(1) The Washington conservation corps is created.
The department of ecology must administer the corps as a
partnership with the departments of natural resources and fish
and wildlife, the state parks and recreation commission, and when
appropriate, other agencies and nonprofit organizations to
advance the program goals outlined in RCW 43.220.045.
(2) The Puget Sound corps is created as a distinct program
within the Washington conservation corps focused on the
implementation of the specific program goals outlined in RCW 43.220.045.
[2011 c 20 § 2; 1999 c 280 § 1; 1994 c 264 § 32; 1988 c 36 § 23; 1983 1st ex.s. c 40 § 1.]
NOTES:
Findings -- Intent -- 2011 c 20: "(1) The legislature finds
that the Washington conservation corps, the veterans conservation
corps, and other state and nonprofit service corps contribute
significantly to the priorities of state government to protect
natural resources, including Puget Sound, while providing
meaningful work experience for the state's youth, veterans,
unemployed, and underemployed workforces.
(2) The legislature further finds that the long-term health
of the economy of Washington depends on the sustainable
management of its natural resources and that the livelihoods and
revenues produced by Washington's forests, agricultural lands,
estuaries, waterways, and watersheds would be enhanced by
targeted, streamlined, and prioritized investments in clean water
and habitat restoration.
(3) The legislature further finds that it is important to
stretch limited public resources to advance the state's natural
resource management priorities. Transformation of natural
resource management and service delivery, including the creation
of strategic partnerships among agencies and nongovernmental
partners, will increase the efficiency and effectiveness of the
expenditure of federal, state, and local funds for clean water
and habitat rehabilitation projects.
(4) The legislature further finds that there are
efficiencies to be gained by streamlining how the various
conservation corps are administered, managed, funded, and
deployed by the natural resources agencies. There are further
efficiencies to be gained through coordinating the conservation
corps with other state service corps programs, recruitment
activities, and through public-private partnerships.
(5) The legislature further finds that the state should seek
to expand the conservation corps in all areas of the state,
deploying the corps to work on projects that advance established
priorities including, but not limited to, the cleanup and
rehabilitation of the Puget Sound ecosystem, oil spill response
and cleanup, salmon recovery, and the reduction of wildfire and
forest health hazards statewide.
(6) The legislature further finds that individuals with
developmental disabilities would benefit from experiencing a
meaningful work experience, and learning the value of labor and
of membership in a productive society. As such, the legislature
urges state agencies that are participating in the Washington
conservation corps program to consider for enrollment in the
program individuals with developmental disabilities, as defined
in RCW 71A.10.020.
(7)(a) Therefore, it is the intent of the legislature to
maintain the conservation corps statewide, to collaborate with
the veterans conservation corps, to establish the Puget Sound
corps, to streamline how government administers and manages the
state's conservation corps to more efficiently expend the state's
resources toward priority outcomes, including the recovery of the
Puget Sound ecosystem to health by 2020, to increase
opportunities for meaningful work experience, and to authorize
public-private partnerships as a key element of corps activities.
(b) It is also the intent of the legislature to integrate
into the Puget Sound corps the therapeutic and reintegration
intent of the veterans conservation corps for veterans involved
in the Puget Sound corps." [2011 c 20 § 1.]