RCW 28B.115.135
Behavioral health loan repayment program account.
(1) Any funds appropriated by the legislature for the behavioral health loan repayment program, or any other public or private funds intended for loan repayments under this program, must be placed in the account created by this section.
(2) The behavioral health loan repayment program account is created in the custody of the state treasurer. All receipts from the program must be deposited into the account. Expenditures from the account may be used only for the behavioral health loan repayment program. Only the office, or its designee, may authorize expenditures from the account. The account is subject to allotment procedures under chapter 43.88 RCW, but an appropriation is not required for expenditures.
[ 2019 c 302 § 12.]
Structure Revised Code of Washington
Chapter 28B.115 - Washington Health Corps.
28B.115.010 - Legislative findings—Intent.
28B.115.030 - Washington health corps—Programs established—Duties of office.
28B.115.040 - Technical assistance for rural communities.
28B.115.050 - Planning committee—Criteria for selecting participants.
28B.115.070 - Eligible credentialed health care professions—Health professional shortage areas.
28B.115.080 - Annual award amount—Scholarship preferences—Required service obligations.
28B.115.090 - Loan repayment and scholarship awards.
28B.115.100 - Discrimination by participants prohibited—Violation.
28B.115.110 - Participant obligation—Repayment obligation—Appeals from determinations.
28B.115.120 - Participant obligation—Scholarships—Appeals.
28B.115.130 - Health professional loan repayment and scholarship program fund.
28B.115.135 - Behavioral health loan repayment program account.
28B.115.140 - Transfer of program administration.
28B.115.150 - Osteopathic or allopathic medical student clinical rotations.
28B.115.155 - Osteopathic or allopathic medical student clinical rotations—Foreign medical schools.
28B.115.900 - Effective date—1989 1st ex.s. c 9.
28B.115.902 - Application to scope of chapter—Captions not law—1991 c 332.