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Capitol Week Ahead: Is there a budget in the House?

Gov. Jay inslee showed us his. Thirty state senators showed us theirs.

This week, House Democrats will unveil their own version of the state's 2013-15 operating budget — somewhere in the neighborhood of $33 billion. That unveiling will be followed by one or…

Higher-ed funding idea: Charge international students more

Each fall, thousands of students from overseas apply to study at the University of Washington and other state schools. So why not charge them extra, then use that money to help solve higher education’s funding woes?

That’s the thinking behind a new Senate bill that…

Shepard offers insight on state Senate budget proposal
Status quo not good enough for higher ed

Everyone’s state budget is going to focus on K-12 education funding this year, because the governor and legislators campaigned on promises to meet the constitutional mandate, and because the state Supreme Court has demanded it. That’s understandable, but a solitary focus on K-12, without…

Bruce's Blog: Should Western join NCAA Div. I?
We don’t need to jettison pension plan that isn’t broken

It’s budget crunch time at the Legislature, which in recent years has given state employees the jitters. Lawmakers have turned to state workers several times to help fill budget deficits, asking them to take pay cuts and contribute more to their medical and pension plans.

Now, how to pay for STEM

For policy wonks, STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) is a mod buzzword. STEM transcends political party, a Republican and Democratic anthem. More STEM and health-care graduates will invigorate Western Washington's economy, and fill a yawning skills gap. And so there's…

Seattle City Light-Backed Researchers Win Awards

Two Western Washington University graduate student wildlife researchers who received some of their funding from Seattle City Light’s Wildlife Research Program won awards from the Washington and Oregon chapters of The Wildlife Society during the organization’s 2013 annual meeting.

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Battle lines take shape in Olympia to close shortfall of up to $1.3B

The battle over the state budget begins in earnest now.

Legislators generally wait for the March revenue forecast before rolling out their spending plans. And Wednesday, they got what passes for good news nowadays — no big drop in projected tax collections.

How would you balance the state budget and fund education?

State lawmakers have a big problem: The next two-year state budget faces a shortfall of up to $1.3 billion. And on top of that, the state Supreme Court has said Washington isn't meeting its obligation to fully fund basic education. Meeting that mandate could cost an additional $500 million…

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