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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Spin Control: Education issues greet East Side business representatives

OLYMPIA – Members of Greater Spokane Incorporated and nearby chambers of commerce made their annual pilgrimage to the capital last week and walked into the middle of the debate over public schools and the courts, which may be the session’s most contentious issue.

The group, which comes early each year to lobby for a variety of local projects and concerns, arrived just as the Senate had passed a new plan to pay for charter schools, so the topic was ripe for discussion – and differences of opinion – from lawmakers making presentations the next day.

The Senate had voted to pay for charter schools out of the fund that holds money collected from the Lottery, then refill that pot of money from the general fund. That isn’t going to cut it with the Washington Supreme Court, which last fall said charter schools can’t get money from the general fund, Sen. Andy Billig, D-Spokane, predicted. People might not like the court’s decision – heck, nobody likes all the court’s decisions – but that’s the system we have, he told the group.

Rep. Bob McCaslin, R-Spokane Valley, was not so charitable toward the high court. “Supreme Court overreach is the main issue,” he told the group a few minutes later. “The Supreme Court keeps moving the goal posts of what we’re supposed to achieve, and when.”

Rep. Chris Reykdal, D-Tumwater, said House Democrats have doubts the court will agree with using Lottery money and may counter with something else. Other charter schools around the state might have to do what the two Spokane schools did and come under the control of their local school district, he said.

But there are 296 school districts in the state, and only Spokane Public Schools stepped forward on charter schools, said Sen. Steve Litzow, R-Mercer Island. He was quick to compliment the district leadership on being forward thinking but added it was also unique. Litzow had pushed the charter school revision bill through the Senate the day before but said debate would continue for weeks.

Like McCaslin, he accused the court of “overreach” for requiring a plan on how the Legislature will deliver on the final piece of its paramount constitutional duty to provide adequately for the education of the state’s children. That involves changing the way state and local property taxes are collected and distributed, a complicated problem that has many proposals, each with only a few supporters, he said.

“You literally have lit everybody’s hair on fire in the Legislature,” Litzow told the group. Well, not literally, because no one has shown up on the floor with singed locks. But it is a hot topic.

Before leaving town, the Spokane contingent had breakfast with Chief Justice Barbara Madsen and Justice Debra Stephens, who tried to pour a little oil on troubled waters. They meet regularly with the governor and legislators on “areas where we bump up against each other,” Madsen said. “We try to be reasonable with one another.”

Asked for a reaction to the fact the Legislature has done little or nothing about the contempt order and the $100,000-per-day fine for not coming up with a plan to solve that property tax conundrum, Stephens demurred.

“We don’t have a bank account,” she said, although the court is tracking the total owed. “Do we feel snubbed? It’s neither here nor there. Our enforcement power depends on the respect for the rule of law.”

Just wondering

Newly elected Rep. Mary Dye, R-Pomeroy, raised some eyebrows and made headlines by asking some teens lobbying in support of Planned Parenthood whether they were virgins. She later said she may have been trying to be more motherly than the teens would have expected for a state representative, adding, “if anything I said offended them or made them feel uncomfortable, I apologize.”

Some were appalled, others have chalked it up to a rookie mistake, and still others seem to feel Dye was perfectly within her rights because the teens were lobbying for an organization that offers contraceptives. You go asking a legislator for support, you should be prepared for the tough questions, those folks have said.

If that’s the case, ask yourself if a legislator would be within his or her right to ask lobbyists from the liquor, beer or wine industries how many are alcoholics? Or members of the beef industry and the fast-food franchise owners if they’ve needed to have their arteries unclogged? Or reps of the soft drink distributors or candy manufacturers who has diabetes? Or ask for a show of hands among tobacco industry lobbyists who’s had lung cancer or a heart attack? Or quiz folks from the state medical association how many malpractice suits they’ve lost?

Even if you think any or all of those questions would be a fine idea, let’s admit any such questions are extremely unlikely to be posed because those are groups with clout in Olympia. Teens, not so much.

Say what?

State Supreme Court Justice Stephens, explaining to the GSI contingent her view of the judiciary’s role in protecting an individual’s right to come to the courts for justice: “The littlest dog can lift its leg against the biggest tree.”

Spin Control, a weekly column by Olympia reporter Jim Camden, also appears online with daily items and reader comments at www.spokesman.com/blogs/spincontrol.