logo
WA governor signs hunting, fishing fee increases into law; Discover Pass price also rising

WA governor signs hunting, fishing fee increases into law; Discover Pass price also rising

Yahoo20-05-2025
May 19—Washington hunters and anglers will pay more money for their licenses starting this summer.
Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson on Saturday signed a new law that raises fees for nearly all hunting and fishing licenses by close to 40%.
Under the law, an annual resident combination fishing license will now cost $62.79. A big game hunting license that includes deer, elk, bear and cougar tags would cost a resident $117.30.
For nonresidents, the combination fishing license will cost just under $150 and the big game license will be just over $1,000.
The law goes into effect July 1.
It's the first time hunting and fishing fees have increased since 2011. While the new fees are expected to bring in more revenue for the Department of Fish and Wildlife, officials have said it won't result in a net increase in its budget because of expected cuts to the agency's share of the state general fund.
Most state agencies are facing cuts as part of the budget lawmakers sent to the governor this spring as they tried to manage a statewide budget shortfall.
License price hikes will help stave off deeper cuts for WDFW, but officials are still bracing for major changes, including cuts to several work programs and possible staff reductions.
Staci Lehman, a WDFW spokesperson, said agency officials are still working out many of the details of those cuts.
Also on Saturday, Ferguson signed a bill increasing the cost of a Discover Pass from $30 to to $45 starting Oct. 1. The pass is required for vehicle access to state parks and oither state managed properties. Its price hasn't been increased since the pass was put in place in 2011.
Most of the proceeds from the Discover Pass go toward Washington State Parks and make up a significant portion of the agency's budget. Smaller amounts go to WDFW and the Department of Natural Resources.
Ferguson vetoed a section of the Discover Pass bill that would have ordered a work group to study funding mechanisms for the three agencies. In a letter explaining the veto, Ferguson wrote that the effort risked diverting limited funding from other important work at the three agencies.
Similar to WDFW, Washington State Parks officials don't expect the price increase to provide a singificant boost to the agency's budget because of cuts in its general fund appropriations.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Over 200 affordable housing units coming to southwest Atlanta
Over 200 affordable housing units coming to southwest Atlanta

Axios

timea day ago

  • Axios

Over 200 affordable housing units coming to southwest Atlanta

Another affordable housing project is getting underway on the southwest side of Atlanta. Why it matters: Skyrocketing housing costs and gentrification are making it hard for long-time Atlanta residents to remain in their communities. The latest: Sylvan Hills II will include 233 affordable housing apartments and townhomes built on the site of the former Sylvan Circle Apartments. This project will sit near a 184-unit affordable housing development for older residents that opened two years ago. What they're saying: Alan Ferguson, chief housing and real estate officer for Atlanta Housing, said at a groundbreaking event Tuesday the type of units offered in the new development will range from "efficiencies" to three-bedroom layouts. "What you see here is today is a result of the shared values, the common vision and innovation and belief, and what's possible when you work together," Ferguson said, adding the project is funded through a public-private partnership. Zoom in: Rents will range from $1,149 to $2,100, according to Atlanta Housing. 24 units will be reserved for two-income households making around $45,700 or 50% of the Atlanta region's area median income; 93 units will be for tenants who make 60% of the AMI ($54,840); and 116 units will be for those who bring in 80% of the AMI ($73,120). Where is Sylvan Hills: The neighborhood, which is majority-Black, is bordered by Langford Parkway to the south, Lee Street to the west, the Downtown Connector to the east and Deckner Avenue to the north. The big picture: Mayor Andre Dickens, who set a goal to preserve or add 20,000 affordable housing units by 2030, said the project shows Atlanta is taking "another step forward to this lasting legacy of progress in our great city." So far, Atlanta has completed 6,800 of those units and another 5,000 are already under construction or funded. He also said Atlanta has implemented initiatives, such as a density bonus program and rapid housing projects, to increase the affordable housing supply in the city. Context: Council Member Antonio Lewis, who represents the area, said the project will provide social mobility to people facing economic hardships on the south side of the city. "There simply aren't enough words to express my gratitude for these public-private partnerships which are making these possible," he said. "At the heart of these partnerships is this shared truth that everyone deserves a decent place to live and a place to grow."

How Big Business killed the ‘click-to-cancel' FTC rule, which would have saved consumers billions
How Big Business killed the ‘click-to-cancel' FTC rule, which would have saved consumers billions

Los Angeles Times

time11-07-2025

  • Los Angeles Times

How Big Business killed the ‘click-to-cancel' FTC rule, which would have saved consumers billions

When consumers are asked to identify their most frustrating interaction with businesses, the obstacles to canceling an automatically-renewing service invariably rank high. Some companies require cancellations to be done by phone, or even in person. Even finding a cancellation option on a merchant's website can be daunting. Cancellation can require multiple steps online, or waiting for hours on hold — before a call just gets dropped without warning. Millions of consumers have ended up paying unwittingly for services or goods they no longer want or need, sometimes for years. So unsurprisingly, the Federal Trade Commission last year finalized a 'click to cancel' rule, requiring that it be as easy to cancel a recurrent subscription as it is to sign up. Also unsurprisingly, the rule came under immediate attack from Big Business, via a federal lawsuit filed last year by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business lobbies. Possibly most unsurprisingly, a three-judge appeals court panel in St. Louis (two appointed by Trump and one by George H.W. Bush) threw out the rule on Tuesday — less than a week before it was to take effect and after more than five years of painstaking administrative and regulatory work — on a legal technicality. Whether the rule will be resurrected by today's FTC is unclear; the commission told me by email it's still 'considering our options.' The FTC's two GOP commissioners — including Andrew Ferguson, who was elevated to the chairmanship by Donald Trump in January — dissented in the 3-2 vote last year to make the rule final. Ferguson succeeded Biden appointee Lina Khan, who told podcaster Pablo Torre last month that the rule had 'enormous support' from the public. The commission has sued several companies over their automatically-renewing subscription services, including Amazon, Adobe and Uber, which it sued as recently as April. Those cases are pending. In announcing the Uber lawsuit, Ferguson observed that 'Americans are tired of getting signed up for unwanted subscriptions that seem impossible to cancel' and said the commission 'is fighting back on behalf of the American people.' Before delving more deeply into the court's ruling, here's some background on why the rule was drafted in the first place. Its target was 'negative option' programs, in which businesses assume customers have consented for automatic renewals unless the customers explicitly cancel. These programs were pioneered by book-of-the-month clubs and similar others, which delivered merchandise to members unless the members told them to skip their monthly offerings. When the FTC first moved against this practice with a 1973 rule, its quarries were 72 book clubs and four record clubs. The practice mushroomed, especially during the pandemic, when people signed up for automatic deliveries of goods or streamed entertainment so they wouldn't have to leave the house. By 2022, businesses were making a mint from auto-renewals, relying on 'lapses in consumer memory and on a lack of fluency with technology,' as 11 law professors told the appeals judges in a friend-of-the-court brief. Seniors who forget what they have signed up for and can't easily navigate online procedures and parents of young children who get snared into signing up for subscriptions tend to be the most common victims. Opinion polls revealed that more than half of all consumers had faced unwanted charges at some point from these programs. Almost three-quarters of respondents to a survey by JPMorgan Chase said they were wasting more than $50 a month on automatic payments for goods or services they no longer needed. A cottage industry of firms purporting to help consumers track down their forgotten subscriptions sprung up — typically operating on the same subscription model. Think all this was accidental? Think again. When the FTC started investigating negative option programs, 'we were stunned to see just how deliberate a business strategy it is,' Khan, who oversaw the regulation's development, told Torre. In 2019, the FTC began working on expanding its 1973 regulation of book clubs to cover all forms of negative option marketing and published a final rule last November. The rule required businesses to clearly disclose all costs and terms of their programs, to obtain explicit enrollment consent from customers and to provide a means of cancellation that is 'at least as easy to use' as signing up. In other words, if it took two clicks to sign up, it would have to take no more than two to cancel. In a parallel effort, in 2023, the FTC sued Amazon over the enrollment and cancellation procedures for its Prime memberships, which afford enrollees discounted shipping fees and access to Amazon's video and music streaming services for annual or monthly fees. The agency asserted that the giant online retailer had 'knowingly duped millions of consumers into unknowingly enrolling in Amazon Prime' and 'knowingly complicated the cancellation process for Prime subscribers who sought to end their membership.' Amazon enticed nonmember customers into signing up for Prime by showering them with repeated come-ons while they tried to finalize a purchase, the FTC said. Some of these messages, the FTC said, obscured that customers who responded to seemingly free offers were actually signing up for Prime. After the FTC told Amazon it was investigating its approach, the company made the signup process more transparent. The agency asserted, however, that even after internal analyses showed Amazon executives that having customers 'sign up without knowing they did' was a major 'customer problem,' higher-ups pushed back against efforts to clarify the sign-up process online. The reason, the agency said, is that the 'clarity improvements' drove subscription numbers down. Prime executives ultimately 'pulled the plug' on the changes, the FTC said. Perhaps more frustrating for consumers was what the FTC labeled the 'labyrinthine' procedure to cancel Prime memberships. This was known inside Amazon, the FTC said, as the 'Iliad flow,' a term that evokes the seemingly endless Trojan War as described in Homer's epic. It was, as the agency laid it out, a 'four-page, six-click, fifteen option' cancellation process. Amazon pared down the process in early 2023, shortly before the FTC filed its lawsuit but after the agency sent it civil investigative demands — a form of subpoena — related to the signup and cancellation processes. In its answer to the lawsuit, Amazon said that its signup and cancellation procedures complied with federal law by 'prominently and repeatedly disclosing key terms, obtaining express informed consent from consumers, and offering a simple cancellation method.' The company also disputed the FTC's 'characterization' of its enrollment and cancellation practices. The claims in the FTC lawsuit, the company said, are 'factually unsupported, legally unprecedented, and wholly antithetical to the FTC's mission of protecting consumers.' It said that it had established an internal team to analyze customer complaints, and that although the team's studies arose from 'anecdotal feedback expressed from a relatively small number of customers,' it 'took that feedback seriously' and made efforts to address the concerns. The FTC lawsuit is currently scheduled to go to trial in Seattle on Sept. 22. Businesses that fear the sting of the FTC's crackdown maintained that the agency had been trying to stamp out a consumer benefit. Auto-renew terms, argued purveyors of home service contracts in a friend-of-the-court brief, appreciate automatic renewals 'because they take one thing off their plate given busy workdays, hectic family schedules, or other demanding circumstances.' The appeals judges expressed some empathy with the victims of marketing scams. 'We certainly do not endorse the use of unfair and deceptive practices in negative option marketing,' they wrote. But they subjected the commission's rulemaking procedure to pitiless quibbling. The commission had failed at one point to issue a 'preliminary' regulatory analysis of its proposed rule, as required by law in some cases. But the FTC did issue a 'final' analysis, which was available for public comment. Yet there could be little in a preliminary analysis that the final analysis wouldn't cover, and businesses had every opportunity to pick it apart (as they did). Nevertheless, because of the FTC's shortcut, the judges said, the business community 'lost a notable opportunity to dissuade the FTC' from issuing the rule. Is that plausible? Industry could hardly be unaware that the rule was under consideration; businesses had mobilized to protect negative option marketing starting at least in 2019, and they hardly lacked for resources to 'dissuade' the commission. This ruling looks more like a reflection of the observation of Dickens' Mr. Bumble in Oliver Twist: 'The law is a ass.' The rule addressed a known consumer abuse that had received bipartisan condemnation in Congress over the years. In developing the rule, the FTC solicited public comment at virtually every stage. Moreover, the rule addressed a marketing process that is destined to keep mushrooming. Companies that used to market their products on a buy-once, use-forever basis have turned to subscription models that allow them to collect fees once a month or annually into the limitless future. If buyers forget that they subscribed and don't notice the regular charges on their credit card or bank statements, so much the better. 'Everything wants to be a subscription now,' Khan told Torre. 'Firms have identified this as a key revenue source, and they've noted that to fully monetize that, they need to make it as easy to sign up and as difficult to cancel' as they can. So they implemented 'explicit strategies to make that happen.' Three conservative judges have given those strategies new life. It's up to the FTC to make its chairman's promise a reality.

Washington state braces for SNAP cuts under Trump spending bill
Washington state braces for SNAP cuts under Trump spending bill

Axios

time07-07-2025

  • Axios

Washington state braces for SNAP cuts under Trump spending bill

The sweeping domestic policy bill President Trump signed last week will cut food assistance for hundreds of thousands of Washingtonians, Gov. Bob Ferguson's office says. The big picture: The legislation makes deep cuts to the social safety net — including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, commonly known as food stamps) — while extending tax breaks and boosting immigration enforcement. By the numbers: All told, more than 908,000 people in Washington received SNAP benefits as of March 2025, per federal data. That's about 11% of the state population. Zoom in: Among other changes, the maximum monthly allotment for Washington's SNAP recipients will drop, falling from $975 to $848 for a family of four, Ferguson said in a news release. New work requirements could also cause more than 130,000 Washingtonians to lose their benefits entirely, the Democratic governor said. What they're saying:"This bill takes food from our most vulnerable Washingtonians to give tax breaks to the ultra-wealthy," Ferguson said. The other side: Trump calls the legislation his "big, beautiful bill," and described it last week as "the greatest victory yet" for his administration.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store