day : 23/01/2026 9 results

Here’s what your state legislators are proposing so far this session

By Macey Wurm
Reporting for West Seattle Blog

As the second week of Washington State’s 2026 legislative session concludes, here’s a quick look at bills that West Seattle’s three 34th District legislators – State Senator Emily Alvarado, State House Rep. Joe Fitzgibbon, State House Rep. Brianna Thomas – are sponsoring so far, with all bill numbers linking to the page where you can get full details:

CHILD CARE

SB 5500 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill would assert that the child care subsidy base rate must achieve the 85th percentile of market at a minimum, and that this must be based on the most recent market rate survey. It also alters how the cost of quality child care rate model is used by the Department of Children, Youth, and Families (DCYF) to recommend base rates. Lastly, it requires DCYF to recommend rate enhancements to support infants, nonstandard hours, and special needs rates every three years.

SB 5911 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill instills that as of January 1, 2027, DCYF may not apply any funds paid to, or on behalf of someone receiving Extended Foster Care (EFC) services as a reimbursement. It would also make DCYF responsible for analyzing whether someone receiving EFC services is eligible for additional government benefits.

ENVIRONMENT

HB 1814 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill provides an exemption from the State Environmental Policy Act for trails and paths that have a surface area of 10 acres or less, or that are on a railroad designated for trail use under federal law, specifically in a city with a population of 500,000 or more. It also requires that applicants wanting an exemption must request consultation with any federally established tribe that may be affected.

HB 2215 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill creates an obligation for compliance with the Climate Commitment Act (CCA) for fuel suppliers in a combined fuel amount exceeding 500 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. Compliance is also required for purchasers from a business not registered under the Climate Commitment Act.

HB 2251 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill repeals three of the Climate Commitment Act funding accounts and replaces them with The Climate Commitment Act Operating Account and the Climate Commitment Act Capital Account. It also makes modifications to CCA spending goals and reporting.

HB 2367 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill specifies that emissions from before Jan. 1 2026 from a coal fired electric generation facility in operation on or before Jul. 22, 2011 are exempt from the Cap-and-Invest Program [CQ] It also removes state limitations from imposing greenhouse gas emissions requirements on a coal facility that is inconsistent with the greenhouse gas Emissions Performance Standard.

HB 2581 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill provides additional investment options for electric utilities under the 20 percent alternative compliance segment of the greenhouse-neutral gas standard under the Clean Energy Transformation Act. These investment areas include transmission capacity constraints, distributed energy resources, and electric vehicles for low-income populations.

GOVERNMENT

HB 2123 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill effectively gets rid of state prohibition on contributions and funds given by foreign nationals toward Washington State elections. Additionally, it repeals certification requirements against foreign national involvement in expenditures.

HJR 4209 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
This House Joint Resolution proposes an amendment to the Washington State constitution that allows the legislature to amend Washington’s congressional districts before the next decennial census through a majority vote, if another state redistricts outside a court order and before the next census. [CQ]

HJR 4210 – Rep. Thomas
This House Joint Resolution would allow the Legislature to determine the length of regular sessions by amending the Washington State Constitution.

HEALTH

HB 2182 – Rep. Thomas
The bill removes requirements for the Washington State Department of Corrections to sell abortion medication and allows the department to obtain payment for distributed medication. It also includes misoprostol under the definition of “abortion medications.”

HB 1090 – Sen. Alvarado, Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill requires that health plans provide a reimbursement of a 12-month supply of contraceptives, unless a smaller supply is requested. The supply applies to refills, not the original prescription.

SB 5993 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill prohibits interest charges or collecting owed interest on new or outstanding medical debt. It also outlines that a judgement that includes medical debt may only be enforced six years after its date of entry, and that afterward the judgement is unenforceable.

SB 6173 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill creates an Apple Health Employer Assessment. The assessment would be imposed on employers with employees enrolled in Medicaid. The amount owed would be calculated annually by the Department of Social and Health Services and collected quarterly. The assessments would go toward the State Health Care Affordability account and be used in health-care programs for low-income individuals. [CQ]

HOUSING

SB 5496 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill prohibits a business or investment entity that has an interest in more than 25 single-family residences from obtaining interest in another, unless the entity is a nonprofit, making modifications to the new interest to comply with building codes, purchasing to increase the number of residential units on the property, constructing property, or purchasing through foreclosure. It also creates a civil penalty under the Consumer Protection Act.

SB 5647– Sen. Alvarado
The bill expands the Real Estate Excise Tax (REET) exemption for self-help housing. It would include all ownership housing provided by an affordable homeownership facilitator.

SB 6026 – Sen. Alvarado (requested by Gov. Ferguson)
The bill proposes that a city or county with a population of 30,000 or more that plans under the Growth Management Act may not exclude residential uses in areas previously zoned for mixed-use or commercial development. Additionally, that the city or county may not require that mixed use or ground floor commercial is a condition of development. [CQ]

SB 6027 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill proposes that a minimum of 60 percent of Local Sales and Use Tax for Housing and Related Services be used for constructing or acquiring affordable housing, for behavioral health facilities, and for operational costs.

SB 6028 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill develops a revolving loan fund created by the Department of Commerce to give loans to organizations for mixed-income affordable housing development, a portion of which would be permanently affordable for low-income households.

SB 6069 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill aims to encourage permanent supportive housing, transitional housing, indoor emergency housing, and indoor emergency shelters through allowing this housing in any zones within an urban growth area that are not zoned for industrial use.

LABOR

HB 2303 – Rep. Thomas
The bill prohibits employers from microchipping employees.

HB 2355 – Rep.Thomas
The bill creates labor protections for domestic workers by clearly defining the term. It includes a requirement for hirees to pay at least minimum wage and provide overtime compensation.

SB 6067 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill modifies workers’ compensation, specifically concerning benefits for permanent total disability. Workers would get monthly payments that include one-hundred percent of the employer’s health-care benefits, unless the employer continues current payment as well as a percentage of their wage. The percentage varies depending on workers’ marital status and number of children.

SB 6068 – Sen. Alvarado
The bill would allow workers employed by subcontractors to seek payment for unpaid wages as well as benefits from contractors. It also addresses misclassification of employees and combats the underground construction economy.

TRANSPORTATION

HB 2517 – Rep. Fitzgibbon
The bill allows regional transit authorities (such as Sound Transit) to apply for permits before acquiring property or receiving notice of a land use decision.

HB 2495 – Rep. Thomas
The bill enables certain cities with populations over 700,000 to remove vehicles that interfere with streetcar operations or are a public safety risk. It asserts that the impoundment would be directed by an “authorized city representative.”

WHAT TO KNOW, AND HOW TO LET LEGISLATORS KNOW WHAT YOU THINK

2026 is the second year of the legislative biennium. This year is a short session, with an expected end date of March 12, 2026. Additional information and updates about the Washington State Legislature and West Seattle’s legislators can be found at leg.wa.gov. Public feedback may also be submitted on any particular bill using this link: leg.wa.gov/bills-meetings-and-session/bills/how-to-comment-on-a-bill. We’ll follow up later in the session to see how local legislators’ proposals are progressing.

WEEKEND PREVIEW: ‘We’re Still Standing’ march and rally in West Seattle on Saturday

(WSB photo, November demonstration in The Triangle)

The Seattle Handmaids are expected to be among the participants in West Seattle Indivisible‘s march and rally tomorrow, with the theme “We’re Still Standing,” a reference to the year that has passed since the administration change. They’re gathering at Hiawatha Playfield (2700 California SW) at 12:30 pm and will have a few speeches before marching southbound to The Junction starting around 1 pm, ending at Junction Plaza Park (42nd SW and SW Alaska). WSI – organizing the rally/march along with Evergreen Resistance and 50501 – explains it as: “Against a backdrop of uncertainty and concern for our democracy, participants will assemble not just to protest, but to celebrate resilience.”

SEEN FROM WEST SEATTLE: Seahawks spirit on the skyline

6:34 PM: Thanks to Jerry Simmons for the photo of Seahawks spirit across the bay. It’s all in advance of Sunday’s NFC championship game, Seahawks vs. L.A. Rams, 3:30 pm kickoff, with a Super Bowl trip up for grabs. Reminder, the West Seattle Water Taxi has added postgame runs, as mentioned in our morning traffic/weather tracker. And for the ticketless West Seattle fans, any venues planning viewing parties are welcome to email us – westseattleblog@gmail.com – so we can add to our Event Calendar.

10:08 PM: More photos, sent by Brittney – above, a wider view of the skyline; below, the building’s property-management crew who she says did the work (with one member who had to be added to the pic because she left before the group shot):

READER REPORT: Prowler/trespasser in Seaview

Last night we published a reader report about an intruder just southwest of The Junction. Today, we have word of an entire neighborhood in nearby Seavuew reporting sightings of an intruder/prowler. One neighbor sent this for greater community awareness:

Last night, between as early as 7:30 pm and as recently as 8 am this morning, a ~30 year old ~5’9 man with dark features and possibly deaf or non-verbal intruded and entered several backyards and structures on our block. Multiple neighbors saw or interacted with him and confirmed it’s the same person. Our block is 45th Ave SW between Dawson and Brandon streets and we’re aware of at least five separate properties that were intruded on. He tried to get in my basement windows multiple times where my daughter sleeps, slept in my neighbor’s garage, opened gates, and went into various yards. I confronted him on the street ~945 pm from my car and told him aggressively to leave the block immediately (when at the time I wasn’t aware this was indeed the person I’d heard nearby) and he was apologetic and non-aggressive in body language, but did not speak. He may have been out of it or had a special condition and he left after seeming to understanding that I wanted him gone. My neighbor and I filed two separate police reports at different times (one last night by me, and her this morning when she saw him in her yard at ~8 am), but we are all concerned he may return. We also saw this WSB post very nearby that is highly likely the same individual. He left clothing at my neighbors’ house as well and did not seem deterred by lighting or locked gates that he opened and entered on multiple properties. …

UPDATE: The man returned to our street (today) at 1:11 pm and retrieved his sweatshirt/poncho which was on street where a neighbor had placed it outside.

How should nearby Boeing Field control airport noise?

(From kingcounty.gov)

By Torin Record-Sand
Reporting for West Seattle Blog

If you’re concerned about air traffic noise in the neighborhood, it’s not too late to make your voice heard.

The administration at Boeing Field (known officially as King County International Airport, or, KCIA, just across the river from West Seattle) is in the process of devising recommendations to the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) on how to reduce air-traffic-related noise in the area.

Their public hearing last night (video added above) offered a chance for them to present their existing plan, as well as offer the community an opportunity to provide feedback, all part of their long-range planning.

As their presentation explained, the plan, officially known as the Noise Compatibility Program (NCP), is part of a larger process for helping get more government funding to prevent noise pollution.

The NCP is the sum total of recommendations made from a lengthy noise study, in accordance to specific legal requirements. These requirements are described in Part 150 of a federal regulations code, hence the term “Part 150 Study.” After the study has been conducted, the local air authorities are in turn asked to consider a set of proposed changes to minimize noise in the designated area. Once these are finalized by KCIA, they are then submitted back to the FAA, who has final say on the implementation. After details of the implementation are finalized between the FAA and KCIA, the FAA will help seek federal funding opportunities to accomplish those goals.

There are two new measures KCIA is recommending. The first measure is to continue working with various local authorities that govern zoning near the KCIA (such as the City of Seattle) and making sure that zoning is appropriate near the airport. This means making sure that there is no new residential zoning near the airport likely to violate federal noise guidelines for residences, as well as ensuring that current zoning is compatible with those guidelines. The second measure, which is similar in method, is for KCIA to acquire property near the airport. This would allow for both an expansion of space for the airport, and ensuring that those properties fall within acceptable noise thresholds.

They also recommend the continuation of many ongoing programs at the KCIA. These include such things as programs to offer neighbors and businesses near the airport chances to insulate their buildings from noise, and proper venues (such as public meetings or websites) for the public to voice comments and complaints.

The outcomes of public comment for this process have impacted West Seattle before. Deep within their official 80-page plan of recommendations, they note the history of their past Part 150 study in 2004. The final recommendations for their 2004 Noise Compatibility Program involved the discouragement of East and West nighttime flights over West Seattle, and KCIA has held to that policy to this day.

And, as expected, community comments suggest room for further improvement. Multiple local community members attended last night’s hearing to voice their opinions about the noise levels in Georgetown. “Every time I go outdoors I can’t hear myself talk [because of the jets].” said one resident. Another echoed their comment: “When I’m outside, talking to my neighbor, we have to stop until the planes have left. It’s a fact of life in Georgetown, we all deal with it. But, if there is going to be a future increase in air traffic due to air shipping from companies like Amazon, I’m concerned.” said another. Other local residents voiced frustrations that KCIA has not offered enough opportunities for public engagement, as well as being vague about their specific plans regarding local property acquisition.

If you’d like to voice your opinion about local noise levels, as well as other comments regarding their process for the Noise Compatibility Program, there’s still time. They will be taking public comment until February 22nd, before they finalize and submit their plan in March. You can email comments to KCIAcommunityoutreach@kingcounty.gov, or submit comments (as well as read the details of their plan) at https://kciaplanning.com.

P.S. Here’s the slide deck from the hearing.

West Seattle High School softball players step up to the plate with another mentoring clinic this year

(WSB photo from last year’s clinic)

Once again this year, West Seattle High School softball players plan a clinic to mentor younger players and fundraise for their program, and registration is open now! Here’s the announcement:

West Seattle High School’s softball team is putting on a one-day clinic Sunday, February 8, for girls ages 7–13 at Nino Cantu Southwest Athletic Complex upper field, for $25.

Beginner Session 8:30-10:00 am, Advanced Session 10:15-11:45 am

*Check in begins 15 minutes before each session. Each session will cover the skills in the infield, outfield and hitting. No pitching and catching instruction. Players, please bring softball equipment.

The link for registration is: zeffy.com/en-US/ticketing/wshs-softball-clinic

NCSWAC is at 2801 SW Thistle.

Students’ spaghetti-dinner fundraiser and more on our list for your West Seattle Friday

(Thursday sunrise, photographed by Jerry Simmons)

Here’s our delayed-by-breaking-news list of what’s happening today/tonight – mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar:

SOUTH SEATTLE COLLEGE GARDEN CENTER It’s open today, 10 am-3 pm at north end of South Seattle College (WSB sponsor) campus (6000 16th SW).

STAY ‘N’ PLAY: Free indoor playtime for little ones and their caregivers, 10 am-11:30 am at Arbor Heights Community Church (4113 SW 102nd).

BABY STORY TIME: 11 am-11:30 am at Delridge Library (5423 Delridge Way SW).

LOG HOUSE MUSEUM: Visit the Log House Museum (61st/Stevens) to learn about local history – open noon-4 pm today.

ENGLISH CONVERSATION CIRCLE: New session continues at High Point Library (3411 SW Raymond), 12:30 pm-2 pm Fridays, no registration required.

TASTING ROOM AND WINE BAR: Viscon Cellars (5910 California SW; WSB sponsor) is open 5-9 pm Fridays. Stop in to sip, or buy by the bottle.

HIGH-SCHOOL BASKETBALL: Two varsity home games at West Seattle High School (3000 California SW) – girls vs. Lincoln at 5:30 pm, boys vs. O’Dea at 8:30 pm.

COFFEEHOUSE MUSIC: 6-8 pm, “Small, fun band” Jumbletron at C & P Coffee. (5612 California SW; WSB sponsor), all ages, no cover.

SPAGHETTI-DINNER FUNDRAISER: Dinner out for only $10! The West Seattle High School Key Club is hosting a spaghetti-dinner fundraiser at the school tonight – with bingo too – just show up between 6:30-8:30 pm. (3000 California SW)

ADMIRAL PUB BINGO: 7 pm, classic bingo! (2306 California SW)

PUNNY NIGHT AT THE SKYLARK: Pun Slam! Sign up at 7 pm, show at 8 pm; get tickets here. (3803 Delridge Way SW)

LIVE AT TIM’S: 8 pm, Henderson Haas and The Ugly Cousin Brothers. (16th/98th, White Center)

SPINNING: Revelry Room is open tonight (4547 California SW), with Vitamin D, 9 pm.

‘MAKE IT LOUD’ SKATING WITH MUSIC: Tonight, skate to Asterhouse and Happy Chemicals, 9 pm at Southgate Roller Rink (9646 17th SW). 21+. $20 cover/$5 skates.

If you have something to showcase on our event lists or ongoing calendar, please email what/when/where/etc. info to westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!

UPDATE: ‘Rope rescue’ response in east Admiral

9:13 AM: Seattle Fire has sent a “rope rescue” response to the 3200 block of SW Spokane [map], upslope from the west side of the Admiral Way hill. According to radio exchanges, they need to lift an injured person off a roof.

9:16 AM: SFD says this is happening at a construction site. Crews are planning to rescue the person via a ladder instead of lifting them out in a basket.

9:32 AM: Firefighters just told dispatch that “the patient is off the roof.” … Reader photo added above, sent by SeanO. The rescued person’s injuries are not described as life-threatening.

TRAFFIC, WEATHER, TRANSIT: Friday + weekend info

6:03 AM: Good morning! Welcome to Friday, January 23, 2026.

WEATHER + SUNRISE/SUNSET

The forecast predicts a mostly sunny day, high in the mid-40s. Sunrise at 7:46 am; sunset at 4:57 pm. (Sunday brings this year’s first 5 pm sunset!)

(Thursday photo by Bob Burns)

TRANSIT TODAY + THIS WEEKEND

West Seattle Water TaxiRegular West Seattle service, fall/winter schedule.

Washington State Ferries – According to WSF’s alerts, the Fauntleroy-Vashon-Southworth route will be on TWO-boat service today, because of vessel trouble elsewhere in the system.

Metro busesRegular weekday schedule and routes today, extra postgame service Sunday for Seahawks fans.

WEEKEND NOTES

Saturday: “We’re Still Standing” rally and march from Admiral to The Junction, 12:30-3 pm.

Sunday: 3:30 pm at Lumen Field, Seahawks host Rams, winner to the Super Bowl. As mentioned above, extra postgame West Seattle Water Taxi service.

Sunday:

SPOTLIGHT TRAFFIC CAMERAS

High Bridge – Here’s the main camera, followed by the Fauntleroy-end camera:

Low Bridge – Here’s the westward view. Also note, maritime-opening info is available via X (ex-Twitter):

1st Avenue South Bridge:

Delridge cameras: In addition to the one below (Delridge/Genesee), cameras are also at Delridge/Juneau, Delridge/Henderson, Delridge/Oregon, and video-only (so you have to go to the map), Delridge/Holden and Delridge/Thistle.

MORE TRAFFIC CAMS: All functioning traffic cams citywide are here (including links to live video for most); for a quick scan of West Seattle and vicinity-relevant cameras, see this WSB page.

See a problem on the bridges/streets/paths/water? Please text or call our hotline (when you can do it safely, and after you’ve reported to authorities if they’re not already on scene) – 206-293-6302. Thank you!