Camas and Washougal officials took their next step toward the formation of a regional fire authority this month with the formation of the Regional Fire Authority Planning Committee.
The committee, which includes Camas City Council members Marilyn Boerke, Bonnie Carter and John Nohr and Washougal City Council members Molly Coston Julie Russell and Michelle Wagner, met for the first time Wednesday, March 6, and will continue to meet twice a month, on the first and third Wednesdays, for the next several months.
Camas City Administrator Doug Quinn told Camas City Council members Monday, March 4, that the resolution forming the RFA planning committee is “the next step in the continuation of the shared services model utilized by the Camas-Washougal Fire Department.”
Though the cities of Camas and Washougal recently agreed to extend the 10-year interlocal agreement that merged the two cities’ fire departments in 2013, “both cities have agreed to discuss the formation of a regional fire protection authority that, if voted into existence by a majority of residents within the area of both cities,” Quinn said, “would reform the current partnership to install the RFA.”
According to the Municipal Research and Services Center, a Seattle-based nonprofit supporting local government jurisdictions in Washington state, a regional fire protection service authority — most commonly called a regional fire authority or RFA — is “a special purpose district created by the vote of the people residing in the proposed district” that has its own governing board consisting of elected officials and acts as an independent taxing authority. There are at least 15 RFAs in the state of Washington, including the Riverside Fire Authority, which encompasses the city of Centralia and the Lewis County Fire District No. 12, about 60 miles north of Clark County.