Sorted by date Results 12 - 36 of 1893

Who would believe that millions of trout, charr and salmon thrive in pristine water pumped from deep inside West Virginia abandoned coal mines? They are creating a burgeoning aquaculture industry offering vital economic support to impoverished communities in the Appalachian Mountains where coal-mining jobs dropped from a peak of 883,000 in 1923 to 44,060 in 2024. In the last 25 years, many developed countries have seen growing resistance to coal-powered electricity...

Every president promises to fix health care -- but the system rarely seems to change for the better. Even when so-called reforms pass, prices remain unpredictable. Costs continue to rise. If President Trump wants to succeed where others have failed, he'll need to target the gargantuan insurance companies that lie at the intersection of every other aspect of the healthcare system. Insurers -- not patients and their doctors -- are the ones that ultimately determine what...
Washington’s public education system is built on decades of legislative decisions. Each one adds new requirements, expectations and funding promises. Over time, that accumulation has produced outdated, duplicative, underfunded or misaligned mandates. House Bill 2636 offers a practical, bipartisan solution. The bill recognizes that accountability should apply not only to schools, but also to the imposed policies. If the Legislature expects results from schools, it must also regularly assess whether its own policies are c...

As I have mentioned in previous articles, the lawsuit filed against the State by the Washington State Association of Counties (WSAC), with Lincoln County, Yakima County, and Pacific County as plaintiffs is now moving forward. The counties allege that the State has violated the Constitution by forcing local governments to bear the cost of a state constitutional obligation without providing the authority or stable funding necessary to meet it. The need for adequate funding is...
Kennewick is facing a decision that will affect families for years to come: whether a home for sexually violent predators is placed in the middle of a residential neighborhood. Parents are asking reasonable questions. Law enforcement is raising legitimate concerns. Neighbors want transparency and accountability before - not after - a decision is made. That is why I co-sponsored Senate Bill 6339 and why it is so troubling that this bill is not being allowed to move forward. SB 6339 addressed a basic accountability problem in...
Recently, I found myself in a committee hearing room in Olympia, listening to a panel of labor-union officials testify in favor of sharp restrictions on initiative signature drives. They said paying canvassers by the signature gives them an incentive to forge people’s names. Then I asked a simple question: Could they identify a single case of fraud in this state over the last 13 years? A representative of the state teacher’s union accepted the challenge. “I’ll take the question and say I don’t have that handy,” she said, ...
It’s no surprise left wing lawmakers in Olympia have so far rejected hearings on Initiative IL-26-001. Last year, many of these same lawmakers pulled the old “bait-and-switch” on parents and voters who previously pushed through Initiative 2081, the Parents Bill of Rights. A brief history: Voters met the signature threshold in 2024 to force the Legislature to approve the Parents Bill of Rights or allow a vote on the matter. Rather than allow a vote, they signed it into law. The law reaffirmed the parental rights to revie...

Rules surrounding Washington state's new policy to allow striking workers to receive unemployment insurance (UI) benefits might have run into an inconvenient reality: UI is not only a state program. While employers in our state fund the benefits that go to unemployed workers, the UI program is a state-federal partnership with federal strings, federal oversight and federal dollars attached. That's why a recent "questions and answers" letter from the U.S. Department of Labor...

When Olympia says 'don't look here,' it's time to start looking really, really hard. Minnesota's deepening Somali daycare fraud scandal naturally is prompting questions about whether the same thing might be happening in Washington state. And one of the most chilling things I've seen lately from our increasingly imperious Democratic leaders is their effort to squelch independent investigation by the news media. They're saying inquiry is racist. The attorney general is hinting r...

All parents in Washington and across America want their children to thrive in learning environments that reflect their diverse interests, talents, and individual challenges. That's why one-in-five parents last year enrolled at least one of their children in a new K–12 school. In fact, the process of moms and dads actively choosing how and where their children learn - often referred to as school choice - reached a five-year high in 2025. Meanwhile, more than 60% of parents s...
In the race to reshore manufacturing and stay ahead of foreign competition, America needs an abundance of added skilled workers and electricity sources. “Electrify Everything” has been our recent political mantra as key politicians race to replace natural gas and coal-fired generation with vast fields and wildlands of wind turbines and solar panels. However, that strategy has glaring glitches, which could derail our economic recovery and job creation. For example, it is bureaucratic nightmare siting power lines and rel...

Last Friday, the Washington State Supreme Court issued a ruling that, for once, I can agree with — a decision that clears the way for a long-standing problem to be addressed. That decision stems from a lawsuit brought by the Washington State Association of Counties (WSAC), in which Lincoln County, along with Yakima County and Pacific County, are plaintiffs, challenging how public defense is funded in Washington. The lawsuit was first heard in Thurston County Superior Court, w...

More than two years ago, the Eastmont School District serving East Wenatchee took the lead in trying to protect girls sports from gender-confused boys. Then Kennewick, Moses Lake and other districts joined in. There was enough pressure last year to prompt the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association to discuss rules to prevent boys from competing in girls athletics. But WIAA administrators balked; school representatives were only presented a non-binding straw ballot....
Public transportation features prominently in city, county and regional plans. The Legislature has been very accommodating and has enabled five different types of transit authorities, each with dedicated revenue sources (also known as taxes). The most common is a Public Transportation Benefit Area. These agencies are governed by boards usually comprised of nine city and county council members appointed though a caucus process. Twenty-two such agencies have been formed and their taxing districts encompass more than three and...
This year’s 60-day legislative session opens Jan. 12. When legislators gather in Olympia, the No. 1 issue facing us will be the state operating budget problem. If this sounds familiar, you are correct. When the Legislature entered last year’s session, there was a budget shortfall. As they are prone to do, majority Democrats chose to balance the new two-year operating budget with a record four-year tax-increase package. The problem is, even after the Ds’ new taxes kicked in a few months ago, the state budget is still hurti...
Editor’s Note: The following column from the Washington Policy Center’s Todd Myers has been abbreviated for space. To read the column in its entirety, log onto www.washingtonpolicy.org. Judging by the discourse in Washington state, many progressives believe the political value of environmental rhetoric supersedes the value of delivering results. On the right, too many treat every environmental concern as a Trojan Horse for socialist policies. That divisiveness has made productive environmental efforts extremely difficult and...
Health care has become a major policy issue in Congress. The recent government shutdown was caused by the minority party insisting on extending the deadline for the COVID-era, generous taxpayer subsidies in the Obamacare exchanges. That was in spite of the fact that when in the majority, they were the ones who set the deadline for Dec. 31. Obamacare has been an abject failure. It has not provided universal health insurance coverage as was promised, nor has it controlled the ever-rising cost of health care. All Americans, exce...

The Holiday Season is an especially tough time for anyone grieving lost loved ones. Evergreen wreaths placed on veterans' graves across America help to ease that pain. On December 13, an ISIS shooter killed two members of the Iowa National Guard and their American interpreter while they were serving in Syria, causing another tragic loss. More than 3.1 million red-ribboned wreaths were placed by thousands of volunteers, including many family members, on December 13. Those...
State government is entitled to a fixed portion of what you earn, even if it is wasted or isn't needed to fund important programs. That is the crux of the argument being made to justify yet more tax increases. Leadership of Washington State Senate Democrats have circulated a document arguing Washington's tax code is "broken." They assert the state is being "defunded" because revenue as a percentage of "total personal income" has declined over 20 years, from a historical 6-7% to approximately 5%. The document's main argument i...
A state agency and two different legislative commissions had meetings last week in which they discussed health care issues in Washington state, legislative priorities and federal health care reforms. “The sky is falling” was the tone whenever federal reforms were mentioned and doom was predicted, despite remaining unknowns and failing to mention the many state-level actions harming Washington's health care landscape. ( Worse than trying to pin all our health care woes on federal Medicaid reforms and the likely and rig...

As we finish the 2026 Lincoln County budget, the same themes I've consistently written about, continue to be front and center: the 1% property-tax cap, runaway insurance costs, unfunded mandates, and a revenue system that simply can't keep pace with reality. Washington law limits counties to a 1% increase in property-tax collections each year. That may have sounded reasonable back in 2001, but 1% doesn't keep up when inflation, wages, utilities, equipment, and basic operating...

As we close out 2025, I wanted to provide you with an update about current projects we have been focusing on and it can all be summed up with the word, “technology.” Technology has always been at the forefront of the law enforcement tool belt but keeping up with latest tech and associated costs are almost always a hardship for smaller agencies. Because of this we have put our focus on upgrading communication systems, and providing deputies with a new tool in technology in hop...

Washington voters have rejected state income tax proposals 10 times. But Democrats still haven't gotten the message. Sen. Noel Frame of Seattle, who serves with me on the Senate Ways and Means Committee, has become the latest Democrat to push the idea of a state income tax. She's also behind the Democrats' multi-year effort to treat certain investments as taxable property – meaning you would get taxed simply for owning them, just like a piece of land. As reported by the m...

President George W. Bush’s eulogy of Dick Cheney, his vice president, brought back memories of a kinder, gentler America—a time when those elected to office did what was best for our country not their political party. Bush reassuring words came after an unthinkable government shutdown (39 days) which paralyzed essential functions and threatened to stop flights during our country’s busiest travel time—Thanksgiving. The shutdown underscored how angry and bitterly divided...
Washington state, a beacon for innovators and entrepreneurs, is witnessing a troubling trend: a steady outflow of its wealthiest and most entrepreneurial residents. High taxes, burdensome regulations and an anti-business climate are pushing the wealthiest and high-earners to sunnier, lower-tax havens such as Nevada, Texas and Florida. Far from the progressive narrative of a booming millionaire class, recent data reveals a selective exodus among the wealthy, threatening the state’s economic vitality. Consider the numbers. A 2...