2024 Washington Initiative 2066

Wikipedia

Initiative 2066

November 5, 2024
Repealing Restrictions on Natural Gas
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 1,941,474 51.71%
No 1,813,169 48.29%
Total votes 3,754,643 100.00%

Source: Canvass of the Returns at the Wayback Machine (archived February 14, 2025)

Washington Initiative Measure No. 2066 (I-2066) was a popular referendum that was decided on November 5, 2024. The initiative was placed on the ballot by a coalition of organizations led by the Building Industry Association of Washington, a Tumwater-based non-profit organization representing an array of organizations in the homebuilding industries.[1] The initiative was started in response to changes to the state's building codes which were intended to provide incentives for buildings to move away from natural gas as a source of heating.[1] Initiative 2066 was approved by the voters following the November 5th, 2024 general election.[2]

Background

Washington has been pursuing a number of strategies to reduce carbon emission in the state, with a goal of reducing the state's greenhouse gas emissions by 95% by 2050.[3] One piece of this effort was the passage of HB 1589, which was signed into law by Gov. Jay Inslee on March 28, 2024.[4] The goal of the law was to guide large utilities (primarily targeting Puget Sound Energy) to move towards home electrification as a key component of the state's decarbonization plan.[5] This happened along with changes to building codes that targeted gas-powered appliances and raised the costs of installing them relative to electric appliances.[6]

In response to these changes, a coalition of groups led by the Building Industry Association of Washington, and including non-profit groups like the Washington Hospitality Association, the Washington Realtors, and Associated General Contractors as well as the libertarian-aligned political action committee Let's Go Washington, began a petition-collection campaign to put a challenge to the parts of HB 1589 that sought to limit the use of natural gas in new homes and other constructions.[1]

Initiative 2066 was certified on July 24, 2024, having collected 533,005 signatures.[7]

Language and Impact

I-2066 placed the following question before the citizens of Washington:[8]

Initiative Measure No.2066 concerns regulating energy services, including natural gas and electrification.

This measure would repeal or prohibit certain laws and regulations that discourage natural gas use, and/or promote electrification, and require certain utilities and local governments to provide natural gas to eligible customers.

Should this measure be enacted into law? Yes [ ] No [ ]

When passed, I-2066 would create a mandate to maintain natural gas access to all eligible households and businesses.[9]

Support for I-2066

According to the Washington Public Disclosure Commission, Let's Go Washington was registered as sponsors of the initiative.[10]

Opposition to I-2066

According to the Washington Public Disclosure Commission, the 45th District Democrats, Defend Washington, Fuse Voters, No on 2066, and Stop Greed were registered as opponents of the initiative.[10]

Public opinion on I-2066

Poll Sponsor Dates Margin of Error Mode Sample Size Support Oppose Undecided
SurveyUSA[11] Seattle Times, KING-TV, & UW Center for an Informed Public Oct 9–14, 2024 ± 5% Online 703 LV 44% 31% 25%
Elway[12] Cascade PBS Oct 8–12, 2024 ± 5% Live Phone & Text 401 LV 51% 28% 20%
Elway[13] Cascade PBS Sep 3–6, 2024 ± 5% Live Phone & Text 403 RV 47% 29% 24%
SurveyUSA[14] Seattle Times, KING-TV, & UW Center for an Informed Public July 10–13, 2024 ± 5% Online 708 LV 54% 21% 25%

Results

I-2066 passed with almost 52% of the vote, becoming the only one of the four initiatives on the 2024 Washington state ballot to pass.[15][16]

By county

County results
County[17] Yes No Margin Total votes
# % # % # %
Adams 3,402 65.83% 1,766 34.17% 1,636 31.66% 5,168
Asotin 7,102 64.48% 3,912 35.52% 3,190 28.96% 11,014
Benton 62,431 64.15% 34,885 35.85% 27,546 28.31% 97,316
Chelan 22,178 54.89% 18,226 45.11% 3,952 9.78% 40,404
Clallam 22,583 49.14% 23,377 50.86% -794 -1.73% 45,960
Clark 147,809 56.48% 113,873 43.52% 33,936 12.97% 261,682
Columbia 1,609 67.13% 788 32.87% 821 34.25% 2,397
Cowlitz 34,506 60.76% 22,284 39.24% 12,222 21.52% 56,790
Douglas 12,078 59.41% 8,251 40.59% 3,827 18.83% 20,329
Ferry 2,551 65.54% 1,341 34.46% 1,210 31.09% 3,892
Franklin 19,545 65.73% 10,191 34.27% 9,354 31.46% 29,736
Garfield 921 69.40% 406 30.60% 515 38.81% 1,327
Grant 21,985 63.88% 12,432 36.12% 9,553 27.76% 34,417
Grays Harbor 20,421 56.23% 15,893 43.77% 4,528 12.47% 36,314
Island 25,762 52.24% 23,553 47.76% 2,209 4.48% 49,315
Jefferson 8,638 36.10% 15,288 63.90% -6,650 -27.79% 23,926
King 446,879 41.10% 640,376 58.90% -193,497 -17.80% 1,087,255
Kitsap 77,087 51.38% 72,949 48.62% 4,138 2.76% 150,036
Kittitas 16,085 63.02% 9,439 36.98% 6,646 26.04% 25,524
Klickitat 7,567 59.70% 5,108 40.30% 2,459 19.40% 12,675
Lewis 28,585 65.22% 15,243 34.78% 13,342 30.44% 43,828
Lincoln 4,890 73.16% 1,794 26.84% 3,096 46.32% 6,684
Mason 20,032 56.42% 15,476 43.58% 4,556 12.83% 35,508
Okanogan 10,722 53.56% 9,298 46.44% 1,424 7.11% 20,020
Pacific 7,061 52.13% 6,483 47.87% 578 4.27% 13,544
Pend Oreille 5,274 64.18% 2,944 35.82% 2,330 28.35% 8,218
Pierce 231,471 55.75% 183,694 44.25% 47,777 11.51% 415,165
San Juan 4,534 36.93% 7,743 63.07% -3,209 -26.14% 12,277
Skagit 38,300 56.62% 29,342 43.38% 8,958 13.24% 67,642
Skamania 4,279 61.44% 2,685 38.56% 1,594 22.89% 6,964
Snohomish 216,077 53.96% 184,359 46.04% 31,718 7.92% 400,436
Spokane 165,596 59.88% 110,951 40.12% 54,645 19.76% 276,547
Stevens 19,347 70.87% 7,951 29.13% 11,396 41.75% 27,298
Thurston 78,857 50.07% 78,639 49.93% 218 0.14% 157,496
Wahkiakum 1,731 59.10% 1,198 40.90% 533 18.20% 2,929
Walla Walla 16,422 57.71% 12,032 42.29% 4,390 15.43% 28,454
Whatcom 64,954 49.36% 66,638 50.64% -1,684 -1.28% 131,592
Whitman 10,454 54.31% 8,796 45.69% 1,658 8.61% 19,250
Yakima 51,749 60.66% 33,565 39.34% 18,184 21.31% 85,314
Totals 1,941,474 51.71% 1,813,169 48.29% 128,305 3.42% 3,754,643

Response to I-2066 Passage

Following the passage of I-2066, Governor Jay Inslee raised questions about the legality of I-2066.[16] Environmental groups echoed this criticism, suggesting that it ran afoul of the one subject rule for initiatives in Washington state. These concerns had been raised prior to the election as well in a brief written in September by the Pacifica Law Group and professor Hugh Spitzer of the University of Washington.[18] On December 11, 2024, a lawsuit was filed by the city of Seattle and King County along with a coalition of environmental groups.[19][20] A week earlier on December 6, 2024, the Buildings Industry Association of Washington, the primary sponsor of the initiative, sued the state to compel it to begin bringing state laws into compliance with I-2066.[20] The building industry says that their lawsuit is about creating certainty within the industry statewide, while environmental groups joining the Seattle and King County lawsuit argue that the language of I-2066 was misleading and deceptive as well as violating the single subject rule.[21]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Cornfield, Jerry (May 16, 2024). "Builders launch initiative to block Washington's natural gas phase-out • Washington State Standard". Washington State Standard. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  2. "WA passes natural gas initiative". The Seattle Times. November 8, 2024. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  3. "Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions - Washington State Department of Ecology". ecology.wa.gov. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  4. "Washington State Legislature". app.leg.wa.gov. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  5. "What is Initiative 2066? Here's what we know". king5.com. October 18, 2024. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  6. "How would Initiative 2066 affect natural gas in WA? Here's what you need to know". The Seattle Times. October 24, 2024. Retrieved November 17, 2024.
  7. "Initiative to the People 2066 certified to November General Election ballot | WA Secretary of State". www.sos.wa.gov. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  8. "Initiatives & Referendums - Elections & Voting - WA Secretary of State". www.sos.wa.gov. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  9. Pfeffinger, Ramsey (November 5, 2024). "What is Initiative 2066, what will it do for natural gas options in WA?". FOX 13 Seattle. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  10. 1 2 "Committees | Washington State Public Disclosure Commission (PDC)". www.pdc.wa.gov. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  11. "New poll shows where WA voters stand on 3 key initiatives". Seattle Times. October 21, 2024. Retrieved October 31, 2024.
  12. Buhain, Venice. "WA voters poised to reject two initiatives, accept other two | Cascade PBS". Cascade PBS. Retrieved October 31, 2024.
  13. Sowersby, Shauna. "Washington ballot initiatives lose ground with voters in new poll | Cascade PBS". Cascade PBS. Retrieved September 17, 2024.
  14. "SurveyUSA News Poll #27198". SurveyUSA. Retrieved September 17, 2024.
  15. Hobbs, Steve (December 4, 2024). "Canvass of the Returns of the General Election Held on November 5, 2024" (PDF). Secretary of State of Washington. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 4, 2025. Retrieved July 14, 2025.
  16. 1 2 "WA passes natural gas initiative". The Seattle Times. November 8, 2024. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  17. Hobbs, Steve (November 5, 2024). "Initiative Measure No. 2066 - County Results". Secretary of State of Washington. Archived from the original on May 21, 2025. Retrieved November 19, 2025.
  18. "King County, Seattle among those suing over natural gas initiative passed by voters". The Seattle Times. December 11, 2024. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  19. "Officials plan to file lawsuit challenging constitutionality of I-2066". king5.com. December 11, 2024. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  20. 1 2 Cornfield, Jerry (December 12, 2024). "Washington's voter-approved natural gas measure snared in two lawsuits • Washington State Standard". Washington State Standard. Retrieved December 24, 2024.
  21. Santos, Melissa (December 11, 2024). "Dueling lawsuits filed over natural gas ballot measure, I-2066, in Washington". Axios. Retrieved December 24, 2024.