The
board of the merger district may, by resolution, reject or
approve the petition as presented, or it may modify the terms and
conditions of the proposed merger, and shall transmit the
petition, together with a copy of its resolution to the merging
district.
If the petition is approved as presented or as modified, the
board of the merging district shall send an elector-signed
petition, if there is one, to the auditor or auditors of the
county or counties in which the merging district is located, who
shall within thirty days examine the signatures and certify to
the sufficiency or insufficiency of the signatures. If the
merging district is located in more than one county, the auditor
of the county within which the largest portion of the merging
district is located shall be the lead auditor. Each other
auditor shall certify to the lead auditor the number of valid
signatures and the number of registered voters of the merging
district who reside in the county. The lead auditor shall
certify as to the sufficiency or insufficiency of the signatures.
No signatures may be withdrawn from the petition after the
filing. A certificate of sufficiency shall be provided to the
board of the merging district, which shall adopt a resolution
requesting the county auditor or auditors to call a special
election, as provided in *RCW 29.13.020, for the purpose of
presenting the question of merging the districts to the voters of
the merging district.
If there is no elector-signed petition, the merging district
board shall adopt a resolution requesting the county auditor or
auditors to call a special election in the merging district, as
specified under *RCW 29.13.020, for the purpose of presenting
the question of the merger to the electors.
[1989 c 63 § 14; 1984 c 230 § 59; 1947 c 254 § 14; Rem. Supp. 1947 § 5654-151c. Formerly RCW 52.24.030.]
NOTES:
*Reviser's note: RCW 29.13.020 was recodified as RCW 29A.04.330 pursuant to 2003 c 111 § 2401, effective July 1, 2004.