SENATE BILL REPORT

 

 

                                   ESSB 6276

 

 

BYSenate Committee on Economic Development & Labor (originally sponsored by Senators Lee, Warnke, Fleming, Smitherman, Conner, Deccio, McMullen and Johnson)

 

 

Creating an interagency task force on entrepreneurial development.

 

 

Senate Committee on Economic Development & Labor

 

      Senate Hearing Date(s):January 14, 1988; January 18, 1988

 

Majority Report:  That Substitute Senate Bill No. 6276 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass.

      Signed by Senators Lee, Chairman; Anderson, Vice Chairman; Cantu, Conner, McMullen, Saling, Smitherman, Warnke.

 

      Senate Staff:Jack Brummel (786-7428)

                  February 4, 1988

 

 

                      AS PASSED SENATE, FEBRUARY 3, 1988

 

BACKGROUND:

 

Entrepreneurs, people who start, organize, and manage new enterprises, are the primary force behind innovation, new business formation, new job creation, and new wealth creation.  In one rating of different states' economic development performance done by the Corporation for Enterprise development, Washington state ranked 48th on the measure of entrepreneurial culture.  It has been suggested that the lack of a vital entrepreneurial environment is one reason that the state has suffered from high unemployment, high business failures, and relatively low business starts.

 

SUMMARY:

 

An interagency task force on entrepreneurial development is created, chaired by the director or an assistant director of the Department of Trade and Economic Development.  The Department of Community Development, the Employment Security Department, the Department of Labor and Industries, the Department of Social and Health Services, the State Board for Vocational Education, the State Board for Community College Education, the Higher Education Coordinating Board and the Superintendent of Public Instruction are also on the task force.

 

The task force is charged with gathering information on entrepreneurial development, formulating interagency agreements to promote entrepreneurial activity, and designing program and policy options.

 

The job training coordinating council will include provisions in its coordination and special services plan to facilitate entrepreneurial development.

 

Appropriation:    none

 

Revenue:    yes

 

Fiscal Note:      requested January 12, 1988

 

Senate Committee - Testified: Kathy Countryman, Employment Security Department