Washington Business Fall 2017 | Legislative Review & Vote Record | Page 11

washington business mccleary: the ‘readers’ digest’ version “This budget will at long last fulfill our constitutional obligations to fully and fairly fund basic education and it also addresses the responsibilities we have under the McCleary decision to equitably fund our schools.” In the 2012 McCleary v. State of Washington education funding case, the state Supreme Court ordered the state to comply with Article IX, Section 1, of the state constitution, which reads in part: “It is the paramount duty of the state to make — Gov. Jay Inslee ample provision for the education of all children residing within its borders…” The plaintiff’s case was bolstered by a pair of The report also notes that K-12 education makes up 50.3 laws that defined the program of K-12 basic education — House percent of all Near General Fund spending in the 2017-19, $43.7 bills 2261 (2009) and 2776 (2010) — that make up the framework billion budget, a number that will climb to 53.3 percent in the the court used to hand down its ruling that the state had failed 2019-21 budget. to meet school funding requirements under state law. “Students from every community in our state will now Those requirements include pupil transportation, full-day have the same opportunity and support as their peers in high- kindergarten, K-3 class-size reductions and materials, supplies performing schools,” Sen. John Braun, R-Centralia and lead and operating costs, or MSOCs. budget writer, said in a press release that echoed the governor’s And, with school districts using roughly $1.5 billion in local statement. “We’re solving a generational problem facing our levy dollars every year for teacher salaries — as much as $14,000 students and taxpayers, with a generational solution.” per teacher, according to a report released last year to the Braun added that the “bipartisan budget includes $21.9 billion Legislature — the court added in its ruling that the state must for K-12 education