Yes on I-1631
"Son, we wanted to do something, but the oil companies said gas prices would go up." (Wikimedia)
If you're reading STB, you likely need no reminder that climate change is an emergency that requires urgent action. So we'll dispense with the general case to take on some of the arguments, often in bad faith, deployed against this ballot measure.
First, familiarize yourself with the specifics of the measure. The carbon fee will discourage carbon-intensive habits and directly fund, among other things, transit and transit-oriented development. Purely from that perspective, our endorsement is inevitable.
And yet, we also enthusiastically endorsed I-732, last year's measure, which used carbon tax revenue to cut regressive taxes instead of funding climate remedies. We find I-1631's spending priorities to be largely worthy. But even if you don't, recall that climate change is an emergency. We can't wait for the ideal policy to come along to start taking action.
"Yes, fire season keeps getting worse, but I didn't want to give spending power to an unelected board!" (Wikimedia)
Indeed, I-732's failure suggests there is no political coalition for climate action with tax cuts. Many of the forces now criticizing "spending" and the costs borne by consumers had no interest in a remedy that returned money directly to taxpayers.
There are many attacks that are pure falsehoods, but the other that is superficially true is that the measure will not solve climate change on its own. While technically accurate, it ignores the power of collective action when nations and regions all over the world commit to change their economies to solve a crisis. Moreover, climate change is not a binary outcome: while it is too late to avoid at least some catastrophes, one degree of warming is better than 1.5, which is better than 2, and so on. Every large economy, like Washington State, that makes an effort will help a bit. And finally, a victory for I-1631 would provide a model of how climate policy can work at the state level, raising the possibility of action across the United States.
Vote for I-1631. The costs are modest, the benefits are large, and the fate of humanity may depend on it.
The STB Editorial Board consists of Martin H. Duke and Brent White.