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Fighting for the environment and our communities on social media

  • Civic Engagement
  • Educating Voters
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  • Lobby & Advocacy

We started this all-virtual legislative session in the cold of winter, unsure of what to expect from online hearings, zoom votes, and more. Now spring is here, we are past the halfway mark of the Washington State legislative session, and our nimble teams are adapting every week – navigating “virtual Olympia” and ensuring our Priority bills are alive and well.

We’re happy to say that our priorities have survived each critical deadline this legislative session, including the Opposite Policy Cut-off date last Friday. In preparation, two weeks ago we led the Environmental Priorities Coalition in a Digital Week of Action to make our voices heard loud and clear before last week’s cutoff.

We rallied our activists, members and coalition partners on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to advocate for healthy communities and a thriving environment.  Building on the success of last month’s all-virtual Environmental Lobby Week of Action, trained constituents tagged, tweeted and advocated on social media.

Morning to evening, EPC spread the word about important actions to protect and restore Washington’s environment. We used our favorite digital platforms to inspire neighbors, friends, family, peers, and more to act for healthy communities. On Tuesday we kicked off the week of action advocating for Climate Action, pushing for a Clean Fuel Standard and Clean and Just transportation, both key priorities of EPC!  Wednesday, the focus was Environmental Justice, pushing the HEAL Act and updating the Growth Management Act with the #WACantWait campaign. Thursday, we decided to #FollowTheMoney and advocate for Conservation Works budget and a Working Families Tax Rebate, wrapping up the week on Friday with advocacy for Voting Rights Restoration (HB 1078) and the Worker Protection Act.

We’re confident this effort caught the attention of legislators – we estimate that throughout the week, over 500 tweets were sent on behalf of these priorities, and countless Facebook and Instagram posts!

Our Digital Week of Action was accessible to anyone, allowing folks to amplify the campaigns with a post or two every day. We gathered for “lunch time office hours” and at volunteer text banks to answer questions.

With your help, we can build a climate-resilient community here in Washington and beyond. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram to amplify our work. Get to know your legislators names and platforms, help us inspire them to do the right thing, join us in keeping the pressure on through the end of session, and make every week a digital week of action!

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Close-up of the US Capitol illustration on American currency, showing detailed architectural design.
  • Democracy
  • General
  • Legislative
  • Racial & Environmental Justice

Government shutdown will harm people, nature 

SEATTLE, WA – This shutdown is not just a political spat, it is an attack on communities and ecosystems. President Trump and Congressional Republicans have spent the year making things more expensive for working families, everything from food to energy costs to healthcare. At the same time, they’ve been rolling back protections for ecosystems and they’re ignoring funding levels set by law that protect clean air, clean water and a healthy climate. “Washington Conservation Action (WCA) is committed to working across the aisle to find solutions that help all communities thrive,” says Christina Wong, WCA’s interim chief executive officer. “From former Gov. Dan Evans (R) to Gov. Jay Inslee (D), we’ve worked with Republicans and Democrats. We expect our Congress and President to do the same.” Trump, and his Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought (an architect of Project 2025), have made it abundantly clear that they want to gut the staff and expertise of the federal civil service. They have already illegally frozen more than $410 billion in spending on projects that are already approved, everything from cutting greenhouse gas emissions to clean school bus programs to ecosystem restoration. Now, during this shutdown, they plan to permanently fire even more people, with devastating losses to services that benefit us all as well as to the institutional knowledge held by these civil servants. No matter who we are or how we make a living, we all want fairness, stability, and a healthy future for the next generation. Today, that's at risk. Families are losing access to critical protections—from healthcare and disaster relief to clean air and safe drinking water, along with clean energy jobs and affordable electricity. This shutdown isn't an accident. It's part of a larger pattern: Trump and Republicans have complete control over the federal government and have chosen to unlawfully steal billions of dollars from communities while giving handouts to billionaires. We cannot allow these harms to continue. Congress must put enforceable guardrails in place and pursue bipartisan negotiations to protect families, communities, and our environment.

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  • General
  • Legislative
  • Organizational

WCA Names Sen. Lovelett as 2025 Legislator of the Year

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEMedia Contact: Zachary Pullin, 206-639-3760, zachary@waconservationaction.org WASHINGTON STATE (July 15, 2025) Today, Washington Conservation Action (WCA) enthusiastically names Sen. Liz Lovelett (D-Anacortes) of the 40th Legislative District as its 2025 Legislator of the Year, key sponsor of the 2025 Recycling Reform Act. Each year, Washington Conservation Action names a single Legislator of the...

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  • Democracy
  • Educating Voters
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  • General

Announcing first round of WCA’s 2025 Endorsements

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We are honored to live and work on the traditional and ancestral lands of the Nations whose current lands we call Washington. We recognize that borders are artificial—many tribal nations from the North, the South, and the East of present-day Washington also have historical and current ties to these lands.

We express our gratitude as guests and thank the original and current stewards of this land. What we experience today is a product of these nations’ ancestors’ ability to be in relationship with the natural world. We would not be here without their guardianship and connection to the earth.

We also acknowledge Black and African labor on which this country built its prosperity—we honor you.