Politics

Special session blues: May the best budget finagler win

The Legislature's special session starts today. Here's what's on the table.

Special session blues: May the best budget finagler win
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John Stang

The Legislature's special session starts today. Here's what's on the table.

The state Legislature begins its 30-day special session today. The question is whether much progress has been made in two weeks of closed-door negotiations.

Gov. Jay Inslee believes some progress has been made, but did not want to publicly discuss the talks last week because that would violate an agreement to keep the negotiations confidential, said Inslee spokesman David Postman.

"We still have a ways to go," said House Majority Leader Pat Sullivan, D-Covington.

When the legislative session ended April 28  the Republican-oriented Senate and the House-controlled House were far apart on what the 2013-2015 state operating budget should be. Sullivan said the current talks have been focused on budget matters. Sen. Andy Hill, R-Redmond and the Senate's lead budget negotiator, could not be reached last week for comment.

Last Thursday, 15 people from Hill's 45th District — who also belong to the Washington Conservation Voters and Environmental Priorities Coalition — gave him a petition with 5,000 signatures that asked him to eliminate a use tax exemption for extracted fuel, which covers a factory or commercial operation's byproducts that are used internally as fuel. The exemption would continue for "hog fuel," which is made from wood byproducts at sawmills and similar facilities. Five oil refineries west of the Cascade Mountains would be affected. And an extra $40.8 million would go to the state in 2013-2015. The petitioners want that money to go to education.

The petition is just the beginning. Both sides, not to mention Inslee, have lists of blocked bills that they want passed this session — with everyone expecting eventual horsetrading.

Here is the impasse that faced the House and Senate two weeks ago.

Inslee also wants several dead policy bills to be revived.

Republican leaders say the DREAM Act, Reproductive Parity Act and any revival of a gun background check bill are not budget measures, and should not be considered in the budget negotiations.

Meanwhile, Republican and Majority Coalition Caucus leaders are considering several workers compensation reform and education reform bills, which House Democrats have stopped, as part of their budget. They say that any budget compromise must include the House passing those bills.

For more exclusive coverage of the state Legislature, check out Crosscut's Olympia 2013 page.

John Stang

By John Stang

John Stang is a freelance writer who often covers state government and the environment. He can be reached on email at johnstang_8@hotmail.com and on Twitter at @johnstang_8