House Speaker: Democrats Deliver
Last gavel falls on historic legislative
session for education, health care and jobs
April 22, 2007
OLYMPIA – After 105 days on the job, the 2007 Legislative Session
ended with House Democrats making good on promises to improve education,
ensure that more citizens have health care, and bolster the state’s
economy.
“I’m very proud of each and every member of the House Democratic
Caucus,” said Speaker Frank Chopp. “We worked together on the issues
Washington families care most about, like increased funding for schools,
health care for children, and investments in good-paying jobs.
“Our progress ensures Washington remains a national leader when it
comes to those kitchen table issues. This is clearly a great session for
One Washington!”
“This has been a phenomenal session for education,” said Rep. Lynn
Kessler, Majority Leader in the House. “We started the session saying it
was going to be about education, education, education. But we achieved
great success in other areas, too, especially in children’s health.”
Chopp agreed. “We are now leading the nation in making sure our
children have health coverage. A child must be healthy to be ready to
learn.”
Guided by the Five-Point Plan developed by House Democrats to
strengthen education standards, the Legislature delivered bills to the
Governor that will:
- Improve access to quality early learning
- Fund basic education, including special education and full-day
kindergarten
Fully fund I-732 to lower class size, and I-728 to raise
teacher salaries
Help students succeed and graduate on time
Expand the Opportunity Grants program and increase
financial aid for higher education
Improving access to health care remained a high priority for House
Democrats, and we delivered with three major victories that:
- Make sure that all children have health care, including coverage
for 100,000 more kids with the Children’s Health Plan in the
previous and current biennium
Connect businesses, workers and the state to provide
affordable and portable health insurance with the Health Insurance
Partnership
Implement recommendations made by the Governor’s Blue
Ribbon Commission on Health Care aimed at cutting red tape and
making systemic improvements
Democrats lead on a comprehensive package of legislation to spur
economic growth and create jobs that will:
Open 9700 new higher education enrollments to help
provide skilled workers for Washington employers
Expand worker retraining opportunities
Reduce unemployment insurance rates for start-up
businesses
Provide a rural county B&O tax credit for creating jobs
Make historic investments in transportation projects
around the state
Invest in a record increase for school construction funding
“We have doubled the state’s investment in school construction over
the last four years,” said Chopp. “This creates jobs in our local
communities and at the same time addressed our need for safe, modern
classrooms.”
House Democrats were also successful at implementing nation-leading
environmental standards, including measures to strengthen state clean
air standards, double the state’s investment in Washington Wildlife and
Recreation Program, eliminate toxic chemicals known as PBDEs, and create
the new Puget Sound Partnership to clean up Puget Sound by 2020.
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Contact: Speaker Frank Chopp 360-786-7920
Representative Lynn Kessler 360-786-7904
Staff contact: Melinda McCrady 360-786-7385
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