The governor called the Legislature into a special session on April 24, after we were unable to reach a budget agreement within the 105-day legislative session.
We are in a special session because Republicans and Democrats have different approaches to the operating budget and McCleary fix. The Senate Republicans budget uses existing revenue to pay for essential state services while the House Democrat budget proposal would increase spending by 34 percent over the next four years. That is simply not sustainable. We have also discussed in previous legislative updates the Democrats new and increased tax proposals – $8 billion over four years.
Additional revenue is not needed. Our current revenues are up almost 14 percent from the last biennium. Their proposed taxes have already been introduced in one form or another, such as proposed legislation or initiatives, and there has not been enough support to implement them.
While this is frustrating, we should not compromise just to end the legislative session. The citizens of the 18th Legislative District sent me to Olympia to be a good steward of their taxpayer dollars. If the budget proposals on the table raise taxes, are not sustainable and not fiscally responsible, then we must negotiate as long as it takes to have an operating budget on the table that is sensible. With that said, past special sessions have produced strong, bipartisan operating budgets.
A big piece of the budget puzzle continues to be education funding. That is also being negotiated. We’ve discussed the differences between the two plans before and both sides are working to find middle ground.