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HR 4695

In Committee

House

Apple blossom festival

Recognizing the 2026 Apple Blossom Festival.

This status may be delayed. See Action History below for the latest updates.

How does a bill become law?
  1. Introduced: The bill is filed and assigned a number.
  2. Committee: A subject-matter committee holds hearings, takes public testimony, and decides whether to advance the bill.
  3. Floor Vote: The full chamber (House or Senate) debates and votes on the bill.
  4. Opposite Chamber: The bill repeats the committee and floor vote process in the other chamber.
  5. Governor: The Governor reviews the bill and decides whether to sign or veto it.
  6. Signed: The bill has been signed into law.
Introduced: February 19, 2026
Last Action: February 20, 2026
Status: H Adopted

AI Analysis

This analysis was generated by AI and may contain errors. It is not legal advice. Always refer to the official bill text for authoritative information.
People & CommunitiesPeople-leaningCorporate & Wealthy Interests

This resolution honors the 2026 Apple Blossom Festival Royal Court — Brielle Precht, Kaylee Pearsons, and Parker Averi — for their academic, leadership, and service accomplishments. It celebrates the festival’s long-standing role in promoting Wenatchee’s agricultural heritage and community spirit.

  • Formally recognizes the 2026 Apple Blossom Festival Royal Court — Queen Brielle Precht and Princesses Kaylee Pearsons and Parker Averi — for their academic achievement, leadership, community service, and athletic involvement.
  • Highlights each royal court member’s background, including school activities, volunteer work, and future career plans.
  • Affirms the legislature’s tradition of honoring excellence in Washington, specifically noting the festival’s role as a family-oriented event celebrating local heritage and the fruit industry.
  • Directs the Chief Clerk of the House to transmit copies of the resolution to the royal court members and festival organizers.
  • Emphasizes that the festival’s royalty program is a community ambassador and leadership initiative, not just a pageant.

Who is affected

  • 2026 Apple Blossom Festival Royal CourtThe three young women recognized — Brielle Precht, Kaylee Pearsons, and Parker Averi — receive formal legislative recognition for their academic, leadership, and community service achievements.
  • Apple Blossom Festival organizers and participantsThe festival gains official acknowledgment from the state legislature, which may help raise its profile and support continued community engagement.
  • Local residents of Wenatchee and East WenatcheeWenatchee and East Wenatchee communities benefit from increased visibility of local youth and civic pride, especially around the region’s agricultural heritage.
  • Washington high school and college studentsStudents and youth in Washington may be inspired by the examples set by the royal court members, especially regarding leadership, service, and career goals.
Model: Intel/Qwen3-Coder-Next-int4-AutoRoundGenerated: Mar 19, 2026 at 8:24 PM

Pro/Con Analysis

Stronger case for benefits

Potential Benefits (5)
  • Formal legislative recognition of high school and college students for academic achievement, leadership, and community service may reinforce positive youth development norms and inspire other students to pursue similar engagement.

    EducationPeopleRef: Whereas clauses 1, 4, 6, and 7; whereas clause 9 (Brielle Precht); whereas clause 10 (Kaylee Pearsons); whereas clause 11 (Parker Averi)
  • State-level acknowledgment of the Apple Blossom Festival may increase visibility and legitimacy of a long-standing local event, potentially supporting continued civic investment and volunteerism in Wenatchee-area communities.

    Local GovernmentLean peopleRef: Whereas clause 3 (festival history); whereas clause 4 (mission); whereas clause 5 (royalty as ambassador/leadership program); whereas clause 7 (names and hometowns); whereas clause 12 (resolution text); whereas clause 13 (transmission to organizers)
  • Highlighting youth involvement in community service (e.g., tutoring children with special needs, visiting memory care facilities, leading inclusive clubs) may reinforce norms of civic responsibility and community care, with indirect benefits to public safety and social cohesion.

    Public SafetyPeopleRef: Whereas clause 7 (names and hometowns); whereas clause 9–11 (individual bios)
  • Public recognition of students pursuing careers in health, environmental science, and community service may encourage young people—especially in rural or underserved areas—to consider public-interest professions, though the resolution itself has no direct policy impact.

    HealthcarePeopleRef: Whereas clause 9 (Brielle’s plans to create an app for children with type 1 diabetes); whereas clause 11 (Parker’s plans to work for Wenatchee Public Utility District); whereas clause 10 (Kaylee’s interest in neuroscience)
  • The resolution affirms local cultural traditions and agricultural heritage, potentially strengthening community identity and pride in Wenatchee and East Wenatchee, though this is symbolic and not policy-changing.

    Local GovernmentLean peopleRef: Whereas clause 6 (royalty as leadership, not pageant); whereas clause 7 (names and hometowns); whereas clause 12 (resolution text)

Who Is Most Affected

2026 Apple Blossom Festival Royal CourtPositive Impact

The three honorees receive formal recognition, which may boost their resumes and local standing, but carries no material benefit beyond symbolic prestige.

Apple Blossom Festival organizers and participantsPositive Impact

The festival gains symbolic legitimacy and potential media attention, but no funding or policy change is attached—impact is limited to reputation and morale.

Local residents of Wenatchee and East WenatcheePositive Impact

Local residents may feel increased civic pride, but the resolution does not alter local services, taxes, or infrastructure—impact is purely symbolic.

Washington high school and college studentsPositive Impact

Students may feel inspired by peer role models, but the resolution does not create programs, scholarships, or curriculum—impact is anecdotal and unmeasured.

Sponsors

Representative Burnett(Republican)District 12Primary
Representative Steele(Republican)District 12Secondary
Representative Leavitt(Democrat)District 28Secondary
Representative Corry(Republican)District 15Secondary
Representative Keaton(Republican)District 25Secondary
Representative Callan(Democrat)District 5Secondary
Representative Ryu(Democrat)District 32Secondary
Representative Thai(Democrat)District 41Secondary
Representative Parshley(Democrat)District 22Secondary
Representative Ley(Republican)District 18Secondary
Representative Barnard(Republican)District 8Secondary
Representative Dufault(Republican)District 15Secondary
Representative Dent(Republican)District 13Secondary