Sunday, December 14, 2008

Is the Speaker of the Washington State House of Representatives delusional?

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Chopp: Washington State's deficit "not that bad?"

How much worse does it need to get before it hits the "bad" level? Isn't upwards of $6 Billion bad enough? The $6 billion figure represents roughly an 18% or so percentage of the budget...

Preliminary figures from Victor Moore, the Guv's budget director, tell us of cuts to public education of around a billion dollars in state funding.

And I, for one, would like to see a little more information on cuts. We've known about this outcome for months. Staff should have already made their recommendations, and we already should have seen them.

What's the hold up?

Originally published Sunday, December 14, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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Chopp: Washington's deficit not that bad
House Speaker Frank Chopp said Washington's projected deficit may not be as bad as it looks.

By Michelle Dupler

Tri-City Herald

KENNEWICK — House Speaker Frank Chopp said Washington's projected deficit may not be as bad as it looks.

Chopp, a Seattle Democrat, was in the Tri-Cities Friday for a forum with the Columbia Basin Badger Club, a local group that grills politicians and newsmakers on political issues without taking sides.

Several club members from the audience of about 75 asked Chopp about the state budget, which officials estimated in November would face a $5.1 billion shortfall in the upcoming biennium.

But Chopp said the doom-and-gloom prophecies include estimates for $1 billion in spending on new programs, which seems unlikely given the current revenue picture.

"In fact, we won't do that now," he said.

Some programs — such as all-day kindergarten — will have to wait until the economy turns around, he said.

Chopp identified several ways he expects the Legislature will look at slashing spending so it doesn't have to borrow money to balance the budget.

Among those were cutting programs added to the budget in recent years that aren't working, such as a job-search program through the Employment Security Department that has only a 5 percent success rate.

"We're going to wipe that out," Chopp said.

He also suggested that about $1 billion the Legislature agreed to put into the state pension system when it had a surplus a year ago could be put on hold.

Areas that Chopp said wouldn't be cut because of constitutional requirements are basic education and funding for people with disabilities, but he added that everything else is on the table.
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