Washington Business Fall 2017 | Legislative Review & Vote Record | Page 10
2017 legislative review
Legislature Reaches Funding Milestone for K-12 Education
For the first time in decades, lawmakers put more than half of
the state’s two-year operating budget toward K-12 education.
Bobbi Cussins
Now that the program of basic education makes up more than 50 percent
of the record-high $43.7 billion state operating budget, the Supreme
Court issued a ruling saying it is satisfied that the funding is sufficient,
but the timeline for implementing the Legislature’s plan is not.
At A Glance
In the 2012 McCleary v. State of
Washington education funding case the
state Supreme Court ordered the state to
comply with the state constitution and fully
and equitably fund the program of K-12
basic education as defined in House bills
2261 (2009) and 2776 (2010).
Since 2013, the Legislature has allocated
an historic $4.5 billion more toward K-12
education, funding pupil transportation,
full-day kindergarten, K-3 class-size
reductions and materials, supplies and
operating costs, or MSOCs.
The final piece — levy reform — was
enacted in the 2017-19 budget
with a restructuring of the state
property tax and local levies.
For more information on McCleary,
educational outcomes and program
specifics, contact AWB Government
Affairs Director Amy Anderson at AmyA@
awb.org. For information on the budget and
tax implications of McCleary, contact AWB
Vice President Government Affairs,
Gary Chandler at [email protected].
Both can be reached at 360.943.1600.
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association of washington business
Legislative leaders and Gov. Jay Inslee gather in the final minutes of the fiscal year
after approving and signing the bipartisan budget agreement.
The governor and lead budget writers in the House and Senate took a victory
lap June 30 as they proclaimed that the two-year, $43.7 billion state budget,
finally fulfills the obligations under the state Supreme Court’s 2012 McCleary
education funding ruling.
More than half of the state’s budget — 50.3 percent — now goes toward K-12
education.
“This is a historic budget because we are going to be fully funding the
education of our children for the first time in the state of Washington in over
30 years,” Gov. Jay Inslee said during the bill signing. “This budget will at long
last fulfill our constitutional obligations to fully and fairly fund basic education
and it also addresses the responsibilities we have under the McCleary decision
to equitably fund our schools.
“With that, I’m going to find a good bill to sign, and I have one right here,”
Inslee said.
But, that’s not the end of the education funding saga that began in the 1970s
and was supercharged in 2012.