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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Spin Control

Sunday Spin: It’s not over til…

OLYMPIA – In trying to come up with a pity description for late special session, I couldn’t shake the memory of a particularly annoying greeting that adults seemed to enjoy during my teenage years: Working hard, or hardly working?

Ask the handful of legislators involved in budget negotiations, they’d say the former. Ask many others in or around the Capitol, the judgment would likely be the latter.

By outward appearances, the workload for this emergency session was disappointingly light.

Even protesters from Occupy Olympia, who had to be escorted out of budget hearings and forcibly removed from the Capitol rotunda at the start of the first week, gave up any pretense of interest by the second week. They showed an amazing lack of staying power.

By the time the session wound down on the final day, Jen Estroff, the government relations director for the Children’s Alliance, had coined a phrase summing things up nicely. . .

To read the rest of this item, go inside the blog.
 


The formal end of a session is called Sine Die, the Latin equivalent of “That’s all, folks”; it’s pronounced Sigh-Nee-Die.
This session’s end, Estroff said, is “tiny die.”
It’s not as if Estroff or most other people watching the session regard $480 million as chicken scratch. That’s the amount the Legislature managed to find to start filling the yawning gap in the General Fund budget. Taken as a whole, one might be able to buy a middling NFL team or a couple of premium baseball players for that amount.
But when facing a gap of at least $1.4 billion – or $2 billion if the state wants to avoid blowing through its emergency and Rainy Day funds and checking under the office cushions for change that might have rolled out of lobbyists’ pockets – that’s just somewhere between a third and a fourth of the hole filled.
One can still fall in, and drop a long, long way.
Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Ed Murray, D-Seattle, noted that the first $480 million was difficult. The panel held hearings on the governor’s proposed cuts, which would fill the entire gap by bulldozing complete programs over the edge, and it was responsible not to make those cuts hastily, he said.
“We allowed the public, night after night after night, to testify about the impacts of what we were about to do, the impacts on their lives,” Murray said.
Some legislators will spend part of the next three weeks looking for other solutions. But whatever they propose will generate another parade of witnesses with heartfelt stories of how a state program helped them, their children, their elderly parents, their neighbor, their co-worker or their employer. It gets harder, not easier.
Republicans are sure to come back Jan. 9 with calls for government reform, although in proposing reforms of her own, Gregoire essentially dared them to come up with proposals that pencil out to anywhere near the remaining $1 billion to $1.5 billion needed.
Some Democrats will come back with plans for new taxes, although the larger the number of tax plans presented, the less likely any will pass.
The last day of the session was not so much of an end as a winter break. A new semester starts in January; the Legislature took an incomplete this term now must earn the equivalent of a doctorate in budgeting.
We can’t have another tiny die.
 



The Spokesman-Review's political team keeps a critical eye on local, state and national politics.