Citizen Portal
Sign In

Senate advances wide range of bills: economic plan, agriculture tax exemption, technical corrections and literacy programs

Washington State Senate · February 16, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Washington State Senate advanced and passed many substitute bills in a single floor session, including an economic development strategic plan (S.B. 6,289), an agricultural hazardous-substance tax exemption extension (S.B. 6,244), technical tax corrections and clarifications (S.B. 6,113; S.B. 6,114), and a transfer of early literacy programs (S.B. 5,961). Most measures were advanced under suspended rules and passed on final reading.

Over the course of the floor session the Senate advanced and passed a number of substitute bills and technical measures. Key items included:

- Substitute S.B. 6,289 (economic development strategic plan): sponsor Sen. Kaufman described it as directing the Department of Commerce to develop a statewide economic development and competitiveness plan. The roll call was announced and the bill was declared passed.

- S.B. 6,244 (hazardous substance tax exemption for certain agricultural crop protection products): Sen. Torres said the bill extended the exemption until Jan. 1, 2038, aligning Washington with neighboring states; the clerk announced the result as 48 yea, 1 nay and the bill was declared passed.

- S.B. 6,113 and S.B. 6,114 (tax code clarifications and definitions): sponsors described these as agency-request technical fixes and clarifications to excise and revenue law; amendments were adopted and the bills were declared passed after roll calls.

- Substitute S.B. 5,961 (early literacy programs): sponsor Sen. Wilson described transferring the Imagination Library and Reach Out and Read programs to the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction; supporters cited program reach (roughly 120,000 children) and the bill was declared passed.

The chamber suspended rules for many items to expedite third reading and final passage. Where floor debate occurred it was focused on technical corrections, implementation timelines, and narrow fiscal trade-offs.