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WA governor calls for tapping reserve fund and climate law cash to fill budget hole

Gov. Ferguson's $79 billion budget proposal addresses a $2.3 billion shortfall with $1 billion from the rainy day fund and nearly $600 million in Climate Commitment Act revenues.

  • On Tuesday, Dec. 23, Gov. Bob Ferguson proposed a $79 billion supplemental operating budget that avoids broad tax hikes while tapping reserves and redirecting Climate Commitment Act revenues to close a $2.3 billion gap.
  • Driven by falling receipts and higher costs, inflation, lower tax receipts and federal cuts eroded finances, prompting adjustments to the two-year, $78 billion 2025-27 budget through June 30, 2027.
  • The plan cuts about $9000 million across agencies, trims university budgets by 3%, removes 1,816 Transition to Kindergarten slots, and funds pay raises for 5,300 workers.
  • Republicans and critics called the proposal gimmicky and questioned its Christmas timing, while Climate Solutions and clean-energy groups opposed diverting CCA auction proceeds from pollution reduction.
  • Although he backs a millionaire's tax, Ferguson described the plan as a roadmap for the Jan. 12 legislative session, noting revenue won't start until 2029.
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WA GOP budget lead blasts Ferguson’s fiscal plan as ‘a complete joke’

(The Center Square) – Washington state Gov. Bob Ferguson released his proposed 2026 supplemental budget on Tuesday, the deadline for presenting it.

Washington State Governor Bob Ferguson recently announced a $3 billion transportation investment plan, aiming to increase investment in highway and bridge maintenance over the next decade and build three new ferries to address the state's aging transportation infrastructure. According to the plan, Washington will invest approximately $1.1 billion in bridge repair and maintenance, $164 million in road paving next summer, and an additional $756 mi…

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The Seattle Times broke the news in Seattle, United States on Tuesday, December 23, 2025.
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