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INSIDE
View
from Olympia
With the state legislative session complete,
we asked our local representatives to give their view on the accomplishments
of our state government.
By
Senator Georgia Gardner
We faced
an almost insurmountable task and we did it. We came up with a
balanced budget for the state of Washington; we came up with an
excellent transportation proposal; and we did it all in 60 days.
Thats the good news. The bad news is what it took to get
there.
I dont think there is any question that the budget shortfall
has dominated the news since September 11, but Washington was
already headed into an economic decline before the terrorist attacks.
Our triple whammy of drought, electricity shortage, and earthquake
brought us expenses we couldnt have foreseen. Even the fall-out
from the energy crisis was unexpected. We in Washington felt we
could weather it and we could have except we were
required to sell power to California at a time we needed it at
home. To do so, we shut down the aluminum industry in Washington
State.
We knew our transportation crisis was causing businesses to be
concerned about the additional costs of locating in Washington.
Boeing moved their headquarters, and the bottom fell out of the
dot.com industry. Then it was September 11. Washington has been
the leader in both international trade and airplane manufacturing,
the two industries hardest hit in the aftermath. In Whatcom County,
we know first-hand the effects of the large drop in commerce that
comes with tightened security at the border.
We did have some concerns last year when we wrote the biennial
budget. Even though we could not have predicted what actually
happened, we had already started to tighten the purse strings.
During the budget debate in 2000, our Republican colleagues offered
about $500 million in additions to services that we felt we could
not prudently accept. The amendments were good ones and it was
difficult to vote against them. Fortunately we did, or that budget
hole we faced this year would have been even greater.
We had to find $1.6 billion dollars of additional funding or cuts
this year in order to balance the budget. Not only had we suffered
a large decline in revenues, but also a dramatic increase in costs.
When money gets tight in our personal budgets, we cut our spending.
We do without. In government, however, there are soaring costs
we cant escape. We have unemployment, retraining, and medical
care for all the folks who lost their medical insurance along
with their jobs. We have to pick up more of the senior care and
services to the disabled community. Our medical costs alone would
break the budget.
It wasnt a year we could raise taxes and place further burdens
on our people, so we had to make cuts. These are real cuts to
real people and they are going to hurt us all. We will all be
directly affected. For many of us, it will be an inconvenience
a longer wait to renew a drivers license or get a
building permit. For students and their families, it will be higher
tuition and fewer openings for our colleges and universities.
For teachers and school districts, there will be fewer amenities
and less opportunity for planning and development. For all of
us, there will be fewer criminals prosecuted and those convicted
will spend less time in jail. It will take longer for a police
officer or a fire department to respond to your call.
But the people who are really hurt by this budget are those that
need a helping hand, the elderly, the sick, and the disabled.
Through government programs, we have been able to keep people
working, contributing members of the community. This will no longer
be the case. We have been able to get children ready to go to
school so they can succeed once they get there. No more. We have
been able to provide independence, housing, and jobs for the developmentally
disabled. Cant do that now. We have provided caregivers
to seniors so they can stay in their own homes. This will be severely
curtailed.
It could have been worse. We were able to maintain school employees
salary increases, although state workers wont get anything.
We have maintained a starvation level of funding to keep our nursing
homes going.
We have done everything we can to skinny everything down while
minimizing the damage, and we got pretty creative in doing so.
We did use some of the rainy-day fund, but we left $300 million
for next year. We shuffled programs and funds around to get the
maximum return. And we securitized a portion of the tobacco settlement.
We took out a mortgage on one-fourth of the tobacco payments;
we elected to receive the money upfront, at a discount. This is
the same as asking a lottery winner if he or she wants the payments
over 20 years or a lesser amount right now. We need the funding
now; the money will be worth less in the future; and further budget-cutting
will create expenses down the road that will far exceed any discount
we have to take on immediate payment of the tobacco funds.
There has been a fair amount of concern about this tobacco mortgage,
but I think it is a prudent move. I also wonder how many of the
folks expressing concerns have home equity loans. Sometimes the
best thing to do is consolidate the debts at a lower rate of interest,
get through the bad times, and repay it. It is a good alternative
for us as individuals and it is good for the state.
These budget reductions hurt real people and they hurt us as a
group. They hurt now and they will continue to have repercussions
for many years to come. If securitization of a portion of the
tobacco money can minimize this impact, I support it. The question
to ask ourselves is, What are the alternatives? Specifically
what could we schedule for additional cuts? If the answer is to
cut state employees, which ones? The real increases in staffing
have come in education and corrections.
In an article on the legislative session, I have spent my time
on the state budget because I feel it has been the biggest issue.
The transportation budget will go to the voters in November. I
wanted to see it passed in the legislature for three big reasons:
First, the unemployed workers in Whatcom County will be in line
for a significant number of jobs and they want to go to work this
summer, not next. Remember, for many of our unemployed, their
unemployment benefits have already run out and these families
will be without funds for another year. Second, I wanted to inspire
confidence in our business community that we were willing to take
action on our transportation problems so no more of them would
leave the state. And finally, I didnt want to lose billions
and billions and billions of dollars of federal money designated
for the state of Washington. Senator Patty Murray did a fabulous
job getting the money earmarked for us. All we had to do is pass
a transportation budget and have our requests in by March 31.
That federal money is our money, paid from our gas taxes, and
it will now go to other states. It wont wait until we get
there next year; it is lost and gone forever. I believe these
are compelling reasons to pass the transportation budget in the
legislature and a large bipartisan majority of the Senate agreed
with me.
Although the session was primarily budget oriented, we did pass
a number of good measures and we failed on a few others. I was
pleased to enact some safety and consumer protection legislation
along with election reforms and local government issues. I was
disappointed to lose the simple majority vote for school elections.
Ill be spending the months until the next session working
primarily on predatory-lending issues and I should have legislation
ready for January 2003.
It isnt possible to provide as much information as voters
need to judge our performance as legislators and I hope the readers
will access the Washington state government website. See what
bills we sponsored and how we voted. Tune into TVW to listen to
our meetings and floor sessions. Contact us directly. Well
have more hard decisions to make next year and we value your ideas
and opinions..
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