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BOOTH WHO? - Washington State Digital Archives

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Its centerpiece –“play or pay”– was the most controversial part. Businesses that didn’t<br />

provide employees with health insurance would be assessed $138 per month per worker<br />

to create a fund to cover the uninsured. To his disadvantage, Gardner’s own 17-member<br />

Health Care Commission was still undecided about “play or pay” after 12 months of study.<br />

Its report wasn’t due until year’s end.<br />

Speaker King’s Democrats delivered a plan the governor could live with. McDonald’s<br />

Republicans stonewalled it in the Senate. Booth was furious, particularly with Jim West,<br />

the tight-fisted senator from<br />

Spokane who headed the<br />

Health Care Committee.<br />

West brusquely denied his<br />

request for a bipartisan<br />

negotiating team from both<br />

houses. “The public needs<br />

to keep the heat on the<br />

Republicans,” the governor<br />

said. “The people must make<br />

sure their voices are heard<br />

over those of the insurance<br />

companies and the medical<br />

industry…”<br />

The 1992 session<br />

marked the rise of a new<br />

star for the Democrats, Gary<br />

Locke of Seattle, who headed the House Appropriations Committee. Hard to peg, then and<br />

in the years to come when he became a two-term governor, Locke’s supplemental budget<br />

proposal cut 1,800 state jobs but restored 3-percent raises for the teachers and the other<br />

survivors. Booth was peeved. No one had asked him for advice or consent. If they had, he<br />

would have said the Locke plan was calculated to make things even worse come 1993.<br />

McDonald upped the ante by proposing to cut 3,600 state employees. At the<br />

same time, he wanted to give the teachers a 3.6 percent raise. The others would get<br />

zero. The new Growth Management plan lost much of its funding. The rainy day fund was<br />

unmolested. It’s “fiscal chaos,” the governor fumed. On this Locke agreed, pronouncing<br />

McDonald’s plan “heartless, unfair and unwise.”<br />

They adjourned in March with a weary whimper. The teachers and other state<br />

employees emerged with a 3 percent raise. Some 2,000 jobs were to be cut, most by attrition.<br />

The rainy day fund was reduced by $160 million. (Locke wryly observed that it wasn’t<br />

raining.) Health care remained unhealthy. Booth used his veto to restore funding for growth<br />

management planning and programs to benefit low-income mothers and their children.<br />

Booth at the legendary annual Pacific County Democrats Crab Feed in 1991. <strong>State</strong><br />

Senator Sid Snyder is at right, Congresswoman Jolene Unsoeld at left.<br />

©The Daily World (Aberdeen, WA) 1991 Reprinted with permission.<br />

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