Negotiators working out the smaller details of 2-year plan
By Mike Baker and Rachel La Corte, Associated Press
Originally published June 25, 2013 at 10:36 a.m., updated June 25, 2013 at 8:08 p.m.
OLYMPIA — Negotiators in Olympia have agreed to the large components of a new state budget but continued to work Tuesday through the smaller details.
Jaime Smith, a spokeswoman for Gov. Jay Inslee, said there have been no setbacks in the talks and that lawmakers are close to agreement on a final deal for a two-year, $33 billion spending plan that would avert a government shutdown next week. Inslee had said Monday that a deal was imminent.
Democratic Rep. Reuven Carlyle cautioned that negotiators “remain apart on a handful of substantive” matters. He said there’s still a possibility that a stalemate would trigger a shutdown, but he was optimistic that wouldn’t happen.
“I think it’s becoming more and more unlikely,” Carlyle said.House Speaker Frank Chopp, D-Seattle, said that as of Tuesday afternoon, there were still “four important issues to resolve,” though he wouldn’t go into detail on what those were.
“We’re getting there,” he said. “We’re making real progress.”Senate Majority Leader Rodney Tom agreed, saying that lawmakers are “so close.”“We’ll be out of here as fast as we can,” he said. “But more important than expediency is getting the job done right.”
After negotiators agree to a new spending plan, it may take a couple more days to go through the process of passing the budget through the Legislature. Smith said the governor’s office hopes the Legislature will be able to finish that job before state workers go home for the weekend.
The Democratic-controlled House and the Senate, which is controlled by a coalition of 23 Republicans and two Democrats, including Tom, have been locked in budget negotiations for several weeks. They are currently in a second overtime legislative session after adjourning both a regular 105-day legislative session and a 30-day special session without reaching a budget deal.
More than 25,000 workers would be temporarily laid off starting Monday if there is no new budget by then, and thousands of workers already have received notifications that it could happen. The state believes 34 agencies will have to cease operations next week, while another 24 agencies would be partially shut down.
Inslee has also pushed for the passage of a transportation revenue package, and on Tuesday, House Democrats unveiled a $10 billion package that includes a 10.5-cent increase in the gas tax, with 6 cents of the increase taking effect on August 1. A House vote on that package was expected to take place today.
The proposal includes $3.2 billion for several state road projects, including State Road 167, Interstate 90 over Snoqualmie Pass and a replacement bridge that would extend Interstate 5 over the Columbia River. It also includes more than $1 billion for maintenance of highways and bridges.
The effort to replace the bridge connecting Portland with Vancouver has encountered obstacles in the Senate, where several members are opposed to the Columbia River Crossing proposal in its current form. They say it is too low and should not include light-rail transit, and are concerned about costs.