(1) A regional
fire protection service authority planning committee shall adopt
a regional fire protection service authority plan providing for
the design, financing, and development of fire protection and
emergency services. The planning committee may consider the
following factors in formulating its plan:
(a) Land use planning criteria; and
(b) The input of cities and counties located within, or
partially within, a participating fire protection jurisdiction.
(2) The planning committee may coordinate its activities
with neighboring cities, towns, and other local governments that
engage in fire protection planning.
(3) The planning committee shall:
(a) Create opportunities for public input in the development
of the plan;
(b) Adopt a plan proposing the creation of a regional fire
protection service authority and recommending design, financing,
and development of fire protection and emergency service
facilities and operations, including maintenance and preservation
of facilities or systems. The plan may authorize the authority
to establish a system of ambulance service to be operated by the
authority or operated by contract after a call for bids.
However, the authority shall not provide for the establishment of
an ambulance service that would compete with any existing private
ambulance service, unless the authority determines that the
region served by the authority, or a substantial portion of the
region served by the authority, is not adequately served by an
existing private ambulance service. In determining the adequacy
of an existing private ambulance service, the authority shall
take into consideration objective generally accepted medical
standards and reasonable levels of service which must be
published by the authority. Following the preliminary conclusion
by the authority that the existing private ambulance service is
inadequate, and before establishing an ambulance service or
issuing a call for bids, the authority shall allow a minimum of
sixty days for the private ambulance service to meet the
generally accepted medical standards and accepted levels of
service. In the event of a second preliminary conclusion of
inadequacy within a twenty-four-month period, the authority may
immediately issue a call for bids or establish its own ambulance
service and is not required to afford the private ambulance
service another sixty-day period to meet the generally accepted
medical standards and reasonable levels of service. A private
ambulance service that is not licensed by the department of
health or whose license is denied, suspended, or revoked is not
entitled to a sixty-day period within which to demonstrate
adequacy and the authority may immediately issue a call for bids
or establish an ambulance service; and
(c) In the plan, recommend sources of revenue authorized by
RCW 52.26.050, identify the portions of the plan that may be
amended by the board of the authority without voter approval,
consistent with RCW 52.26.050, and recommend a financing plan to
fund selected fire protection and emergency services and
projects.
(4) Once adopted, the plan must be forwarded to the
participating fire protection jurisdictions' governing bodies to
initiate the election process under RCW 52.26.060.
(5) If the ballot measure is not approved, the planning
committee may redefine the selected regional fire protection
service authority projects, financing plan, and the ballot
measure. The fire protection jurisdictions' governing bodies may
approve the new plan and ballot measure, and may then submit the
revised proposition to the voters at a subsequent election or a
special election. If a ballot measure is not approved by the
voters by the third vote, the planning committee is dissolved.
[2006 c 200 § 2; 2004 c 129 § 4.]