(1) The
department may enter into a written cost-reimbursement agreement
with a permit or lease applicant or project proponent to recover
from the applicant or proponent the reasonable costs incurred by
the department in carrying out the requirements of this chapter,
as well as the requirements of other relevant laws, as they
relate to permit coordination, environmental review, application
review, technical studies, establishment of development units and
approval or establishment of pooling agreements under chapter 78.52 RCW, including necessary technical studies, permit or lease
processing, and monitoring for permit compliance.
(2) The cost-reimbursement agreement shall identify the
tasks and costs for work to be conducted under the agreement.
The agreement must include a schedule that states:
(a) The estimated number of weeks for initial review of the
permit application;
(b) The estimated number of revision cycles;
(c) The estimated number of weeks for review of subsequent
revision submittals;
(d) The estimated number of billable hours of employee time;
(e) The rate per hour; and
(f) A date for revision of the agreement if necessary.
(3) The written cost-reimbursement agreement shall be
negotiated with the permit or lease applicant or project
proponent. Under the provisions of a cost-reimbursement
agreement, funds from the applicant or proponent shall be used by
the department to contract with an independent consultant to
carry out the work covered by the cost-reimbursement agreement.
The department may also use funds provided under a
cost-reimbursement agreement to hire temporary employees, to
assign current staff to review the work of the consultant, to
provide necessary technical assistance when an independent
consultant with comparable technical skills is unavailable, and
to recover reasonable and necessary direct and indirect costs
that arise from processing the permit or lease. The department
shall, in developing the agreement, ensure that final decisions
that involve policy matters are made by the agency and not by the
consultant. The department shall make an estimate of the number
of permanent staff hours to process the permits or leases, and
shall contract with consultants or hire temporary employees to
replace the time and functions committed by these permanent staff
to the project. The billing process shall provide for accurate
time and cost accounting and may include a billing cycle that
provides for progress payments.
(4) The cost-reimbursement agreement must not negatively
impact the processing of other permit applications. In order to
maintain permit processing capacity, the agency may hire outside
consultants, temporary employees, or make internal administrative
changes. Consultants or temporary employees hired as part of a
cost-reimbursement agreement or to maintain agency capacity are
hired as agents of the state not of the permit applicant. The
restrictions of chapter 42.52 RCW apply to any cost-reimbursement
agreement, and to any person hired as a result of a
cost-reimbursement agreement.
[2009 c 97 § 9. Prior: 2007 c 188 § 1; 2007 c 94 § 11; 2003 c 70 § 2; 2000 c 251 § 3. Formerly RCW 43.30.420.]
NOTES:
Severability -- Effective date -- 2007 c 341: See RCW 90.71.906 and 90.71.907.
Intent -- Captions not law -- Effective date -- 2000 c 251: See notes following RCW 43.21A.690.