(1) The board shall:
(a) Adopt rules and procedures necessary to implement the
freight mobility strategic investment program;
(b) Solicit from public entities proposed projects that meet
eligibility criteria established in accordance with subsection
(4) of this section; and
(c) Review and evaluate project applications based on
criteria established under this section, and prioritize and
select projects comprising a portfolio to be funded in part with
grants from state funds appropriated for the freight mobility
strategic investment program. In determining the appropriate
level of state funding for a project, the board shall ensure that
state funds are allocated to leverage the greatest amount of
partnership funding possible. After selecting projects
comprising the portfolio, the board shall submit them as part of
its budget request to the office of financial management and the
legislature. The board shall ensure that projects submitted as
part of the portfolio are not more appropriately funded with
other federal, state, or local government funding mechanisms or
programs. The board shall reject those projects that appear to
improve overall general mobility with limited enhancement for
freight mobility.
The board shall provide periodic progress reports on its
activities to the office of financial management and the senate
and house transportation committees.
(2) The board may:
(a) Accept from any state or federal agency, loans or grants
for the financing of any transportation project and enter into
agreements with any such agency concerning the loans or grants;
(b) Provide technical assistance to project applicants;
(c) Accept any gifts, grants, or loans of funds, property,
or financial, or other aid in any form from any other source on
any terms and conditions which are not in conflict with this
chapter;
(d) Adopt rules under chapter 34.05 RCW as necessary to
carry out the purposes of this chapter; and
(e) Do all things necessary or convenient to carry out the
powers expressly granted or implied under this chapter.
(3) The board shall designate strategic freight corridors
within the state. The board shall update the list of designated
strategic corridors not less than every two years, and shall
establish a method of collecting and verifying data, including
information on city and county-owned roadways.
(4) The board shall utilize threshold project eligibility
criteria that, at a minimum, includes the following:
(a) The project must be on a strategic freight corridor;
(b) The project must meet one of the following conditions:
(i) It is primarily aimed at reducing identified barriers to
freight movement with only incidental benefits to general or
personal mobility; or
(ii) It is primarily aimed at increasing capacity for the
movement of freight with only incidental benefits to general or
personal mobility; or
(iii) It is primarily aimed at mitigating the impact on
communities of increasing freight movement, including
roadway/railway conflicts; and
(c) The project must have a total public benefit/total
public cost ratio of equal to or greater than one.
(5) From June 11, 1998, through the biennium ending June 30,
2001, the board shall use the multicriteria analysis and scoring
framework for evaluating and ranking eligible freight mobility
and freight mitigation projects developed by the freight mobility
project prioritization committee and contained in the January 16,
1998, report entitled "Project Eligibility, Priority and
Selection Process for a Strategic Freight Investment Program."
The prioritization process shall measure the degree to which
projects address important program objectives and shall generate
a project score that reflects a project's priority compared to
other projects. The board shall assign scoring points to each
criterion that indicate the relative importance of the criterion
in the overall determination of project priority. After June 30,
2001, the board may supplement and refine the initial project
priority criteria and scoring framework developed by the freight
mobility project prioritization committee as expertise and
experience is gained in administering the freight mobility
program.
(6) It is the intent of the legislature that each freight
mobility project contained in the project portfolio submitted by
the board utilize the greatest amount of nonstate funding
possible. The board shall adopt rules that give preference to
projects that contain the greatest levels of financial
participation from nonprogram fund sources. The board shall
consider twenty percent as the minimum partnership contribution,
but shall also ensure that there are provisions allowing
exceptions for projects that are located in areas where minimal
local funding capacity exists or where the magnitude of the
project makes the adopted partnership contribution financially
unfeasible.
(7) The board shall develop and recommend policies that
address operational improvements that primarily benefit and
enhance freight movement, including, but not limited to, policies
that reduce congestion in truck lanes at border crossings and
weigh stations and provide for access to ports during nonpeak
hours.
[2005 c 319 § 125; 1999 c 216 § 1; 1998 c 175 § 3.]
NOTES:
Findings--Intent--Part headings--Effective dates -- 2005 c 319: See notes following RCW 43.17.020.