📰 Support nonprofit journalism

What Groups Around Washington Are Asking from Olympia

Ray Dubicki - February 22, 2023
WALeg Banner Week 7. Microsoft Connector Bus in Queen Anne (Sounder Bruce via Flickr)

WALeg Wednesday faces another calendar cutoff and looks at lobbying efforts by agencies, organizations, and corporations.

The Washington Legislature is in the week between legislative calendar cutoffs, so there is some tumult in what bills are moving forward. As discussed last week, the calendar cutoffs are deadlines imposed by the legislature to keep things moving in their part-time sessions. The first policy cutoff has passed, and quite a few pieces of legislation have escaped their initial committees. However, the budget and transportation cutoff is looming this Friday, February 24th.

A number of bills — including the big missing middle bill HB 1110 — have met the first cutoff but have been passed to the appropriations committee. That means they are still subject to the second cutoff, so they are in a bit of will-they, won’t-they limbo at the moment.. Here’s a run down of the bills we have been tracking. Any that are still hanging out between policy committee and a budget or transportation committee are labeled in LIMBO. By clicking on the link to the bill, it is still possible to send a note to your legislator supporting the legislation.

  • HB 1110 – Missing Middle is in LIMBO
    • Out of Housing. Scheduled for executive session in Appropriations 2/23.
    • Companion SB 5190 – Out of Housing. Referred to Ways and Means without a committee hearing scheduled.
  • HB 1181 – GMA Climate Change provisions is MOVING
    • Out of Local Government. Out of Appropriations, not read on the floor yet
    • Companion SB 5203 – Out of Local Government. Referred to Ways and Means without a committee hearing scheduled.
  • HB 1045 – Evergreen Basic Income pilot LIMBO
    • Out of Human Services. Referred to Appropriations without a committee hearing scheduled.
  • HB 1026 – Local Government Design Review Reform MOVING
    • Out of Housing. Not read on the floor yet.
  • HB 1131 – WRAP Act (bottle deposit and packaging reform) LIMBO
    • Out of Environment. Scheduled for executive session in Appropriations 2/23.
    • Companion SB 5154 – Out of Environment. Referred to Ways & Means with no hearing scheduled.
  • HB 1040 – Aviation and Aerospace Advisory Committee KAPUT
    • Did not pass Innovation committee before cutoff.
  • SB 5466 – Promoting Transit Oriented Development LIMBO
    • Out of Local Government. Scheduled for executive session in Transportation 2/23
    • Companion HB 1517 – Did not pass Housing before cutoff.
  • SB 5383 – Concerning Pedestrians Crossing and Moving Along Roadways LIMBO
    • Scheduled for executive session in Transportation 2/23.
    • Companion HB 1428 – In Transportation without an executive session scheduled.
  • HB 1124 – Protecting Tenants from Excessive Rent and Related Fees MOVING
    • Out of Housing. Referred to Rules with no floor reading scheduled.
  • HB 1388 – Protecting Tenants By Prohibiting Predatory Residential Rent Practices LIMBO
    • Out of Housing. Referred to Appropriations with no hearing scheduled.
  • HB 1389 – Residential Rent Increases Under the Landlord Tenant Act LIMBO
    • Out of Housing. Executive session in Appropriations 2/24.
    • Companion SB 5435 – No action taken in Housing before cutoff.

So, for those keeping score of the 11 bills we’re tracking, two are moving ahead and eight are in the between-week appropriations nether region. One bill is kaput, and that’s okay because there were some questions on whether HB 1040’s proposed Aviation and Aerospace Advisory Committee was going to be useful when it didn’t consider the environment until a deep footnote.

This Week’s Focus: Organization, Agency, and Corporate Legislative Priorities

The big board is going to look somewhat different next week, so this is an opportunity to take a breather and track down some legislative priorities by organizations that may not often get attention. The Urbanist’s focus on housing and environment necessarily turns attention towards Futurewise’s work to promote smart growth and breathable air, contrasted with the Association of Washington Cities’ work to cry “local control” at every turn. But there are other organizations that are showing up in Olympia and bending legislators’ ears.

There are the local branches of national organizations. A lot of housing bills have been supported by groups like the American Farmland Trust, who have Washington specific legislative priorities that include preserving farmland through land use protections and building more housing in existing urban footprints. They also support programs that broaden the demographics of farmers and promote conservation and preserving soil health. Washington State PTA has similar announcements of legislative priorities in that same big picture language, then keep a running tally of bills on their blog.

Alternately, the American Civil Liberties Union does a good job deep diving on specific pieces of legislation with a full list of supported bills. This year, the ACLU is keeping abortion and gender affirming care at the top of its priorities, backing the HB 1469 protections of reproductive and gender affirming care in Washington. The organization’s work with decriminalizing drug possession and reducing incarceration has a list of bills that raise the age on juvenile detention and engages alternatives to jail. Unfortunately, a few of the bills they supported about online privacy and regulating automated decision systems did not make it out of committee, even with some interesting background info on the topic.