For the first time this special session, the activity moved away from the decorated chamber floor of the Senate to the more utilitarian committee rooms.
The Senate spent most of the morning in caucus, moving a single bill prior to adjourning until Noon tomorrow. The action then moved to the Senate Ways & Means Committee who held a work session, several public hearings, and finally moved a handful of bills to the floor.
The Committee held a work session on new language put forth by Sen. Rockefeller that would provide substance to Senate Bill 6853 which currenlty exists in “title only” format.
The Rockefeller language, which has been in development for some time, recognizes the intent of the Washington Legislature to review tax preferences in the same manner as budget expenditures. The language sets standards for what should be considered in future tax preference legislation and changes membership of the Citizen Commission on the Performance Review of Tax Measures to include the State Treasurer and two members appointed by the Governor of which one must be a citizen representing working families or a nonprofit organization. In addition, the Governor would be required, when submitting tax preference requests to the Legislature, to offset the cost of any preference by reductions/eliminations of existing preferences. Finally, the language would require the Washington Department of Revenue to provide the tax exemption report every 2 years rather than every 4 years.
The Committee took no action on the bill.
Though the Committee took action on several bills, moving them forward to the floor for further consideration, the Commitee only held a public hearing on the one bill of interest to Evergreen. House Bill 2854 was heard before Senate Ways & Means Committee. House Bill 2854 establishes a low interest state loan for students seeking a college education. The Committee took no further action on the bill this afternoon.