McKenna, Inslee differ on plan for needy schools

SEATTLE (AP) - A relatively obscure tax plan to equalize the way Washington homeowners pay for public schools got some time under the spotlight as the candidates for governor debated its merits.
What was most surprising about the mention of the levy swap plan at Tuesday's debate in Yakima was the way this idea from Democrats has been adopted by Republican Rob McKenna and appears to have been rejected by Democrat Jay Inslee.
The plan would replace some local property taxes with a statewide education property tax and essentially take tax money from property rich taxpayers and distribute it to areas with schools in greater need.
McKenna's comments during the debate made it sound as though he was endorsing the proposal by Rep. Ross Hunter, D-Medina, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Inslee, however, called the levy swap a "gimmick." His campaign has created a website rejecting the idea and warning voters their property taxes might go up if McKenna is elected.
McKenna spokesman Charles McCray said the candidate supports the concept of the levy swap, but specifics haven't been worked out because they don't have the staff resources that come with being governor. He said it wasn't clear whether proposals being worked up by Hunter and others would be taken up in their entirety.
"I would imagine they would serve as somewhat of a framework," McCray said.
McCray said the levy swap is necessary to respond to a state Supreme Court decision that determined the state was not adequately funding education.
Inslee spokeswoman Jaime Smith said the candidate doesn't think increasing property taxes for hundreds of thousands of people when the state is just beginning to emerge from the recession is the right thing to do.
"Especially when the proposal only fixes part of our education funding problem on paper, but doesn't do a single thing to fix it in our classrooms," she said.
Hunter said his proposal is still a work in progress, and he predicted if he and his colleagues can write a policy that gets enough votes in both houses of the Legislature, it would get signed by the governor, no matter who wins in November.
The idea is not ready for primetime, however, or for a sound bite during a political debate, Hunter said.
"It does not lend itself well to the kind of campaign these guys have to run," he said.
Hunter expects the levy swap will be part of a long-term plan that makes school funding fair and dependable across Washington. The new levy system wouldn't cost school districts a penny - some would actually see their tax income go up - but it would hit some taxpayers in their wallets.
Instead of the school districts with the highest property values being able to collect the most school levy dollars, taxpayers across the state would be contributing more to the overall state education system, and that money would be redistributed according to student population and needs, not by property values.
Taxpayers in high property value districts might not like seeing their dollars shifted to other places. And in places where taxpayers are paying relatively low school levies, such as Seattle, where a large population shares the tax burden - residents would likely see their taxes go up.
Meanwhile, school districts in property tax poor communities are not happy about how much money they would be getting in the proposed new system.
Rep. Marcie Maxwell, D-Renton, who like Hunter represents voters in Seattle's suburbs, said Wednesday she thinks Hunter's idea is worth exploring further.
Maxwell added she was skeptical about how money would be taken money from the Seattle suburbs and sent elsewhere in the state, and said her constituents were concerned about increases in their property taxes.
Hunter, one of the Legislature's chief budget writers, believes his proposal would move about $1 billion around and eventually help fix some of the inequity in the way school dollars are distributed around the state.
What was most surprising about the mention of the levy swap plan at Tuesday's debate in Yakima was the way this idea from Democrats has been adopted by Republican Rob McKenna and appears to have been rejected by Democrat Jay Inslee.
The plan would replace some local property taxes with a statewide education property tax and essentially take tax money from property rich taxpayers and distribute it to areas with schools in greater need.
McKenna's comments during the debate made it sound as though he was endorsing the proposal by Rep. Ross Hunter, D-Medina, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Inslee, however, called the levy swap a "gimmick." His campaign has created a website rejecting the idea and warning voters their property taxes might go up if McKenna is elected.
McKenna spokesman Charles McCray said the candidate supports the concept of the levy swap, but specifics haven't been worked out because they don't have the staff resources that come with being governor. He said it wasn't clear whether proposals being worked up by Hunter and others would be taken up in their entirety.
"I would imagine they would serve as somewhat of a framework," McCray said.
McCray said the levy swap is necessary to respond to a state Supreme Court decision that determined the state was not adequately funding education.
Inslee spokeswoman Jaime Smith said the candidate doesn't think increasing property taxes for hundreds of thousands of people when the state is just beginning to emerge from the recession is the right thing to do.
"Especially when the proposal only fixes part of our education funding problem on paper, but doesn't do a single thing to fix it in our classrooms," she said.
Hunter said his proposal is still a work in progress, and he predicted if he and his colleagues can write a policy that gets enough votes in both houses of the Legislature, it would get signed by the governor, no matter who wins in November.
The idea is not ready for primetime, however, or for a sound bite during a political debate, Hunter said.
"It does not lend itself well to the kind of campaign these guys have to run," he said.
Hunter expects the levy swap will be part of a long-term plan that makes school funding fair and dependable across Washington. The new levy system wouldn't cost school districts a penny - some would actually see their tax income go up - but it would hit some taxpayers in their wallets.
Instead of the school districts with the highest property values being able to collect the most school levy dollars, taxpayers across the state would be contributing more to the overall state education system, and that money would be redistributed according to student population and needs, not by property values.
Taxpayers in high property value districts might not like seeing their dollars shifted to other places. And in places where taxpayers are paying relatively low school levies, such as Seattle, where a large population shares the tax burden - residents would likely see their taxes go up.
Meanwhile, school districts in property tax poor communities are not happy about how much money they would be getting in the proposed new system.
Rep. Marcie Maxwell, D-Renton, who like Hunter represents voters in Seattle's suburbs, said Wednesday she thinks Hunter's idea is worth exploring further.
Maxwell added she was skeptical about how money would be taken money from the Seattle suburbs and sent elsewhere in the state, and said her constituents were concerned about increases in their property taxes.
Hunter, one of the Legislature's chief budget writers, believes his proposal would move about $1 billion around and eventually help fix some of the inequity in the way school dollars are distributed around the state.
Yep, taxes on the middle-class and poor will fix everything in America! Never-mind all of the theft, misspent and mismanaged funds allocated to the school districts.
Sounds to me like this plan shifts most if not all of the burden of financing the states schools from the state and onto the property owners. All of the property "rich", these people are totally out of touch with reality. Not only is it going to tax a lot of people right out of their homes, it's going to raise the rents to a point where people will
not be able to even find a place to live. This is the kind of insantity that's a part of how in these people run this state.
Schools are currently funded primarily through property taxes. Take a look at your property tax statement and you'll see. What they're talking about is "equalization". Think Robin Hood.
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I believe the idea is to take some of the taxes from the property-rich area (King, Pierce and Snohomish Counties, for instance) and redistribute some of that tax to poorer areas like almost the entire eastern side of Washington.
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I'm not sure if I'm for or against this idea yet since that will mean areas that have a greater student base will not be able to get or keep quality (let the jabs start now) teachers.
 @responsible adult? Indeed, in Texas(?) 20 years ago, these were referred to as the "Robin Hood Laws." Apparently they served to make all districts poor.
Thank you for the information, but this leaves a lot of unanswered questions in my mind. These levies are district specific and I am wondering how they plan to get around that? Does anyone know. What makes me even more nervous is how will
they decide about district specific levies and those that are state levies? If the state government is funding the schools, then where does that money come from? Property taxes are voter approved by district.
 @Jatok Instead of each school district being financed by local residents within that district, school districts would be financed by a large pool from all property owners in the state. So instead of my property taxes going to schools in Seattle, where I live, that money is no longer specifically for my local schools, it becomes part of this large pool to be redistributed based on bureaucratic criteria not explained in this article.Â
What about the district levies that are in place as of this time? They are voter approved for that district.
So McKenna favors "redistribution."Â Got it.Â
 @caphillkid He thinks he is pandering to the Dems on the fence...