Action Alerts

Click on the links below to learn more about bills currently being reviewed in the state legislature. You can “take action” on these most pressing bills by following the links below. Please sign in as individuals and not as representing the League of Women Voters. Thank you for taking action!

Priority Actions

 

Recognize Election Day as a Holiday

This bill, HB 1116, Recognizing Election Day as a Holiday and Promoting Civic Education, makes the first Tuesday after the first Monday of November (Election Day) a “recognized legislative holiday” and directs the WA Secretary of State to create materials that can be used by state and local governmental entities, schools, etc. to offer educational programming on democracy and voting. Empowering voters and civic education are key missions of the League. This bill passed out of the House State Gov’t & Tribal Relations unanimously on Jan. 17. A public hearing is scheduled for 4 pm on January 27 before the House Appropriations Committee.

⚠️ Sign in PRO on HB 1116 HERE by 3:00 pm on Monday, January 27.

 

Support Local News

This bill, SB 5400, Supporting Local News Journalism, would establish a Journalism Corps Program to create grants that would support the employment of news journalists to cover civic affairs in underserved communities. It would go a long way in easing the crisis that has reduced and, in many cases, eliminated local news coverage for millions of Washingtonians. It would establish the Washington Local News Journalism Corps Program in the Department of Commerce to distribute grants to support the employment of journalists to cover civic affairs in underserved communities.

Funding would come from an existing workforce education investment surcharge imposed on select advanced computing businesses, namely Big Tech. The bill calls for $20 million of the funds deposited in the Workforce Education Investment Account to be used to support the Journalism Corps Program each fiscal year.

Care would be taken to ensure grants would go to news organizations, including print and online newspapers, radio and television, that meet specific criteria. Those standards include regularly updated coverage of local civic affairs, systems for verifying facts and correcting and reporting errors, and the employment of professional staff.

LWVWA supports this bill because it recognizes that an informed electorate is engaged and enables our democracy to work. The bill is being heard in the Senate Labor & Commerce Committee on Tuesday, January 28 at 10:30 am.

⚠️ Sign in PRO on SB 5400 HERE by 9:30 am on Tuesday, January 28. 

 

Improving Waste Management Outcomes
The legislature has already established goals and enacted significant policies to achieve reduction in food waste and organics management. More work remains to be done in the
organic materials management area. This bill, HB 1497, Compost, Organics Management (Improving Outcomes Associated with Waste Material Management Systems), takes additional steps forward on the path toward more environmentally and economically sustainable practices.

The bill calls for development of education and outreach programs; development and administration of grant programs to support the implementation of requirements of this act; standardization of collection containers, providing single-family and multi-family organics programs as well as business organics management; establishing a sustainable farm funding program; and creating a farm-to-school food procurement program as well as management of food waste from schools.

The bill is being heard in the House Environment and Energy Committee, on Tuesday, January 28 at 4 pm

⚠️ Sign in PRO on HB 1497 HERE by 3:00 pm on Tuesday, January 28.

 

Improve Educational Opportunities for People Who Are Incarcerated

Education in prison is a key component to successful reentry into society. Current educational opportunities are not adequate—space is limited, and the classes being offered do not always meet the needs of people who are incarcerated. HB 1166, the Providing Effective Education for Reentry Success (PEERS) Act addresses these concerns by authorizing pilot programs in adult and youth facilities to allow people to (1) purchase laptops to access online educational content and (2) access federal funding for correspondence courses. These steps will increase access to educational opportunities and improve the ability of incarcerated people to successfully enter the modern workforce upon release. A public hearing is scheduled for 1:30 pm on Wednesday, January 29.

⚠️ Sign in PRO on HB 1166 HERE by 12:30 pm on Wednesday, January 29.

 

Concerning Universal Health Care

This Memorial, SJM 8004, Memorial to the US Congress and President Concerning Universal Health Care, describes a national universal health care program as the most efficient and cost-effective means of providing access to health care for everyone and how it could eliminate the economic, physical and mental health pain and suffering so many Americans are experiencing due to lack of timely access to health care and/or debt incurred. It calls for authority for the State of Washington, in the absence of a federal program, to create its own universal health care program.

This bill will be heard in the Senate Health & long-Term Care Committee at 8:00 am on Thursday, January 30. 

⚠️ Sign in PRO on SJM 8004 HERE by 7:00 am on Thursday, January 30.

See All Action Alerts
 

 This Week in the Legislature

This is the third week of the 2025 legislative session. Committees are well underway with public hearings, executive sessions to move bills out of policy committees and submittals to the Rules Committee for scheduling floor action on the ones that have passed through the committees.

Behind the scenes, policy bills are being evaluated for budget impacts, given the anticipated budget deficit if the expenditure budget is not reduced or new revenue is not passed. We understand that intense work is going on at the legislature to analyze Gov. Inslee’s and Ferguson’s budget proposals and the choices that the legislature must make to adopt a balanced budget.

The first cut-off for bills to emerge from their respective policy committees is February 21. While that is a month away, hundreds of new bills have been filed and many will need to be processed with public hearings and executive sessions in that period of time. Any policy bill that has not been passed out of the policy committee in the house of origin by February 21 is effectively “dead” for 2025, though it could be revived in the 2026 second half of the biennium.

The LWVWA Lobby Team will continue to follow bills that we support based on our adopted positions and oppose on the same basis and to ask readers to support our efforts by signing in PRO or CON as requested. 

 

 The 2025 Legislative Issues

LWVWA Legislative Issues From the 2025 Washington State Legislative Session

Click on an issue overview to learn more about the bills the League is following and "This Week's Updates" to read the issue chair's report on this past week. When a "⚠️" appears next to an overview, it indicates there are actions to take for this week. Click on the "⚠️" to be taken to the actions for that issue.

*Please note that additional issues will be available in next week's issue.

 

Democracy

Civics Education | Issue overview | Weekly Update ⚠️
Elections | Issue overview | Weekly Update ⚠️
Local News and Democracy | Issue overview |Weekly Update ⚠️

Redistricting | Issue overview

 

Environment

Climate Crisis and Energy | Issue overview |Weekly Update⚠️

Forests| Issue overview |Weekly Update

Waste Diversion | Issue overview |Weekly Update⚠️

 

Social and Economic Policy

Behavioral Health | Issue overview |Weekly Update ⚠️

Health Care | Issue overview | Weekly Update ⚠️

Affordable Housing and Homelessness | Issue overview | Weekly Update⚠️

K-12 Education | Issue overview | Weekly Update

Early Care and Education | Issue overview |Weekly Update ⚠️

Children's Issues | Issue overview |Weekly Update⚠️

Criminal Justice | Issue overview |Weekly Update ⚠️

Revenue | Issue overview | Weekly Update

 
Support Our Advocacy Work

League of Women Voters of Washington
1511 3rd Avenue, Suite 801, Seattle, WA 98101
206-622-8961 | 1-800-419-2596 | www.lwvwa.org

The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan political organization that encourages informed and active participation in government, works to increase understanding of major public policy issues, and influences public policy through education and advocacy.

 

The League of Women Voters of Washington
1511 Third Ave, Suite 900
Seattle, WA 98101
United States

If you believe you received this message in error or wish to no longer receive email from us, please (Unsubscribing is not supported in previews).  If you would like to update your contact information and subscription preferences, please click here.