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Hot List, Week of February 1, 2010

Week of February 1, 2010:

 

 

WORKING FOR CLEAN WATER: PLEASE CO-SPONSOR

Later in the week a bill will be dropped that creates jobs, rebuilds local economies, and cleans up
polluted waterways like Puget Sound and the Spokane River. By increasing the existing tax on
Hazardous Substances (levied on petroleum and other toxic chemicals), the state can raise $450 million
per biennium to fund job-creating clean water projects in every district and temporarily provide much
needed dollars for the General Fund. The bill is prime-sponsored by Rep. Ormsby and supported by
environmentalists, labor, local governments, and the Rebuilding our Economic Future Coalition.
PLEASE CO-SPONSOR THIS ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNITY PRIORITY BILL!

 

SENATE COMMITTEE ACTION

 

SB 5543: Establishing the product stewardship recycling act for mercury-containing lights.

Environment, Water & Energy: Public Hearing

 

POSITION: SUPPORT PSSB 5543

 

  • Creates a producer-provided recycling program for CFLs and other mercury-containing lights from residents who currently have limited or no recycling options across the state. The program will protect people and the environment from mercury release while also bolstering consumer confidence in using energy-efficient lights that reduce greenhouse gases.
  • Budget-neutral to the State. A fee paid by producers of mercury-containing lights recovers agency oversight costs.

 

SB 6301: Concerning the designation of urban growth areas outside the hundred year floodplain by counties.

Government Operations & Elections: Public Hearing & Possible Executive Session POSITION: OPPOSE

 

  • Currently counties are not allowed to extend urban areas into floodplains when they have other alternatives to focus future growth. This is important because just in the past two years, flooding has caused over $1 billion dollars damage to the state, not to mention threatening lives and property and damaging the environment.
  • This bill allows counties to ignore the cost-saving and damage-avoiding law directing future growth into floodplains. Further, it allows urban growth to leapfrog over undeveloped land in a manner that will encourage sprawl and harm water quality.

 

SB 6343: Establishing the Washington food policy council.

Agriculture and Rural Economic Development: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT

  • A State Food Policy Council would bring together a broad group of stakeholders and agencies to better coordinate with the goal of increasing the production, sales, and consumption of Washington-grown foods, and to promote programs that bring healthy Washington grown foods to low income people.

 

SB 6366: Concerning permits for certain major transportation corridor projects.

Transportation: Possible Executive Session
POSITION: OPPOSE

 

  • Will gut the local and environmental permitting processes for all state highway projects over one billion dollars.
  • Directs all permit appeals directly to the Superior Court, robbing local jurisdictions of environmental, shoreline, and community protections.

 

SB 6422: Regarding environmental and land use hearings boards and making more uniform the timelines for filing appeals with those boards.

Government Operations & Elections: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT PSSB 6422

  • This legislation seeks to streamline the process and timelines for environmental and land use appeals. It is part of the Governor's package to improve the efficiencies of the natural resource agencies.
  • The proposed substitute ensures that the streamlining efforts also maintain existing levels of public participation and community protections. The filing deadlines for appeals that will go to the land use board will stay at 60 days; all other environmental appeals are given 30 day filing deadlines.

 

SB 6489: Adding products to the energy efficiency code.

Environment, Water and Energy: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT

  • This bill adopts efficiency standards for televisions.
  • In 2020, these efficiency standards will save Washington energy consumers about $24.8 million per year. Energy savings will be an estimated 45 annual average megawatts – equal to the average output of about 60 wind turbines.

 

SB 6611: Extending the deadlines for the review and evaluation of comprehensive land use plan and development regulations for three years.

Government Operations & Elections: Public Hearing & Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT IF AMENDED

  • SB 6611 delays the next time local governments update their land use plans for three years. These updates are where cities and counties comprehensively review and revise their 20-year growth plans to reflect future land capacity & demand, population projection, and infrastructure funding.
  • The amendment protects commercially significant farm and forest land from being converted to other uses during this 3 year delay. Paving over resource land is difficult if not impossible to undo; local governments should protect these non-urban lands from conversion until they are able to comprehensively review their land use plans.

 

SB 6656: Energy efficiency financing- Authorizing a local financing tool to fund energy efficiency upgrades and removing financial barriers to implementing conservation programs.

Environment, Water and Energy: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT

  • This bill unlocks the full job-creating potential of making our homes and businesses more energy efficient by allowing municipalities to set up revolving loan programs that over come the biggest barrier to money-saving conservation projects in Washington- the lack of up-front financing. Conservation loans are paid back with energy savings through utility or property tax bills.
  • The bill also allows utilities to recover investments made to make our homes and businesses more energy efficient.

 

SB 6763: Restricting the sales and use tax exemptions for machinery and equipment used in the generation of renewable local electric utilities or persons contracting with local electric utilities.

Ways and Means: Public hearing

POSITION: OPPOSE

  • Last year, the Senate and Governor Gregoire resoundingly approved a two-year extension of the green sales tax exemption at full value, followed by two more years at a 75 percent exemption rate. The sales tax exemption meant the difference for ensuring economically viable renewable energy investments in Washington – those investments would have gone elsewhere if the sales tax exemption had not been extended for two-four years.
  • Changing the green energy benefits now is poor policy and sends a bad signal to renewable energy companies about doing business in Washington.

 

Hot List for the STATE HOUSE:

 

WORKING FOR CLEAN WATER: PLEASE CO-SPONSOR

Later in the week a bill will be dropped that creates jobs, rebuilds local economies, and cleans up
polluted waterways like Puget Sound and the Spokane River. By increasing the existing tax on
Hazardous Substances (levied on petroleum and other toxic chemicals), the state can raise $450 million
per biennium to fund job-creating clean water projects in every district and temporarily provide much
needed dollars for the General Fund. The bill is prime-sponsored by Rep. Ormsby and supported by
environmentalists, labor, local governments, and the Rebuilding our Economic Future Coalition.
PLEASE CO-SPONSOR THIS ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNITY PRIORITY BILL!


POSSIBLE HOUSE FLOOR ACTION

 

2SHB 1165: Providing safe collection and disposal of unwanted drugs from residential sources.

POSITION: SUPPORT
  • Drug producers will provide and pay for program to collect unneeded medicines including controlled substances such as narcotics. Producers can provide needed financial and logistical support to law enforcement, who can legally collect and dispose of controlled substances.
  • Important public safety measure supported by WACOPS and many other organizations. The collected medicines will not cause accidental poisonings, be used illicitly by a teenager, or contaminate our water.

 

HOUSE COMMITTEE ACTION


HB 2597: Eliminating the HPA Permit Program

Agriculture and Natural Resources: Public hearing

POSITION: OPPOSE

  • This bill would eliminate the entire HPA permit program at the Department of Fish and Wildlife. These permits are the only permits specifically designed to protect critical fish habitat from various types of development.

 

HB 2744: Protecting lake water quality by reducing phosphorus from lawn fertilizers.

Agriculture and Natural Resources: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT

  • Phosphorous from residential lawn fertilizers is a major water quality problem that, if not limited, will require local governments to spend millions on wastewater treatment plant upgrades.
  • Broadly supported by local governments, business and environmentalists, this bill will prevent pollution by limiting phosphorous in lawn fertilizers.

 

HB 2853: Authorizing a local financing tool to fund energy efficiency upgrades and removing financial barriers to implementing conservation programs.

Technology, Energy & Communications: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT

  • This bill unlocks the full job-creating potential of making our homes and businesses more energy efficient by allowing municipalities to set up revolving loan programs that overcome the biggest barrier to money-saving conservation projects in Washington- the lack of up-front financing. Conservation loans are paid back with energy savings through utility or property tax bills.
  • The bill also allows utilities to recover investments made to make our homes and businesses more energy efficient.

 

HB 2855: Providing financing options for the operations and capital needs of transit agencies.

Transportation: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT

  • Large and small transit agencies across the state are facing drastic budget shortfalls due to their dependence on sales taxes. If new, sustainable revenue is not identified in the next two years, agencies serving Anacortes, Walla Walla and everywhere between will be forced to make drastic cuts to their service, cuts that will hinder our region’s economic recovery, clog our roads, prevent us from reducing greenhouse gas emissions and leave transit riders abandoned on the side of the road.
  • This legislation provides a temporary tool that can help address transit agencies' revenue shortfalls during this economic crisis and directs the Joint Transportation Committee to create a statewide plan that will guide future investments in public transportation.

 

HB 2914: Reducing the release of mercury into the environment.

Environmental Health: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT PSHB 2914

  • Creates a producer-provided recycling program for CFLs and other mercury-containing lights from residents who currently have limited or no recycling options across the state. The program will protect people and the environment from mercury release while also bolstering consumer confidence in using energy-efficient lights that reduce greenhouse gases.
  • Budget-neutral to the State. A fee paid by producers of mercury-containing lights recovers agency oversight costs.

 

HB 2935: Regarding environmental and land use hearings boards and making more uniform the timelines for filing appeals with those boards.

General Government Appropriations: Possible Executive Session

POSITION: SUPPORT PSHB 2935

  • This legislation seeks to streamline the process and timelines for environmental and land use appeals. It is part of the Governor's package to improve the efficiencies of the natural resource agencies.
  • The proposed substitute ensures that the streamlining efforts also maintain existing levels of public participation and environmental protections. The filing deadlines for appeals that will go to the land use board will stay at 60 days; all other environmental appeals are given 30 day filing deadlines.

 

HB 2974: Reducing Ability of DFW to Enforce HPA Permits.

Agriculture and Natural Resources: Public hearing

POSITION: OPPOSE

  • This bill would virtually eliminate the ability of the Department of Fish and Wildlife to enforce HPA fish habitat permits.

 

HB 2992: Extending the deadlines for the review and evaluation of comprehensive land use plan and development regulations for three years.

Local Government & Housing: Public hearing & Possible Executive Session
POSITION: SUPPORT IF AMENDED

  • HB 2992 delays the next time local governments update their land use plans for three years. These updates are where cities and counties comprehensively review and revise their 20-year growth plans to reflect future land capacity & demand, population projection, and infrastructure funding.
  • The amendment protects commercially significant farm and forest land from being converted to other uses during this 3 year delay. Paving over resource land is difficult if not impossible to undo; local governments should protect these non-urban lands from conversion until they are able to comprehensively review their land use plans.

 

HB 3018: Limiting the use of copper and other substances in vehicle brake pads.

Environmental Health: Public hearing
POSITION: SUPPORT

  • This bill calls for the phasing out of copper brake-pads. Copper from brake-pads is a major pollutant in stormwater runoff which is extremely toxic for salmon and other aquatic life.

 

 

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