WA State Government Spending

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Tue, Dec 15, 2009, 3:00 pm  //  Craig Mayberry

It is always fascinating to watch the government budgeting process. With the recent reduction in revenue forecast, the Governor and other state politicians announced a severe cut in funding to the following key programs to meet a $760 million shortfall in this budget and $2.6 billion budget shortfall in 2011-2013 budget.

• Some correctional institutions to be closed
• School district's levy lid lift to be increased to 30%
• Basic Health Plan to be ended
• General Assistance for the unemployable to be ended
• Prescription drug assistance for 85,00 seniors to be suspended
• Maternity support for 50,000 pregnant mothers to be suspended
• Hospice assistance to be cut
• Financial aid to over 12,000 low income students to be ended
• Levy equalization to be suspended

I was heavily involved in the budgeting process at Intel Corporation for a number of years and I learned a lot about the games that get played in the budgeting process. At Intel we would start with the existing budget and then add spending depending on how much was available. A zero increase in the budget was generally considered a maintenance budget with maybe a slight increase for wages and benefits. Department managers were expected to fight for higher budgets and make strong cases about why they needed more money. As would be expected, they wanted to cut the critical programs Intel could not do without, it was part of the game. My role as a finance manager was to be the check and balance on the system, to test the legitimacy of the requests and balance all of the various departments to see who really needed the money. Budgeting was a very painful process, but generally the process worked.

In watching the state budgeting process there are some critical differences. As can be seen from the Governor's list above, politicians trot out all the key programs they know people will not want cut to make their case for more money. That is to be expected and is what the department managers should do. However, there are two inherent flaws in the system. First, the spending base is not based on the last budgeted number, but a “maintenance budget” which is much higher than the current budget. (I would love to see a politician claim with a straight face they need to increase spending by 17% just to provide the same level of service.) The $2.6 billion shortfall is because the revenue is not living up to a desired 17.2% increase in spending from the 2009-11 budget ($30.1 billion) to the 2011-13 budget ($35.3 billion). The other flaw is the lack of any real checks and balances in the system. My role as financial manager was to play the role of shareholder and push back on spending. In principle, legislators should probably play that check and balance role, but they do not. Voters are too far removed from the process to have enough information to adequately play that role. The budgeting process will never lead to appropriate results for the citizens of this state as long as these two flaws exist.

One way to put some checks and balances into the system, and correct the fatal flaws that currently exist, is to move to a low, medium and high priority budget system. Each department would be categorized as low, medium, or high, and then depending on expected revenue, a budget would be established based on a percentage increase (or decrease) from the prior budget. At current revenue levels spending can increase by 3.7% over the 2007-09 budget even with the December revenue level. This allows a 4% increase for high priority departments, 0% growth for medium priority, and a 15% budget cut for low priority programs. The outlook for 2011-13 is much improved with high priority programs getting a 8.5% increase, medium a 4% increase and low priority a 2% increase. Adjustments can then be made; the money can be taken from one part of the budget and given to another part of the budget. For example, deeper cuts in higher education can be moved to K-12 education, or the cuts in low priority programs can be deeper and the money moved to health care. I have put together an Excel spreadsheet with all of the operating budget departments. You can easily create your own budget by changing the percentages for high, medium, and low programs, change the priority category of the department, or make other specific adjustments. I was hoping to be able to make it available though this blog, but it only allows pictures, so if you want a copy of the spreadsheet email me at ckmayberry@clearwire.net and I would be happy to send it to you.

This approach at least ensures that money is going to critical programs and decisions are more transparent and easier to follow. It also allows the formulas to act as some measure of checks and balances on the system when politicians are not willing to play that role. It is hard to take politicians seriously when they make exorbitant claims of the deep budget cuts to be made to key programs, when in fact no such cuts need to happen. Despite the apparent hype, Washington State revenue and spending has gone up each year, and the trend will likely continue. It would be great for politicians to hand out 10% budget increases every year and never have to make a hard decision, but those days are over. The new reality is that the economy is not going to grow much over the next 3-5 years. Every level of government wants more money, but whenever one level takes more it comes at the expense of another level. For instance, an increase in taxes at the federal level means citizens in Washington have less to spend and therefore will buy fewer goods, leading to a further decline in sales tax revenue. The problem is not the amount of money, but flaws in the process that do not allow the appropriate checks and balances. Fix the flaws and then we can have a more realistic budget conversation.

The picture of the front table of Craig's multi-table spreadsheet. You can email him and he will send you the Excell spreadsheet. See article for what he suggests you might accomplish with it.

Lummi Ferry Petition is Linked

Wed, Sep 01, 2010, 2:40 pm  //  John Servais

A petition to the federal government online at skookum.us. It asks they step in to resolve the impasse between the Lummi and Whatcom County.

0 comments


Lummi Island - The Price of Admission

Thu, Aug 26, 2010, 3:01 pm  //  Tip Johnson

Legal or Political Football?

4 comments; last on Aug 27, 2010


Politics & Ice Water: Part 1 of ?

Sat, Aug 21, 2010, 8:07 am  //  Larry Horowitz

Politics is like a pool of ice water. When men jump in their balls shrivel up.

5 comments; last on Aug 26, 2010


Lummi Island Softball

Fri, Aug 20, 2010, 3:26 pm  //  Tip Johnson

Islanders need a new game

1 comments; last on Aug 24, 2010



Cantwell Confused

Wed, Aug 18, 2010, 4:07 pm  //  Tip Johnson

Ignoring the real problem

3 comments; last on Aug 19, 2010


Election Results

Tue, Aug 17, 2010, 8:05 pm  //  John Servais

A running blog this election night

0 comments


The Political Downzone of Responsible Land Use Planning

Mon, Aug 16, 2010, 12:55 pm  //  John Lesow

John Lesow rebuts Jack Petree's Herald oped article that strongly criticized county planning.

30 comments; last on Aug 25, 2010


Herald runs a beautiful smear of Rossi

Mon, Aug 16, 2010, 12:03 pm  //  John Servais

Headline and article paint U.S. Senate candidate Dino Rossi very badly on final day ballots are mailed. The Bellingham Herald editors print a perfect smear.

5 comments; last on Aug 18, 2010


Lummi Football

Sat, Aug 14, 2010, 12:20 pm  //  Tip Johnson

Time for hardball?

0 comments


Mail your ballot by Monday, 3 p.m.

Sat, Aug 14, 2010, 6:51 am  //  John Servais

Mailing even late Monday evening is gambling on its being counted. Mail in time.

1 comments; last on Aug 14, 2010


Deceptive Herald article on planning

Fri, Aug 13, 2010, 8:39 am  //  John Servais

Am looking for a writer to rebut Jack Petree's BIAW propaganda article the Herald saw fit to print.

3 comments; last on Aug 20, 2010


The Way I See It - Time to change

Wed, Aug 11, 2010, 4:00 pm  //  Ham Hayes

Fear and attack-rhetoric are leading us in the wrong direction.

1 comments; last on Aug 12, 2010


Candidate choices of John Servais

Mon, Aug 09, 2010, 3:15 pm  //  John Servais

Personal opinion and recommendations from an independent liberal and progressive. ADDED more on Tuesday, Aug 10.

3 comments; last on Aug 13, 2010


And in the 40th we have…..

Mon, Aug 09, 2010, 1:49 pm  //  Ham Hayes

Candidates, o candidates - where art thou? Monday Updates

2 comments; last on Aug 04, 2010


Where’s the Info?

Mon, Aug 09, 2010, 12:38 pm  //  Viki Warner

One week till the Primary, but no info?

3 comments; last on Aug 09, 2010


Cooperation no substitute for small libraries

Sat, Aug 07, 2010, 8:18 am  //  John Servais

A library card from any Whatcom County library can now be used at any library in the county

5 comments; last on Aug 15, 2010


40th District State Representative Pos 1 Primary - Tom Pasma’s Responses

Fri, Aug 06, 2010, 4:54 am  //  Ham Hayes

Tom answers our questions

1 comments; last on Aug 08, 2010


40th District State Representative Pos 2 Primary - Rep. Jeff Morris’ Responses

Fri, Aug 06, 2010, 4:50 am  //  Ham Hayes

Jeff answers our questions

0 comments


40th District State Representative Pos 1 Primary - Chuck Carrell’s Respones

Fri, Aug 06, 2010, 4:48 am  //  Ham Hayes

Chuck answers our questions

0 comments


Act of War or Act of Congress?

Thu, Aug 05, 2010, 1:50 pm  //  Tip Johnson

Where, oh where, are our federal representatives?

6 comments; last on Aug 06, 2010


A letter to the Bellingham City Council

Thu, Aug 05, 2010, 8:28 am  //  John Servais

We ask why the EIS extension was given to the Chuckanut Ridge developers when the city is negotiating to buy the property.

0 comments


City bumbles on Chuckanut Ridge extension

Wed, Aug 04, 2010, 8:12 am  //  John Servais

Bellingham Planning Department is giving quiet extensions to the Chuckanut Ridge developer - propping up the property value.

1 comments; last on Aug 04, 2010


Chuckanut Ridge Development Gets Extension

Mon, Aug 02, 2010, 1:30 pm  //  John Servais

Bellingham Planning Department gave a three month extension, till Oct 29, to Greenbriar

2 comments; last on Aug 02, 2010


John Powers death, in the words of a friend

Sat, Jul 31, 2010, 9:29 pm  //  John Servais

John Powers died yesterday. Ted expresses his remembrance.

0 comments


Raising a Village: Can the Bellingham Cooperative School be saved?

Fri, Jul 30, 2010, 10:54 am  //  Kamalla Rose Kaur

Mourning the loss of a valuable community asset

2 comments; last on Aug 01, 2010


The Way I See It - Mud resurrected

Wed, Jul 28, 2010, 4:39 am  //  Ham Hayes

It is time we gave “mud” back its good name.

0 comments


The Way I See It - En Garde

Wed, Jul 21, 2010, 4:42 am  //  Ham Hayes

“We have lots of robberies.” As I reported last week, that was the apocalyptic statement by the investigating officer to our recent plight in St.…

0 comments


Greed: The Shadowy So-called Non-profit Taecan

Mon, Jul 19, 2010, 11:53 am  //  Tip Johnson

For-Profit Non-Profits - Pulling the Plug on Services

0 comments


The Forsaken Constituents of Lummi Island

Mon, Jul 19, 2010, 11:20 am  //  Tip Johnson

Taxation without representation

3 comments; last on Jul 28, 2010


Libraries are still very valuable

Fri, Jul 16, 2010, 8:18 pm  //  John Servais

The New Spice Man tells us why libraries are useful and valuable. This applies to all libraries.

0 comments


Three Port Executive Finalists Withdraw

Fri, Jul 16, 2010, 1:30 pm  //  John Servais

In a surprise development, the Port of Bellingham is starting over again in their search for an executive director. Position now vacant for over a…

1 comments; last on Jul 18, 2010


Book Review:  Whole Earth Discipline

Fri, Jul 16, 2010, 4:44 am  //  Guest writer

Eric Hirst reviews this October 2009 book by Stewart Brand of Whole Earth Catalog fame. Stewart is critical of several mainstream environmental stances.

1 comments; last on Jul 19, 2010


 

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