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Rep. Deb Eddy, serving the 48th District Serving Clyde Hill, Hunts Point, Yarrow Point, Medina, and parts of Redmond, Kirkland, Issaquah and Bellevue. |
For immediate release - January 29, 2009
Olympia – State Rep. Deb Eddy
(D-Kirkland) is pushing hard to make it easier and cheaper for
Washingtonians to purchase and drive electric vehicles.
In this
morning’s House Technology, Energy and Communications committee meeting, she
explained that House Bill 1481 is a necessary step towards building the kind
of infrastructure that makes possible the early deployment of electric
vehicles.
“We must make it easy for this transportation technology
to grow,” says Eddy. “Both to reduce our carbon footprint and to reduce our
reliance on foreign oil.”
Eddy’s legislation would:
• Provide
numerous tax incentives such as B&O tax deductions for installing electric
car plug-ins and sales tax exemptions for purchasing electric vehicles or
electric vehicle batteries;
• Set targets for larger counties to provide
dedicated private and public parking spaces that are “electric vehicle
ready;”
• Require certain kinds of new or retrofitted parking garages,
parking lots, office and retail spaces and homes to be built with the
electric circuitry that supports electric vehicle charging;
• Require
cities in large counties to begin incorporating charge spots in on-street
parking areas near larger commercial and multi-family developments; and
•
Set targets for the state to purchase electric vehicles when replacing fleet
vehicles.
Israel, Denmark and Australia have made headlines as
early-adopters of the new technology. Here in the United States, the idea is
also starting to gain traction. If enacted, Washington would become only the
fourth state to aggressively tackle the creation of an electric vehicle
infrastructure. Hawaii, California and Oregon have partnered with
manufacturers of the vehicles and network suppliers to begin building the
technology and network necessary to make electric cars an attractive choice
for consumers.
Eddy is hopeful that the growing urgency to take
action on climate change will prompt the Legislature to move quickly.
“While the Governor is announcing her own climate agenda this morning,
we’re beginning to take the concrete steps necessary to make things happen.”
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