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Fight over hotly debated natural gas initiative headed to Washington State Supreme Court

May 28, 2025, 4:19 PM | Updated: 4:22 pm

natural gas initiative - I-2066...

Flame coming out of gas stove burner. (Photo: Ervins Strauhmanis via Flickr Creative Commons)

(Photo: Ervins Strauhmanis via Flickr Creative Commons)

Supporters of , a voter-approved measure aimed at preserving access to natural gas, are taking their case to the Washington State Supreme Court.

The (BIAW) and Attorney General Nick Brown are appealing a lower court ruling that struck down the initiative.

鈥淎fter years of opposing political efforts to ban natural gas in Washington, BIAW fought back at the ballot box,鈥 BIAW Executive Vice President Greg Lane said in a . 鈥淲e crafted I-2066 carefully with a singular goal鈥攑reserving natural gas as an energy choice for current and future homeowners. And every step of the way, opponents have filed lawsuits seeking to stop us.鈥

鈥淲hile I personally disagreed with I-2066, it was passed by Washington voters and is the law of the state,鈥 Brown said. 鈥淢y job as attorney general is to enforce and defend the laws of Washington, and I will continue to vigorously do so in this case.鈥

Opponents argue the measure extends beyond natural gas and could affect energy efficiency and air quality.

King County judge strikes down I-2066

A King County Superior Judge struck down I-2066 in March, according to nonprofit .

Initiative 2066 aims to repeal parts of a state law that accelerates shift away from natural gas. It was one of four initiatives on last November鈥檚 general election ballot, and it was the only one to pass 鈥 by about 3.4%.

In March King County Superior Court Judge Sandra Widlan ruled that I-2066 violates the Washington state constitution — agreeing with the group of public interest advocates and local governments, led by Climate Solutions, who sued the State of Washington. The group claimed the initiative makes broad-sweeping impacts, hidden in what was supposed to be a single subject.

“I-2066鈥檚 most obvious constitutional infirmity is that it combines one seemingly popular subject (i.e., requiring certain utilities and local governments to provide natural gas to customers) with a host of separate subjects, including altering how the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (鈥淯TC鈥) sets utility rates, limiting the authority of county-level agencies to regulate air pollutants, and purportedly rolling back state and local energy efficiency standards in new building construction,” Climate Solutions wrote in . “By joining all of these distinct policy choices and requiring voters to enact all or none of them, I-2066 violates the Constitution鈥檚 prohibition on logrolling.”

Climate Solutions reported that during the ruling, Widlan made the example a voter may want to have access to natural gas but also want the government to regulate air pollution from natural gas.

Supporters of I-2066 continue fight

However, BIAW claimed those who want to ban natural gas are trying to force their view on the majority of Washingtonians.

“We will not back away from the fight to ensure the will of the people who voted to make I-2066 law stands,” BIAW wrote in a statement in March. “We will continue to use every avenue available, including appealing to the state Supreme Court, to protect energy choice for the people of Washington.”

It added the King County Superior Court’s “decision was based solely on the policy preference of the judge and had no legal basis whatsoever. Every Washington citizen should be appalled by such an irresponsible ruling.”

The BIAW,聽听(奥贬础),听, and聽 are part of the coalition supporting the initiative.

鈥淚t鈥檚 to protect natural gas and propane service statewide by restricting any state, county or city entity from banning, restricting or disincentivizing the use of natural gas for existing or new customers in areas where natural gas is available,鈥 Lane said in May of 2024.

Supporters believe I-2066 protects natural gas and all energy choices across the state.

鈥淲e are protecting choice from everybody so everybody can choose any energy resource they think is best for their home or business,鈥 Lane said.

King County, city of Seattle join lawsuit

In December, 成人X站 Newsradio reported King County and the city of Seattle were among the plaintiffs to file the lawsuit challenging I-2066.

The lawsuit, filed December 11 in King County Superior Court, asked a judge to block the implementation of I-2066, which its attorneys said misled voters 鈥渁bout its actual provisions鈥 and violated Washington鈥檚 single-subject law.

鈥淭his initiative, the way that it鈥檚 written, it covers multiple different subjects, not just issues related to natural gas 鈥 which is what the initiative supporters focused on and suggested all that was at issue,鈥 Paul Lawrence, an attorney for the plaintiffs and partner with Pacifica Law Group, said in December. 鈥淭his has much broader impact on a number of other laws 鈥 including energy efficiency, to avoid the disproportionate negative health impacts from air pollution, and these other issues that go far beyond the issue of natural gas.鈥

This story was originally published in March 2025. It has been updated and republished since then.

Contributing: Frank Lenzi, Matt Markovich, and Sam Campbell, 成人X站 Newsradio

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