Saturday, December 30, 2023

Fentanyl Death in King County

When COVID hit, we treated it like the public health emergency it was. 

But this public health disaster?  Business as usual.

It's a scandal that we have no urgency, no real plan to address the fentanyl crisis ravaging Seattle's streets, one commensurate with the scale of the problem.


Sandeep Kaushik

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Washington State Legislature 60-day session

The Washington State Legislature will begin its 60-day session on January 8. The main focus of this year’s legislative session will be developing and approving updates to the three state budgets - operating, transportation, and capital - for the 2023–2025 biennium.

The Legislature will also be make adjustments to various laws, including in energy, natural resources, healthcare, education, and other areas. The legislative session will be very fast paced and will feel like it finishes soon after it starts. In every session, there will be policies debated that could affect Washington state businesses.

Supporting Washington Businesses

Decisions the Legislature makes are very important to the state and its efforts to promote a supportive business climate. Most of the revenue that funds state operations are generated from sales taxes and business taxes. In order for the state to maximize its revenues, our business sector needs to thrive.

While there are many steps lawmakers could take to better support Washington businesses, here are five ideas:

1. Business and Occupation Tax Reforms

Washington State implements a Business and Occupation (B&O) tax, which is applied to the gross receipts of all products and services. The rate depends on the type of business, such as manufacturing, wholesaling, or retailing. The tax applies to “gross” rather than “net” income of businesses, meaning that businesses are taxed even if they don’t earn a profit.
This tax structure is especially burdensome for high volume, low margin businesses. Reforms to the B&O tax would likely impact revenues in the short term but would help businesses be successful over the long term. This would keep more people employed and generate additional economic opportunities.

2. Climate Commitment Act Changes

The state’s Climate Commitment Act was approved by the Legislature in 2021 and began in 2023. It is a comprehensive program aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions by requiring the purchase of allowances in a cap-and-trade program. Many of us who voted against it expressed concerns about the program’s likely impact on gas prices, which analysts now estimate is nearly 50 cents extra per gallon.

High gas prices can have devastating impacts on senior citizens, working families, and businesses. High gas prices affect all of us with increased travel, grocery, and supply chain costs.  Adjustments should be made to lessen this programs economic impacts.

3. Refocus Education on Academics and Job Skills

With over one million students in the state public school system, K-12 education is critical to workforce development. Washington businesses rely on students being college or career ready. Per student expenditures have grown to over $17,000 per year with funds supporting pre-kindergarten programs, multiple meal services, childcare offerings, social supports, healthcare in schools, and other functions.

There is no doubt that students have many needs, which our schools can help facilitate, but with only 50% of students meeting English standards and only 40% meeting Math standards, we must make academics and job skills one of our top priorities. Our school system must work for all students, so they are prepared to succeed and contribute to our global economy.

4. Preserve and Improve our Transportation System

Washington businesses depend on a high functioning transportation system. This is key to getting crops to market, creating efficiencies in the supply chain, and improving commutes for employees. The Legislature has increased funding in recent years for preservation and maintenance of our roads and bridges, but the funding has unfortunately not kept pace with inflation, nor with the additions to the transportation system over time. In my opinion, preservation of our existing system is more important than new projects, but new projects are also needed to keep up with our growing population and keep traffic moving. The state approved a new 16-year, $16.9 billion package in 2022 for statewide transportation investments. We need to ensure that these projects get completed as scheduled so that Washington businesses can benefit from a reliable statewide transportation system.

5. Continue Efforts on Housing Solutions

Affordable housing continues to be a struggle in nearly every community, although what is characterized as “affordable” varies from place-to-place and is the source of substantial debate at the State Capitol. The Legislature has recently made record investments through its capital budget to fund housing opportunities in Washington State, but more work remains to be done. Various regulatory and land use reforms could be made to slow down the rapidly escalating costs associated with homebuilding. Many new laws and programs have recently been implemented, which may take some time to produce results. While these new policies get implemented, we should be mindful of other opportunities because stable housing is fundamental to nearly every aspect of life. For businesses, having access to a reliable, local workforce is very important.

Guns & Freedom

there are two prominent anti-gun bills; HB 1902 and HB 1903.

HB 1902 will implement a permit to purchase system in Washington, which will require Washingtonians to receive government permission to exercise a constitutionally protected right. The system will require mandatory live fire training prior to purchasing a firearm and the creation of a government registry of personally identifiable information, including fingerprinting and a waiver of medically protected information.

HB 1903 will penalize law-abiding gun owners who are the victims of a crime by placing a civil liability and a $1,000 fine on gun owners who are the victim of theft and requires mandatory reporting of the theft or loss of a firearm within 24 hours to law enforcement.

Thursday, December 7, 2023

Olympia to operate a rental registry

Tuesday November 14, 2023, the Olympia City Council reviewed an ordinance for a rental registry program that will also have a required rental home inspection. The home inspection looks quite extensive. Attached is the agenda for the meeting, the proposed ordinance, and the draft rental inspection checklist.

The city will require an annual registration of $35, plus a business license, and a rental inspection by a qualified rental housing inspector and re-inspection if a unit fails the initial inspection. This will be both costly and time consuming for landlords. There are apparent penalties for not complying (such as $50 a day for first offense with fees escalating to $250 a day).

Naturally, this ordnance will increase the difficulty of being a a landlord and ultimately make housing more scarce and expensive,
  
Ordinance Rental Registry (PDF)
Agenda City Council (PDF)
Draft Inspection Checklist (PDF)

What other people read on this blog

Effing the ineffable - Washington State elections sometimes have been rigged.

“It is enough that the people know there was an election. The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything.”
-- Joseph Stalin

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