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We would get those gas wars going here in Utah when we first moved here in the early 60's ,I don't remember seeing it below .20 but ,pretty common for awhile to see it in the 20's . Before we moved to Utah , raised in northern Montana , my dad worked for a small oil refinery in Chinook . If I remember he was paying around 15 cents per gallon from the oil refinery there in the 50's . I am sure it was more in the gas stations .
Lowest at 16 yrs old in SW Wa 24.9 in 1969. Amazing how cool I thought driving was then even in dads 1969 Ford Futura station wagon ! Aka “the Sled”
 
Without getting deep into politics

1. Our state is spending way too much money
2. The state is doung things they shouldn't be doing
3. If they won't cut the budget they should cut their own pay not mine.
Yes increasing taxes is giving me a pay cut.

Maybe for most people 200 bucks is no big deal, maybe 1 dollar per gallon in gas taxes is no big deal. Maybe 30% increases in fishing licenses amid drastically reducing fishing opportunity is no big deal to some. It's not a small thing to my budget.
WA state pension obligation is 9 billion a year, so in a state with no personal income tax the only way they can begin to cover such massive payouts is by taxing and raising fees for everything else.
OR pays out 6 billion a year, with no sales tax it has to lean on income taxes and fees for everything else.
CA pays out 31B a year, so basically tax the hell out of everything without legs on it and charge fees for even that.
4 states are in technical default on their pensions, with 27 states currently unable to meet their annual all in financial obligations. Supreme Court watchers believe one of the biggest cases to ever reach the SC will be when a state declares bankruptcy and seeks relief from it's pension obligation through reduced payouts.
 

Under current U.S. federal law, states cannot file for bankruptcy. While municipalities (cities, counties) can use Chapter 9 to restructure debt, states are sovereign entities under the Constitution and lack a legal framework to declare bankruptcy. They can, however, default on debt or technically face insolvency.

It will be an interesting turn of events, should it unfold.
 
Rob isn't exactly wrong here. WA takes in billions $$$ more in revenue than ever. WA doesn't have a revenue problem. WA has a spending problem.
Well most all states are taking in record revenues, due to both larger populations and inflated currency...

Relative to income and population growth, Washington’s budget has actually declined by 60% overall. From 1995 to 2025, the state’s yearly operating budget shrank from 1.55% to 0.63% of total personal income for every one million residents (adjusted for inflation).

Consider the tax structure of the state also...the lowest incomes pay the highest percentages as tax, so relatively modest increases are a higher percentage of their income, leading to higher levels of resentment compared to high wage earners.


 
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Well most all states are taking in record revenues, due to both larger populations and inflated currency...

Relative to income and population growth, Washington’s budget has actually declined by 60% overall. From 1995 to 2025, the state’s yearly operating budget shrank from 1.55% to 0.63% of total personal income for every one million residents (adjusted for inflation).

Consider the tax structure of the state also...the lowest incomes pay the highest percentages as tax, so relatively modest increases are a higher percentage of their income, leading to higher levels of resentment compared to high wage earners.


I agree And Rob is never entirely wrong in my opinion and some here go way back seeing his posts as I do. Monikers change or true names are used but the people do not
 
I sympathize with you rob! This state is taking in enormous amounts of revenue, and for what? My wife just had her 28th first grader added to her class. School support is being slashed left and right. Our roads are congested and in constant disrepair. Can't fish anywhere I want to, but the states spending millions supporting Canadian trollers and filling lakes with zombie fish.

I'm happy to pay taxes that get used moderately efficiently to cover goals for the common good. Education, health care, infrastructure, social safety nets, let's go. But lately it's seemed to be costing a whole hell of a lot to watch the things I love in this state disappear.
 
Without getting deep into politics

1. Our state is spending way too much money
2. The state is doung things they shouldn't be doing
3. If they won't cut the budget they should cut their own pay not mine.
Yes increasing taxes is giving me a pay cut.

Maybe for most people 200 bucks is no big deal, maybe 1 dollar per gallon in gas taxes is no big deal. Maybe 30% increases in fishing licenses amid drastically reducing fishing opportunity is no big deal to some. It's not a small thing to my budget.
I understand all 3 items above. I don't see how doing #3 necessarily even helps with 1 and 2. In fact, I would say that 3 is a poor answer to the issues that 1 and 2 represent.

I think the issue is that I don't really know who the "they" that you speak of is. If "they" are the representatives in Olympia, then I can see your point, however, cutting the pay of Rep's won't make a dent in the budget. If "they" is state employees then I think that would be a poor tactic and probably cost a lot more in the long run. It's not like the average state employee is making big bucks. Balancing the budget on the backs of your employees salaries is generally quite short sighted in my opinion.

I think that you should do all that you can to be an active participant in our state and lobby for the state government that you want. If that is a government that provides fewer things or with different priorities, you should get involved as best as you can.
 
While the sticker shock may be real, for me, I put these things in perspective; $200 for tags does not outrage me quite as much as the price of groceries. The price of a tin of coffee is currently $18.00; a tin lasts us just about 2 weeks. That's 2 tins a month or 24 a year = $432 for the year of coffee - fortunately, we stocked up bigly when we could buy it for 9 or $10 a tin (last year), but that is still around $200 per year for coffee, and I hate to admit, but coffee probably doesn't get me as far as my vehicle does.

On another note, mileage you put on your vehicle is irrelevant, unless you want the price of tags prorated to mileage, which would require monitoring 😱, which I suspect the OP would be vehemently against.
 
I sympathize with you rob! This state is taking in enormous amounts of revenue, and for what? My wife just had her 28th first grader added to her class. School support is being slashed left and right. Our roads are congested and in constant disrepair. Can't fish anywhere I want to, but the states spending millions supporting Canadian trollers and filling lakes with zombie fish.

I'm happy to pay taxes that get used moderately efficiently to cover goals for the common good. Education, health care, infrastructure, social safety nets, let's go. But lately it's seemed to be costing a whole hell of a lot to watch the things I love in this state disappear.
School support for counties who give more to Olympia than they recieve is being cust more and more it seems. We happen to live in one of those counties. The debtor counties are a different story.
 

Under current U.S. federal law, states cannot file for bankruptcy. While municipalities (cities, counties) can use Chapter 9 to restructure debt, states are sovereign entities under the Constitution and lack a legal framework to declare bankruptcy. They can, however, default on debt or technically face insolvency.

It will be an interesting turn of events, should it unfold.
and corporations were never classified as people before...until they got in front of the SC
 
and corporations were never classified as people before...until they got in front of the SC
True...and when they hang one ill agree that corps are people.
😁

Money is speech too, another underlying issue affecting tax structure in a way that likely is adversely impacting lower and mid income families.
 
WA state pension obligation is 9 billion a year, so in a state with no personal income tax the only way they can begin to cover such massive payouts is by taxing and raising fees for everything else.
OR pays out 6 billion a year, with no sales tax it has to lean on income taxes and fees for everything else.
CA pays out 31B a year, so basically tax the hell out of everything without legs on it and charge fees for even that.
4 states are in technical default on their pensions, with 27 states currently unable to meet their annual all in financial obligations. Supreme Court watchers believe one of the biggest cases to ever reach the SC will be when a state declares bankruptcy and seeks relief from it's pension obligation through reduced payouts.
The Washington state retirement system relies mostly on investments for it's payouts. It's not as though the state is taxing people to pay out 9 billion to retirees.
 
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