S-2849.1          _______________________________________________

 

                           SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 8229

                  _______________________________________________

 

State of Washington              52nd Legislature         1991 1st Special Session

 

By Senators Thorsness, McCaslin, Craswell, Roach, Patterson, Cantu and Amondson.

 

Read first time June 21, 1991.  Referred to Committee on Governmental Operations.Amending the Constitution so that state officials' salaries are not set by an independent commission, but are established as they were prior to the commission's establishment.


     BE IT RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, IN LEGISLATIVE SESSION ASSEMBLED:

     THAT, At the next general election to be held in this state there shall be submitted to the qualified voters of the state for their approval and ratification, or rejection, an amendment to Article XXVII of the Constitution of the state of Washington to read as follows:

      Article XXVIII.  ((Salaries for members of the legislature, elected officials of the executive branch of state government, and judges of the state's supreme court, court of appeals, superior courts, and district courts shall be fixed by an independent commission created and directed by law to that purpose.  No state official, public employee, or person required by law to register with a state agency as a lobbyist, or immediate family member of the official, employee, or lobbyist, may be a member of that commission. As used in this section the phrase "immediate family" has the meaning that is defined by law.

     Any change of salary shall be filed with the secretary of state and shall become law ninety days thereafter without action of the legislature or governor, but shall be subject to referendum petition by the people, filed within the ninety‑day period.  Referendum measures under this section shall be submitted to the people at the next following general election, and shall be otherwise governed by the provisions of this Constitution generally applicable to referendum measures.  The salaries fixed pursuant to this section shall supersede any other provision for the salaries of members of the legislature, elected officials of the executive branch of state government, and judges of the state's supreme court, court of appeals, superior courts, and district courts.  The salaries for such officials in effect on January 12, 1987, shall remain in effect until changed pursuant to this section.

     After the initial adoption of a law by the legislature creating the independent commission, no amendment to such act which alters the composition of the commission shall be valid unless the amendment is enacted by a favorable vote of two‑thirds of the members elected to each house of the legislature and is subject to referendum petition.))  All elected state officials shall each severally receive such compensation as the legislature may direct.  The compensation of any state officer shall not be increased or diminished during his or her term of office.

     The provisions of ((section 14 of Article IV,)) sections 14, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21, and 22 of Article III((,)) and section 23 of Article II((,)) insofar as they are inconsistent herewith, are hereby ((superseded.  The provisions of section 1 of Article II relating to referendum procedures, insofar as they are inconsistent herewith, are hereby superseded with regard to the salaries governed by this section)) repealed.

     BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the secretary of state shall cause notice of the foregoing constitutional amendment to be published at least four times during the four weeks next preceding the election in every legal newspaper in the state.