House Bill 1.18 sought to add new sections to state law to create a committee tasked with oversight of nuclear power facilities. Proponent Tim Healy argued the bill would encourage safe nuclear development and counteract what he described as misleading media narratives about nuclear power: "Nuclear power has been proven to be the cleanest, most powerful, most space efficient energy source known to humans," Healy said.
Opponents pushed back that existing regulators already license and oversee nuclear facilities. Smart Malakapali of the Bellevue delegation said the state’s nuclear regulatory commission already manages licensing, waste and safety; adding another committee would duplicate authority and divert limited funds. Delegates also questioned whether the committee would set its own members’ salaries, an issue Healy acknowledged without providing data on redundancy.
Debate included a question-and-answer exchange about the bill’s precise scope and whether the committee would regulate new builds or oversee existing sites; Healy clarified it would focus on oversight of already built facilities. After floor debate, the bill did not secure passage and was defeated.
Sponsors argued the measure would strengthen oversight and encourage responsible energy development; critics said it would create unnecessary bureaucracy and could interfere with established federal and state regulators.