Clark County commissioners said Wednesday they might put a nonbinding advisory vote on November’s ballot regarding the Columbia River Crossing.
However, Chief Civil Deputy Prosecutor Bronson Potter reiterated to commissioners his opinion from 2010, when he said they could not have an advisory vote on a matter over which they lack the authority to decide.
Potter said Wednesday that commissioners could ask voters only about whether county money should be spent on the project. He said commissioners could adopt a draft resolution saying no county money would be spent on the planning of the Columbia River Crossing or in support of the bi-state project, and then ask voters whether the resolution should be formally adopted. The language resembles that of a resolution anti-light rail activists are trying to get the Vancouver City Council to put on the ballot.
Commissioner Steve Stuart said county money isn’t much of a player in the CRC, as plans call for state and federal funding.