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MEANWHILE IN WASHINGTON: New Law Taking Effect June 9 Requires Marketers to Honor “Indications” of Revocation and I’ve About Had It

Patchwork state-level regulations on nationwide telecom activity?

Sounds fine.

Vague phrases in statutes governing speech?

No problem.

(This is me throwing my hat on the ground in disgust).

So we’ve been covering Florida and Oklahoma and the disastrous laws those state legislatures have come up with. (I know I still owe everyone a deep dive into the OK law–it is coming, I promise.)

Out in Washington state though we have a new law to report on–taking effect June 9, 2022–that is not quite as bad as a Mini-TCPA but that will be giving marketers fits for days.

The new law contains the following provisions–that, just for fun, do not match any other jurisdiction’s law:

These rules apply to “telephone solicitations” defined in the new law as: “unsolicited initiation of a telephone call by a commercial or nonprofit company or organization to a person and conversation for the purpose of encouraging the person to purchase property, goods, or services or soliciting donations of money, property, goods, or services.”

Exceptions include:

(a) Calls made in response to a request or inquiry by the called party. This includes calls regarding an item that has been purchased by the called party from the company or organization during a period not longer than twelve months prior to the telephone contact;

(b) Calls made by a not-for-profit organization to its own list of bona fide or active members of the organization;

(c) Calls limited to polling or soliciting the expression of ideas, opinions, or votes; or

(d) Business-to-business contacts.

Notice that calls to any number are covered–but if the call is to a B2B contact (whatever that means) it is exempt. That will be a fun rule to apply.

And in line with Florida and Oklahoma the WA bill also limits contacts to 8 am to 8 pm in the called party’s time zone.

You can read the full bill here: Washington Bill

We’ll keep an eye on this stuff.

Oh, and credit to the Baron (that title is retired) Paul Besozzi over at Squire for flagging this for me. (And if you hear about any other states proposing similar laws let me know–not even the Czar can be everywhere at once. (Yet.))

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