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Spin Control

Details of $38.2 billion budget released; votes expected later today

OLYMPIA -- Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Andy Hill, R-Redmond, explains details of the $38.2 billion budget released Monday afternoon. (Jim Camden/Spokesman-Review)
OLYMPIA -- Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Andy Hill, R-Redmond, explains details of the $38.2 billion budget released Monday afternoon. (Jim Camden/Spokesman-Review)

OLYMPIA -- Legislative negotiators just released details of the $38.2 billion compromise, which will come to a vote in the Senate later this afternoon or early this evening.

It would spend $2.8 billion on public schools, where the state is under a court order to live up to its constitutional obligations. It offers public school employees and state workers a cost-of-living raise of 3.2 percent, and gives school employees extra raises in the next two years as the state tries to correct problems with the property tax system.

It increases spending on social programs and mental health care -- another area where the state has lost state challenges for budget cuts during the recession.

It offers all college students in the state a 5 percent tuition reduction next year, and gives further cuts to students at the four-year colleges in the 2016-17 year that amount to 15 percent for Washington State and the University of Washington, and 20 percent at the regional universities like Eastern Washington.

Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Andy Hill, R-Redmond, said the tuition cuts would be the first in state history. 

WSU would receive $2.5 million to seek accreditation for its proposed medical school at its Spokane campus. UW would receive $9 million to continue teaching students in its multi-state WWAMI program in Spokane, with directions to enroll 60 first-year medical students in each of the next two school years. 

"It is a true bipartisan budget," Hill said. "We did it by living within our means."

The budget has no new taxes, although it does close some tax preferences to generate an extra $185 million. 

A budget deal has eluded the Legislature for six months, and it started the third overtime session on Sunday with a partial government shutdown on Wednesday hanging over its head.

Hill said one of the reasons for the extended time was the fact the Senate and House are controlled by different parties. "We're in the world of divided government, so it takes longer." 

House Appropriations Committee Chairman Ross Hunter, D-Medina, said members of both parties, in both chambers, will find something about the budget that they don't like, but that's the nature of compromise.\

Unlike the other Washington, we actually do compromise," Hunter said.

Here's a link to the official overview.



Jim Camden
Jim Camden joined The Spokesman-Review in 1981 and retired in 2021. He is currently the political and state government correspondent covering Washington state.

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