Washington Research Council

Budget

2023-25

24th of May 2023

State continues to treat working families tax credit as a spending program instead of a revenue reduction (plus, remittances to date)

This is the first year in which low-income Washingtonians can claim the working families tax credit (WFTC). According to the Department of Revenue (DOR), through May 15, the state has returned $83 million to 175,886 taxpayers. The 2023 supplemental operating budget appropriates $221.0 million for WFTC remittances in FY 2023. (And the fiscal note for […]


22nd of May 2023

Operating budget vetoes add about $15 million in NGFO spending

Last week, Gov. Inslee signed the 2023 supplemental and 2023–25 operating budgets. He vetoed several provisions. Altogether, it appears that his vetoes increase appropriations from funds subject to the outlook (NGFO) by a net of $14.9 million. In the 2023–25 budget, the governor vetoed $1.6 million in NGFO appropriations and $5.1 million in assumed NGFO […]


18th of May 2023

The state has appropriated over $400 million related to the Blake decision

On Tuesday, the Legislature held a special session to pass 2E2SSB 5536, a drug policy bill that is in response to the 2021 state Supreme Court decision in State v. Blake. (The Court held that the state’s drug possession law was unconstitutional because the state did not have to prove intent in order to convict.) […]


17th of May 2023

Appropriations for public schools make up 10.1% of the capital budget

The 2023–25 capital budget (as passed by the Legislature) includes $871.5 million for public schools. Capital appropriations for schools account for 10.1% of total appropriations in the budget. The budget includes: Note that the $871.5 million includes $4.0 million for preconstruction grants and administrative implementation of SHB 1044, which would create a new school construction […]


16th of May 2023

Housing funding in the operating and capital budgets

Last week Gov. Inslee signed several housing policy bills. The Seattle Times reports, “Washington will now allow multifamily housing in many more neighborhoods, encourage people to develop accessory dwelling units, and streamline development regulations, among other policies. The overarching effort to smooth regulatory barriers, like zoning and permits, to building housing garnered bipartisan support.” The […]


10th of May 2023

State will save $2.473 billion over five years by reducing contributions to unfunded pension liabilities (even as the pension plans are still fully funded)

A major source of state savings throughout the budget outlook window is a policy change related to unfunded pension liabilities. The state has been making extra contributions towards unfunded actuarial accrued liabilities (UAAL) in the Public Employees’ Retirement System (PERS) plan 1 and the Teachers’ Retirement System (TRS) plan 1. There is a minimum contribution […]


Document recording fees: A backfill, a simplification, and an addition

The state imposes four document recording surcharges to help fund housing programs. As I wrote last year, the revenues from these surcharges have been falling short of estimates. The 2023–25 operating budget (as passed by the Legislature) includes funding to backfill these programs. According to the conference report summary document, $66.0 million from the general […]


8th of May 2023

Budget appropriates $200 million for a reserve for the paid family and medical leave program

Last month Gov. Inslee signed SSB 5286, which makes changes to the paid family and medical leave (PFML) program rate structure. Beginning with calendar year 2024, the PFML rate will be set to maintain a three-month reserve for the program. (See here for more about the bill.) The family and medical leave insurance (FMLI) account […]


5th of May 2023

Budget provisos related to taxes, transparency, benefits, and the economy

The 2023–25 operating budget includes many provisos on fiscally-related topics. Notably, though, it does not reauthorize the Tax Structure Work Group (TSWG). Accordingly, the last meeting of the TSWG will be May 8. However, the budget does appropriate $300,000 for a study of wealth taxes (which were considered and rejected by the TSWG). A status […]


4th of May 2023

Operating budget reduces funding for student loan program to $90 million

As I wrote a few weeks ago, the Legislature passed a bill (EHB 1823) that makes changes to the state’s not-yet-implemented student loan program. The details are still to be determined by the Washington Student Achievement Council, and loans will not be awarded until school year 2025–26. (The bill has not yet been signed by […]