House approves changes to Climate Commitment Act compliance; opponents warn of harm to small fuel suppliers
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The House passed Engrossed Second Substitute House Bill 22 15 after debate. Supporters said amendments balance fairness for fuel distributors under the Climate Commitment Act; opponents said the compliance costs risk pushing small, corner gas stations out of business and encourage cross-border fuel purchasing. Final vote: 57 yeas, 38 nays, 3 excused.
The House debated and passed Engrossed Second Substitute House Bill 22 15, a measure addressing how certain fuel distributors are treated under the Climate Commitment Act. Supporters said the amendments strike a fair balance and prevent evasion, while opponents warned the changes would impose burdensome compliance obligations on smaller retailers.
Representative Fitzgibbon, urging a yes vote, said the amendments were intended to ensure a level playing field for fuel distributors and to prevent new entities that would evade compliance from gaining advantage: "...so the new entities don't form for the purpose of evasion" (Representative Fitzgibbon). By contrast, Representative Dye argued the bill would disproportionately affect small, corner fuel suppliers in border communities and could cause consumers to buy fuel across state lines: "We're going to drive your family owned corner gas stations out of business" (Representative Dye). Dye said the Climate Commitment Act originally targeted larger entities and that the added record-keeping and compliance obligations would disadvantage small operators.
The Clerk recorded 57 yeas, 38 nays and 3 excused; the bill was declared passed. Floor remarks did not include detailed fiscal figures in the transcript; members framed the debate around fairness, market impacts and compliance burdens.
