Walla Walla lawmaker’s bill for safer highways with new crash zones moves forward

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UPDATE: January 27 at 11:20 p.m.

The state House Local Government Committee has approved Rep. Klicker’s bill to improve safety on highways with high accident rates.

House Bill 2174, sponsored by Klicker, aims to create Crash Prevention Zones (CPZs) on roads like State Route 395 and Highway 12, where multiple fatal accidents have occurred. The most recent accident claimed the lives of a family of three on Christmas Day.

“We’ve had a number of accidents, primarily within Franklin County and Walla Walla County,” Klicker said in a release by Washington State House Republicans. “These are really high-risk areas, so I looked at a way of trying to solve some of the problems that contribute to collisions.”

The Washington State Department of Transportation reports 68 injury collisions and seven fatalities on State Route 395 from 2020 to 2025. Highway 12 near the Wallula Gap saw no less than 30 collisions in 2025, with three fatalities.

Public hearings must be held before establishing a CPZ, allowing community input. A CPZ can be dissolved after improvements or if recommended by the creating entity.

Lawmakers have until February 17 to pass HB 2174 in the House and send it to the Senate.

WALLA WALLA, Wash. – A new legislative proposal in Washington state by Rep. Mark Klicker (R-Walla Walla) to establish accident risk zones on public roads with high accident rates is set for discussion during the 2026 legislative session.

If passed by the legislature, HB 2174 would give local governments and the state Department of Transportation the authority to designate these zones. Before finalizing any accident risk zone, a public hearing will be held to allow residents to view maps and provide feedback.

Once a zone is designated, authorities would conduct engineering and traffic investigations to identify necessary safety improvements. These may include speed limit adjustments and increased traffic law enforcement. Traffic fines in these zones would be doubled, provided there are signs alerting drivers to the increased penalties.

This legislation was filed just days before a tragic crash on Highway 12 near Touchet that claimed the lives of three people, including a six-month-old child. The crash occurred when a vehicle heading westbound struck a guardrail, overcorrected and collided with an eastbound vehicle carrying the victims.

Rep. Klicker emphasized the urgency of these measures, stating that Highway 12 between Walla Walla and Burbank/Tri-Cities is one of the most dangerous highways in Washington.

During the 2025 legislative session, Rep. Klicker helped secure more than $44 million in funding for improvements over the next four years to enhance safety on this highway.

The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) and the US Highway 12 Coalition have been working on widening US 12 from two to four lanes since 2003.

Phase 8 of the project, scheduled to begin in spring 2027, will complete the remaining 10 miles of the new four-lane highway between Wallula and Nine Mile Hill near Touchet.

ORIGINAL COVERAGE: December 28 at 5:55 p.m.


 

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