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Zarelli proposes constitutional amendment to require
savings of exceptional revenue
SJR 8209 leads a trio of measures aimed
at improving state budget situation
January 21, 2009
OLYMPIA…
Sen. Joseph
Zarelli today proposed an amendment to the state
constitution that would route more money into the state’s
rainy-day fund when revenue collections are exceptionally large,
as they were from 2005 to 2007.
“State government is better prepared now to handle ‘rainy days,’
thanks to the voters, but there’s more we can do to bring
stability to the budgeting process. This amendment would treat
an exceptional revenue collection as one-time money and put it
out of easy reach of the Legislature,” said Zarelli,
R-Ridgefield.
Senate Joint Resolution 8209 already has gained bipartisan
support, with Sen. Lisa Brown, Senate Democrat leader, at the
top of the list of co-sponsors. She worked with Zarelli in 2007
to get the rainy-day fund amendment put on that year’s ballot,
where it passed overwhelmingly.
Last week Zarelli suggested the projected gap lawmakers must
close when writing the 2009-11 state operating budget could
reach $7.5 billion. Had the change represented by SJR 8209 been
made prior to 2005, Zarelli estimates that difference would be
nearly $5 billion smaller.
“The extraordinary amount of revenue taken in during the 2005-07
biennium, when revenues grew by 21.4 percent, is already gone.
There was nothing to force the Legislature to save that money,
so it was spent,” Zarelli said. “My goal is to make sure, should
that kind of growth resume, some of the revenue is automatically
set aside. It can only help spare future legislatures from the
kinds of decisions we will have to make in the coming months.”
SJR 8209 would automatically move, into the rainy-day fund,
revenue collected in excess of 133 percent of the state’s
10-year revenue growth average. Had
the formula in Zarelli’s proposal been applied to the revenue
collected in 2005-07, $2.4 billion would have been termed
“exceptional” and deposited into the rainy day fund.
Because that $2.4 billion also would have been unavailable for
legislators to spend – as they did to launch and expand state
services – the combined net benefit would be $4.8 billion today.
“Sending this proposal to the ballot will show that Olympia has
learned one of the important lessons resulting from the state’s
budget situation,” said Zarelli, who thoroughly explained the
concept in a
budget brief last week. “If we see more of those
exceptionally sunny days, when revenue collections really take
off, state government will be in a position to make the most of
it.”
SJR 8209 is one of three measures Zarelli has proposed, in what
will be a budget-oriented 2009 legislative session, to help
bring stability, transparency and efficiency to state spending
practices.
Another measure introduced today,
Senate Bill 5409, would create a competition council within
the Office of Financial Management. A group comprising
lawmakers, executive-branch experts and private-sector
representatives would examine "commercial activities" being
performed by state employees to ensure they are performed in the
most cost-efficient and effective manner.
“We know competitive contracting is a great way to save money,
but it has yet to receive the emphasis that should have come as
part of the 2002 collective bargaining law,” said Zarelli.
When the council proposed in SB 5409 determines that outsourcing
a commercial activity may result in reduced costs, the governor
will direct the appropriate agency to pursue a contract using
the competitive bidding process.
“This shouldn’t be met with alarm by state employees, because
their work units will be able to compete for contracts as well,”
Zarelli said.
His third budget-related bill, introduced on the session’s
opening day, is
Senate Bill 5073. This measure would fold the separate
accounts that have proliferated in recent years into the state’s
general fund.
“The operating budget is the general fund and a set of other
funds which, for reasons that aren’t completely clear, were
created outside but ‘near’ the general fund. That makes it
unnecessarily difficult for taxpayers to follow how their
dollars are being spent. We need to go back to having just one
fund, the general fund, from which money is spent,” Zarelli
said.
“Considering how some major spending reductions will be needed
to produce a balanced operating budget for 2009-11, it’s
important for that budget to be transparent,” Zarelli said.
“This will help taxpayers to see how spending and revenue
relate.”
The accounts which are apart from the general fund are
designated for public safety education; health services;
violence reduction and drug enforcement; K-12 education (the
student achievement fund and education legacy account); pension
funding stabilization; and water quality, plus an equal justice
sub-account.
The education legacy trust account and the pension funding
stabilization account have not been counted against the state’s
spending limit; Zarelli’s legislation would change that. And
because the general fund would be larger, the deposit to the
rainy-day fund would grow, and the state’s bonding capacity
would increase.
“This bill doesn’t take away revenue sources, so people who
supported certain state programs don’t have to worry that it
will jeopardize funding. My legislation simply takes the
position that all dollars are green, and so all of the dollars
the state spends on programs and services should be in the
general fund, not scattered around,” Zarelli said.
Zarelli is Republican leader on the
Senate
Ways and Means Committee, which addresses tax and
spending matters that include development of the biennial
operating budget.
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For more information contact
Eric Campbell
at (360) 786-7503 or
campbell.eric@leg.wa.gov
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