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Votes at a glance: key floor outcomes, March 11

March 11, 2026 | Legislative Sessions, Washington


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Votes at a glance: key floor outcomes, March 11
Here are the principal roll‑call outcomes recorded on the House floor March 11. Tally numbers and outcomes are taken from the Clerk’s statements on the record.

- Substitute Senate Bill 62‑25 (transportation bonds, third reading and final passage): 59 yays, 38 nays, 1 excused — declared passed.

- Engrossed Substitute Senate Bill 62‑60 (education efficiencies/programming changes, as amended by the House): 50 yays, 47 nays, 1 excused — declared passed. Debate focused on transitional kindergarten (TTK), Alternative Learning Experience (ALE) counting rules, and Local Effort Assistance (LEA) impacts; several amendments were debated (26‑37 failed; 26‑54 adopted).

- Engrossed Senate Bill 6228 (pharmacy tax/B&O changes as amended by the House): 52 yays, 42 nays, 4 excused — declared passed.

- Engrossed Senate Bill 6347 (estate tax changes as amended by the House): 85 yays, 8 nays, 5 excused — declared passed.

- Second substitute Senate Bill 61‑82 (establishing an abortion savings account and assessment): recorded and declared passed on final reading (clerk reports constitutional majority; recorded tallies in transcript).

- Substantive Senate Bill 6355 (Washington Transmission Development Authority, as amended by the House): 66 yays, 27 nays, 5 excused — declared passed.

What this list covers: only measures with recorded roll‑call tallies noted on the floor transcript. Many other bills were read, concurred, or advanced with voice votes or without objection; the transcript contains a long sequence of such actions.

Why it matters: these votes change state policy across transportation, K–12 funding, tax policy and energy planning. Some passed measures were controversial on the floor and drew warnings about budgetary or legal risk.

Source: House floor transcript, March 11 session; final tallies as announced by the Clerk of the House.

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