Top Wash. Appropriator Seeks 911 Fee Revenue for Cities
Municipal police dispatchers should get a slice of county 911 fee revenue in Washington state if they receive emergency calls transferred from the county, House Appropriations Committee Chair Timm Ormsby (D) said at a Local Government Committee hearing livestreamed Tuesday. Ormsby sponsored HB-2258, which would require counties collecting the tax to transfer some of the revenue to local governments operating municipal 911 systems. Currently, counties may impose a 911 excise tax of up to 70 cents monthly per line on landlines, wireless and VoIP; states may additionally impose a 911 tax of up to 25 cents. But in some areas, like Spokane, the county emergency communications center transfers calls requiring police to the city, which doesn’t receive any 911 fee revenue, said Ormsby. “This is about making sure that folks in our community that pay that excise tax get services for the larger portion of the 911 calls that are police, not fire related.” The bill wouldn’t raise the 911 tax, he said in response to a question by Rep. Cyndy Jacobsen (R).