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Court K-12 sanctions

Les Schwab Tires
Published:2015-08-14 State
Court K-12 sanctions    Print Snohomish Times    
Court K-12 sanctions

By Jason Mercier
Yesterday the State Supreme Court in a 9-0 ruling took the unprecedented step of fining the state (i.e. taxpayers) for the Legislature's failure to adopt a detailed plan showing how lawmakers plan to meet certain K-12 funding goals by 2018. WPC agrees with the brief filed by Attorney General Bob Ferguson that the contempt sanctions should have been vacated after the historic investments in K-12 by the Legislature this year. Unfortunately the Court disagreed.
Elected officials are now trying to figure out what to do next including trying to determine how the fines are to be collected and paid since under Article 8, Section 4 of the state constitution money can only be disbursed via an appropriation. This may mean to enforce the Court's fine lawmakers would have to vote on appropriations to fine the state.
As noted by the Seattle Times:
“It’s not even clear how the fine — assessed by one branch of government against the others — would be paid.
The court order “is not self executing,” noted Jim Lobsenz, an attorney who specializes in constitutional law. He cited Article 8, Section 4 of the state constitution, which says money cannot be paid without a vote by legislators.
“If the Legislature doesn’t appropriate money to pay the fine, then it won’t get paid,” Lobsenz said in an email.
The state is working to figure out how it will treat the fine, according to Ralph Thomas, spokesman for the state Office of Financial Management.”
Some have already said that based on the Court's ruling the state should follow the example set by New Jersey in response to its K-12 court sanctions and adopt a new tax (like a capital gains income tax) for education spending.
In 1976 the New Jersey Supreme Court ordered schools closed (during the summer) until lawmakers complied with its K-12 adequacy ruling. In response lawmakers enacted the state's first income tax.
Did that solve the problem? No, the New Jersey Supreme Court again ruled in 1990 that the state wasn't funding K-12 adequately.
What did happen over time, however, is a continuous increasing of the original income tax rates set in 1976 and ongoing tax and budget challenges for New Jersey.
The top income tax rate adopted in 1976 was 2.5%. The top rate reached a high of 10.75% in 2009 and today maxes out at 8.97%.
While there may be many wonderful things about the Garden State, the stability and success of its tax structure isn't one of them.
Now it's possible Washington voters may warm from their consistent ice cold opposition to major (and even small) tax increases, but from a tax volatility and budget sustainability standpoint the response to creating a brand new tax in response to the McCleary ruling should be summed up in one word - fuhgeddaboudit.




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