Southwest Washington family budgets are under siege from higher gasoline prices, spiking property taxes, rents, and, soon, tolling in some form to the extent that buying shelter, food, water, energy, and transportation is no longer a given for many wage earners.
We are no longer shocked when we find workers living in their cars and sending homeless kids to school.
Now comes Initiative 1631, which if passed in November imposes a fee on carbon emissions, which is to say, on many essential human activities such as travel to work or family activities. Supporters — environmentalists, social justice campaigners and tribal leaders — met in Seattle last May. After dining on lemongrass tofu and regional fine wines, they formed the Alliance for Jobs and Clean Energy.
But will it actually promote jobs or clean energy?
Washington voters turned down a carbon tax in 2016 with 59 percent of the vote. I-1631 instead imposes a fee, its backers emphasize. The fee in 2020 would be $15 per metric ton of carbon, rising $2 each year until state-imposed goals — double-digit reductions compared to 1990 carbon levels — are met. If the program fails to meet the goals, the price rises after 2035.