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Articles written by mark schoesler


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  • Legislative Commentary: Dec. 13, 2018

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Feb 1, 2019

    Dear Friends, Here on National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day, when we remember those who lost their lives in Hawaii on this day 77 years ago, there is another reason to think of George H.W. Bush, our nation’s 41st chief executive. The attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into World War II and what specifically was known as the War in the Pacific – where the first President Bush began his decades of distinguished public service, as a U.S. Navy torpedo bomber pilot. I very well remember his time as the leader of our...

  • Legislative Commentary: Dec. 20, 2018

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Feb 1, 2019

    Dear Friends, State law requires the governor to submit a budget proposal to the Legislature ahead of each of our sessions. This week Governor Inslee submitted the seventh budget of his time in office, and he’s now 7-for-7 on wanting new taxes. Keep reading for details, including how he is continuing the crusade against the Snake River dams. I was west of the mountains early this week for a meeting of the Select Committee on Pension Policy, and also the meeting where the Senate Republican Caucus divided up our seats on the v...

  • Legislative Commentary: Dec. 27, 2018

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Feb 1, 2019

    Dear Friends, The time has come to ease up on legislative business and focus on enjoying time with family and friends as we reach the peak of the holiday season. That includes taking a brief break from commenting on things coming out of Olympia, even though the list of deserving topics has been growing lately. I’ll touch on a few of those before signing off. This week’s legislative calendar included a meeting of the Washington State Institute for Public Policy board. WSIPP takes a deeper look at a variety of issues that cro...

  • Legislative Commentary: Jan. 10, 2019

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jan 31, 2019

    Dear Friends, Maybe you’ve heard the old line that suggests the making of laws is like the making of sausage. In that sense I guess the sausage-making that went on at my farm a week ago was like a warm-up for the lawmaking ahead -- because the start of the 2019 legislative session is now just 10 days away. After a nice break from Senate business from before Christmas through New Year’s Day, I was back in the saddle bright and early Wednesday morning for a phone interview with one of the big radio stations in Portland. Tod...

  • Legislative Commentary: Jan. 17, 2019

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jan 31, 2019

    Dear Friends, It’s customary for me, as leader of one of the four legislative caucuses, to do a round of media interviews on the opening day of a legislative session. You never know exactly what the questions will be, but my interview with the TVW public-affairs network in the Rotunda (click here or on either photo to watch) was fairly typical, going something like this: -What are the Senate Republican Caucus priorities this year? Our list includes improvements to mental-health services (which does not automatically mean b...

  • Legislative Commentary: Jan. 24, 2019

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jan 30, 2019

    Dear Friends, It’s customary for me, as leader of one of the four legislative caucuses, to do a round of media interviews on the opening day of a legislative session. You never know exactly what the questions will be, but my interview with the TVW public-affairs network in the Rotunda (click here or on either photo to watch) was fairly typical, going something like this: -What are the Senate Republican Caucus priorities this year? Our list includes improvements to mental-health services (which does not automatically mean b...

  • Legislative Commentary: Jan. 31, 2019

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jan 30, 2019

    Dear Friends, Before the 2019 legislative session took up, Democratic leaders in the Legislature indicated that they shared our interest in addressing two major issues: improving the delivery of mental-health treatment and addressing the shortage of available (and affordable) housing. I was proud that members of our Senate Republican caucus had put good ideas on the table back in the fall, and hopeful that we could see early action on those priorities. Two weeks into the session, my colleagues in the Senate’s Democrat m...

  • Legislative Commentary

    State Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jan 11, 2019

    While this year’s election season is over, as I mentioned in last week’s commentary, the general election itself isn’t wrapped up quite yet. As of yesterday the outcome of elections for two Senate positions was still up in the air. Hopefully things will be settled well before November 27, which is the deadline for county election offices to certify and turn in their results to the state. As Senate Republican leader I look forward to knowing exactly how many members will be on our side of the aisle. In the meantime, we are g...

  • Sen. Mark Schoessler

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Nov 15, 2018

    Cell phones have their place, but it can be nice to step back in time by going to a place where my phone simply won’t work. Recently I let my legislative staff know that I would be out of range for a few days, and headed for the Blue Mountains and some elk hunting with good friends. Whether I bring home some meat or not, being out in the field surrounded by God’s creation is one of the things I enjoy most about this time of year (and Colt, my faithful hunting dog, is always up for chasing some birds). Hunting season isn...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Nov 8, 2018

    I’ll start with a good word for our regional Department of Transportation folks and the contractor who got the overpass at the Tokio interchange on Interstate 90 repaired and back open this week, ahead of schedule. The bridge that was damaged (in July, by an oversize load) takes Danekas Road over I-90 east of Ritzville. The timing was bad because the vehicles that were forced to take turns going across included trucks hauling commodities from our local farms. But on the bright side, once DOT closed the bridge completely on O...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Nov 1, 2018

    Knowing Cougar Nation, it was no surprise that the highway detour on State Route 26 east of Othello had zero effect on turnout for this past Saturday’s WSU-Oregon football game. And once the ESPN network announced its popular “Gameday” show would be beaming from Pullman and Martin Stadium that morning, wild horses couldn’t have kept fans away. Fall is a great time of year to be in the Palouse, even more when the Cougs are winning. The Cougars’ football season has at least another month to go, but our state’s election se...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Sep 27, 2018

    I like a “win-win” idea as much as anyone, and its all the better when the idea has to do with farming, and the source of the idea is WSU. So I was happy to see the recent write-up in the Spokesman-Review featuring longtime WSU faculty member Tim Murray and the research he’s doing in south Spokane County on using fly ash to improve soil quality. I’ve known Tim for a long time, at least back to when he was doing work on perennial wheat. His project, which is another example of the world-class thinking coming out of our sta...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Sep 13, 2018

    While it’s still summer according to the calendar, the football schedule had the WSU Cougars playing their first home game of the season on Sept. 8; a sure sign that fall is not far off. Several weeks ago it looked like members of Cougar Nation who use State Route 26 would have to contend with a significant detour on their way to and from Pullman, while the highway bridge over the railroad tracks about 15 miles east of Othello undergoes major repairs. WSDOT says that project is now on hold until later in September, so h...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Sep 6, 2018

    A lot of folks take advantage of the Labor Day holiday to make one more late-summer trip, but for me Labor Day weekend means staying around Ritzville and taking part in our Wheat Land Communities’ Fair, which started Thursday and ran through Sunday. Besides taking a turn working the gate, I also participated in the parade and livestock auction. I’m also looking forward to being at the Palouse Empire Fair on its opening day Thursday, Sept. 6, as one of several elected officials who will cook food and serve it to senior cit...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Aug 23, 2018

    There’s so much to do during harvest that my legislator duties naturally shift to the back burner. But sometimes farming and being a state senator simply have to overlap, and that’s when the cab of a combine can be a pretty good place to meet and visit, like this past week, when Japan’s consul general for our region came to town. Consul General Yoichiro Yamada had arrived at his new posting in Seattle last summer, coming from his nation’s embassy in Belgium, and following other postings in Russia, Poland, New York and Ken...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Aug 2, 2018

    Wheat harvest got under way on the Schoesler farm this week, after we finished up with the canola. It presented the familiar mix of rewards and challenges, as we tried to work at maximum efficiency and keep all of our machines going. Things look encouraging so far, but either way I can’t complain, not after seeing how fire destroyed thousands of acres of wheat in north central Oregon in a matter of days. Let’s hope no more crops are lost to fire this year. As I’m wearing my farmer hat, I’ll focus this commentary on two of...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jul 26, 2018

    A year ago today the longest legislative session in state history finally ended. It was no fun being away from the farm during the run-up to harvest, but at least the heavy lifting we did in 2017 had much to do with the 2018 session ending on schedule. This year’s wheat harvests are already under way, with asparagus and cherry harvests winding down, and the talk I’m hearing so far is positive from the areas that usually come in earlier. By the time you read this my own harvest may be going, hopefully a safe and fire-free har...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jul 5, 2018

    Driving around our legislative district on Senate business takes me away from my farm, but it also means I’m driving past someone else’s farm a fair amount of the time. I’ve been on the road to Pasco and Pullman quite a bit lately, and whether it’s wine grapes here or wheat there, the crops are looking better than average to my eye at this point in the season. The garbanzo beans (chickpeas) are looking especially good in Whitman County, which just happens to be the nation’s leading producer of that particular legume. I...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jun 28, 2018

    When Thursday arrived, bringing the official start of summer, I was reminded how at this time a year ago the Legislature was still in session with no firm end in sight. In fact, June 21 of last year was both the final day of the second overtime session and the first day of the third overtime. It would be another 30 days before the 2017 session finally fizzled to a halt, in one of the most bizarre ways imaginable: majority Democrats literally walking out of the House chamber so Republicans couldn’t force a vote on the ...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Jun 7, 2018

    Recently I mentioned how one of the state Supreme Court justices, from Seattle, had attended a political rally put on in Spokane by the largest teachers’ union in the state. She did so shortly before she was to hear arguments in a lawsuit brought by that union and others against the state’s charter schools, and her appearance rightfully had people wondering if she could be impartial about that case. Part of Justice Mary Yu’s public excuse for speaking at the political event was that she wanted to encourage teachers to have...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Mar 15, 2018

    The legislative session ended late Thursday night, on schedule. Unfortunately, wrapping up on time was about the only good thing I can say about our entire final week in Olympia. We saw the new Senate majority ignore the state constitution, starve the state’s rainy-day fund, and refuse to roll back the school-tax increase that has caused a property-tax spike statewide, and that was just in the final two days of the session. I’m glad it is over, and I am looking back to getting home and onto a tractor. In what is probably my...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Mar 8, 2018

    It isn’t every day that I am able to talk about Harrington and Washtucna to my Senate colleagues, but today House Bill 1209 gave me a reason. Without going into great detail, the bill would lift the limit on deposits of public funds from rural counties into credit unions that are exempt from the business and occupation tax (banks aren’t exempt). To me this isn’t really about credit unions versus banks. It’s more about causing even more capital to be exported from rural Washington into big-city money centers, at a time wh...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Mar 1, 2018

    The end of the 2018 legislative session is less than two weeks away. The session hasn’t produced a lot of positive things for the people of our state, but being an eternal optimist, I can point to one. Olympia’s new ruling party has less than two weeks left to impose its liberal special-interest agenda on the families and employers of our state, before we adjourn for the year. My favorite visitors for the week were my three grandchildren, for the Senate’s observance of Children’s Day. It snowed more than once at the Capitol t...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Feb 22, 2018

    Much has been happening at the Capitol, but before commenting on some of the key decisions I’ll point out that today is day 40 of our 60-day session. We’re at the stage where the Senate committees are considering bills passed by the House, and vice versa. More significantly, the first state revenue forecast of 2018 was released Thursday – and it’s an absolute game-changer in my book, as I’ll explain. The Senate and House budget writers will use the forecast to fine-tune their budget proposals, which should emerge next week...

  • Legislative Commentary

    Senator Mark Schoesler, Ninth District|Updated Feb 15, 2018

    When we’re on the floor of the Senate chamber debating and voting on legislation, it’s known as “floor action.” At this point in the session, when the full Senate is working through bills that were moved forward by the various committees, the floor action can last all day, and then some. Our first day of floor action this past week had us in the Senate chamber until early the next morning. We spent the better part of the final two hours on two pieces of legislation that sure look like an attempt by a powerful labor union t...

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