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Updated Interactive Map Shows UW’s Impact in Legislative Districts Statewide

This week the Office of State Relations released an updated web tool that provides a range of data gathered from campus units on the University of Washington’s impacts in all 49 legislative districts across the state.

Visit the newly re-launched UW In Your Community interactive map online at www.uw.edu/maps/state.

UW In Your Community Map

By clicking on any district, a user can view Fast Facts about the UW’s impact, such as number of UW students, alumni, and employees living there.

Each district has its own dedicated page, with photos and links to the representatives serving from that district in the State Legislature. The district pages also provide information on the many UW partnerships and programs with local schools, community organizations, health care clinics, and more that operate in communities around the state.

Today in Olympia: Capital Budget, Operating Budgets, State Need Grant, College Bound, and GET

Welcome to Week 2 of the 105-day legislative session.

Clearing the fog of what’s happening in Olympia this week, we turn to Crosscut for a succinct treatment of legislative affairs:

For those new to the Legislature, committees are where shy new bills go to introduce themselves. After being read for the first time to the whole House (or Senate, for Senate bills), bills are sent to committees depending on their subject. Once in committee, bills are presented to committee members, who decide whether to send them on for review by the larger group — or nip them in the bud.

Turning to Higher Ed, interested parties from around the state came before the House Committee on the Capital Budget to give testimony on HB 1089, the 2013-2015 capital budget.

UW’s Director of State Relations Margaret Shepherd provided  testimony on the university’s priority capital projects. Watch the testimony here.

This afternoon, the Senate Ways & Means Committee held a Work Session on Higher Education. Committee members received an overview of the Higher Education Operating Budget, State Need Grant and College Bound program, Guaranteed Education Tuition (GET) Program, and heard perspectives from Higher Ed stakeholders – including UW. Senators had a chance to ask the public four-year universities about the $225 million reinvestment proposal to freeze undergraduate tuition for two years.

In related news, the Seattle Times reported this weekend that the College Bound program has been more successful in sending low-income students to four-year colleges than expected.

Here’s how the program works, per the Times:

Middle-school students sign a pledge to keep at least a C average, stay out of legal trouble and apply for college and financial aid. Low-income students already can get substantial financial aid from the state and federal government and from private sources. College Bound also gives students up to $500 a year for books. Grants do not need to be repaid.

College Bound is one of the programs that UW undergrads participating in the Dream Project are helping spread the word about through mentoring students in Seattle-area high schools. In 2012-13, 713 College Bound students became Huskies.

Tomorrow, the House Higher Education Committee will begin hearings on “The Higher Education Needs of Industry.”

For an early perspective on that topic, last week Richard Fabian (VP of Imaging Systems Marketing at Philips) testified before the House Technology & Economic Development Committee.

Responding to a question from the Chair, Mr. Fabian noted the crucial importance of the University of Washington to its presence in the state. Watch the testimony here.

Seattle Chamber of Commerce’s Public Officials Reception

Randy Hodgins and attendees

PHOTO: UW Vice President for External Affairs Randy Hodgins (left) poses with attendees at the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce’s Public Officials Reception.

Held every December, this event brings together business and civic leaders to meet and network with state legislators and local elected officials about issues of regional and state interest.

State officials attending this year were: Gov.-elect Jay Inslee, Secretary of State Sam Reed, State Treasurer Jim McIntire, Attorney General-elect Bob Ferguson, State Senators: Jeanne Kohl-Welles, Andy Hill, Joe Fain, Steve Litzow, Reuven Carlyle; State Representatives: Judy Clibborn, Joe Fitzgibbons, Cyrus Habib (elect), Zack Hudgins, and Eric Pettigrew; as well as many other local and regional officials.