KIRO NEWSRADIO OPINION

Sullivan: Tire ban, $1,000 fines for idling have life in WA Legislature

Feb 7, 2024, 7:58 PM | Updated: Feb 8, 2024, 9:27 am

Image: A SUV drives past a sign near a tire shop on a snow-covered road in January 2012 in the West...

A SUV drives past a sign near a tire shop on a snow-covered road in January 2012 in the West Seattle neighborhood of Seattle. (Photo: Stephen Brashear, Getty Images)

(Photo: Stephen Brashear, Getty Images)

It’s amazing what can get passed through committee in Olympia without any public input.

Last week, we reported on the Washington House of Representatives bill that would allow the Washington State Department of Commerce to ban affordable and durable replacement tires under the umbrella of helping the climate.  The bill received a committee hearing but didn’t go any further. There was no support for the bill in the committee so it died there.

Previous Chokepoints content: Buying tires could become a lot harder

But like the mythical Phoenix, Sen. Marko Liias, D-Edmonds, was able to resurrect the ban from the ashes and sneak it into a seemingly unrelated bill (SB 6304) on electric vehicles in the Senate and get it passed out of his committee.

No public hearing. No public comment. All done behind closed doors in executive session.

To remind you of what this bill would do: It would require that any replacement tires sold in our state meet yet-to-be determined fuel efficiency standards, based on their rolling resistance. That’s how much friction the tires create. It would likely eliminate the most affordable and durable tires available.

Comments from lawmakers and experts

But Liias told his Senate Transportation Committee that drivers would really benefit from this.

“(The) Department of Commerce tells us that the average Washingtonian could save as much as $770 in gas with more efficient tires that use up less fuel on our roadways while also reducing emissions for our state,” Liias said.

Numbers that are disputed by most of the industry experts. Tracey Norberg of the U.S. Tire Manufacturers Association addressed those rosy estimates during the House public hearing on this idea.

“I think the estimates that we see in the bill are I guess the right word would be very optimistic and and very layers of optimism,” she testified.

“These tires are more costly,” Sen. Curtis King, R-Yakima, added. “They have a shorter lifespan. They don’t function well on snow or ice, and it’s something that we should not be considering.”

More from Chris Sullivan: Major travel disruptions coming to Highway 529

Language to ban idling also added to bill

Also magically stuffed into Liias’ EV bill during executive session: Language that would ban commercial vehicles from idling.

Beginning Jan. 2, 2025, any person who owns, operates, or causes to operate any diesel-fueled commercial motor vehicle must not idle for five consecutive minutes at any location. Going further, those who own trucks with diesel-fueled auxiliary power systems would not be able to idle for more than five minutes within 100 feet of restricted areas.

Those restricted areas include individual or multi-family housing units, schools, hotels, motels, hospitals, senior care facilities and child care facilities.

The fines for idling would run between $300 and $1,000 per day and any police officer would be able to issue fines.

The bill is now up for full Senate consideration.

Check out more of Chris’ Chokepoints here. You can also follow Chris on X, formerly known as Twitter. Head here to follow KIRO Newsradio Traffic’s profile on X.

KIRO Newsradio Opinion

public restrooms...

Angela Poe Russell

Angela Poe Russell: It’s time to reimagine public restrooms

It’s the Great Restroom Debate. How do we create public restrooms everyone can feel comfortable using?

7 hours ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Could WA Turn Red? Trump and the Governor Race

Spike O’Neill sees right through Trump’s ’50 State Strategy’ and Jack Stine weighs the odds of Dave Reichert beating Bob Ferguson’s name recognition – especially now that there aren’t three Bob Fergusons – in the race for Washington governor. Polling suggests voters are much more undecided than we expected. Tune in live to The Jack […]

20 hours ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Are Gas Prices Dropping? Not Really

Jack Stine investigates (aka, actually reads) a clickbait headline about gas prices. And Spike O’Neill is ready to buy an EV. Where’s Newt Gingrich when you need him? Tune in live to The Jack and Spike Show weekdays from noon to 3pm on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM. And if that timing, or our location in […]

21 hours ago

Photo: Bend of a running track....

Julia Dallas

John and Jake: Where’s the line when it comes to transgender children competing in sports?

Elizabeth Wilson's middle-school daughter took second place in the invitation-only Junior Olympic race for the 1600, but Wilson believes the first-place winner had an unfair advantage.

2 days ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Why Are White Woman Paying Thousands To Scream Therapy!

There’s a new therapeutic method in town: “primal scream therapy.” Video footage of one of the sessions is going viral, showing white women in the woods beating sticks onto the ground while they scream, a privilege which they have allegedly paid thousands of dollars to experience. But Jack Stine knows this ‘new craze’ is actually […]

5 days ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Trump’s Weird Excuse For Why He Didn’t Testify

Another radio station talk show, WABC, interviewed Donald Trump and asked him directly why he did not testify during his hush money criminal trial in New York (even though he said that he would). And the answer Trump gave them was completely nonsensical. Jack Stine and Spike O’Neill take a listen. Tune in live to […]

5 days ago

Sullivan: Tire ban, $1,000 fines for idling have life in WA Legislature