SENATE BILL REPORT
ESSB 6580
This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in
their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a
statement of legislative intent.
As Amended by House, March 6, 2008
Title: An act relating to mitigating the impacts of climate change through the growth management act.
Brief Description: Addressing the impacts of climate change through the growth management act.
Sponsors: Senate Committee on Government Operations & Elections (originally sponsored by Senators Marr, Weinstein, Pridemore, Kauffman, Keiser, McAuliffe, Hobbs, Regala, Kline, Kohl-Welles, Fairley, Oemig, Rockefeller, Prentice and McDermott).
Brief History:
Committee Activity: Government Operations & Elections: 1/22/08, 2/05/08 [DPS-WM, w/oRec].
Ways & Means: 2/11/08, 2/12/08 [DPS(GO), DNP, w/oRec].
Passed Senate: 2/19/08, 31-18.
SENATE COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS & ELECTIONS
Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 6580 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass and be referred to Committee on Ways & Means.Signed by Senators Fairley, Chair; Oemig, Vice Chair; Kline, McDermott and Pridemore.
Minority Report: That it be referred without recommendation.Signed by Senator Roach, Ranking Minority Member.
Staff: Khalia Gibson (786-7460)
SENATE COMMITTEE ON WAYS & MEANS
Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 6580 as recommended by Committee on Government Operations & Elections be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass.Signed by Senators Prentice, Chair; Fraser, Vice Chair, Capital Budget Chair; Pridemore, Vice Chair, Operating Budget; Hobbs, Keiser, Kohl-Welles, Oemig, Rasmussen, Regala, Rockefeller and Tom.
Minority Report: Do not pass.Signed by Senators Zarelli, Ranking Minority Member; Carrell, Honeyford, Parlette, Roach and Schoesler.
Minority Report: That it be referred without recommendation.Signed by Senator Brandland.
Staff: Richard Ramsey (786-7412)
Background: The Growth Management Act (GMA) includes 13 goals to guide the development
and adoption of comprehensive plans and development of regulations for jurisdictions planning
under the GMA.
Jurisdictions planning under the GMA must adopt internally consistent comprehensive land use
plans, which are generalized, coordinated land use policy statements of the governing body.
Comprehensive plans must satisfy requirements for specified elements, each of which is a subset
of a comprehensive plan.
There are currently eight elements to be addressed in comprehensive plans: a land use element;
a housing element; a capital facilities plan element; a utilities element; a rural element; a
transportation element; and a park and recreation element.
Any new or amended elements are to be adopted concurrent with the scheduled update for the
planning jurisdiction. Funds sufficient to cover applicable local government costs must be
appropriated and distributed by the state to local governments when new or amended elements
are required.
Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill: The Department of Community, Trade and Economic
Development (CTED) must: (1) develop and provide counties and cities with a range of advisory
climate change response methodologies, a computer modeling program, and estimates of
greenhouse gas emissions reductions which must reflect regional and local variations of the
county or city by December 1, 2009; (2) work with the DOT to reduce vehicle miles traveled; (3)
administer a local government global warming mitigation and adaptation program, which must
conclude by June 30, 2010. Counties and cities are selected for the program through a
competitive process; (4) provide grants and technical assistance to aid the selected counties and
cities in their efforts to anticipate, mitigate, and adapt to global warming and its associated
problems; (5) prepare a report of program findings and recommendations to the Governor and
Legislature by January 1, 2011; and (6) prepare an additional report including descriptions of
actions that counties and cities are taking to address climate change, among other items, by
December 1, 2008. An advisory policy committee must prepare the report.
A Growth Management Hearings Board is not authorized to hear petitions alleging non-compliance with this act. Emergency, and null and void clauses are added.
Specifies that CTED, in administering the local government global warming mitigation and
adaption program, must select six or fewer cities, rather than six cities, for the program. Deletes
a provision specifying that recommendations in a climate change report produced by CTED must
be approved by a majority of an advisory policy committee established in the underlying
amendment. Inserts a provision specifying that recommendations in the report must be approved
by a majority of the voting members of an advisory policy committee.
Specifies that a report produced by CTED for the local government global warming mitigation
and adaptation program must consider the positive and negative impacts to affordable housing,
employment, transportation costs, and economic development that result from addressing the
impacts of climate change at the local level. Directs CTED to, when developing a climate change
report, consider positive and negative impacts to affordable housing, employment, transportation
costs, and economic development that result from addressing the impacts of climate change at the
local level. Requires city and county members serving on the climate change advisory policy
committee to be elected officials. Adds a member representing an association of commercial
forestry interests to the list of nonvoting ex officio members serving on the climate change
advisory policy committee.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available on SHB 2797 – House Companion Bill.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Staff Summary of Public Testimony on Original Bill (Government Operations & Elections):
PRO: Local solutions to global warming will provide local governments with the tools and
support to fulfill our pledge to reduce global warming pollution through responsible growth
management. We need to move forward together on a problem that affects us all. Adding climate
change elements to the goals and comprehensive plan elements under the GMA is the best way
to address climate change solutions. The GMA is a planning tool, and it is important to address
how greenhouse gasses will affect the community. Failure to include a climate change element
in the GMA would require the implementation of a new GMA-like system. Climate change is
one of four community priorities, so there is no time to waste. Climate change is a local, state,
and personal issue. The main contributing factor to global warming and greenhouse gas
emissions is transportation and it needs to be addressed immediately. Cleaning up cars and the
fuel supply must also be a part of this solution. Global warming solutions will also provide some
solutions to the fossil fuel dependency problem. Over 700 cities have taken on similar goals
regarding climate control, 29 of those cities are in Washington state. Many counties and cities
wish to minimize their communities' greenhouse gas emissions, but lack the required expertise.
Large cities have the resources to implement computer monitoring programs, but smaller cities
need CTED to assist in the implementation of the computer models. These models would give
local governments some tools that may allow those jurisdictions to move forward.
CON: This bill wrongly assumes climate change is human caused and human influenced while
there is no scientific conclusion to support this theory. By looking at the history of other areas
such as Portland, one can see that legislation such as this does not work. Studies show that only
7 to 9 percent of people want to live closer to the city and public transportation. This bill adds
more costs to the already existing housing market problem by limiting the ability to increase
urban growth areas and requiring builders and developers to take emission mitigation measures.
Studies show that land use regulations add approximately $133,000 to the price of homes in the
Seattle area, and other significant costs throughout Washington State. The GMA is not the right
place for climate change proposals because it is already ripe with litigation. There would be
numerous appeals to Growth Management Hearings Boards (GMHB), and it would open the
flood gates to more litigation. The current GMA goals are sufficient, and the focus needs to be
on making sure that the existing goals are adequately accomplished before adding more. Adding
another goal would add more litigation issues to the best available science standard as well. The
bill does not indicate how to measure success or the standards used by GMHBs and courts. There
is no indication of the cost to local governments and communities to implement the climate
elements. As an alternative, a performance audit can be done on the GMA as a whole and
determine the issues from there. The business community is opposed to the bill, but not opposed
to implementing local solutions to global warming. There needs to be a collaborative process
where everyone is working on an approach to global warming together. The most effective way
to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions is through carbon sequestration.
OTHER: There needs to be input from numerous cities before implementing this bill. The cities
have already laid out their concerns in discussions with proponents, and everyone is working on
significantly narrowing the scope of the bill. There will be GMA work groups during the interim
to address these issues. It is important for the cities to determine the source of funding for this
legislation. We cannot look at this issue through urban colored glasses, it is important to first
pilot some projects to see how other cities and counties look at climate change. The counties are
committed to climate change, but also want to ensure that the plan is well thought out before it
is implemented. This may not be the time to put a climate element in the GMA. We need to
work on the elements that are already required and how land use connects to climate change.
Persons Testifying (Government Operations & Elections): PRO: Cliff Traisman, Washington
Environmental Counsel; K.C. Golden, Climate Solutions; Kevin Raymond, Earth Ministry/Pacific
Forest Trust; Mike Shaw, American Planning Association; Rhenda Strub, City of Olympia; April
Putney, Futurewise; Bill LaBorde, Environment Washington; Joseph Tovar, American Planning
Association; Bill Baarsma, Mayor of Tacoma.
CON: Wesley L. McCart, Stevens County Farm Bureau; Andrew Cook, Building Industry
Association of Washington; Chris McCabe, Association of Washington Businesses; Dan Wood,
Farm Bureau; Van Collins, Associated General Contractors.
OTHER: Dave Williams, Association of Washington Cities; Eric Johnson, Washington State
Association of Counties; Bill Clarke, Washington Realtors.
Staff Summary of Public Testimony on Substitute Bill (Ways & Means): PRO: This bill is
still a work in progress. We're working to refine and address concerns. Nearly 50 percent of the
greenhouse gas emissions are attributable to transportation. How we reduce the demand for
driving single occupancy vehicles is a land use decision. Ecology may be a better place than
CTED for tracking greenhouse gas emissions. The objective is to have local government make
decisions under a broad goal, rather than have a state mandate.
CON: Through the Governor's executive order and implementing legislation, Washington has
taken the lead among others in addressing climate change. The state has done a lot; we're
concerned we may go too far, too fast. By adding another goal to the GMA, further challenges
local government already struggling to meet the existing goals. Doing so will also increase the
number of appeals to the growth management hearings boards and increase litigation. We're also
concerned that we'll competitively disadvantage Washington businesses and citizens with respect
to other states. The tracking of greenhouse gas emissions by CTED may complicate that which
Ecology is doing already.
OTHER: Every seven years comprehensive plans are subject to review. The next review is in
2011; however, local governments will begin their reviews in 2009. Adding a climate change
goal will complicate and confuse those reviews. Whether a new goal is added now or not, local
governments need the pilot program, models, and inventory/tracking support now. If there is a
goal, it will be subject to challenges under SEPA.
Persons Testifying (Ways & Means): PRO: Cliff Traisman, Washington Conservation Voters
& Washington Environmental Council.
CON: Andrew Cook, Building Industry Association of Washington; Chris McCabe, Association
of Washington Business.
OTHER: Dave Williams, Association of Washington Cities.