Climate includes patterns of temperature, precipitation, humidity, wind  and seasons. "Climate change" affects more than just a change in the  weather, it refers to seasonal changes over a long period of time. These  climate patterns play a fundamental role in shaping natural ecosystems,  and the human economies and cultures that depend on them. 
 Because so many systems are tied to climate, a change in climate can  affect many related aspects of where and how people, plants and animals  live, such as food production, availability and use of water, and health  risks.  
 For example, a change in the usual timing of rains or temperatures can  affect when plants bloom and set fruit, when insects hatch or when  streams are their fullest. This can affect historically synchronized  pollination of crops, food for migrating birds, spawning of fish, water  supplies for drinking and irrigation, forest health, and more. 
 Some short-term climate variation is normal, but longer-term trends now  indicate a changing climate. A year or two of an extreme change in  temperature or other condition doesn’t mean a climate change trend has  been "erased.”   
 Worldwide, people are paying serious attention to climate change. In  Washington state, climate change is already disrupting our environment,  economy and communities.  We can help slow it down, but we must take  action now. 
Are climate change and global warming the same thing?
Not exactly, but they’re closely related, and some people use the terms  interchangeably. Global warming causes climates to change.  "Global  warming" refers to rising global temperatures, while “climate change”  includes other more specific kinds of changes, too. Warmer global  temperatures in the atmosphere and oceans leads to climate changes  affecting rainfall patterns, storms and droughts, growing seasons,  humidity, and sea level.  
    Also, while “global warming” is planet-wide, “climate change” can refer  to changes at the global, continental, regional and local levels. Even  though a warming trend is global, different areas around the world will  experience different specific changes in their climates, which will have  unique impacts on their local plants, animals and people.  A few areas  might even get cooler rather than warmer. 
http://www.ecy.wa.gov/climatechange/whatis.htm