Playing Chicken with the Supreme Court
Apparently that's the consideration of some in the Legislature. Publicola is reporting that Senator Steve Litzow told a group of regional leaders (in a closed door meeting a couple of weeks ago) that after the election, the Legislature would convene for a special session...for transportation. (It's a gas tax.)
Now either the Governor would have to convene this or the Legislature would have to get a 2/3rds vote in both houses to have a special session.
So here's the question (bold mine).
From Publicola:
Now either the Governor would have to convene this or the Legislature would have to get a 2/3rds vote in both houses to have a special session.
So here's the question (bold mine).
From Publicola:
And this brings us to the
"One Question" we've got for Litzow: Is he trying to get the Washington
State Supreme Court—which is already holding him (along with the entire
legislature) in contempt for failing to come up with a plan to fully fund K-12 education—to
throw him in jail now? The legislature needs to come up with about $5
billion extra for K-12 education. The Court would certainly be
stunned—after being told by the state's attorney at the September's
contempt hearing (the state lost, obviously) that school funding was the #1 priority and was "on every legislator's lips" —to then see legislators come up with $12 billion for transportation and not education.
And second question, actually: How would that square with Litzow's caucus' mantra to "fund education first?"
Another question: what will the Legislature do if I-1351 passes AND they have McCleary on their plates?
Comments
http://www.del.wa.gov/publications/research/docs/ECEAP_expansion_plan.pdf
PSP
But, inherent in the idea of basic funding and fully-funding is class size so I think the two overlap.
Hope he's replaced in the next election.
CT