Создать аккаунт
Главные новости » Эксклюзив » In Washington State, So Far It’s State Workers Who Have Felt The Budget Squeeze
Эксклюзив

In Washington State, So Far It’s State Workers Who Have Felt The Budget Squeeze

0
Loading…

This story is part of an NPR nationwide analysis of states’ revenue and budgets during the pandemic.

In Washington state, tax collections are expected to tumble by $8.8 billion over the next three years. For context, the state’s current two-year budget is about $53 billion.

In response, Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee ordered furloughs for approximately 40,000 general government workers — something not seen in the state since the Great Recession. He also canceled planned pay raises for about 5,600 higher-earning state employees, mostly agency directors and managers.

In May, the governor’s budget office told state agencies to identify potential cuts of 15%. The picture that emerged from that exercise was bleak: slashed payments to providers of social services, state employee layoffs and 3,700 fewer course offerings at community and technical colleges — to name just a few examples.

«If we actually had a budget like this, it would be horrifying, says David Schumacher, the governor’s budget director. A special session to begin to address the budget is possible later this year. Already, majority Democrats in the Legislature are signaling that an all-cuts budget is unlikely and that taxes are on the table.

Austin Jenkins is the Olympia-based political reporter for the Northwest News Network.

Loading…
0 комментариев
Обсудим?
Смотрите также:
Продолжая просматривать сайт nrus.info вы принимаете политику конфидициальности.
ОК