Washington HB 2497
Washington HB 2497 can be seen here.
“Child fatalities and near-fatalities increased by about 75% between 2020 and 2024 — from 28 cases to 49 cases — and what to do about it took top priority at the Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 14.
Keeping Kids Safe, an organization of foster parents that started amid concerns with HB 1227’s impact, organized a rally at the Capitol that blamed the Keeping Families Together Act (HB 1227), which came into effect in 2023, for the rise in critical cases. HB 1227’s sponsor, Rep. Lillian Ortiz-Self, D-Mukilteo, introduced a new bill on the same day. She says the new bill would address the rise in fentanyl, which she blamed for the rise in childhood fatality and injuries.”
“Ortiz-Self and DCYF attribute the critical case rise to fentanyl — over 50% of critical cases in 2025 were opioid-related. In 2024, HB 6109 was passed to amend that courts can “give great weight” to the lethality of drugs like fentanyl when considering removing a child from a home.
HB 1227 called for family support rather than child removal. Among these supports has been distributing Narcan, which reverses a fentanyl overdose, as well as lock boxes for users to put drugs into, away from children. Rally organizers said this is not enough.
“Are we going to just keep Narcaning people, or can we do something that’s a little bit more permanent?” Fujita said. “Getting people the help that they need so that they can safely parent their kids.”
Organizers cited a funding problem, but said HB 1227’s threshold criteria hold back DCYF workers from removing kids from harmful situations, whether there is adequate funding or not.
“Our members with our union are going out into these homes and knowing that there’s nothing that they can do to keep this child safe,” Lowery said. “It’s keeping us up at night. It is really affecting our mental health because then these kids die, and then we are the ones that are being put on trial … the media is blaming us, when it’s not us.”
Ortiz-Self’s new bill, HB 2497, was first read in the House on Jan. 14, which she hopes addresses the specific concerns that the data is showing about fentanyl.”
“It states that if there is “reasonable concern” for a child’s safety (a lower standard than the “imminent physical harm”), the courts can immediately order child care, addressing medical concerns, and removing the child temporarily from home, Ortiz-Self said. That list will be workshopped throughout this legislative session.
“We’ve got to be careful when we do government overreach,” Ortiz-Self said. “When you go into someone’s house and say, ‘you no longer can have your child,’ we’ve got to be able to prove that.”
Other bills seeking to address the rise in fatalities include HB 1092 from Rep. Travis Couture, R-Allyn, which would change the word “imminent” to “serious.” And HB 2511 from Rep. Tom Dent, R-Moses Lake, that allows “physical imminent harm” to include the presence of illicit drugs.”
Increasing child fatality addressed at rally and in Legislature
[San Juan Journal 1/20/26 by Annika Hauer]
REFORM Puzzle Piece

Lillian Ortiz Self is totally out of line recommending children returned back home to drug addicts, even if “recovering”, because you are always an addict, and always at risk. How many more children in King, Snohomish and Pierce County have to die from fentanyl, opiate exposure for her to realize the statistics? Ortiz-Self states government overreach, which is really stating she does not trust the judgment of case workers, guardians, or relatives. Shame on her, she used to be a social worker but now she’s chasing the bucks. (Because lawyers profit off these cases)