The director:
(1) Shall adopt motor vehicle emission and equipment
standards to: Ensure that no less than seventy percent of the
vehicles tested comply with the standards on the first inspection
conducted, meet federal clean air act requirements, and protect
human health and the environment.
(2) Shall adopt rules implementing the smoke opacity testing
requirement for diesel vehicles that ensure that such test is
objective and repeatable and that properly maintained engines
that otherwise would meet the applicable federal emission
standards, as measured by the new engine certification test,
would not fail the smoke opacity test.
(3) Shall designate a geographic area as being a
"noncompliance area" for motor vehicle emissions if (a) the
department's analysis of emission and ambient air quality data,
covering a period of no less than one year, indicates that the
standard has or will probably be exceeded, and (b) the department
determines that the primary source of the air contaminant is
motor vehicle emissions.
(4) Shall reevaluate noncompliance areas if the United
States environmental protection agency modifies the relevant air
quality standards, and shall discontinue the program if
compliance is indicated and if the department determines that the
area would continue to be in compliance after the program is
discontinued. The director shall notify persons residing in
noncompliance areas of the reevaluation.
(5) Shall analyze information regarding the motor vehicle
traffic in a noncompliance area to determine the smallest land
area within whose boundaries are present registered motor
vehicles that contribute significantly to the violation of motor
vehicle-related air quality standards in the noncompliance area. The director shall declare the area to be an "emission
contributing area." An emission contributing area established
for a carbon monoxide or oxides of nitrogen noncompliance area
must contain the noncompliance area within its boundaries. An
emission contributing area established for an ozone noncompliance
area located in this state need not contain the ozone
noncompliance area within its boundaries if it can be proven that
vehicles registered in the area contribute significantly to
violations of the ozone air quality standard in the noncompliance
area. An emission contributing area may be established in this
state for violations of federal air quality standards for ozone
in an adjacent state if (a) the United States environmental
protection agency designates an area to be a "nonattainment area
for ozone" under the provisions of the federal Clean Air Act (42
U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), and (b) it can be proven that vehicles
registered in this state contribute significantly to the
violation of the federal air quality standards for ozone in the
adjacent state's nonattainment area.
(6) Shall, after consultation with the appropriate local
government entities, designate areas as being noncompliance areas
or emission contributing areas, and shall establish the
boundaries of such areas by rule. The director may also modify
boundaries. In establishing the external boundaries of an
emission contributing area, the director shall use the boundaries
established for ZIP code service areas by the United States
postal service.
(7) May make grants to units of government in support of
planning efforts to reduce motor vehicle emissions.
[1991 c 199 § 207; 1989 c 240 § 2.]
NOTES:
Finding -- 1991 c 199: See note following RCW 70.94.011.
Effective dates -- Severability -- Captions not law -- 1991 c 199: See RCW 70.94.904 through 70.94.906.