• 24 Jan 2024 11:28 AM | Anonymous

    The 2024 legislative session is well underway, completing three weeks in session as of this publication. Our League Lobby Team of Issue Chairs has been very busy reviewing bills, researching, preparing testimony, and writing the Legislative Action Newsletter. The 13 Issue Chairs are supported by 14 Advocates, who are League members with a passion about specific issues and who have the time and talent to help with research and writing. Additionally, Issue Chairs rely on support from the League’s contract lobbyist, Nancy Sapiro, and issue-specific coalitions for background and prioritizing which legislation is most important to support (or oppose).

    Here's what goes on behind the scenes. Issue Chairs work in teams of related issues, including Making Democracy Work, Environment and Social and Economic Policy. They begin in the summer, during the legislative interim, recruiting new volunteers and meeting in a retreat to debrief the previous session and determine how to approach the upcoming one.

    Early in the term of the new Board (some Board members are elected each year, most at Convention and some at Council), there is a discussion of how the Lobby Team is organized, as background for upcoming issues.  In early fall, each Issue Chair—both current and proposed new ones—submits an application to be appointed to that role. Issue Chairs are authorized to speak for the League and must be approved by the Board. Advocates, in contrast, do not speak for the League and do not need Board approval. They work with Issue Chairs according to interests and the needs of the Issue Chairs.

    In later fall, the Lobby Team submits proposed legislative priorities and requests for coalition memberships for Board approval. Then the Team begins organizing the Action Workshop(s) for late November/early December and Democracy Lobby Week in conjunction with Fix Democracy First, typically in late January. (Note, the 2024 Lobby Week is having its celebration as this is published). These activities are organized to provide you—our members and interested readers—with background on the issues and opportunities to meet with your legislators during session.

    The week ahead is critical for the legislature. January 31 is the cut-off of bills in the policy committees of the chamber of origin. In other words, if a bill is initiated by a Representative, then the relevant House policy committee must have passed it on to the next stage or the bill has died; and the same in the Senate. Our Lobby Team is working hard to help get priority bills passed by then. This means tracking progress, testifying in committees, meeting with legislators to discuss the bills, and coordinating with relevant coalitions.

    The next phases are consideration of fiscal bills—those that generate revenue and those that appropriate, or spend the funds—and working on legislation going through the process in the opposite chamber. Throughout this process, both Chambers meet “on the floor” in session where they vote on what to pass for the other chamber to consider. By February 13, any bill that has not been passed by its chamber of origin dies.

    The last day of session is March 7, only three weeks after the above cut-off. During that final period, the opposite chamber is considering bills passed by the first chamber and gets into final budget negotiations. Our Lobby Team works hard to continue to press for legislation and budgets we support, right up to the end.

    This is a continuous learning experience for everyone. Even Issue Chairs who have been in that role for a decade or more learn something new each session. If you are interested in joining this team, starting as an Advocate and perhaps moving into an Issue Chair role, please know that we need your help! You will be provided with training and mentoring throughout. Those interested can contact Cynthia Stewart to learn how to get involved.

  • 24 Jan 2024 10:45 AM | Anonymous

    The Election Credibility Committee (ECC) of the League of Women Voters of Washington is proud to announce a compelling initiative aimed at fostering civic education among high school students—the Student Video Contest. This project presents a unique opportunity for young folks to create impactful 30-60 second videos, engaging their peers in understanding and advocating for election credibility in an informative and persuasive manner. The goal is to empower students to gain accurate information about voting and elections in Washington state, building a culture of knowledge-sharing with friends, family, and the broader public.

    Washington high school students are invited to participate in the creation of videos focused on election protection and credibility within the state. The judging process, slated for the summer, will evaluate entries for both content and technical excellence, with winners to be announced in September. The winning videos will gain visibility on social media, various voting websites, and potentially even television. Notably, the student producers behind the winning entries will be rewarded with prize money.

    Registration and submission for the contest began in November and will conclude on May 1, 2024. Interested participants can find detailed information and register here.

    In a press release from December, the League of Women Voters of Washington, led by President Mary Coltrane, emphasized the significance of this initiative as an opportunity for high school students to deepen their understanding of election credibility. With the inclusion of 17-year-olds in the presidential primary voting process in March, the contest aims to inspire students to learn and share accurate information about Washington state voting and elections, building a sense of active civic engagement.

    To acknowledge the hard work and excellence of the winning submissions, the ECC will award cash prizes to the 1st and 2nd place videos. Complete details about the contest, including rules and registration information, are available on the contest webpage. Registration remains open until midnight on May 1, 2024, marking the deadline for both completed registrations and the submission of videos. To support participants in their video production journey, tutorials and guidance will be accessible to all registered contestants, with training resources and in-person tutorials available on the official contest website.

    The contest is sponsored by the LWVWA, a nonpartisan organization with a century-long commitment to education, voting, and democratic principles, the contest's judging panel comprises video professionals, election officials, and League members.

    Reflecting on the success of the 2023 Student Video Contest, judges praised the winning video for its clarity in addressing voting eligibility and registration, as well as highlighting the critical issue of mis- or disinformation as a significant threat to voting integrity. The video was lauded for its balanced messaging, compelling visuals, and memorable filming angles.

    For those wanting to view last year's winning entry, the video is available below.


    Those interested in this year’s contest can view the Election Credibility Committee’s High School Video Contest website for more information. 

  • 18 Dec 2023 10:42 AM | Anonymous
    There are a number of ways you can take action and help support the Lobby Team's advocacy! Some of these include:
    • Attend Democracy Lobby Week, January 22 through 26, to hear more details about specific legislation League is supporting. Get more information and register here.
    • Participate in meetings with your local Legislators during Democracy Lobby Week. Nervous? Prepare by getting tips on how to effectively discuss the issues with your legislators at Speak-up School, January 6. Get more information and register here.
    • Read the weekly Legislative Action Newsletter and follow the Action Alerts. Pick your favorite issues and weigh in electronically. Subscribe here.
    • Volunteer to become an advocate on an issue of your choice. Contact the LWVWA Advocacy Chair, Cynthia Stewart, or any of the Issue Chairs here.
    • Talk to your friends and neighbors about how they also can be involved in solutions for Washington state.
    And why should you help? Because many Washingtonians need help! From homelessness to health care, behavioral health to criminal justice, systemic racism to extreme inequities in wealth, crises from the effects of climate change, and so much more—we all need to be part of the solutions.

    For Further Inspiration...

    ...read On Advocacy by Rosemary Powers, President of the League of Women Voters of Tacoma-Pierce County. Here’s what she said about advocacy as she introduced the meeting of the Pierce County Coalition to End Homelessness one Friday:

    “Today I am thinking about 'advocacy.'" The issues and my response seem to fit today, as this is the time of year for receiving many requests from multiple sources asking us to review budget proposals, identify legislative priorities, let public officials and decision-making groups know what we think should be done to address immediate and long-range housing needs.    

    During the meeting today we will hear about the Pierce County budget, and about advocacy priorities for the coming state legislative session. And we’ll think together about advocating—in a more individual sense – about what to say in personal conversations with family, and neighbors, and officials, and strangers—who do not see the issues in the ways we’ve come to see them.

    Advocacy is an old concept. From the Medieval Latin word ‘advocare’ (‘to add’ a ‘voice’) it means to plead a case or a cause, to argue that something needs to be changed or improved. Other related words and phrases would be ‘lobbying’, ‘fighting for change’, ‘standing up for rights’, ‘championing a cause’, ‘changing the system’.  We use the word easily as a shorthand way to describe acting in support of what’s important to us—sometimes with others, sometimes with a lot of planning, sometimes out of a deep sense that we cannot stay silent. It makes me wonder why we so often choose to keep silent—or stay silent until we feel compelled, and conclude that we must “add our voice”.

    Read more of Rosemary Powers' inspiring remarks here.
  • 18 Dec 2023 10:27 AM | Anonymous

    By Mary Lynne Courtney, LWVWA Behavioral Health Issue Chair


    What are the critical challenges facing healthcare in the U.S. today

    Most commonly, cost and accessibility are cited. However, related to, and contributing to, these problems are an increasing shortage of healthcare providers, health disparities among groups, an aging population, and the complexity of the healthcare system (in-network restrictions, prior authorizations, drug formularies, lack of interconnectivity of healthcare records). 

    Costs are rising for everyone: the cost to individuals (insurance premiums, deductibles, copays, drugs); employers providing health insurance for their employees; government programs (such as Medicaid, Medicare, the VA system, and Tricare); and the organizations providing healthcare services (hospitals, pharmacies, and providers). According to the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF), in 2022, half of adults said that it was difficult to afford healthcare costs. This was particularly burdensome for Black and Hispanic adults, persons with lower incomes, and those without insurance.   

    Even persons with insurance struggle with costsThey may be underinsured, that is, someone whose medical costs, excluding premiums, exceed 10% of their incomePersons covered by insurance purchased on the public market are the most likely to be underinsured; however, even those with insurance from their employers may be underinsured. Since 2010, it is the latter group that has fueled the growth in the underinsured. 

    In spite of the high cost of healthcare in the U.S. (nearly18 percent of GDP), The Commonwealth Fund reported that Americans die younger and are less healthy than residents of other high-income countries. 

    High costs impact accessibility to healthcare, which in turn negatively impacts an individual’s health. A KFF survey in March 2022, found that 43% of adults said that they or someone in their household put off or postponed needed healthcare due to cost. Twenty-five percent said that they had not filled a prescription, cut pills in half, or skipped doses of a medicine due to cost. Location as is a factor in accessibility.   

    According to a National Institutes of Health (NIH) 2022 report, almost 63% of counties in the United States have been designated as primary healthcare professional shortage areas. Disproportionately more rural counties have received this designation. 

    What is the League position on healthcare?

    The LWVWA Program in Action states that the League supports action to control total system expenditures and to provide universal access to affordable health services with seamless coverage regardless of one's health status. 

    What is the Washington State Legislature doing to address these problems? 

    Last year, the Legislature passed several bills that address expanding the healthcare and behavioral health workforce, establishing minimum staffing standards for nurses in hospitals, extending telemedicine authorization, increasing payments to hospitals for certain Medicaid patients, establishing the profession of dental therapy, requiring insurance coverage for hearing aids, and legislation addressing crisis response and suicide prevention. Workforce issues and access to healthcare and behavioral healthcare will continue to be addressed in the upcoming session. 

    Generally, legislation has addressed particular issues in healthcare, but important as these issues are, the legislature has not addressed the problem wholistically An exception would be SJM 8006, which the League supports, a bill requesting that the Federal Government create a Universal Health Care Program and, if not, then issue waivers for the states to do so. In addition, the Washington State Universal Healthcare Commission created by SB 5399 in 2021, is looking at the entire healthcare system in the state, attempting to identify how Washington State might provide healthcare to all its residents. Its 2023 report to the Legislature, issued on November 1, states, “In the short-term, Washington is limited in both its ability to recoup federal funding to support a unified financing system, and to regulate coverage sources subject to or preempted by federal law. However, paths to achieving benefits parity in the short-term for Washingtonians eligible for Medicare, ERISA, and Medicaid have surfaced and will be examined further.” 

    So, we have much work to do to achieve a health care system that sufficiently addresses the coverage and cost issues that are so problematic for many people in Washington.

  • 18 Dec 2023 10:17 AM | Anonymous

    With the 2024 legislative session set to begin on January 8, the League of Women Voters of Washington has announced our Board-adopted legislative priorities for this year. Our Lobby Team will use these priorities to ensure that their advocacy work aligns with our commitment to justice, fairness, and civic engagement. 

    You can get updates on our progress on each of these issues in our weekly Legislative Action Newsletters. Watch for the first 2024 issue on Sunday, January 14, and weekly through the end of the legislative session on March 7, with a final closeout newsletter a couple of weeks later.  

    Subscribe to the Legislative Action Newsletter here.

    The LWVWA's advocacy work is broken up into three areasMaking Democracy Work®, the Environment, and Social and Economic Policy—and includes 16 separate issues. You can find a brief explanation of our aims in each area below. More in-depth information about each issue can be found here.

    Making Democracy Work® 

    Elections and Money in Politics
    Support changes in the electoral system that streamline process while protecting the integrity of records and ballots as well as limitations on the influence of money in election outcomes.
     

    Redistricting
    Support redistricting reform by 2031 that includes an updated commission, ongoing staff and technical support, process transparency, clearly defined rank criteria, an inclusive process for public input, and language accessibility.
     

    Education
    Ensure the school funding model is ample to meet the education needs of today, including those of students with special needs; ensure that state academic standards are sustained in local districts; and ensure that equitable education is available for all students.
     

    Local News and Democracy
    Support efforts to ensure conditions are such that ethical local journalism survives and thrives.
     

    Environment 

    Climate Crisis & Energy
    Support measures that address the climate crisis and create clean and renewable energy sources as well as opportunities to enhance climate and environmental justice.
     

    Forests
    Support measures that protect and restore mature and old-growth forests, reform the adaptive management program and enhance community resilience to wildfire.
     

    Growth Management
    Assure that land use decisions protect resource lands, forests, shorelines, rural areas and agriculture, and also enhance climate resilience.
     

    Waste Diversion
    Divert waste from disposal through reuse, reduction, recycling through a variety of methods including producer responsibility and product stewardship policies with special attention to packaging, plastics, batteries and digital electronic products.
     

    Transportation
    Achieve balanced and efficient systems, prioritizing those that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and congestion.
     

    Social and Economic Policy 

    Housing & Homelessness
    Ensure affordable housing for all and that new housing development is transit-oriented and contains environmental justice provisions.
     

    Health Care
    Support interim measures needed to progress toward Universal Healthcare funded by a single payer system for Washington State. Also support increasing the healthcare workforce capacity and improvements in system regulation.
     

    Behavioral Health
    Support increased funding for behavioral health services and behavioral health workforce development.
     

    Children’s Issues
    Ensure policies that provide for the safety and well-being of all children as well as access to opportunities to develop their full potential.
     

    Early Care and Education
    Promote the availability of safe, culturally appropriate early care and education services that support the development of young children, economic vitality for families and businesses, and living wages and training for early care and education workers.
     

    Criminal Justice
    Advocate for a criminal justice system that is just, effective, equitable and transparent, including sentencing reform, restrictions on use of solitary confinement, police accountability and recognition that mental health conditions and substance use disorders are health issues, not crimes.
     

    Revenue
    Promote a flexible, equitable tax structure that provides robust support for all government obligations and is based on sound economic policy, including measures that will support savings in government costs to do business.
     

  • 18 Dec 2023 9:25 AM | Anonymous

    Who are the people that represent League at the Legislature? There is a team of issue experts (called Issue Chairs) who each specialize in a subject for which they come with expertise and remain well-informed. Learn more about the Lobby Team or read their bios here. These are people who dedicate much of December and all of January through March or April to the League’s work on their respective issues. This includes preparation for the beginning of session, bill tracking, research, development of testimony, consultation with legislators and coalitions, supporting member engagement with the Legislative Action Newsletter, and so much more. Their jobs are full-time plus during this part of each year.  

    The Lobby Team members work hard. Here’s how some of them described why they wanted to do this work:

    "I applied to join the Lobby Team because in these uncivil times, legislation is one of the ways we can work for meaningful change."
    Dee Anne Finken, Local News and Democracy

    "I have always found the League Lobby Team to be effective and specifically joined to elevate my particular issue (waste diversion) as it is relative to the Climate Crisis priority. I have appreciated that we now have the capability of expanding issue chair participation from across the state."
    Ann Murphy, Waste Diversion

    "Of course I am very interested in behavioral health and concerned about obstacles that might prevent someone from obtaining the help that they need. But the decision to join the Lobby Team was really based on more self-serving reasons. I like to do things that scare me as long as they do not terrify me. Another more self-complimentary way of saying this is, I like to do things that challenge me, but things that I could accomplish if I stretched myself. It is a legal high."
    Mary Lynne Courtney, Behavioral Health

    The Team also includes advocates, who are volunteers that help with research, writing, developing testimony as well as providing other support to the Team. Advocates are not appointed by the LWVWA Board to speak for the League, however, so they don't give testimony. The Advocate role is perfect for members who feel nervous about testifying but have a deep interest in a subject area and want to help. Or for those who want to learn about issues they haven’t previously delved into.

    Any League member is welcome to support an Issue Chair working on a topic they want to support. Here’s what Carol Sullivan said about why she’s doing this work as an advocate.

    "I’m part of Lobby Team, because together, we are learning, sharing and making a difference in what happens in WA State."
    Carol Sullivan, Advocate

    Make sure you subscribe to the League's Legislative Action Newsletter, a weekly newsletter produced during Washington State's legislative session. It features easy-to-follow summaries of the legislative process, updates on key issues, and action alerts.

  • 20 Nov 2023 1:27 PM | Anonymous

    Dear members and friends of the LWVWA,

    The League of Women Voters has a history of holding the line when assaults to our democracy happen—and assaults do happen. Impact on Issues, the LWVUS guide to public policy issues, reminds us about the "witch hunt" period of the early 1950s. The League took an impactful role during this era, and during the 1960s on civil rights, as well as in the 1970s on a woman's right to choose. We are again in a time when we must step up to the demands of democracy. 

    This is exactly what the LWVWA did earlier this month when word came that a white powder was showing up in election offices around the state. League leaders worked together to get information and send out this statement.

    Did you know that several local Leagues have election observer programs in county elections offices? These are the people who watch ballots being received, opened, signatures checked, and counted. They know from direct observation how secure our elections are. This is why the LWVWA can say beyond any wisp of doubt that our elections are free and fair. Unfortunately, not everybody recognizes this, and some seek to cast doubt.  

    Our work for the 2024 election is just beginning. You are welcome to join in, if you aren't already doing so. Check with your local League to learn about efforts to get out the vote and call out the hard work election workers do to keep votes safe. Consider joining your local or state League's Voter Services Committee or become an ambassador for how our elections workbecause this is how democracy works. Or, if you are unable to contribute your time, please consider a donation to the LWVWA to help us continue our work in defending democracy. Thank you! 

    Kind regards, 

    Mary Coltrane, LWVWA President

  • 20 Nov 2023 12:59 PM | Anonymous
    The League of Women Voters is known for its grassroots efforts to educate and register voters. Local Leagues register voters, hold events to learn about candidates, and work to get out the vote. The LWVWA Voter Services Committee brings together members from around the state to share program ideas and resources, to learn about updates to voter registration, election laws, and candidate forum practices, as well as to provide mutual support and encouragement.   

    This year meetings had an educational focus. Representatives from the Elections Division of the Washington Secretary of States Office (SOS) met with the Voter Services committee three times. From these meetings the League learned about changes to voter registration that make it easier to vote, about SOS plans for civic engagement around the state, and SOS’s work to combat election mis- and disinformation. These meetings also provided League members an opportunity to inform SOS officials about problems they've encountered and to share LWVWA voter resources such as our Info-Bits. 

    Two of the Voter Services meetings this year focused on candidate events. Members learned about an innovative candidate event LWV Mason County heldmodeled after speed dating, where voters at the event met candidates and asked them questions directly. These meetings also had space for local Leagues to share how their candidate forums are conducted and included methods of distribution such as livestreaming events and recording them for viewing later or in-person events. Voter Services meetings also have resources that are available to help local Leagues with candidate events

    This fall Voter Services met with Mike Bay, Vice President of Programming for TVW, to discuss TVW's priorities for covering candidate forums and ways they can work with local communities. Now, the League is gearing up for the 2024 electionswhich will have many state and federal office racesand planning candidate events throughout the state.  

    The LWVWA is inspired by the work local Leagues are  doing around the state!

    • In Pullman, League members taught the Civics and Natural World chapter of The State We're In (elementary school edition) to 4th graders in several elementary schools. 
    • LWV Benton/Franklin produced a "Get Out the Vote dance video performed by the Pasco High School Dance Team. Watch in English or Spanish.
    • Clallam County League members devised a voting game to educate children on the importance of voting. Children voted on which charitable organization the League should donate to—a subject meaningful to them—and found the were really engaged! 
    • LWV Thurston produced a Be A Voter video highlighting the diversity of their community. Watch it here.

    Sharing among our members helps keep the energy going for all. The Voter Services committee has future meetings planned that will focus on programs for youth and Spanish speaking outreach, as well as on resources and Vote411.

    Please consider donating to support our voter services work here.

  • 20 Nov 2023 12:34 PM | Anonymous

    By Dee Anne FinkenLWVWA Director, Local News and Democracy 

    The refrain that local news is in crisis has become common knowledge among people who are involved in their communities and who follow the actions and decisions of their city and county councils and school board trustees.   

    But last week, we got a closer look at just how rapidly the crisis is growing when scholars at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalismamong the nation’s most preeminent researchers on the topicannounced their latest findings. 

    Their news isn’t good.  

    With an average of 2.5 newspapers now closing each weekup from two a week a year agomore than half of the counties in the nation now have either no local news source or only one remaining outlet. According to Penny Abernathy, co-author of Medill’s annual “State of Local News Project,” that remaining outlet is typically a weekly newspaper.  

    The implications of this worsening situation should be of even greater concern for those of us working to defend democracy and empower voters. As the League of Women Voters of Washington’s study “The Decline of Local News and Its Impact of Democracy” and scores of other research projects have illustrated, the decline is linked with reductions in voter turnout, decreased candidate participation, increased government costs, less effective public health education, reductions in civic engagement, and increased political polarization. 

    In spring 2023, after the LWVWA adopted the study, members also reached consensus on a Local News and Democracy position. The position states it is the responsibility of the government to provide support for conditions under which credible local journalism can survive and thrive.”  

    To be clear, the position does not specifically call on government to provide funding to support newspapersfor profit or nonprofit. It simply says government has a responsibility to make sure that conditions are such that allow local news publications to serve us. It is purposely written broadly so League members have the flexibility to support a wide variety of thoughtful efforts while rejecting those that aren’t. 

    In reaching consensus on the position, League members in Washington considered the actions of US founders, including their decisions to enshrine protection for a free press in the Constitution and to establish a federal postal service with reduced rates for publishers. The latter measure was to ensure early Americans were kept informed about the actions of their leaders by way of the most effective news distribution vehicle of the times. 

    Earlier this year, in Washington, the position allowed the League to advocate for one piece of legislation that will helpat least minimallystem the tide. WA Senate Bill 5199, approved with wide bipartisan support, extends a Business & Occupations tax preference for qualifying publishers to a full exemption. Those in the industry say that savings will likely equate to the salaries of three full-time positions at the Seattle Times, one full-time newsroom position at each of the other dailies and a half of a position at weeklies. 

    Small successes, but a start. 

    Meanwhile, because rebuilding local news also means educating consumers about how to distinguish between news and opinion and mis- and disinformation, the League also will advocate this session on behalf of two measures designed to boost news media literacy and digital citizenship in Washington schools. 

    The reality, though, is that the decline of local news is a nationwide problem, a situation clearly detailed by Medill scholars and others. As such, it can’t be effectively addressed through efforts in a single state. This is why the LWVWA Board voted earlier this year to seek national adoption of the LWVWA news position by concurrency.  

    The road to national concurrence is a long one and requires considerable effort, including securing support from local and state Leagues from across the country It will require Washington delegates to attend the national convention in Washington, D.C., in June 2024, where they can hold caucuses and canvass for support.   

    The LWVWA has sought national concurrence on only a small number of state positions, according to former LWVWA president Judy Golberg, who has been active with LWVUS for several years. 

    The local news crisis is a national problem, added Golberg, who is from LWV Benton/Franklin counties. “This is an issue we should all be concerned with.”

    Please consider donating to support this important work.

  • 20 Nov 2023 11:53 AM | Anonymous

    by Beth Pellicciotti—LWVWA Board, Civic Education

    The League of Women Voters of Washington is committed to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and to supporting civic education throughout the state. Civic education inclusion involves reaching out to underserved and underrepresented groups with information on how the government works and how to be engaged in a democracy. Civic education is for youth, but also for adults We all need to know more about how government works and the role we play in our democracy. 

    Each year, the LWVWA solicits civic education grant requests from local Leagues, with grant funds pulled from the LWVWA’s Education Fund. The guidelines are broad“How are you reaching underserved/underrepresented groups with voter education or civic education?”   

    Below are some examples of civic education grant work serving youth. Please consider giving to support future projects like these.

    KSPS Civics Bowl (civic education and inclusion)

    In 2021, the Spokane Area League partnered with the local public broadcasting station, KSPS, and the Spokane Public Schools to support teams of high school students to compete in a jeopardy-like civics bowl. Spokane League members wrote 700 questions from the two League civics textbooks used in schools. Civics teachers served as coaches; family members watched live recordings of the shows; and community members saw broadcasts of highly educated civics students competing.  

    In 2022, one of the semi-finalist teams hailed from the Spokane project-based Community School (an alternative high school), In 2023, the KSPS Civics Bowl is still going strong! Watch recent student Civic Bowl participants answering questions about their experience here.

    Legislative Page Program (civic education and equity)

    In 2022, the Clallam County League partnered with their local Boys and Girls Club to support and encourage club members to become legislative pages. Some of the young folks who wanted to participate in our state government as pages, in the capital for a week, learning the legislative process, could not afford the transportation, living, and clothing costs.

    To assist efforts to get these young folks to the capitol, the Clallam League served as the content expert on the legislative page programanswering questions, assisting with applications, and keeping track of important deadlines. The Boys and Girls Club gave students funding for clothing,transportation, as well as room and board costs. Read about the world-view altering experience of one legislative page below.


    Civics Textbooks to Schools (civic education, equity, and inclusion)

    In 2023, the Clark County League received funding to purchase the LWVWA civics textbooks, The State We’re In for a school district experiencing severe budget cuts The head of curriculum for that district asked for help paying for textbooks for elementary and middle school teachers. While the LWVWA textbooks are free online, teachers and students like to have a hardcopy. Access problems arise because not all school districts can afford printed textbooks, and many do not have broadband internet access.  

    Additionally, through the work of long-time League volunteer Karen Verrill, the League's textbooks, posters, and a recent supplement on The History of Latinos in Washington have been translated into Spanish! Ongoing planning with the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction is focusing expanding access to the translated versions to the over 40,000 students in dual language programs. It is important that ALL of uswhether our first language is English or nothave access to materials to aid in learning how Washington State and Native American governments work. Translated materials can be accessed here.

The League of Women Voters of Washington is a 501(c)(4) non-profit organization.
The League of Women Voters of Washington Education Fund is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. LWVWA Education Fund contributions are tax-deductible to the extent allowable by law. The League of Women Voters Education Fund does not endorse the contents of any web pages to which it links.

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