Procedures for qualifying an initiative in Washington

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Contents

Citizens of Washington can use the initiative process to:

A fourth way, not involving direct democracy, that a ballot measure can be placed on the statewide ballot in Washington is through the process of legislative referral. These are known as Referendum Bills. They are proposed laws or constitutional amendments that the legislature chooses to place before the voters on the ballot.

Washington voters are not permitted the right to initiate constitutional amendments through a direct democracy process.

How to begin the process

In order to file an initiative in Washington, the sponsor must file typewritten or printed copy in complete text form of the proposed initiative or referendum with the secretary of state. Your filing must also include a signed affidavit of sponsorship verifying that the sponsor of the initiative is a legal voter of the state. Their is a $5 filing fee. Once the initiative is filed and a ballot title has been granted, sponsors can begin to collect signatures.

Deadlines

Initiative to the People must be filed in the ten-month period prior to the state general election ballot on which you wish the measure to appear. Petitions (signatures) must be filed with the Secretary of State not later than 5 pm on the last business day not less than four months prior to that general election. (For 2008, that date is July 3rd.) If a filing deadline falls on a Saturday, the office of the Secretary of State will be transact business on that Saturday from 8 am to 5 pm.

Initiative to the Legislature must be filed in the ten-month period prior to the regular session of the Legislature in which you wish them to be considered. (For 2008, this period begins March 12th.) Petitions must be filed with the Secretary of State not later than 5 pm on the last business day not less than ten days prior to that regular legislative session convening. If a filing deadline falls on a Saturday, the office of the Secretary of State will be transact business on that Saturday from 8 am to 5 pm.

Referendum Measures may be filed any time after the Governor has signed the act that the sponsor wants referred to the ballot. Petitions must be filed with the Secretary of State not later than ninety days after final adjournment of the session in which the measure was passed by the state legislature. (The current legislative session is scheduled to adjourn on March 13, 2008.)

Single Subject Jurisdiction

Washington has a single-subject rule, which requires that an initiative deal with only one issue or subject.

Signatures

The number of signatures that need to be collected is based on the total number of votes cast for the Governor at the last regular gubernatorial election. Eight percent (8%) of that vote total is required for initiatives and four percent (4%) for referenda. For 2008, 224,880 signatures are required for initiatives. Half that number (112,440 signatures) is required for referenda.


Circulation Period

The circulation period for Initiative to the People petitions is six months.

The circulation period for Initiative to the Legislature petitions is ten months.


Residency

Circulators do not have to be residents of the state of Washington.[1]


Paid Circulators

LIMIT v. Maleng decided that it was not only unconstitutional to ban the payment of petition circulators, but also to regulate how the petitioners are paid.[2]


Distribution Requirement

Washington has no distribution requirement for signatures.


Signature Verification Process

Washington's signature verification involves random sampling.


Initiative and Referendum Law


References

  1. Washington State's Filing Initiative and Referenda Manual: 2005-2008
  2. Minnesota House of Representative, I&R Legislation

External links

Initiative and Referenda Rules and Regulations by Washington State
Brief of Petition Process in Washington

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