成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Pickleball, dinosaurs, and a state nickname: Lawmakers weigh trio of lighthearted bills

Jan 26, 2022, 10:45 AM

Bills, pickleball...

Could pickleball soon become Washington's official state sport? (Wikimedia Commons)

(Wikimedia Commons)

During this short legislative session, Washington lawmakers are working to prioritize bills related to a variety of crucial topics. Among the bills under consideration, though, are a handful of more lighthearted proposals.

4th-graders help renew push to get Washington a state dinosaur

State sport

One such proposal is a bill seeking to make pickleball Washington’s official state sport, having already garnered bipartisan support among its 10 sponsors.

Pickleball’s origins can be traced back to former Washington Rep. Joel Pritchard, who was said to have come up with the sport with businessman Bill Bell while at the Congressman’s Bainbridge Island home in 1965. As the story goes, Pritchard and Bell were searching for badminton equipment, but when they couldn’t find enough rackets for a game, they used ping-pong paddles and a plastic ball instead.

“At first they placed the net at badminton height of 60 inches and volleyed the ball over the net,” the . “As the weekend progressed, the players found that the ball bounced well on the asphalt surface and soon the net was lowered to 36 inches.”

After inviting their friend Barney McCallum to try out at the game on Pritchard’s property the next weekend, the trio drafted a set of rules, kickstarting decades of growth for the sport as it spread across the globe.

Lawmakers sponsoring are looking to honor the legacy of pickleball’s creators, “and recognize the Washingtonians who created, popularized, and continue to enjoy this sport.”

The bill was approved by the Senate’s State Government & Elections Committee in mid-January, and was scheduled for a second reading in the Rules Committee days later, where it still sits. Should it pass out of the Rules Committee, it would be placed on the calendar for a full vote in the state Senate.

State dinosaur

The push to make the Suciasaurus rex Washington’s official dinosaur dates back years, having failed to gain traction in past legislative sessions. Now, has been reintroduced as part of the 2022 session, as its bipartisan sponsors maintain hope that this may finally be the year it crosses the finish line.

The Suciasaurus rex is named after the first and only dinosaur fossil found in Washington state, at Sucia Island State Park in the San Juans in 2012. The fossil itself is a portion of a left femur of a theropod, a bipedal class of dinosaurs that includes the likes of the Tyrannosaurus rex, Velociraptor, and more. Experts aren鈥檛 certain which specific theropod it belongs to, but predominant evidence points to a Daspletosaurus, a close, smaller relative to the T-rex.

The Suciasaurus rex is not believed to have originated in Washington state, and some scientists theorize that the Suciasaurus rex actually originated somewhere around California, later hitching a ride on a portion of the western edge of North America that was eventually displaced to British Columbia in the Late Cretaceous period.

Washington would join 12 other states in having a designated state dinosaur, including: Arizona (Sonorasaurus); Arkansas (Arkansaurus); California (Augustynolophus); Colorado (Stegosaurus); Connecticut (Dilphosaurus); Maryland (Astrodon); Missouri (Hypsibema missouriensis); New Jersey (Hadrosaurus); Oklahoma (Acrocanthosaurus); Utah (Utahraptor); Wyoming (Triceratops); and Texas (Paluxysaurus). Washington, D.C., also has its own official dinosaur, aptly dubbed the Capitalsaurus.

HB 1067 got close to passing in 2021, after getting moved out of committee and placed in the Rules Committee. For the 2022 session, it retained in its previous status, and will again be sent to the Rules Committee for consideration.

State nickname

Washington is widely known as the “Evergreen State,” and this session, lawmakers are looking to make it official by designating that the official state nickname with .

Washington was first dubbed the Evergreen State by Seattle realtor C.T. Conover in 1889, just months after it became the 42nd state in the Union.

Legislative session kicks off with packed agenda, virtual testimony

“C.T. Conover was a former newspaperman who had gone into real estate,” 成人X站 Newsradio historian Feliks Banel describes. “To drum up business from out of town, he and his business partner Samuel L. Crawford commissioned a booklet extolling the virtues of this verdant, lush, and forested wonderland.”

“Early Seattle historian Frederic Grant wrote the copy for the booklet, but Conover came up with the title: ‘Washington, The Evergreen State and Seattle, Its Metropolis,'” he added.

Despite the nickname circulating widely, it was never legally adopted by the state. Republican State Sen. Jim Honeyford introduced a bill to do just that in 2009, although it failed to pass at the time. Honeyford is one of seven sponsors on 2022’s iteration, which has already been placed on a second reading in the Senate Rules Committee.

MyNorthwest News

The U.S. Coast Guard tows a disabled, 97-foot fishing boat with three people aboard, after the vess...

Tom Brock

Coast Guard rescues disabled fishing boat adrift 95 miles from Oregon coast

The Coast Guard sent an airplane, a helicopter and two boats to rescue three people on a fishing boat 95 miles off the coast of Oregon last week.

1 hour ago

Spokane County Sheriff鈥檚 Office Sergeant Kenneth Salas, 59, killed in the line of duty Saturday. ...

Tom Brock

Spokane County Sheriff’s sergeant struck and killed on I-90 near Cheney

A horrible accident has taken the life of a Spokane County Sheriff鈥檚 sergeant.

3 hours ago

snakes ball pythons mill creek reptile zoo...

Jake Skorheim and Spike O'Neill Show

Exotic pet snakes found in Mill Creek; Reptile Zoo to close in October

Last month, a maintenance team discovered four snakes thousands of miles away from their natural habitat in a local nature preserve in Mill Creek.

8 hours ago

AI social media parents...

Katrina Guischard

Could AI be the new tool for parents battling social media鈥檚 impact on children?

One company is using artificial intelligence as a window into a child's online habits and behaviors. The app builds a personalized baseline for each child, then alerts parents when something seems off.

8 hours ago

Seattle police are investigating a shooting on lower Queen Anne near Bhy Kracke Park. (Photo courte...

Tom Brock

Police investigate shooting in lower Queen Anne neighborhood

Seattle police detectives are trying to figure out why a man was shot several times in the leg near a Queen Anne park early Saturday morning.

24 hours ago

Gold futures all time high tariffs...

Jason Sutich

Gold futures surge above $3,500 to all-time high amid U.S. tariff concerns

Gold futures hit an all-time high of $3,534 on Thursday after reports of the White House's plans to issue an executive order imposing tariffs on gold.

1 day ago

Pickleball, dinosaurs, and a state nickname: Lawmakers weigh trio of lighthearted bills