Politics & Government
Gregoire Calls for Special Legislative Session After Revenue Forecast Lowered by $1.4 Billion
The state's economist is expecting another negative revenue forecast Nov. 17.
Gov. Chris Gregoire announced that she will call legislators in for a special session, beginning Nov. 28, after the stateβs economist lowered the Washingtonβs revenue forecast for the 2011β13 biennium by $1.4 billion.
βCongressional gridlock, the European debt crisis and high unemployment continue to take their toll on consumer confidence and our stateβs economy,β Gregoire said. βOnce again, we are facing a budget shortfall and once again Iβm calling the Legislature back into special session to address the stateβs budget. My only option is across-the-board cuts, and that option is unacceptable. Solving this budget crisis will require the Legislature to act.β
The stateβs economist, Dr. Arun Raha, is expecting another negative revenue forecast Nov. 17. Gregoire plans to tackle both negative revenue forecasts in one special session and hopes to finalize a budget with healthy reserves before Christmas. More than one month ago, Gregoire asked state agencies to detail how additional 5 to 10 percent cuts would affect their abilities to serve Washingtonians. She expects agencies to begin delivering those packages now.
If the Legislature approves a budget before the end of special session, Gregoire said she plans to spend the regular session focusing on policy bills to support job creation and economic growth.
βLetβs get this budget done right in one swoop well before Christmas and then turn our focus to supporting jobs and growing our economy,β Gregoire said.
Since the national recession began, the state has made nearly $10 billion in cuts. Gregoire has warned that additional reductions will continue to hurt public health, safety and education programs.
--Information from the Governor's website.
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