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Legislators with BillsLegislators(200)
Referred Bills (518)
Establishing a statewide low-income energy assistance program.
Concerning tribal consultation conducted by the energy facility site evaluation council.
Concerning climate commitment act compliance obligations for fuels supplied or otherwise sold into Washington.
Concerning emissions from emissions-intensive, trade-exposed facilities under the climate commitment act.
Increasing transparency and consumer protection in water system rates.
Concerning fair treatment of waste to energy facilities under the climate commitment act.
Revised for 1st substitute: Regulating artificial intelligence companion chatbots.
Informing users when content is developed or modified by artificial intelligence.
Streamlining consumer-owned utility procurement requirements for clean energy generation, energy storage, transmission, and distribution projects.
Updating provisions for consumer-owned utilities, including port districts, and affected market customers under the clean energy transformation act.
Reducing certain reporting obligations under environmental or energy laws.
Expanding the use of distributed energy resources.
Modernizing the definition of motor fuel in the motor fuel quality act.
Concerning utility connection charge waivers.
Concerning utility connection charge waivers.
Authorizing community scaled weatherization projects.
Improving efficiency in appeals to the pollution control hearings board.
Providing consumer access to safe cookware and interstate and international trade certainty in the regulation of lead in cookware.
Creating an artificial intelligence grant program.
Concerning environmentally sustainable urban design.
Concerning naturally occurring fibrous silicate materials.
Addressing emerging large energy use facilities.
Allowing limited exemptions to renewable energy systems requirements for certain school districts.
Revised for 1st substitute: Regulating artificial intelligence companion chatbots.
Creating an artificial intelligence grant program.
Concerning environmental crimes.
Concerning broadband infrastructure repair loans.
Eliminating preferential treatment related to a coal-fired electric generating plant.
Concerning performance measures, duties, and reporting requirements for the office of privacy and data protection.
Providing certainty for the development of low-to-zero carbon alternative jet fuel production in Washington state.
Authorizing community scaled weatherization projects.
Eliminating preferential treatment related to a coal-fired electric generating plant.
Expanding the use of distributed energy resources.
Concerning tribal consultation conducted by the energy facility site evaluation council.
Improving reliability and capacity of the electric transmission system in Washington state.
Regarding cultural resource protection for certain land use activities that are categorically exempt from the state environmental policy act.
Concerning recycling and waste reduction.
Improving reliability and capacity of the electric transmission system in Washington state.
Reducing environmental impacts associated with bags provided to customers at retail establishments.
Increasing transmission capacity.
Providing consumer protections for artificial intelligence systems.
Assessing the feasibility of developing an affordability index for appliances sold into Washington state.
Concerning mattress producer responsibility organizations.
Establishing producer responsibility for textiles.
Addressing emerging large energy use facilities.
Reducing environmental and health disparities and improving the health of Washington state residents in large port districts.
Addressing resiliency, public safety, and quality of broadband.
Authorizing certain public entities to contract for the capability of renewable or nonemitting electric generation projects.
Concerning accountability for waste tire removal funds.
Requiring an economic assessment before the purchase of any third-party, commercial cloud computing service.
Concerning 6PPD and regrettable 6PPD substitutes in tires.
Concerning naturally occurring fibrous silicate materials.
Repealing the pollution prevention planning requirements under chapter 70A.214 RCW.
Integrating advanced nuclear energy into the state energy strategy.
Concerning wildfire prevention and creating the Washington wildfire prevention and protection council.
Limiting the exercise of eminent domain for the purposes of constructing electrical transmission facilities on agricultural lands.
Providing cost relief to Washingtonians by suspending certain requirements in the climate commitment act.
Concerning postconsumer recycled content requirements for plastic products.
Providing electricity service to large energy use facilities.
Regulating high-risk artificial intelligence system development, deployment, and use.
Repealing restrictions and fees on plastic carryout bags.
Concerning the annual reporting of information associated with sales of vehicles subject to the advanced clean trucks regulations.
Concerning fair treatment of waste to energy facilities under the climate commitment act.
Incentivizing grid-connected residential battery energy storage systems.
Exempting utility service vehicles from certain motor vehicle emission standards.
Concerning the use of carbon capture and utilization, mineralization, or sequestration technologies under the Washington clean energy transformation act.
Modifying the standards for determining water quality pollution.
Establishing civil liability for suicide linked to the use of artificial intelligence systems.
Exempting emissions associated with lubricants from coverage under the cap and invest program.
Concerning asbestos-containing building materials.
Furthering digital equity and opportunity in Washington state.
Streamlining certain decisions pertaining to the development or extension of a trail or path from the state environmental policy act.
Incentivizing grid-connected residential battery energy storage systems.
Establishing a presumption of compliance for entities covered under the state’s industrial stormwater general permit under certain circumstances.
Concerning the compliance obligation under the climate commitment act for certain municipal gas utilities.
Concerning the delivery of electronic admission tickets.
Modifying eligibility for the broadband service expansion grant and loan program.
Continuing to provide payments to support farm fuel users and transporters for exempt fuel under the Washington climate commitment act.
Requiring proof of adequate water supply before permitting new energy facilities.
Improving accessibility of community solar projects in Washington state.
Advancing the production and use of alternative jet fuels in Washington.
Improving the end-of-life management of electric vehicle batteries.
Requesting enactment of the Northwest Energy Security Act.
Increasing compliance pathways for the clean buildings performance standard.
Concerning fair access to community solar.
Reducing environmental impacts associated with the operation of certain ocean-going vessels.
Concerning the state universal communications services program.
Revised for 1st substitute: Allowing schools and school districts to request extensions to state energy performance standard deadlines for K-12 school buildings.
Authorizing electrical companies to securitize certain wildfire-related costs to lower costs to customers.
Increasing transparency regarding sewage-containing spills.
Concerning approval of electric utility wildfire mitigation plans.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions associated with hydrofluorocarbons.
Modernizing the energy independence act to avoid regulatory duplication and overlap with other laws.
Supporting the servicing and right to repair of certain products with digital electronics in a secure and reliable manner.
Increasing environmental justice by improving government decisions.
Concerning wholesale power purchases by electric utilities under the Washington clean energy transformation act.
Revised for 1st substitute: Accelerating the development of clean energy.
Prohibiting the energy facility site evaluation council from preempting local laws that forbid the siting of certain storage facilities in critical areas.
Concerning emissions of greenhouse gases used for anesthetic purposes.
Facilitating predictable and timely application decisions by the energy facility site evaluation council.
Adding fusion energy to facilities that may obtain site certification for the purposes of chapter 80.50 RCW.
Concerning motor vehicle emission standards for Washington.
Expanding the state battery stewardship program to include electric vehicle batteries.
Concerning wood burning devices.
Implementing strategies to achieve higher recycling rates within Washington's existing solid waste management system.
Increasing efficiency at the energy facility site evaluation council by removing the governor from the project approval process.
Establishing a new clean energy fund program.
Concerning green energy community funds to support school districts and nonprofit organizations that service the communities where renewable energy projects are located.
Revised for 1st substitute: Supporting the servicing and right to repair of certain products with digital electronics in a secure and reliable manner to increase access and affordability for Washingtonians.
Establishing a right to repair for mobility equipment for persons with physical disabilities.
Amending the climate commitment act by adjusting auction price containment mechanisms and ceiling prices, addressing the department of ecology's authority to amend rules to facilitate linkage with other jurisdictions, and providing for market dynamic analysis.
Authorizing utility companies to securitize certain costs related to disasters or emergencies to lower costs to customers.
Concerning the clean fuels program.
Improving outcomes associated with waste material management systems.
Concerning litter.
Ensuring environmental and public health protection from solid waste handling facility operations.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions associated with hydrofluorocarbons.
Increasing transparency regarding sewage-containing spills.
Concerning sampling or testing of biosolids for PFAS chemicals.
Improving Washington's solid waste management outcomes.
Improving safe excavation practices and preventing damage to underground utilities.
Concerning the exemption for fuels used for agricultural purposes in the climate commitment act.
Expanding the ability of consumer-owned utilities to enter into joint use agreements.
Encouraging the deployment of low carbon thermal energy networks.
Increasing compliance pathways for the clean buildings performance standard.
Adding fusion energy to facilities that may obtain site certification for the purposes of chapter 80.50 RCW.
Concerning lead in cookware.
Revised for engrossed: Encouraging the development of distributed energy resources.
Concerning wholesale power purchases by electric utilities under the Washington clean energy transformation act.
Exempting local governments providing certain services for projects under the jurisdiction of the energy facility siting evaluation council from certain appeals.
Strengthening Washington's leadership and accountability on climate policy by transitioning to annual reporting of statewide emissions data.
Protecting Washington communities from lead-based paint.
Concerning approval of electric utility wildfire mitigation plans.
Regarding the costs of compliance with the state energy performance standard.
Concerning the photovoltaic module stewardship and takeback program.
Allowing public utility districts to form, own, or use captive insurers.
Concerning contracts for materials or work required by joint operating agencies.
Reducing lead in cookware.
Improving the outcomes associated with waste material management systems, including products affecting organic material management systems.
Modifying the appeals process for environmental and land use matters.
Requiring environmental and labor reporting for public building construction and renovation material.
Promoting the establishment of thermal energy networks.
Reducing environmental impacts associated with lighting products.
Promoting the integration of fusion technology within state clean energy policies.
Supporting Washington's clean energy economy and transitioning to a clean, affordable, and reliable energy future.
Facilitating linkage of Washington's carbon market with the California-Quebec carbon market.
Promoting the development of geothermal energy resources.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Addressing 6PPD in motorized vehicle tires through safer products for Washington.Original: Expediting the safer products for Washington process regarding motorized vehicle tires containing 6PPD.
Concerning court-ordered restitution in environmental criminal cases.
Requiring environmental and labor reporting for public building construction and renovation material.
Supporting Washington's clean energy economy and transitioning to a clean, affordable, and reliable energy future.
Ensuring that methods for calculating the electric load of utilities under the energy independence act do not have the effect of discouraging voluntary investments in renewable power.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Concerning agricultural and forestry biomass.Original: Concerning biochar production from agricultural and forestry biomass.
Concerning the sale of biogenic carbon dioxide and other coproducts of biogas processing.
Providing tools designed to reduce the impacts of unlawful solid waste dumping.
Establishing an artificial intelligence task force.
Creating business and occupation and public utility tax exemptions for certain amounts received as the result of receipt, generation, purchase, sale, transfer, or retirement of allowances, offset credits, or price ceiling units under the climate commitment act.
Changing the incentive structure for tier 1 and tier 2 buildings.
Repealing the greenhouse gas content disclosure provision.
Concerning the governance of technology services in state government, including eliminating the office of the chief information officer and renaming the consolidated technology services agency.
Concerning the sale of biogenic carbon dioxide and other coproducts of biogas processing.
Concerning energy labeling of residential buildings.
Providing for the responsible management of refrigerant gases with a higher global warming potential than carbon dioxide that are used in appliances or other infrastructure.
Concerning energy in buildings.
Concerning tax preferences for clean energy manufacturers.
Concerning biosolids.
Concerning disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions.
Exempting certain sales of electricity to qualifying green businesses from the public utilities tax.
Concerning energy labeling of residential buildings.
Concerning energy in buildings.
Improving the end-of-life management of electric vehicle batteries.
Providing tax incentives to encourage energy storage system and component parts manufacturing in Washington.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Creating and expanding tax incentives for the research, development, deployment, production, and sale of hydrogen fuel products in Washington state.Original: Creating and expanding tax incentives for the research, development, production, and sale of hydrogen fuel products in Washington state.
Reducing public health and environmental impacts from lead.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Supporting school districts and nonprofit organizations that service the communities where renewable energy projects are located.Original: Creating a green energy community fund to support school districts and nonprofit organizations that service the communities where renewable energy projects are located.
Revised for 2nd Substitute: Extending the expiration date for the state universal communications services program.Original: Removing the expiration date for the state universal communications services program.
Planning for advanced nuclear reactor technology in Washington.
Concerning petroleum products supply and pricing.
Improving the outcomes associated with waste material management systems, including products affecting organic material management systems.
Requiring the office of privacy and data protection to develop guidelines for the use of artificial intelligence.
Integrating environmental justice considerations into certain project decisions.
Affirming Washington's support and commitment to the extension of the affordable connectivity program.
Supporting the servicing and right to repair of certain products with digital electronics in a secure and reliable manner.
Promoting the establishment of thermal energy networks.
Requiring applicants seeking energy facility site certification for an energy facility that generates electricity using renewable resources to provide evidence of an adequate water supply for the project.
Requiring customer charges to be listed on utility billing statements if the charges are a result of implementing the Washington climate commitment act.
Improving Washington's solid waste management outcomes.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Authorizing consumer-owned utilities to establish energy efficiency revolving loan programs.Original: Authorizing electric utilities to establish energy efficiency revolving loan programs.
Authorizing authorities to address aerial firefighting aspects as part of permitting processes for communities at risk of wildfires.
Concerning fair access to community solar.
Protecting consumers by requiring summaries for certain agreements and policies presented in an electronic format.
Creating a dilapidated recreational vehicle disposal program.
Concerning siting wind energy facilities to avoid interference with military installations.
Concerning substantive amendments to the state energy code for nonresidential buildings.
Concerning the environmental impacts of fashion.
Mitigating the consumer impacts of the climate commitment act by creating greater administrability of emissions exemptions and improving the transparency and business practices under the act.
Concerning the allocation of allowances under chapter 70A.65 RCW, the Washington climate commitment act.
Providing information about the costs of the climate commitment act to electricity and natural gas customers.
Balancing energy efficiency with consideration of other factors such as housing affordability, development costs, and feasibility in the state energy code for residential structures.
Concerning the price ceiling under chapter 70A.65 RCW, the climate commitment act.
Concerning sales to a broadband communications services provider of machinery and equipment used in a communication network.
Establishing the development of renewable energy for Washington revolving loan program and account.
Expanding revenue generation and economic opportunities from natural climate solutions and ecosystem services.
Concerning a state broadband map.
Promoting the fair servicing and repair of digital electronic equipment.
Planning for advanced nuclear reactor technology in Washington.
Studying the risks of electromagnetic pulse attacks.
Concerning procurement requirements for joint operating agencies and their member districts.
Developing a process to implement exemptions for certain fuels under the climate commitment act.
Concerning a state broadband map.
Providing carbon sequestration and ecosystem services in the management of public lands.
Incentivizing gas companies to develop and acquire renewable energy resources.
Creating a charter of people's personal data rights.
Requiring environmental and labor reporting for public building construction and renovation material.
Establishing a cybersecurity governance framework within state government.
Requiring fashion retail sellers and manufacturers to disclose environmental due diligence policies.
Reducing lead in cookware.
Establishing and making appropriations for the capital broadband investment acceleration program.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Expanding the department of ecology's authority to refrain from enforcing certain provisions of chapter 70A.60 RCW to mitigate the effects of supply chain problems or other similar disruptions.Original: Expanding the department of ecology's authority to refrain from enforcing chapter 70A.60 RCW to mitigate the effects of supply chain problems or other similar disruptions.
Supporting Washington's clean energy economy and transitioning to a clean, affordable, and reliable energy future.
Creating a work group to develop a "Whole WA" digital experience that will connect Washington residents to services.
Protecting human health from excessive air pollution.
Promoting the fair servicing and repair of digital electronic equipment.
Concerning classification as a competitive telecommunications company for an incumbent local exchange carrier currently operating under an alternative form of regulation authorized by RCW 80.36.135.
Modeling, measurement, and reporting embodied carbon emission reductions from structural building products in state-funded projects.
Concerning clean energy siting.
Establishing guidelines for government procurement and use of automated decision systems in order to protect consumers, improve transparency, and create more market predictability.
Preventing utility shutoffs for nonpayment during extreme heat.
Advancing the due date for the department of ecology's report on the effects of the clean fuels program.
Exempting certain public school buildings from the state energy performance standard.
Enhancing access to clean fuel for agencies providing public transportation.
Concerning biosolids.
Concerning the "pick it up, Washington" litter control program.
Creating a state financial assurance program for petroleum underground storage tanks.
Recognizing that power plants that comply with the state greenhouse gas emissions performance standard are consistent with Washington's long-term policy for electricity.
Ensuring that the Washington state energy code may not prohibit the use of natural gas in buildings.
Creating a work group to evaluate the costs of the state energy performance standard for covered commercial buildings.
Eliminating expedited processing of alternative energy resource facilities fueled by solar or wind energy on certain designated lands before the energy facility site evaluation council.
Mitigating the risk of wildfires through electric utility planning and identification of best management practices appropriate to each electric utility's circumstances.
Concerning online marketplace consumer protection caused by organized retail crime.
Removing regulatory restrictions on hydropower.
Improving Washington's solid waste management outcomes.
Modernizing the energy independence act to avoid regulatory duplication and overlap with other laws.
Improving climate resilience through updates to the state's integrated climate response strategy.
Concerning the use of toxic chemicals in cosmetic products.
Supporting clean energy through tax changes that increase revenue to local governments, schools, and impacted communities.
Providing for responsible environmental management of batteries.
Reducing light pollution associated with certain energy infrastructure.
Reassessing standards for polychlorinated biphenyls in consumer products.
Reducing toxic air pollution that threatens human health.
Concerning district energy systems.
Authorizing the use of performance-based contracting for energy services and equipment.
Evaluating compostable product usage in Washington.
Concerning a study on the recycling of wind turbine blades.
Reauthorizing the business and occupation tax deduction for cooperative finance organizations.
Concerning clean energy siting.
Enhancing access to clean fuel for agencies providing public transportation.
Applying the affected market customer provisions of the Washington clean energy transformation act to nonresidential customers of consumer-owned utilities.
Promoting the alternative jet fuel industry in Washington.
Concerning electric power system transmission planning.
Addressing the extent to which Washington residents are at risk of rolling blackouts and power supply inadequacy events.
Creating a state financial assurance program for petroleum underground storage tanks.
Improving climate resilience through updates to the state's integrated climate response strategy.
Concerning compliance with labeling requirements for wipes.
Mitigating the risk of wildfires through electric utility planning and identification of best management practices appropriate to each electric utility's circumstances.
Reducing plastic pollution.
Preventing utility shutoffs for nonpayment during extreme heat.
Revised for 2nd Substitute: Concerning cybersecurity.Original: Concerning the protection of critical constituent and state operational data against the financial and personal harm caused by ransomware and other malicious cyber activities.
Concerning logistical processes for the regulation of priority chemicals in consumer products.
Closing the digital equity divide by increasing the accessibility and affordability of telecommunications services, devices, and training.
Addressing the extent to which Washington residents are at risk of rolling blackouts and power supply inadequacy events.
Concerning tribal consultation regarding the use of certain funding authorized by the climate commitment act.
Accelerating the availability and use of renewable hydrogen in Washington state.
Concerning financial responsibility requirements related to oil spills.
Concerning broadband infrastructure loans and grants made by the public works board.
Setting domestic wastewater discharge fees.
Modifying the definition of broadband or broadband service.
Establishing the Washington blockchain work group.
Modernizing the energy facility site evaluation council to meet the state's clean energy goals.
Concerning organic materials management.
Reducing methane emissions from landfills.
Concerning greenhouse gas emissions reductions in the design of public facilities.
Concerning state laws that address climate change.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions in buildings.
Concerning greenhouse gas emissions reductions in the design of public facilities.
Updating definitions applicable to energy conservation projects involving public entities.
Creating a sales and use tax deferral program for solar canopies placed on large-scale commercial parking lots and other similar areas.
Updating the utilities and transportation commission's regulatory fees.
Concerning timing restrictions for remedial action grants to local government.
Concerning technical changes to the commercial property assessed clean energy and resiliency program.
Eliminating the 2022 expiration date of the marine resources advisory council.
Concerning energy transformation, nonemitting electric generation, and renewable resource project analysis and declaratory orders.
Concerning appliance efficiency standards.
Concerning the statewide master oil and hazardous substance spill prevention and contingency plan.
Changing the expiration date for the sales and use tax exemption of hog fuel to comply with the 2045 deadline for fossil fuel-free electrical generation in Washington state and to protect jobs with health care and retirement benefits in economically distressed communities.
Concerning the valuation of property related to renewable energy for the purposes of property tax and providing for a payment in lieu of taxes for renewable energy facilities.
Concerning public health and fluoridation of drinking water.
Strengthening energy codes.
Concerning the decommissioning of alternative energy facilities.
Concerning the protection of critical constituent and state operational data against the financial and personal harm caused by ransomware and other malicious cyber activities.
Concerning shoreline master program review schedules.
Concerning marine shoreline habitat.
Establishing a presumption of liability for wildfires caused by an electric utility's equipment.
Concerning the use and disclosure of toxic chemicals in cosmetic products.
Adding a climate resilience element to water system plans.
Concerning the use of verifiable credentials.
Setting a different direction on environmental policy in order to reduce the skyrocketing prices of basic goods and services.
Concerning a zero-emission landscaping equipment incentive program.
Concerning the management, oversight, and use of data.
Concerning broadband infrastructure loans and grants made by the public works board.
Implementing enterprise-wide technology policies in state government to ensure consistency, security, and responsible use of data.
Concerning tax deferrals for investment projects in clean technology manufacturing, clean alternative fuels production, and renewable energy storage.
Renewing Washington's recycling system and reducing waste.
Concerning green roofs on large commercial and multifamily buildings.
Concerning noise standards for providers of essential services.
Concerning dedicating funding from the model toxics control accounts for pollution cleanup, water flow management, water supply, and aquatic resource protection.
Protecting Puget Sound from wastewater pollution by requiring the department of ecology to strengthen the Puget Sound nutrient general permit.
Concerning online marketplace consumer product theft and safety protection.
Allowing persons to take immediate action to remedy water quality conditions to protect public health and welfare without the threat of penalty.
Increasing housing access and affordability by decreasing construction costs associated with the Washington state energy code for residential buildings.
Concerning the protection of critical constituent and state operational data against the financial and personal harm caused by ransomware and other malicious cyber activities.
Establishing data privacy protections to strengthen a consumer's ability to access, manage, and protect their personal data.
Providing for the recycling of wind turbine blades.
Concerning the authority of publicly owned electric utilities to engage in targeted electrification through the adoption of plans that establish a finding that utility outreach and investment in the conversion of its customers' end use equipment from fossil fuels to electricity will provide net benefits to the utility.
Concerning the recyclability of products and packaging.
Recognizing that power plants that comply with the state greenhouse gas emissions performance standard are consistent with Washington's long-term policy for electricity.
Allowing the labeling of biodegradable products that are supported by recognized national or international test methods.
Removing plastic bags as an option for use at retail establishments.
Asking the United States Government to enter into a fossil fuel nonproliferation treaty.
Concerning the application of the consumer protection act to the fair servicing and repair of manufactured products.
Concerning the acceleration of broadband deployment.
Strengthening energy codes.
Concerning public health and fluoridation of drinking water.
Prohibiting products that contain olefins derived from methanol manufactured from natural gas.
Reopening the renewable energy system incentive program for residential-scale systems.
Concerning litter pickup during maintenance closures.
Concerning the management of spent nuclear fuel.
Concerning organic materials management.
Concerning compost products.
Modifying the regulation of gas companies to achieve reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
Concerning the use and disclosure of toxic chemicals in cosmetic products.
Concerning the preparedness of state agencies to manage data backup and improve disaster recovery practices.
Providing support for utility customers impacted by COVID-19 through payment plans, including partial forgiveness of arrearages and a credit against the public utility tax.
Prohibiting broadband internet access service providers from applying data caps during a state of emergency.
Concerning claims due to a breach of the security of a state database or information technology system.
Concerning the "pick it up, Washington" litter control program.
Concerning the energy facility site evaluation council.
Concerning criteria for excluding artificial water bodies as shorelines of the state.
Concerning carbon pollution.
Concerning on-bill disclosures to retail electric customers.
Establishing a statewide organic waste management goal.
Concerning the electrification of transportation.
Encouraging the production of advanced nuclear reactors, small modular reactors, and components through the invest in Washington act.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions by reducing the carbon intensity of transportation fuel.
Concerning the management of plastic packaging materials.
Eliminating expedited processing of an alternative energy resource facility fueled by solar energy on certain designated lands before the energy facility site evaluation council.
Concerning renewable and nonemitting resources analysis and advisory opinions.
Providing for the recycling of wind turbine blades.
Concerning risk-based water quality standards for on-site nonpotable water systems.
Requesting various entities assist state and local governments in Washington with monitoring and mitigating PFAS contamination of surface water and groundwater.
Concerning a moratorium on facial recognition technology.
Addressing the economic challenges facing Washington citizens from the COVID-19 pandemic through a temporary reduction in compliance and tax burden on electric utilities in order to lower costs and support direct utility assistance to low-income customers.
Affirming the process for disposing of dredged materials for federal navigation channel maintenance and improvement.
Reducing unnecessary paperwork to promote development.
Requiring broadband internet access service providers to provide virtual private network service.
Promoting greater access to the internet by modifying permitting, taxation, and other standards for telecommunications companies and facilities.
Reducing statewide greenhouse gas emissions by achieving greater decarbonization of residential and commercial buildings.
Protecting the privacy and security of COVID-19 health data collected by entities other than public health agencies, health care providers, and health care facilities.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions by reducing the carbon intensity of transportation fuel.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions from fluorinated gases.
Implementing the recommendations of the environmental justice task force.
Concerning the Washington climate commitment act.
Concerning the management of certain materials to support recycling and waste and litter reduction.
Concerning preparedness for a zero emissions transportation future.
Creating and expanding unrestricted authority for public entities to provide telecommunications services to end users.
Affirming the process for disposing of dredged materials for federal navigation channel maintenance and improvement.
Authorizing a public utility district to provide retail telecommunications services in unserved areas under certain conditions.
Establishing a statewide industrial waste coordination program.
Concerning cybersecurity and data sharing in Washington state government.
Extending the business and occupation tax exemption for amounts received as credits against contracts with or funds provided by the Bonneville power administration and used for low-income ratepayer assistance and weatherization.
Enhancing litter control along state highways.
Transforming the regulation of gas and electrical companies toward multiyear rate plans and performance-based rate making.
Creating a hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicle pilot sales and use tax exemption program.
Concerning smoke management civil enforcement.
Prohibiting a utility from being assessed a penalty for not meeting its biennial acquisition target for cost-effective conservation in special circumstances outside the utility's control.
Allowing the use of nonwood renewable fiber in recycled content paper carryout bags.
Delaying certain implementation dates for the photovoltaic module stewardship and takeback program.
Concerning cloud computing solutions.
Encouraging utility mitigation of urban heat island effects.
Changing the expiration date for the sales and use tax exemption of hog fuel to coincide with the 2045 deadline for fossil fuel-free electrical generation in Washington state and to protect jobs with health care and retirement benefits in economically distressed communities.
Concerning minimum recycled content requirements.
Reauthorizing the business and occupation tax deduction for cooperative finance organizations.
Establishing a statewide industrial waste coordination program.
Establishing the Washington blockchain work group.
Encouraging compost procurement and use.
Concerning the photovoltaic module stewardship and takeback program.
Concerning the heating oil insurance program.
Concerning the use of facial recognition services.
Aligning the timing of comprehensive plan updates required by the growth management act with the timing of shoreline master program updates required by the shoreline management act.
Concerning the labeling of disposable wipes products.
Concerning the underground storage tank reinsurance program.
Reducing emissions by making changes to the clean car standards and clean car program.
Reducing pollution from plastic bags by establishing minimum state standards for the use of bags at retail establishments.
Amending state greenhouse gas emission limits for consistency with the most recent assessment of climate change science.
Concerning the reorganization of laws related to environmental health without making any substantive, policy changes.
Concerning commercial property assessed clean energy and resilience.
Eliminating exemptions from restrictions on the use of perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances in firefighting foam.
Concerning the safe and efficient transmission and distribution of natural gas.
Ensuring compliance with the federal clean water act by prohibiting certain discharges into waters of the state.
Concerning antifouling paints on recreational water vessels.
Concerning system reliability under the clean energy transformation act.
Concerning registration and consumer protection obligations of data brokers.
Regulating online services and applications that are directed at minors.
Concerning the regulation of bot communication on public-facing internet web sites.
Concerning privacy assessment surveys of state agencies.
Developing and coordinating a statewide don't drip and drive program.
Reducing the greenhouse gas emissions associated with transportation fuels.
Concerning updating and streamlining energy facility site evaluation council operations.
Concerning offshore oil extraction.
Concerning chemical contaminants in drinking water.
Extending the business and occupation tax exemption for amounts received as credits against contracts with or funds provided by the Bonneville power administration and used for low-income ratepayer assistance and weatherization.
Concerning certain expanded polystyrene products.
Reducing the greenhouse gas emissions associated with transportation fuels.
Concerning updating and streamlining energy facility site evaluation council operations.
Enhancing litter control along state highways.
Implementing a coordinated strategy of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and making needed investments in transportation infrastructure.
Concerning the management and oversight of personal data.
Increasing transparency for renewable energy credit transactions.
Concerning emissions of greenhouse gases.
Allowing for alternative public notice of applications for coverage under the construction stormwater general permit.
Reducing unnecessary paperwork to promote development.
Concerning a federal nuclear waste repository.
Concerning use of industrial waste through industrial symbioses.
Clarifying the valuation and determination of used and useful property for rate making purposes.
Establishing a healthy environment for all by creating a definition of environmental justice, directing agencies to address environmental health disparities, and creating a task force.
Concerning performance-based contracting services by energy service contractors.
Prohibiting single-use plastic straws.
Concerning risk-based water quality standards for on-site nonpotable water systems.
Concerning surcharge for electricity used to charge vehicles.
Concerning electric vehicle readiness.
Increasing housing access and affordability by decreasing construction costs associated with implementing the Washington state energy code for residential buildings.
Establishing a comprehensive, statewide photovoltaic module recovery, reuse, recycling, and end-of-life program.
Concerning minimum recycled content requirements.
Implementing a greenhouse gas emissions cap and trade program.
Concerning enforcement of the policies of the department of ecology.
Examining the costs and benefits of making changes to the Hiram M. Chittenden locks, Skagit river hydroelectric project, and Ravenna creek.
Reducing waste associated with single-use food service products.
Concerning chemicals in drinking water.
Promoting the development of the Washington state bioeconomy.
Eliminating exemptions from restrictions on the use of perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances in firefighting foam.
Eliminating expedited processing of alternative energy resource facilities before the energy facility site evaluation council.
Concerning commercial property assessed clean energy and resilience.
Expanding equitable access to the benefits of renewable energy through community solar projects.
Amending state greenhouse gas emission limits for consistency with the most recent assessment of climate change science.
Expanding affordable, resilient broadband service to enable economic development, public safety, health care, and education in Washington's communities.
Concerning the fair servicing and repair of digital electronic products.
Concerning the electrification of homes and buildings.
Reducing the greenhouse gas emissions associated with transportation fuels.
Creating an exemption from shorelines substantial development permit requirements for single-family residential protective marine bulkheads.
Requiring the department of ecology to develop a waste discharge general permit to reduce pollution resulting from the unauthorized use of public streets by owners or occupants of recreational vehicles or campers.
Ensuring compliance with the federal clean water act by prohibiting certain discharges into waters of the state.
Generating electricity from a facility powered by the combustion of solid waste.
Concerning the use of unmanned aerial systems near certain protected marine species.
Relating to greenhouse gas emissions.
Addressing marine plastic pollution prevention.
Ensuring the long-term economic and environmental sustainability of the state's recycling system within the existing regulatory structure.
Concerning commercial property assessed clean energy and resilience.
Studying the use of solid waste to produce renewable energy.
Concerning the sale and installation of solid fuel burning devices.
Requiring publicly owned wastewater treatment plants that directly discharge to Puget Sound to control pollution from opioids.
Concerning cloud computing solutions.
Promoting small modular reactors in Washington.
Reducing threats to southern resident killer whales by improving the safety of oil transportation.
Directing the department of ecology to adopt a rule governing the evaluation of greenhouse gas emissions under chapter 43.21C RCW.
Ensuring that components of solar energy systems are produced in the United States or according to Washington state environmental standards.
Establishing guidelines for government procurement and use of automated decision systems in order to protect consumers, improve transparency, and create more market predictability.
Concerning the procurement and use of facial recognition technology by government entities in Washington state and privacy rights relating to facial recognition technology.
Concerning sustainable recycling.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions from hydrofluorocarbons.
Protecting consumer data.
Concerning claims about climate change made by electric utilities.
Concerning data sales and governance.
Concerning energy efficiency.
Ensuring compliance with the federal clean water act by prohibiting certain discharges into waters of the state.
Concerning updating and streamlining energy facility site evaluation council operations.
Concerning reviews of voluntary cleanups.
Concerning ticket sales over the internet.
Advancing electric transportation.
Concerning the disclosure of personal wireless service charges or fees.
Concerning community solar gardens.
Concerning public utility districts' contracts for work or materials.
Concerning the right to consume self-generated electricity.
Concerning the tax treatment of renewable natural gas.
Protecting personal information.
Providing access to broadband internet services.
Amending the definition of substantial development to exclude certain dwellings for the elderly and infirm.
Concerning appliance efficiency standards.
Concerning the responsible management of plastic packaging.
Expanding affordable, resilient broadband service to enable economic development, public safety, health care, and education in Washington's communities.
Concerning the volatility of crude oil received in the state by rail.
Reducing threats to southern resident killer whales by improving the safety of oil transportation.
Preventing toxic pollution that affects public health or the environment.
Concerning marketing the degradability of products.
Concerning appliance efficiency standards.
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions from hydrofluorocarbons.
Protecting personal information.
Supporting Washington's clean energy economy and transitioning to a clean, affordable, and reliable energy future.
Enabling electric utilities to prepare for the distributed energy future.
Concerning the tax treatment of renewable natural gas.
Streamlining the permitting process for disposing of dredged materials.
Concerning the disclosure of attributes of electricity products.
Concerning net metering.
Concerning sustainable recycling.
Recognizing the validity of distributed ledger technology.
Concerning the electrification of transportation.
Concerning reviews of voluntary cleanups.
Authorizing the production, distribution, and sale of renewable hydrogen.
Concerning state board of health rules regarding on-site sewage systems.