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Bill would let accredited private labs supplement state toxicology testing to reduce backlog

House Committee on Community Safety · January 19, 2026

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Summary

House Bill 12-28 would allow blood and breath analyses performed by ISO/IEC 17025‑accredited labs to be valid in criminal and civil proceedings alongside state toxicologist methods. Supporters cited multi-hundred‑day backlogs and repeated DUIs during delays; opponents warned of inequitable access and urged funding for the state lab instead.

OLYMPIA, Wash. — House Bill 12-28 would establish an alternative means of validating blood and breath analyses for driving-under-the-influence and related prosecutions by recognizing testing from laboratories accredited to the ISO/IEC 17025 standard alongside the state toxicologist’s methods.

Committee staff and multiple testifiers described the problem the bill aims to address: Washington’s toxicology backlog. Representative David Hackney, the sponsor, said the state processed about 19,000 nonlethal toxicology requests last year with an average turnaround of over 300 days, compared with shorter turnaround times in other states. Seattle City Attorney Erica Evans said some cases in her office cannot be filed for nearly two years because of delayed results, allowing alleged offenders to drive without court-ordered conditions in the interim.

The bill would permit local jurisdictions to use accredited private laboratories as an option; it would not mandate private testing or require jurisdictions to pay for it. Proponents said private accreditation to ISO/IEC 17025 would ensure the same scientific standards while reducing turnaround times and speeding prosecution and accountability.

Stakeholders raised operational and equity concerns. Defense attorneys asked for contractual language to preserve defendants’ due-process discovery rights in cases where labs are part of multistate organizations and may not reliably appear for deposition or production without complex interstate subpoenas. County officials and the Association of Counties cautioned that outsourcing testing could shift costs to counties that lack budget capacity and create a two‑tier system of justice where wealthier jurisdictions obtain faster results.

Law‑enforcement and prosecutorial witnesses said reducing backlog is urgent and urged either the in-state private-lab option or increased funding for the state toxicology lab; technical witnesses described grant models and bulk-sample approaches used in other states to address backlogs.

The committee heard the variety of views and closed public testimony; members signaled they would continue to weigh options including clarifying discovery language and looking at funding paths for the state lab.