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Committee advances 13 bills to rules/Ways & Means, holds two for later

February 24, 2026 | Legislative Sessions, Washington


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Committee advances 13 bills to rules/Ways & Means, holds two for later
The State Government, Tribal Affairs & Elections Committee on Feb. 24 rebriefed and advanced most of the bills on its agenda, adopting amendments on several and referring measures to the next stages in the legislative process.

Major actions

- House Bill 1710 (Washington Voting Rights Act): Committee adopted a striking amendment (A) that replaced the term 'aggrieved party' with 'aggrieved person' and voted to send the amended bill to the Ways & Means Committee with a 'do pass' recommendation.

- House Bill 1750 (guidelines for voter-suppression and vote-dilution claims): The committee adopted amendment B, which adds a 'clear and convincing evidence' narrow-tailoring exception for certain election policies, then rolled B into a striking amendment and sent the bill to the rules committee with a 'do pass' recommendation.

- House Bill 1916 (voter registration challenges): The committee adopted a striking amendment clarifying that a person challenging a voter's registration must reside in the same county as the challenged voter and that the registration language use 'canceled' rather than 'removed'; the bill was referred to rules with a 'do pass' recommendation.

- House Bill 2420 (small works roster limits): The committee advanced substitute HB 2420, which phases increases to the small works roster maximum contract value from $350,000 to $650,000 by 07/01/2030 and specifies that sales tax is excluded from the estimated cost for qualification purposes.

- House Bill 2475 (language access): Substitute HB 2475 was advanced to Ways & Means. It requires the Office of Equity to develop uniform language-access guidelines, to work on proposals to address a shortage of qualified interpreters and translators, and to require agencies to report implementation processes and resource needs.

Other measures advanced included bills on the Washington code of military justice (HB 2417), modernizing statutory terminology (HB 2632), adding WATEC network/security employees to civil service (HB 2249), eliminating unnecessary postgraduate degree requirements in classification plans (HB 2309), foreign-national participation thresholds and related certifications (substitute HB 2123, as amended), and Public Records Act exemptions related to firearms records (HB 2235). Substitute HB 2411 (shared leave expansion) also received a 'do pass' recommendation.

Held items

The chair announced that House Bills 2574 (removal of deceased candidates from ballots) and 2637 (expanding exemptions for personal information under the Public Records Act) would not be moved during the executive session and were therefore held.

Process notes and next steps

Most votes were recorded as voice votes; the chair consistently ruled that bills passed 'subject to signatures.' Several amendments were adopted without recorded roll-call tallies. The committee adjourned after completing its agenda; the actions reported here move the advanced bills to the rules or Ways & Means committees as noted.

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