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Articles written by Mark Harmsworth


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  • Legislature should cut bureaucrat wages

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Nov 28, 2024

    When Jay Inslee took the job as governor in 2013, the state’s annual operating budget was approximately $38.4 billion. After 12 years of the Inslee administration, the state is now spending almost twice as much per year, $75.5 billion. Yet, despite this massive increase in state spending, legislators are claiming that they will need another $10-12 billion over the next 4 years to balance the state’s checkbook. The state does not have a revenue problem, it has a spending problem. Democrat Sen. Ja...

  • Minimum wage fever isn't passing – more increases will bring more misery for workers

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Oct 24, 2024

    Several cities and counties in Washington have caught the minimum wage increase fever by proposing increases of $20.29 in King County to as high as $24 an hour in Olympia. There was even talk about a $41 an hour wage for a single parent with a child at home which roughly equates to $82,000 a year. Sounds great until the reality of paying for the increases kicks in. King 5 reports one restaurant owner said going over $20 per hour will likely force him to raise prices. The false assumption in all minimum wage increase proposals is the employee...

  • Eventually, the money will run out

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Aug 22, 2024

    An extensive study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research concludes that universal basic income, the government gifting of taxpayer dollars, doesn’t have the effect that proponents of forced re-distribution of wealth would have hoped for. In fact, the opposite is true. A universal basic income promises a government guaranteed income which is supposed to improve the economic situation of those receiving the money, typically median or lower income families. The study, however, d...

  • Lawmakers need to change growth law

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Jun 13, 2024

    Demographia has just published a study, authored by Wendell Cox, that compares the affordability of housing in the international marketplace. The conclusions show that while Washington state isn’t the most expensive, it is on its way to the top spot. What’s sad is it’s all avoidable with some simple changes to state policy. Currently, Seattle ranks 73 out of 100 of the most affordable major cities to live. The study summarizes that the high prices are “largely the product of policies that seek to limit growth on the periphery” of municipal...

  • Study shows capping rent costs won't help tenants

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Apr 18, 2024

    In a backwards approach to helping tenants, the Federal Government is capping rent increases on subsidized housing at 10% in a bid to reduce the cost of rental properties. The result, should the measures be adopted, will be exactly the opposite and rents will go up. When you place caps on rent, instead of letting the market drive the pricing, the supply of rental property declines and the result is higher demand and higher prices for rent. There is a short-term impact to rental costs, but as...

  • House Bill 2114, rent control, appears to have died in the Washington State Senate

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Feb 29, 2024

    House Bill 2114 (HB 2114), otherwise known as rent control, that passed the Washington State House of Representatives February 13 on a party line vote, appears to have died in the Senate and failed to pass out of committee. HB 2114 would have limited rent and fee increases to 7% and would have increased the notification period to 180 days for increases over 3%. The tenant would have been able to terminate a lease within 20 days and if the increase is over 7%, the tenant would have received damag...

  • Minimum Wage hikes, predictably, increase the cost of fast food

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Feb 8, 2024

    If you have taken your kids to McDonalds (or indulged yourself) in the last 6 months, you will have noticed the prices have increased substantially. Washington is not the only state where prices are going up, and it’s partially because of increases to minimum wage. Zerohedge is reporting another price increase, driven primarily by increases to the minimum wage, that is going to hit California in April this year. California minimum wage is set to increase to $20 an hour for fast food workers, a...

  • Senate Bill 6064 would effectively ban pets from rental properties

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Jan 25, 2024

    In a mis-guided attempt to limit the amount a property owner could collect in a damage deposit for pets, lawmakers are proposing a pet deposit cap of $150, starting this July. Like much of the other legislation that has been proposed this year to reduce the cost of housing, Senate Bill (SB 6064), introduced by Senator Drew Hansen (D-23), will have exactly the opposite effect. Pet deposits are designed to cover the cost of either deliberate or accidental damage repairs to an rental property,...

  • California is doing something right for housing, should Washington follow suit?

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Dec 14, 2023

    The Puget Sound Regional Council has just released a report reviewing housing prices in Washington and no surprise, concludes housing costs too much. The basic rules of demand and supply drive the cost of homes, the less homes on the market, the more they will cost. Making it worse are high interest rates and recent inflationary pressure caused by the federal government’s reckless monetary policy during COVID. Homeowners are holding onto homes financed with low interest rate loans, the t...

  • Traffic to get worse regardless of tolls

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Oct 26, 2023

    The Interstate 405 and state Highway 167 toll lane experiment is losing money. Now, the state Transportation Commission is considering increasing tolls by up to 80% to $18 each way on I-405. The increase will cost an I-405 commuter, using the lanes at peak toll periods, around $720 per month or $8,640 per year. If you travel the entire Highway 167 and I-405 corridor you could see a toll of up to $54. The state Department of Transportation fiscal report for the tolling project shows a loss of...

  • Despite the obvious safety risks, the City of Spokane is pushing forward with more Lime scooters

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Jun 1, 2023

    In a strange twist of fate, within 30 days of the City of Spokane announcing Lime scooters are back in Spokane with a new scooter model that promises to be safer, better handling and cheaper to run, a scooter rider was hit and injured on-route to a Shania Twain concert. This, as Krem 2 reports, this was not the first time a scooter related accident has happened. In 2019 a man was killed on a Lime scooter; a women broke her jaw when the scooter un-expectantly engaged its brakes and in 2020 a man...

  • Legislature 2023: The legislature says it wants affordable housing but keeps pushing legislation that will do the opposite

    Mark Harmsworth, Director Small Business Center, Washington Policy Center|Feb 16, 2023

    House Bill 1628 (HB 1628) creates a new property tax category of 4% on property valued at over $5 million. Proponents of HB 1628 argue that a property owner that sells property that is valued at over $5 million can afford to pay the additional tax rate. The majority of properties, however, that are sold that are valued over $5 million, are multi-unit housing, apartments, duplexes, retail and commercial properties which provide homes, products and services for every Washington resident. The...

  • Audit recommendations still not followed

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|Jan 5, 2023

    The Washington State Auditor has completed a performance audit of the Employment Security Department and has found the agency still has not corrected its systemic performance and fraud problems uncovered during the COVID-19 pandemic. After the complete failure of the agency to handle pandemic unemployment claims, which culminated in the resignation of Commissioner Suzi LeVine in 2021, state lawmakers passed several key pieces of legislation to require the agency to reform many of its internal...

  • State should simplify regulations

    Mark Harmsworth, Small Business Center at the Washington Policy Center|Dec 15, 2022

    Former state senator and current state Director of Commerce Lisa Brown rightly describes the difficulties a small business startup faces in Washington. Brown says the state Department of Commerce is helping small business owners navigate the complicated array of regulations and mandates that the very same government agency had previously imposed. But Brown completely glosses over the underlying problem small businesses face when they first start; that is, over complex government regulations....

  • Mark Harmsworth

    Virus mandate is unconstitutional

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center|May 27, 2021

    New COVID workplace restrictions, issued by Washington State Labor and Industries (L&I) on May 21, require employers to check employee vaccine documents before allowing relaxation of social distancing and mask requirements in the workplace. The new state rules require an employer to confirm, and have employees prove their vaccine medical status. The process used to verify vaccination, and the medical status of the employee's vaccination record, including the employee medical information must be...

  • Failures of the State

    Mark Harmsworth, Washington Policy Center for Small Business|Jan 21, 2021

    The COVID-19 crisis and related economic shutdown has highlighted a number of failures of the state Employment Security Department. These failures in unemployment systems and department procedures resulted in managers being unable to meet basic levels of service and failing to pay benefits in a timely fashion when the number of claims increased. ESD systems were overwhelmed, allowing Nigerian scammers and other individuals to steal at least $350 million in benefits from state taxpayers....

  • High minimum wage brings low benefit

    Mark Harmsworth, Director of the Small Business Center for the Washington Policy Center|Nov 12, 2020

    Washington has one of the highest minimum wage levels in the U.S. For workers who have a job this sounds like a great deal, but as with all things the government mandates, there are some serious, negative consequences, primarily on young and entry level workers who are forced into joblessness. Nowhere is the harm imposed by a high minimum wage demonstrated more clearly than in Seattle, where the city council has aggressively increased the minimum wage over the last few years. The rash of...

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