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June 4, 2007 Eide receives school
administrator group’s highest award for education leadership
OLYMPIA – She hails it as an unprecedented victory
for the education community — and the education community
seems to agree with her. After working on the issue since
1993, a measure by Sen. Tracey J. Eide, D-Federal Way,
to allow the passage of school levies by a simple majority
cleared the Legislature this year. For this landmark
achievement, the Washington Association of School
Administrators (WASA) awarded her its Golden Gavel award,
the highest honor the association confers on an individual
or individuals who have made an outstanding contribution to
public education in the state.
“This honor conveys our members’ appreciation of your
dedication to our public schools and for the many, many
years of work and effort you have undertaken in helping us
realize our goal of sending the simple majority
constitutional amendment to the people of Washington,” said
WASA Executive Director Paul Rosier.
“The simple majority measure represents a huge victory
for our schools and children,” Eide said. “So many parties
have worked long and hard for this success, and I am
grateful the voters of the state of Washington will have the
opportunity to decide this vital issue in the fall.”
In November, Washington voters will decide whether to
amend the state constitution by allowing school levies to be
approved by a simple majority, or 50 percent-plus-1 vote,
instead of the current 60 percent supermajority. This
follows the Legislature’s approval, by a required two-thirds
majority in the House and Senate, of Eide’s measure.
“Education was the top reason I ran for the Legislature,”
Eide said. “I had two children in public schools, and I saw
firsthand how important the work is of our teachers, staff
and administrators. It made no sense to me to make our
schools and their supporters to work against such steep odds
to pass a levy so vital to our children and their futures.”
Eide explained she had a hard time understanding the
wisdom of various levy requirements.
“A few years ago, our school levy in Federal Way failed
by two-tenths of a percentage — 59.8 percent voted for it.
Yet multimillion dollar athletes and their billionaire
owners can get voters to approve a new stadium with a 50
percent-plus-1 vote,” Eide said. “Let me put it another way:
We have needed a 60 percent majority to build a new school,
and an inmate in the county jail can get a new cell built
when just a simple majority vote ‘yes.’”
This legislative session Eide championed education
funding. She was successful in securing $20 million in new
funding for the Federal Way School District for such items
as maintaining voter-approved cost-of-living increases and
class size reductions, health benefits, special education,
transportation, technology and vocational equipment.
Eide will receive her award at the WASA awards luncheon
on June 25 in Spokane.
WASA is a professional organization representing
education administrators in the state.
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