The Washington State
Legislature is close to expanding its power when it comes to wood
stoves—in an alarming way—in SB 6102 and HB 2326 (which has passed
the House).
House Bill 6102, passed the House 66 to
30, Senate Bill 2326 now in Senate Committee on Environment. Steve Tharinger sponsored this bill. Kevin Van De Wedge voted
for it. Both are from the Olympic Peninsula. The legislative committee
recommends "do pass."
What
these bills would do is to define what “prohibit” means to include “forcing homeowners
to remove or destroy their wood stoves’’. You might follow the law,
you might even never use your wood stove—but the state could require you
to rip it out. This would include stone fireplaces.
Here
is the full provision:
“Prohibit the use” or
“prohibition” may include requiring disclosure, removal, rendering
inoperable, providing evidence of destruction, or other similar requirements as
may be approved by rule by a local air pollution control authority or the
department.”
Think
about this: “prohibiting the use” of a wood stove in order to
keep the air clean suddenly means the power to create a wood stove registry
(“disclosure”), or to take or destroy them? Simply by redefining
one word, this legislation dramatically expands government power in a way that
could trample property rights and create a dangerous precedent in other areas
of law.
Think
about this: Washington State just experienced a winter storm that left
many without power for days while the weather was bitter cold and many streets
impassible. Does the legislature really want to eliminate what for many people
is their only source of backup heat in such an emergency?
One last
thought: Considering past actions by the government in things like “beach
watchers” and other environmental efforts, it is probably fair to expect
that they will urge people to call and report neighbors when they see smoke
coming from a fireplace.
FOR THOSE WHO
GIVE A DAMN- HERE’S THE SENATE DIRECTORY: https://www.leg.wa.gov/senate/Pages/default.aspx
House Bill 6102 would
enable unspecified,
unaccountable, unelected "authorities" to
prohibit use of
fireplaces and even the use of Oregon-approved clean-burning stoves under
certain environmental situations
Enforcement of this proposed law “may
include requiring disclosure, removal, rendering inoperable, providing evidence
of destruction, or other similar requirements as may be approved by rule by a
local air pollution control authority or the department.”