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HomeMy WebLinkAboutRes 1873 - 2016 Legislative AgendaA RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TUKWILA, WASHINGTON, ADOPTING A LEGISLATIVE AGENDA FOR USE DURING THE 2016 WASHINGTON STATE LEGISLATIVE SESSION. WHEREAS, the City Council has agreed to pursue certain legislative issues for 2016; and WHEREAS, the City Council recognizes this agenda is not all encompassing, in that certain additional items may arise during the legislative session that require support or opposition; and WHEREAS, a legislative agenda outlines the priority issues that elected officials may discuss when speaking to members of the Washington State Legislature; and WHEREAS, the City Council agreed to these priorities at the Special City Council Meeting on January 25, 20161 NOW, THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TUKWILA, WASHINGTON, HEREBY RESOLVES AS FOLLOWS: The Tukwila City Council has identified priorities for the 2016 Washington State Legislative Session that provide a framework for advocacy on behalf of the community. The City of Tukwila 2016 Legislative Agenda is hereby incorporated by reference as Attachment A. PASSED BY THE CITY COUNCI� OF THE CI- Y OF TUKWILA, WASHINGTON, at a Special Meeting thereof this day of (_'knu 12016. ATTEST /AUTHENTICATED: Christy O'Flaherty, MMC, City Clerk (;oe Juffffie, Counq015'res'Ident APPROVED AS TO FORM BY: Filed with the City Clerk: Passed by the City Council: 11�!511� Resolution Number- Rachel B. Turpin, City Attorney Attachment A: City of Tukwila 2016 Legislative Agenda W:\Word Processing\Resolutions\Legislative Agenda for 2016 1-11-16 LH:bjs Page 1 of 1 City of Tukwila 2016 Legislative Agenda Transportation & Infrastructure Funding from key programs such as the Transportation Improvement Board and Public Works Assistance Account are critical for cities in addressing infrastructure and transportation needs. Previous raids on the Public Works Assistance Account resulted in a loss of $9.6 million in loans to Tukwila alone which would have funded critical infrastructure in the City. The State Legislature should fully fund these and other programs, such as the Centennial Clean Water Fund and Model Toxics Control Account, to allow cities to meet growing transportation and infrastructure needs. Shared Revenue • The State must continue its role as a partner with cities. Maintaining existing programs such as Streamlined Sales Tax Mitigation Payments, which provides Tukwila over $1.1 million annually, is part of this partnership. In addition, the state must retain the local share of liquor taxes to allow jurisdictions to address impacts, such as public safety, of privatized liquor in our cities. Revenue Reform • Allow cities the authority and flexibility to address the fact that growth in the cost of services continue to outstrip revenues. • The state should amend the law that limits annual property tax growth to 1 percent and work with cities to authorize additional funding flexibility and opportunities at the local level. Public Records Provide cities with additional tools to address public disclosure requests that are voluminous, overly broad, commercially- driven or retaliatory in nature. The City of Tukwila is committed to — and has a long history of — making public documents as accessible as possible; however, many of the more onerous public disclosure requests require an inappropriate use of tax payer dollars, particularly when subsidizing requests tied to commercial or personal gain. Human Services Funding The City of Tukwila is committed to local funding for human services, and we know that as the city with the lowest median income in King County, many of our residents rely on local, county, state and federal services for basic survival. While we continue to do our part, we cannot do it alone and will continue to rely heavily on county, state and federal partners to meet the needs of the most vulnerable. We strongly encourage the state to adequately fund human services programs for the health of the safety net. Education • Implement needs based funding for allocation of social emotional student support resources and expand funding for learning opportunities for summer school students. • Increase funding for homeless students and secondary ELL students. • Incorporate early learning for low income students as a part of Basic Education.