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Legislators with BillsLegislators(138)
Referred Bills (147)
Keeping our Washington national guard strong act.
Adopting the recommendations of the public records exemptions accountability committee in its 2025 annual report.
Concerning the removal of deceased candidates for nonpartisan office from ballots.
Safeguarding personal information entrusted to agencies that is of no legitimate concern to the public.
Concerning compliance with the Washington voting rights act of 2018.
Creating guidelines for voter suppression and vote dilution claims under the Washington voting rights act.
Designating the twelfth day of December as the day of the 12s.
Concerning public records act exemptions regarding concealed pistol licenses, permits to purchase firearms, and firearms purchases or transfers.
Amending voter registration challenges and managing voter registration lists.
Concerning foreign national participation in Washington state elections.
Concerning statutory establishment of the governor's office of Indian affairs.
Ensuring access to voting services for military, overseas, Native American, and disabled voters.
Concerning protection of the voter registration database.
Concerning the preservation and inspection of state historical records.
Concerning the definition of a "qualifying discharge" for the Washington state veterans' preference program for civil service.
Designating the twelfth day of December as the day of the 12s.
Ensuring access to state benefits and opportunities for veterans, uniformed service members, and military spouses.
Modernizing terminology when referring to individuals who are not citizens or nationals of the United States.
Changing the Washington code of military justice so that it includes certain protections for victims of an offense while serving within the organized militia of Washington.
Concerning language accessible public programs, activities, and services conducted, operated, or administered by state agencies.
Increasing small works roster contract limits.
Amending the state civil service statutes to include Washington technology solutions network and security systems employees.
Modifying shared leave provisions to authorize shared leave for victims of a hate crime and those whose absence is due to immigration enforcement actions against the employee or the employee's relative.
Protecting Washingtonians from invasion of privacy, including the unauthorized disclosure of sex designation information and historic sex designation changes in official government records.
Clarifying the prohibition on voting more than once in an election.
Reestablishing the joint select committee on civic health.
Establishing the Washington division of civil air patrol as part of the Washington military department.
Concerning the veterans affairs advisory committee.
Authorizing the Washington state leadership board to solicit gifts, grants, and endowments from public or private sources.
Concerning the veterans affairs advisory committee.
Reducing barriers to state employment by eliminating postgraduate degree requirements that are unnecessary.
Improving government efficiency related to reports by state agencies.
Improving regulatory efficiency by integrating executive order 25-03, concerning permitting and licensing processes, into chapter 43.42A RCW.
Recognizing Diwali and Bandi Chhor Divas.
Creating the capitol centennial stewardship account and authorizing members of the legislature and statewide elected officials to solicit gifts, grants, and donations to the account.
Concerning individual privacy by Washington technology solutions through an exemption from public inspection and copying.
Celebrating Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Guru Nanak, Guru Gobind Singh, and Vaisakhi.
Removing the requirement that women's commission members be subject to senate confirmation.
Protecting the integrity of the state initiative and referendum process by requiring a demonstration of support before issuance of a ballot measure title and authorizing citizen actions for certain signature gatherer compensation violations.
Concerning the veterans affairs advisory committee.
Adopting national standards for uniformed and overseas civilian voting, including conforming amendments to existing statute.
Designating kimchi day.
Making adjustments to the schedule for reporting campaign finance expenditure activity.
Protecting student and employee information from public disclosure.
Designating the state cactus.
Adopting the evergreen state as the state nickname.
Establishing a state sandstone.
Concerning qualifications of legislators.
Concerning the law enforcement aviation support grant program.
Protecting elected officials from political violence by creating the statewide emergency public official notification system.
Implementing prompt pay recommendations from the capital projects advisory review board.
Concerning public inspection and copying of internal deliberations of the legislature.
Concerning fraud prevention.
Encouraging agency demographic data collection.
Concerning the protection of voluntary supplied personal information of local government employees.
Establishing campaign contribution limits for state employees.
Concerning the display of previous campaign memorabilia within a legislative office.
Addressing regional transit authority accountability.
Concerning collection and publishing of disaggregated data to inform state-funded programs, services, and activities.
Concerning products manufactured in the United States for the purposes of public works projects.
Concerning the design and operation of buildings to protect birds.
Leveraging artificial intelligence to improve Washington's regulatory climate through streamlining language in rules and regulatory guidance documents.
Amending the state Constitution to allow the legislature to determine the duration of regular sessions.
Concerning information access by the state auditor.
Establishing a pilot program to advance funds to nonprofits to support grant performance.
Concerning effective voter notifications and forms.
Strengthening transparency measures to prevent the fraudulent, wasteful, or improper use of state resources.
Concerning participation in the address confidentiality program by administrative law judges and staff employed by the office of administrative hearings.
Designating the state shark.
Protecting elected officials and candidates, executive state officers, election officials, and criminal justice participants against threats and incidents of political violence.
Preserving records and artifacts regarding the historical treatment of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities at Northern state hospital.
Recognizing Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and Hanukkah.
Changing the Washington code of military justice so that it includes certain protections for victims of an offense while serving within the organized militia of Washington.
Providing protections for school districts against burdensome public records requests.
Expanding the public records exemption for personal information of family home child care providers to all licensed or certified child care providers.
Establishing balanced legislative oversight of gubernatorial powers during a declared emergency.
Establishing protections for citizens participating in the initiative and referendum process.
Reducing barriers to state employment by eliminating postgraduate degree requirements that are unnecessary.
Concerning gatherings of a majority of members of a governing body and action taken by a governing body during a state or federally declared emergency in response to a natural disaster.
Creating the state elections confidence using rigorous examination act.
Concerning the law enforcement aviation support grant program.
Concerning the disclosure of critical energy infrastructure information.
Establishing African diaspora heritage week.
Providing hiring preferences for state employment to certain federal employees.
Establishing the own your own art purchase program.
Concerning government services delivery improvement.
Regarding names to be included on the Washington state law enforcement memorial.
Requiring a legislative comparison study.
Exempting email addresses of individuals who subscribe to regular communications and updates from local agencies.
Revised for 1st substitute: Concerning prohibitions on electioneering within buildings containing the division of elections for county auditor offices, including any adjacent county owned and operated parking lots routinely used for parking at the buildings.
Supporting back country search and rescue organizations and volunteers through the creation of the back country search and rescue grant program.
Concerning recommendations of the public records exemptions accountability committee.
Designating the Pacific geoduck as the state clam.
Applying for a convention to propose amendments to the United States Constitution relating to fiscal restraints on the federal government, the power and jurisdiction of the federal government, and limit terms of office for federal officials and for members of congress.
Modifying provisions on joint legislative audit and review committee studies.
Concerning the disclosure of critical energy infrastructure information.
Designating the Pacific razor clam as the state clam.
Concerning the state capitol campus.
Modifying the responsible bidder criteria for public works projects.
Establishing the Washington state commission on boys and men.
Establishing balanced legislative oversight of gubernatorial powers during a declared emergency.
Concerning the purchase of power at state expense for electric vehicle charging stations.
Concerning requirements pertaining to signatures and addresses of ballot measure petitioners and petition signature gatherers.
Shifting general elections for local governments to even-numbered years to increase voter participation.
Restricting the use of health care premiums for political lobbying.
Transferring ownership of the Naselle Youth Camp property to the Chinook Indian Nation.
Concerning nuclear war checks and balances.
Concerning state employee access to peer-reviewed journals.
Revised for 1st substitute: Providing clarity where candidates for the same office have similar names.
Establishing protections for citizens participating in the initiative and referendum process.
Establishing trick-or-treat day.
Concerning voter education during a period in which a jurisdiction is changing the method of selecting candidates.
Concerning the privacy of party selections during presidential primaries.
Calling on Congress to exercise its authority under Article V of the United States Constitution to regulate money spent on elections.
Requiring the secretary of state to print and distribute a voters' pamphlet for the primary in each even-numbered year and for the general election every year.
Eliminating the expiration of the interagency, multijurisdictional system improvement team.
Concerning public inspection and copying of proprietary financial and security information submitted to or obtained by the gambling commission.
Creating a portal to identify opportunities for increased government efficiency.
Implementing year-round Pacific standard time.
Notifying legislators of initiative signature challenges.
Creating an election security camera grant program.
Labeling ballot drop boxes.
Concerning the ethics in public service act.
Revising the period in which the oath of office must be taken for elective offices of counties, cities, towns, and special purpose districts.
Concerning prime contractor bidding submission requirements on public works contracts.
Increasing support and services for veterans.
Concerning election security.
Concerning expansion of voter registration services by government agencies.
Concerning the disclosure of information pertaining to complainants, accusers, and witnesses in an employment investigation.
Increasing the availability of baby diaper changing stations.
Creating the fire service policy board.
Modifying provisions on joint legislative audit and review committee studies.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Authorizing county commissioners to administer oaths of office to state legislators.
Authorizing the women's commission to solicit gifts, grants, and endowments from public or private sources.
Establishing a public records exemption for the proprietary information of public risk pools.
Requiring social equity impact analysis in performance audits and legislative public hearings thereon.
Concerning the public records exemptions accountability committee.
Modifying bonding requirements in the design portion of design-build public works projects.
Concerning the governor's authority to limit outside militia activities within the state.
Concerning public inspection and copying of proprietary financial and security information submitted to or obtained by the gambling commission.
Concerning exemption of certain personnel of the department of social and health services from civil service.
Rescinding prior applications for a constitutional convention to propose amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
Modifying the responsible bidder criteria for public works projects.
Eliminating the expiration of the interagency, multijurisdictional system improvement team.
Establishing the state marine forest.
Concerning state employee access to peer-reviewed journals.
Revised for 1st Substitute: Celebrating Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha.