(1) The legislative
authority of a county may adopt an ordinance creating a ferry
district in all or a portion of the area of the county, including
the area within the corporate limits of any city or town within
the county. The ordinance may be adopted only after a public
hearing has been held on the creation of a ferry district, and
the county legislative authority makes a finding that it is in
the public interest to create the district.
(2) A ferry district is a municipal corporation, an
independent taxing "authority" within the meaning of Article VII,
section 1 of the state Constitution, and a "taxing district"
within the meaning of Article VII, section 2 of the state
Constitution.
(3) A ferry district is a body corporate and possesses all
the usual powers of a corporation for public purposes as well as
all other powers that may now or hereafter be specifically
conferred by statute, including, but not limited to, the
authority to hire employees, staff, and services, to enter into
contracts, and to sue and be sued.
(4) The members of the county legislative authority, acting
ex officio and independently, shall compose the governing body of
any ferry district that is created within the county. The voters
of a ferry district must be registered voters residing within the
boundaries of the district.
(5) A county with a population greater than one million
persons and having a boundary on Puget Sound, or a county to the
west of Puget Sound with a population greater than two hundred
thirty thousand but less than three hundred thousand persons,
proposing to create a ferry district to assume a passenger-only
ferry route between Vashon and Seattle, including an expansion of
that route to include Southworth, shall first receive approval
from the governor after submitting a complete business plan to
the governor and the legislature by November 1, 2007. The
business plan must, at a minimum, include hours of operation,
vessel needs, labor needs, proposed routes, passenger terminal
facilities, passenger rates, anticipated federal and local
funding, coordination with Washington state ferry system,
coordination with existing transit providers, long-term operation
and maintenance needs, and long-term financial plan. The
business plan may include provisions regarding coordination with
an appropriate county to participate in a joint ferry under RCW 36.54.030 through 36.54.070. In order to be considered for
assuming the route, the ferry district shall ensure that the
route will be operated only by the ferry district and not
contracted out to a private entity, all existing labor agreements
will be honored, and operations will begin no later than July 1,
2008. If the route is to be expanded to include serving
Southworth, the ferry district shall enter into an interlocal
agreement with the public transportation benefit area serving the
Southworth ferry terminal within thirty days of beginning
Southworth ferry service. For the purposes of this subsection,
Puget Sound is considered as extending north to Admiralty Inlet.
[2007 c 223 § 5; 2006 c 332 § 7; 2003 c 83 § 301.]
NOTES:
Effective date -- 2007 c 223: See note following RCW 36.57A.220.
Findings -- Intent -- Captions, part headings not law -- Severability -- Effective date -- 2003 c 83: See notes following RCW 36.57A.200.