Jaron Goddard is an associate in the Seattle office of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, where she is a member of the firm's energy and climate solutions practice. She works on a broad range of project development, financing, regulatory, and policy issues affecting the solar, wind, hydroelectric, energy storage, energy efficiency, distributed energy resources, electric vehicle, and other renewable energy industries. Jaron combines a diverse experience as a clean energy lawyer, former U.S. Senate staff counsel involved in negotiating and drafting provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA), and strong industry background to create solutions for her clients engaged in the clean energy transition and navigating a constantly evolving international, federal, and state legal and regulatory landscape.
Prior to joining the firm, Jaron served as chief counsel and climate policy advisor to Assistant Majority Leader Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) in Washington, D.C. In this role, she counseled Senator Murray on energy and environmental matters as a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Working in collaboration with White House and federal agency counterparts, Jaron played a key role as a U.S. Senate staffer during the negotiations of Build Back Better, which became the IRA upon passage.
In addition, she worked on the Infrastructure, Investment, and Jobs Act (IIJA), National Defense Authorization Acts, and annual appropriations bills. She led efforts on behalf of the senator to secure billions of dollars across a broad range of matters, including Congressionally directed spending for renewable energy and transmission projects, defense nuclear clean-up, advanced nuclear, low-income electric and water utility assistance, and grid storage development and modernization.
In particular, Jaron led the development of the Clean School Bus Act on behalf of Senator Murray in the 117thCongress, which was successfully included in the IIJA; this bill authorized a new, five-billion-dollar program at the Environmental Protection Agency to spur the nationwide transition of nearly 500,000 diesel school buses to EVs.
Jaron also led the senator’s federal judicial nominations work. In doing so, she led a novel selection process for the senator that was heralded by the House Judiciary Committee and CNN as a nationwide model. Jaron managed the appointment of the 10-member merit selection committee, background investigations of judicial candidates, selection process in conjunction with the White House Counsel’s office, and successful Senate confirmation of these candidates. This nominations work included the successful selection and confirmation of ten federal district court and court of appeals judges.
Jaron’s pro bono practice consists of assisting clean energy industry associations with a wide array of legislative and regulatory matters, from interconnection reform to low-income energy efficiency rebates, to counseling U.S. state energy offices and green banks on clean energy financing structures and transactions and advising an international non-profit on the creation of Energy Attribute Certificates under the I-REC Standard to finance clean energy projects internationally.
During law school, Jaron was appointed by Washington state Governor Inslee to the University of Washington Board of Regents, where she oversaw a $7.6 billion dollar budget, capital expenditures, bonds, mergers and acquisitions, and federal, state, and local compliance obligations. Before law school, Jaron worked as a consultant to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and served in the Peace Corps in Guatemala as a food security and sustainability volunteer.
Jaron Goddard is an associate in the Seattle office of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, where she is a member of the firm's energy and climate solutions practice. She works on a broad range of project development, financing, regulatory, and policy issues affecting the solar, wind, hydroelectric, energy storage, energy efficiency, distributed energy resources, electric vehicle, and other renewable energy industries. Jaron combines a diverse experience as a clean energy lawyer, former U.S. Senate staff counsel involved in negotiating and drafting provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA), and strong industry background to create solutions for her clients engaged in the clean energy transition and navigating a constantly evolving international, federal, and state legal and regulatory landscape.
Prior to joining the firm, Jaron served as chief counsel and climate policy advisor to Assistant Majority Leader Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) in Washington, D.C. In this role, she counseled Senator Murray on energy and environmental matters as a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee. Working in collaboration with White House and federal agency counterparts, Jaron played a key role as a U.S. Senate staffer during the negotiations of Build Back Better, which became the IRA upon passage.
In addition, she worked on the Infrastructure, Investment, and Jobs Act (IIJA), National Defense Authorization Acts, and annual appropriations bills. She led efforts on behalf of the senator to secure billions of dollars across a broad range of matters, including Congressionally directed spending for renewable energy and transmission projects, defense nuclear clean-up, advanced nuclear, low-income electric and water utility assistance, and grid storage development and modernization.
In particular, Jaron led the development of the Clean School Bus Act on behalf of Senator Murray in the 117thCongress, which was successfully included in the IIJA; this bill authorized a new, five-billion-dollar program at the Environmental Protection Agency to spur the nationwide transition of nearly 500,000 diesel school buses to EVs.
Jaron also led the senator’s federal judicial nominations work. In doing so, she led a novel selection process for the senator that was heralded by the House Judiciary Committee and CNN as a nationwide model. Jaron managed the appointment of the 10-member merit selection committee, background investigations of judicial candidates, selection process in conjunction with the White House Counsel’s office, and successful Senate confirmation of these candidates. This nominations work included the successful selection and confirmation of ten federal district court and court of appeals judges.
Jaron’s pro bono practice consists of assisting clean energy industry associations with a wide array of legislative and regulatory matters, from interconnection reform to low-income energy efficiency rebates, to counseling U.S. state energy offices and green banks on clean energy financing structures and transactions and advising an international non-profit on the creation of Energy Attribute Certificates under the I-REC Standard to finance clean energy projects internationally.
During law school, Jaron was appointed by Washington state Governor Inslee to the University of Washington Board of Regents, where she oversaw a $7.6 billion dollar budget, capital expenditures, bonds, mergers and acquisitions, and federal, state, and local compliance obligations. Before law school, Jaron worked as a consultant to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and served in the Peace Corps in Guatemala as a food security and sustainability volunteer.
University of Washington Office of the President Full-Tuition Merit Scholarship
Master’s Capstone Project: “Financial Implications of Direct Bank Lending and Carbon Emissions Trading: Analysis and Recommendations for the Governmental Accounting Standards Board.”
Dean’s List
University of Washington Office of the President Full-Tuition Merit Scholarship
Master’s Capstone Project: “Financial Implications of Direct Bank Lending and Carbon Emissions Trading: Analysis and Recommendations for the Governmental Accounting Standards Board.”
Dean’s List
Jaron has been interviewed for and quoted in numerous publications, including Law360, Energy News Network, Canary Media, Bloomberg, Seattle Times, and Crosscut Media.
Jaron has been interviewed for and quoted in numerous publications, including Law360, Energy News Network, Canary Media, Bloomberg, Seattle Times, and Crosscut Media.