Students
from WashPIRG chapters around the state, including the UW and Evergreen
State College, met on the front steps of the capitol building in
Olympia to hold a press conference with state legislators on Friday.
At the conference, a papier-mâché polar bear and a petition with
1,000 signatures was presented to Sen. Craig Pridemore (D-WA), asking
that the Washington state legislature make climate change and other
environmental issues a top priority.
Junior Tamara Mitchell gave a speech addressing why climate change
is an important issue for the legislature and important to college
students across the country.
“The actions of America’s leaders today directly affect the severity
of this threat to upcoming generations,” she said. “Clearly this threat
is an intergenerational problem that requires an intergenerational
solution.”
Pridemore agreed with the significance of the four energy efficiency
bills WashPIRG is advocating. Two of the bills, one focusing on
creating affordable energy efficient appliances and one encouraging
energy efficiency in public buildings, failed early on in the process
due to a lack of bi-partisan support.
“This is the greatest challenge we have faced,” Pridemore said. “Not enough people are concerned.”
Sen. Rosa Franklin (D-WA) spoke encouraging words to the students
and commended them on their passion and activism, citing civic
engagement and political involvement as the driving forces behind
making their goals a reality.
“Believe in yourselves,” Franklin said. “Since the ‘50s and ‘60s I
have seen the erosion, disinterest and hatred for civic engagement.
Civic engagement cannot be stressed enough. … Look at history, this is
where it starts: on the campuses. Let your voices be heard.”
Senator Franklin left challenging students to be stewards for the environment.
“Leave this planet a little better than you found it,” she said.
Mitchell said she hopes WashPIRG will continue to fight for government funding for the remaining two bills.
“We stand here at the steps of our capitol because we believe these
are the right steps to take towards a progressive Washington state,”
Mitchell said. “We stand here at the steps of Washington because we are
the change we want to see in the world.”
[Reach reporter Garrett Troy at news@thedaily.washington.edu.]