Washington Business Fall 2016 | Legislative Review | Page 8
2016 legislative review
Editorial Scorecard
“Washington’s charter-school advocates have walked on eggshells for more
than a year. First, they had to wait almost a year for the state Supreme
Court to rule on opponents’ lawsuit; then they had to stand by for the
Legislature to remedy the court’s decision to close them; and finally they
had another nail-biting wait to see whether Gov. Jay Inslee would veto
the bipartisan, common-sense legislation to keep them open permanently.
A sense of closure finally came Friday when Inslee said he would let
the bill become law — without his signature — two days later.
The good news is Washington’s charter school experiment finally can
continue for about 1,100 students statewide and for others to come.
But Inslee’s indifference to charter schools is disappointing. He should
be championing them.”
— The Seattle Times (1)
“The news that our state ranks in the middle of the pack compared
with other states on a recently released scoreboard is a bit
disheartening, if not entirely surprising.
When it comes to recruiting new businesses and residents — as
well as retaining them — we have some work to do and we know
where many of the shortcomings lie.
It was still a tough thing to hear, however, when Opportunity
Washington recently turned a spotlight on those weaknesses.
Nobody likes to have their flaws flaunted for all to see. But in this
case it just may be the kind of wake-up call our state’s leaders need.
The analysis compared data from 50 states across three
categories Washingtonians say are most important: Achieve
(education quality and outcomes), Connect (transportation
efficiency and reliability) and Employ (economic vitality).
Washington dropped to 28th overall with a score of 68 out of
100. Utah took the top spot with a score of 127.
Twenty-eighth out of 50 is not competitive, no matter the test
or contest.”
— The News Tribune (4)
“The state Legislature deserves to be the butt of a familiar joke:
They’d procrastinate, if only they could get around to it.
For the seventh time in three years, lawmakers treated the
scheduled end of the legislative session like a yield sign, not a stop
sign, and skidded straight into a special session. This time, it was
20 days of overtime, even though the stakes were low. Tuesday’s
agreement on a one-year supplement to the state’s $38.2 billion
two-year budget added less than one half of 1 percent.”
“While the old saw about politics being a contact sport
carries a grain of truth, a couple items out of Olympia
this week lend additional insight to the physical nature
of legislative give-and-take.
In one, Lieutenant Gov. Brad Owen used the
occasion of his retirement announcement to implore
lawmakers to put aside the “insanity of partisan
politics.” While that might be akin to asking sharks to
stop swimming, Owen added, “All it does is create an
environment of ‘us against them’ instead of ‘all of us
for the people.’”
— The Seattle Times (3)
— The Columbian (5)
— The Tri-City Herald (2)
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“Nobody expected Washington state lawmakers to
do much during a 60-day session leading up to a big
November election.
But in some ways, the Legislature undershot those
already low expectations by failing to take action on
two major fronts: They didn’t pass a supplemental
budget, causing the governor to call a 30-day special
session Thursday for them to finish their work. And
they didn’t come up with a way to solve school-funding
issues that have landed the state in contempt of court,
promising instead to fix things next year.
The Legislature’s modest record of accomplishments
was further compromised Thursday when Gov. Jay
Inslee vetoed 27 of the bills lawmakers managed to
agree on this year.”
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