Committee hears proposal to extend hazardous-substance tax exemption for pesticide warehousing

House Finance Committee · February 26, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
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

Senate Bill 6244 would extend the HST exemption for specific agricultural crop-protection products staged in Washington for regional distribution through Jan. 1, 2038; logistics and agricultural interests urged extension citing supply-chain and food-security benefits.

Committee staff briefed that Senate Bill 6244 would extend the hazardous-substance tax exemption for agricultural crop-protection products (including certain pesticides and insecticides moved in interstate commerce) from its current expiration date of Jan. 1, 2028 to Jan. 1, 2038, and that the change includes JLARC review and a ten-year expiration provision.

Senator Nikki Torres, sponsor, described the exemption as a JLARC recommendation aimed at permitting in-state warehousing so farmers can receive crop-protection products more quickly than sourcing from neighboring states, framing the change as supporting food security and regional competitiveness.

Matt Ewers, principal with IEDS Logistics, testified in support, saying the exemption makes it economically feasible to stage FIFRA-regulated products in Washington for Pacific Northwest distribution, reduces the need for on-farm storage, speeds product delivery to farmers, and created jobs in Pasco. He offered to answer technical questions on how warehousing and staging could reduce product application or storage risks.

A fiscal note was noted in the agency briefing; the committee closed the testimony for that item and proceeded with other business.