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Washington Require Payments to Non-Public School Students Initiative (2026)

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Washington Require Payments to Non-Public School Students Initiative

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Election date

November 3, 2026

Topic
Public education funding and School choice policy
Status

Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballotNot on the ballot

Type
Indirect initiated state statute
Origin

Citizens



The Washington Require Payments to Non-Public School Students Initiative is not on the ballot in Washington as an indirect initiated state statute on November 3, 2026.

The ballot initiative would have required 100,000 payments annually of $12,000 to families of home-schooled and private-school students, paid for with funds currently restricted to public schools, early learning, and higher education.[1]

Text of measure

Full text

The full text of the measure is available here.

Path to the ballot

Process in Washington

See also: Laws governing the initiative process in Washington

An indirect initiated state statute is a citizen-initiated ballot measure that amends state statute. There are nine (9) states that allow citizens to initiate indirect state statutes.

While a direct initiative is placed on the ballot once supporters file the required number of valid signatures, an indirect initiative is first presented to the state legislature. Legislators have a certain number of days, depending on the state, to adopt the initiative into law. Should legislators take no action or reject the initiative, the initiative is put on the ballot for voters to decide.

In Washington, the number of signatures required for an indirect initiated state statute, called an Initiative to the Legislature (ITL), is equal to 8% of the votes cast in the last gubernatorial election. Signatures for indirect initiatives are due at least 10 days prior to the beginning of the legislative session in the year of the targeted election.

In Washington, the Legislature has three options regarding Initiatives to the Legislature:

  • (1) The Legislature can adopt an Initiative to the Legislature, in which case the initiative is enacted into law without a vote of electors;
  • (2) The Legislature can reject or not act on the initiative, in which case the initiative is placed on the ballot at the next state general election; or
  • (3) The Legislature can approve an alternative to the proposed initiative, in which case both the original proposal and the legislative alternative are placed on the ballot at the next state general election.

If an indirect initiative goes to the ballot, a simple majority vote is required for approval.

The requirements to get an Initiative to the Legislature certified for the 2026 ballot:

Stages of this ballot initiative

The following is the timeline of the initiative:[2]

  • May 23, 2025: Citizen Brian Heywood filed the petition for the initiative with the Washington secretary of state's office.
  • June 6, 2025: The initiative was issued a serial number (IL26-880), a ballot title, and a ballot summary. It was cleared to begin gathering signatures.
  • January 2, 2026: The initiative failed to have enough valid signatures submitted by the January 2, 2026 deadline, and did not make the ballot.

External links

See also

Footnotes