Knot gave the declination for the PNW at 15 degrees. To give a sense of scale to how that differs by location, its about -11 degrees on the Chesapeake. Declination changes over time because Magnetic North moves.
https://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/calcul ... eclination
I am an old-fashioned compass and paper chart navigator. I have gray hair. When I started boating folks just didn't have electronic navigation and auto-pilot. So understand I have some ingrained distrust of the gadget approaches.
When setting a route with waypoints, how do you KNOW its going to steer you clear of trouble? The given accuracy on these things is 10 feet. More than enough in open water. In close quarters? When approaching known rocks or markers? How close is your plotter taking you to turn points?
That 10 feet is on a perfectly calibrated and perfectly functioning system.
Yet, pay attention to double checking it with radar overlay. Begin at the 13:00 mark
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yraYqKlfv5Y&t=50s
If your radar is telling you a mark's location or the shoreline is in a different spot than what the Garmin chart is telling you, then you have a calibration error somewhere in your system. Over-reliance on the electronics can then give you a false sense of security while it either auto-pilots you into trouble or guides you to manually steer it over submerged trouble.
If you want to trust it, verify it. Understand how much potential location error needs to be accounted for.
Back in the day with paper charts, you begin knowing there is an element of guesswork. Electronics, not so much.
"It ain't what you don't know that hurts you, its what you think you know that happens to be wrong."