We are proud to announce that POC's operations specialist, Jen Kitajo, received the Mary Grembowski Staff Recognition Award for her 14 years of service at the School of Social Work, nearly five of which have been with Partners for Our Children.
Blog
Jul 05, 2016
POC's executive director, Benjamin de Haan, contributes to an article exploring how technology could be better harnessed to prevent youth homelessness.
News
Jun 30, 2016
POC's Jim Theofelis shares his experience working with young adults who are homeless and what he believes could be a game changer in the field.
Blog
Jun 20, 2016
Partners for Our Children is pleased to partner with the Washington State Budget & Policy Center to host a Forum on Poverty: The Impact on Children and Families on May 26th, 12:00-4:00 PM at the Navos Community Center in Burien.
Blog
May 05, 2016
When we started on the path of developing an open source parenting program, we could only hope that Strive would become what it is today. We still have a lot of work to do, but one thing we know for sure is: we’ve tapped into something that everyone seems desperate for.
Blog
Apr 19, 2016
Legislative Update
Apr 01, 2016
There are many reasons we believe Oliver will improve social services, but we decided to start with “Top 7 Reasons Oliver Will Improve Social Services” from the service provider perspective.
Blog
Mar 23, 2016
Legislative Update
Mar 18, 2016
SB 6671 was heard in Ways and Means and is now in Senate Rules. The bill died in Senate Rules.
Bill
Mar 09, 2016
HB 3006 was referred to House Appropriations on March 8th but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Dead.
Bill
Mar 09, 2016
Legislative Update
Mar 04, 2016
Legislative Update
Feb 26, 2016
The bill passed the Senate, 49-0 and has been referred to the House Appropriations committee; it was not scheduled for a hearing and was referred back to Senate Rules. The bill died on the Senate's 3rd reading calendar
Bill
Feb 23, 2016
The Governor signed SB 5728 into law.
Bill
Feb 23, 2016
Referred to the House Appropriations committee. It was not scheduled for a hearing or moved out of Appropriations and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 23, 2016
Legislative Update
Feb 19, 2016
Governor Jay Inslee announced a transformative shift for how services will be delivered to children and families in Washington State – a shift that Partners for Our Children has supported for many years.
Blog
Feb 18, 2016
Legislative Update
Feb 16, 2016
POC's executive director shares how technological innovation is critical within social services.
News
Feb 16, 2016
The bill was referred to the Senate Law & Justice committee on February 12. No further action has been taken. Dead.
Bill
Feb 15, 2016
During the 2015 session, the bill passed in the House, 97 - 0 but died in the Senate Law & Justice committee. During the 2016 session, the bill has been reintroduced and retained in its current status. It has been referred to House Rules. The bill was pulled in Rules and voted on by the House. The vote was 97 in favor, 1 excused. The bill was heard and exec'd in Law and Justice, sent to Rules, pulled in Rules and passed unanimously by the Senate. HB 1553 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Feb 10, 2016
SB 6647 was heard in Ways and Means but not exec'd. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Feb 09, 2016
Legislative Update
Feb 05, 2016
HB 2515 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
SB 6272 was amended and exec'd out of the Senate Health Care Committee and referred to Ways and Means. The bill was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 2366 passed the House and was referred to the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee. The bill was not heard or exec'd so it is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 1794 was initially introduced in 2015. The bill passed out of the Early Learning and Human Services Committee and went to Rules. It did not come out of Rules. In 2016 the bill was reintroduced and remains in Rules. Dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
SB 6530 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
SB 5065 was initially introduced in 2015. It passed out of the Early Learning and K-12 Committee and was sent to Ways and Means. The bill did not come out of Ways and Means and retained its status there. In 2016 the bill remains in Ways and Means and therefore is dead. 1682, the House version of the bill, passed and has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
SB 5437 was introduced in 2015, passed out of the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee as well as the Ways and Means Committee, was sent to Rules but never got out of Rules. In 2016 the bill was retained in Senate Rules and therefore is dead.http://www.partnersforourchildren.org/admin/config/date
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 2964 was passed by the House, heard and passed in the Senate Early Learning/K-12 Committee, and referred to Ways and Means. The bill was not heard or passed in Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 2183 was introduced in the 2015 session but did not come out of the House Education Committee and was retained in its present status. In 2016 the bill was heard, amended and exec'd in the Education Committee and referred to Appropriations. It was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
SB 6592 was referred to the Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 2597 passed the House and Senate and has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 1565 passed the House and referred to the Senate Human Services Committee. It was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 2957 was referred to the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 02, 2016
HB 2958 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 01, 2016
SB 6629 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Feb 01, 2016
In 2016 HB 1295 was heard, amended and exec'd in both the House Education and Appropriations committees. It was passed by the House and will be heard and passed in the Senate Early Learning K-12 Committee. The bill was referred to Ways and Means. It was heard but not exec'd and therefore is dead.
Bill
Feb 01, 2016
HB 2944 was referred to the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee but was not heard. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Feb 01, 2016
SHB 1408 passed the Senate and was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Feb 01, 2016
Legislative Update
Jan 29, 2016
SB 6598 was heard and exec'd in the Senate Early Learning/K-12 committee. The bill was heard in the Ways and Means committee but was not exec'd and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 28, 2016
SB 6603 was referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing committee but was not heard or exec'd out of committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 28, 2016
HB 2939 was referred to the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 28, 2016
SB 6494 was heard in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health, and Housing Committee; the bill was exec'd out of this committee on February 5th and referred to Ways & Means. The bill was heard, amended and exec'd of Ways and Means on February 8th and was referred to Rules. It was pulled in Rules but did not come up for a vote on the Senate floor and therefore is dead. The House companion, HB 2439, was passed by the legislature and signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 28, 2016
HB 2024 was initially introduced in 2015 and referred to the House Higher Ed Committee. The bill did not move out of the Higher Ed committee in 2015 and retained its status in 2016. It did not come up for a hearing in the House Higher Ed Committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
The Senate amended and passed HB 2906 and sent the bill back to the House for concurrence. The House concurred and the bill has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
SB 6586 was herd in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing Committee but was not exec'd and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
HB 2677 was heard in the House Early Learning and K-12 committee but was not exec'd and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
HB 2915 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
HB 2927 was referred to the House Health and Wellness committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
HB 2926 was referred to the House Public Safety committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
HB 2874 was heard and exec'd in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee. It was then heard and exec'd out of House Appropriations and has been referred to Rules. The bill did not come out of Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 27, 2016
SB 6559 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Dead.
Bill
Jan 26, 2016
SB 6557 was referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 26, 2016
SB 5752 did not get out of Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 26, 2016
HB 2076 did not get out of House Rules prior to the cut-off. Therefore it is dead.
Bill
Jan 26, 2016
SB 6372 was heard in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing Committee but did not come up for exec action. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 26, 2016
SB 6391 died on the Senate floor (was not voted on). It is now in the Senate X files. HB 2694, the House companion, passed and was signed into law by the Governor. It goes into effect on June 9, 2016.
Bill
Jan 26, 2016
SB 6497 died in House Rules. HB 2449 was signed into law (partial veto -- Section 1, the intent section; and sections 13-15 and section 21 -- all dealing with the use of Learning Assistance Program dollars to implement strategies related to truancy.
Bill
Jan 26, 2016
We took a look at what you were most interested on our blog in 2015. Turns out, it's a very well-rounded list - everything from event recaps to analyzing data trends to updates on new policies.
Blog
Jan 26, 2016
SB 6529 was referred to the House Transportation committee following passage by the Early Learning/Human Services Committee. It passed out of Transportation, was pulled in Rules, and passed by the House. It was amended in the House and went back to the Senate for concurrence/dispute. It does not appear to have come up for concurrence and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
HB 2878 did not get out of Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
SB 6524 did not come up for a vote before cut-off and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
SB 6543 was referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health, and Housing Committee but was never heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
AB 6535 was heard and exec'd by the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee. The bill was referred to and heard in Ways and Means but was not exec'd and therefore is dead. HB 2877, the House companion, did pass and was signed into law.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
HB 2877 was heard and passed in Ways and Means, pulled in Rules, and passed by the Senate. It was amended by the Ways and Means committee so will go back to the House for concurrence/dispute. The House refused to concur and asked that Senate to recede from their amendments. They did and the bill has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
This 2016 brief provides key facts on mental health issues related to children - how many are affected, how many receive the care they need, what level of mental health coverage is available, and more.
Brief
Jan 25, 2016
HB 2830 was heard in Appropriations but did not come up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead. Efforts were made to include language related to fiscal notes included in the budget; however, it was not.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
SB 6518 was heard and exec'd in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing committee. It then went to Ways and Means, however, did not get scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
SB 6495 did not get out of Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
HB 2834 was on the Senate floor calendar but never came up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
SB 5879 was heard and exec'd in the House Early Learning and Human Services committee, pulled in Rules, and passed by the House. The bill was amended in the Early Learning and Human Services Committee so will go back to the Senate for concurrence/dispute. The Senate concurred with the House amendments and the bill has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
SB 6477 was heard and passed in Ways and Means and was referred to Senate Rules. It did not move out of Senate rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
SB 6481 was referred to the Senate Higher Education Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
HB 2811 did not come up for a vote on the House floor and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 25, 2016
This 2016 brief provides key facts on the intersection between poverty and involvement in the child welfare system, as well as policy recommendations to ensure family economic security.
Brief
Jan 24, 2016
HB 2820 was heard in the House Appropriations Committee but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 21, 2016
HB 2746 passed the House and the Senate and has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HJR was referred to the House Finance Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. The bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6413 passed in House Judiciary, pulled in Rules and passed by the House. The bill was amended by the Judiciary Committee so will likely go back to the Senate for concurrence/dispute. The Senate concurred with the House amendments and the bill has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6422 was heard in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing committee but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6423 was heard and passed in the Senate Accountability and Reform Committee and referred to Ways and Means. The bill was not heard or passed in Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6432 was heard in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee but not exec'd and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6442 was referred to the Senate Commerce and Labor committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2749 was signed by the Governor on April 1st.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2791 was heard and passed in Ways and Means, referred to Senate rules, but has yet to be pulled in Rules. The bill was pulled and passed by the Senate. The House concurred with the Senate amendments and the bill has been delivered to the governor. HB 2791 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2793 was passed by the Senate and will likely go back to the Senate for concurrence/dispute. The House concurred with the Senate amendments and the bill has been delivered to the Governor. The Governor signed the bill into law.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 5378 was heard in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health & Housing committee but was not exec’d and therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6382 was did not get out of Rules and therefore is dead. HB 2749, the House companion, was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6383 did not get out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SJR 8211 failed in the Senate as it needed a 2/3 majority and did not receive that. The resolution died.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 1541 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2713 was referred to the House Appropriations committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2728 was referred to the House Education committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2716 was heard in Ways and Means but does not appear to have been exec'd. Therefore the bill is dead. Efforts were made to include language related to 2716 in the budget; however, it was not.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2662 was heard and exec'd in the House Higher Education committee. It was referred to Appropriations but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6368 was referred to the Senate Early Learning & K-12 Education committee and was heard on Feb. 1st at 1:30. It was not brought up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6370 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead. Work related to this issue will take place during the interim.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2656 was referred to the House Appropriations committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. The bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6371 passed the House and has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6364 was referred to the Senate Law & Justice committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2694 was pulled in Rules and passed by the Senate. The bill had been amended and will return to the Senate for concurrence/dispute. The House concurred with the Senate amendments and the bill has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2690 was heard in the House Education committee but does not appear to have been exec'd and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2671 was pulled in Rules and placed on the House floor calendar but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead. The companion, SB 6371, was signed into law.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2668 did not get out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2621 was passed by the House but it appears that it was not heard in the Senate Early Learning/K-12 committee. Therefore the bill is dead. It is expected that efforts will take place during the interim to address the issues identified in the bill.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 1999 was passed in Ways and Means, pulled in Rules and voted on by the Senate. The bill passed and has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
SB 6329 passed the House; it is unclear if there were amendments that would require the bill to go back to the Senate for concurrence/dispute. The House concurred with the Senate amendments and the bill has been delivered to the Governor. It is interesting to note that the House companion has also been delivered to the Governor! The Governor vetoed SB 6329 and signed HB 2394, the companion, into law.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2607 was referred to the House Education committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2609 was referred to the House Education committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 2591 was pulled in Rules and passed by the Senate. It has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 20, 2016
HB 1734 was originally introduced on Jan. 27th, 2015. The bill passed out of the Judiciary Committee but did not pass out of House Appropriations. It was referred back to House Judiciary; however, a proviso was included in the budget that established a public-private partnership to develop a plan for a dependency court improvement pilot. For the 2016 session, HB 1734 is currently in House Judiciary and was heard on Jan. 19th at 10:00. It was not exec'd and therefore is dead. The House budget includes $500,000 for implementation of the pilot. There is no funding in the final budget.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6246 was amended and passed by the Senate. It is now in Appropriations. The House bill is the Supplemental budget vehicle. It has not yet been acted upon by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
The House concurred with the Senate amendments to HB 1682. It has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SCR 8405 was pulled in Rules but did not come up for a vote. The bill was put in the X files. Dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6243 passed the Senate, was referred to the House Education Committee, passed by the Ed Committee, sent to Appropriations but not heard and therefore is dead. However, when HB 2439, the youth mental health bill went back to the Senate after the House did not concur with the Senate amendments, they included the contents of SB 6243 onto HB 2439. So, while SB 6243 died, its substance lived on through HB 2439. Another example of how a bill is not really dead until they adjourn sine die! It appears, however, that this section of HB 2439 is dependent upon funding and it is unclear if such funding was allocated in the budget.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6249 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead. The House companion did pass and was signed into law.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6244 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2394 was amended and exec'd in Senate Human Services Committee, pulled in Rules, passed by the Senate and will (likely) return to the House for concurrence/dispute. The House concurred and the bill has signed into law by the Governor. Note: The Senate bill also made its way to the Governor but was vetoed.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2396 did not get out of the Senate Health Care Committee; however, it was amended onto HB 1682, which passed the Senate and will return to the House for concurrence/dispute. The House concurred with the changes made by the Senate (including the inclusion of HB 2396) and HB 1682 has been signed into law by the Governor, including the language from HB 2396.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2483 was heard in the Senate Law and Justice Committee; however, was not exec'd and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2479 was referred to the House Finance committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is likely dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2449 was amended and passed by the Senate and will go back to the House for concurrence. The House concurred and the bill was signed into law. NOTE: It was anticipated that aspects of the bill would be vetoed, however, information regarding the veto has not been posted as of this writing. Please check leg.wa.gov, bill information, HB 2449 for updates.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2440 was amended and passed by the Senate and will go back to the House for concurrence. The House concurred and the bill was signed into law by the Governor on April 1st.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2411 was referred to the House Public Safety committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2439 was signed into law by the Governor. Funding was included in the budget for the PAL Plus pilot (one site), and the survey of school based mental health services. Note: The Governor has not yet taken action on the supplemental budget.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2376 has been delivered to the Governor but as of this writing, has not been signed. The Governor has 20 days from the date it was delivered to him to act on the budget. Check leg.wa.gov for updates with respect to any vetoes the Governor may do. NOTE: A separate budget document will be posted as soon as possible.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2378 did not come out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2373 was heard and exec'd in the House Education committee. It was referred to Appropriations but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2300 was heard and passed in Senate Human Services. It was referred to Rules was not pulled. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SJR 8208 was referred to the Senate Government Operations and Security committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. The bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SJR 8209 was referred to the Senate Government Operations and Security committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6192 was heard in the Senate Early Learning & K-12 Education committee but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6195 has passed the House and Senate and has been signed by the Governor. The law went into effect on 2/29/16.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2313 was heard and exec'd in House Health and Wellness. It was referred to Appropriations but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6157 was referred to the Senate Commerce and Labor committee and was scheduled for a hearing on Feb.1st at 1:30. The bill was not exec'd out of committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6279 was heard in the Senate Ways and Means Committee but has not been scheduled for exec action. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6298 was heard, amended and exec'd in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee and is now in Ways and Means. It was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead. The House companion did pass (HB 1682)!
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2518 was referred to Ways and Means but not heard and therefore the bill is dead. Work is underway to include language in the budget (proviso). Language was not included in the budget proviso; however, the Legislative task force on TANF may address intergenerational poverty ala HB 2518.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
SB 6310 was referred to the Senate Law and Justice Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2511 was heard and passed by the Senate EL/K-12 Committee, referred and pulled in Rules, and is awaiting a vote in the Senate. The Senate passed the bill and the House concurred with the Senate amendments. HB 2511 has been delivered to the Governor for action. HB 2511 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2513 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
HB 2537 died in the House Appropriations Committee.
Bill
Jan 15, 2016
The new and improved Child Well-Being Data Portal was designed so you can more quickly and easily find the information you need.
Blog
Jan 14, 2016
This updated 2016 policy brief provides background on visitation for parents and their children in foster care, an overview of research findings on visitation and policy recommendations for visitation.
Brief
Jan 14, 2016
This 2016 policy brief provides an overview of why creating a separate Children's Department in Washington State would be a better way to serve children and families.
Brief
Jan 01, 2016
We are excited to announce that Partners for Our Children recently received a $500,000 grant from the Raikes Foundation to support the extension of Oliver into the runaway and homeless youth sector.
Blog
Dec 30, 2015
On December 8, 2015, POC hosted the Poverty & Child Welfare Forum, which brought together practitioners, advocates, researchers, and others engaged in child welfare and anti-poverty work in Washington state.
Blog
Nov 19, 2015
An interview on The Impact with POC's Mark Eddy on maintaining the bond between parents in prison and their children.
News
Nov 05, 2015
Engaging parents in the child welfare process is critical, but it can be a challenge for a number of reasons. That's why we've focused on strengthening parent-child engagement through the Strive Supervised Visitation Program.
Blog
Oct 23, 2015
Geekwire explores how the UW School of Social Work is using technology to solve important social issues, including a new technology solution created by POC.
News
Sep 30, 2015
In July, alongside Children’s Home Society of Washington and the Washington State Frontiers of Innovation / DSHS, we participated in a presentation on the Innovations Clusters (FOI programs) as well as the System and Policy Level work currently underway.
Blog
Aug 27, 2015
A close look at how new measures and data analysis will allow us to better quantify and understand the experiences of children and families in the child welfare system.
Blog
Aug 19, 2015
Now that the legislative session has finally wrapped, we've put together a chart that compares the 2015-2017 Biennial Budget Proposals around specific items related to children and families.
Legislative Update
Aug 12, 2015
After three special sessions the 2015 legislative session has finally come to an end. Overall, we are thrilled that the final budget and several bills support vulnerable children and families in Washington state.
Blog
Jul 29, 2015
How does the age of birth mothers compare to the age of adoptive mothers? We take a close look at this question and the percentage of adoptions by age of the child.
Blog
Jul 17, 2015
Our new website aims to provide easier-to-access resources. This new site will also allow us to take more opportunities to share what we are learning and our perspective on key child welfare issues.
Blog
Jul 07, 2015
HB 1774 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 23, 2015
Budget Component
Jun 22, 2015
Budget Component
Jun 22, 2015
Budget Component
Jun 22, 2015
SB 5556 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5215 was signed into law on April 24th and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1353 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5710 was referred to the Senate Law and Justice Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The bill was signed by the Governor on March 30th.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5292 did not pass out of the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee. Therefore the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5594 was heard in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee but was not scheduled for executive action.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The bill was signed by the Governor on March 30th.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5159 was passed by the Senate Committee on Commerce & Labor on Feb. 4th at 1:30pm. The vote was along party lines. The bill was pulled in Rules and placed on the second reading calendar. It did not come up for a vote and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1588 was on the House floor calendar, but never came up for a vote. It was returned to Rules where it eventually died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1934 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2263 was signed into law on July 6th and went into effect October 9, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1506 did not come up for a vote in the House Judiciary Committee. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The Governor signed the bill into law.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5714 was referred to the Senate Law and Justice Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SSSB 5732 passed the Senate and House, and was later signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1391 was referred to House Judiciary, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1676 was heard in the House Committee on Judiciary. It was never scheduled for executive action and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The bill was signed by the Governor on March 30th.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1313 did not come up for a vote. It was returned to Rules where it eventually died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5485 was referred to the Senate Law and Justice Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5895 passed the Senate and was referred to the House Appropriations Committee. Because the House did not take the bill up during the regular session it was sent back to the Senate and subsequently reintroduced. No vote was taken.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5401 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1882 was referred to the Appropriations Subcommittee on Health & Human Services but was not scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1436 did not get out of Senate Rules and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5843 passed the Senate and will be heard in the House Finance Committee on April 19th, 8:00. It was never scheduled for executive action.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5234 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections Committee, but was never scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1497 was heard in the House Judiciary Committee, but was never scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1457 was heard in the House Finance, but was never scheduled for a vote. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1724 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5181 was scheduled for executive action in the Senate Committee on Energy and Environment & Telecommunications; however, it did not come up for a vote. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1890 was referred to the House Finance Committee for a hearing. It was not scheduled for executive action.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1213 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1529 was passed by the House and referred to the Financial Institutions, Housing & Insurance committee. It was never scheduled for a hearing and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SJR 8200 was heard in the Senate Committee on Governmental Operations on Feb. 7th at 10:00am. It was not scheduled for executive action.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1096 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5894 was referred to Senate Ways and Means but was not scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5638 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but was never scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5115 was never heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore it died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5568 has been signed into law by the Governor!
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5039 was heard in Senate Ways and Means on Feb. 14th. It was never scheduled for executive action.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1338 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5521 did not come up for a vote in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5639 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means committee but was never scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
ESSHB 1522 was heard in Senate Ways and Means, but did not come up for executive action. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1585 was referred to the House Health Care and Wellness Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Status: HB 2064 was heard and passed by the House Finance committee on May 29th, and passed by the House on May 30th.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1524 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1545 was referred to the House Finance Committee but was never scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5725 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, it died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SCR 8401 has been filed with the Secretary of State.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
After passing the House, HB 2038 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee. It was not scheduled and returned to House Rules. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1376 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5341 was referred to the Senate Committee on Law and Justice but was not scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SJR 8202 was introduced on Jan 16 and referred to Ways and Means. It has not scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5571 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections, but was never scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1003 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5738 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but was never scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5150 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections, but was never scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5341 was referred to the Senate Committee on Law and Justice, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1122 was introduced on Jan 16 and referred to House Finance. It was not scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5376 was passed by the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and referred to Ways and Means. It was not scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1947 was returned to House Rules where it eventually died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5640 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but was never scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SSSB 5732 was signed into law on May 21st.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5455 was referred to the Senate Health Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5040 was introduced on Jan. 15 and referred to Senate Ways and Means. It has not yet been scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1250 was not passed by the House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5397 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SJR 8207 was referred to Senate Ways and Means but was never scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1821 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The bill died, but the Senate proposed budget includes a proviso for $85,000 for the WA State Institute for Public Policy to conduct an empirical study of the validity and reliability of the safety assessment tool currently used in child welfare cases by the children’s administration of DSHS.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5643 did not come up for a vote in the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5064 did not come out of Rules and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5118 was pulled in House Rules, but died on the floor calendar.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1525 was signed into law on May 21st. A directive from the Governor to the Dept. of Health regarding implementation of the law can be found on the Governor’s website.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1675 did not come up for a vote in the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1361 died on the Senate floor calendar. However, the companion bill in the Senate passed.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5600 did not come up for a vote in the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB1021 has been signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5475 did not get out of Senate Rules and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1342 was passed by the House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services and sent to Appropriations. It was not scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1547 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1261 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1276 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5764 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5405 was signed into law on May 21st.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The draft bill was heard in the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee on Jan. 21st. It was not scheduled for a vote.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1452 did not come out of Rules and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1302 was not heard in Senate Ways and Means and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5403 did not make it out of Rules in the Senate and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5762 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5389 was signed into law on May 21st.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5279 did not come up for executive action in the House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5147 was signed by the Governor on Feb. 27th!! It was the first bill Governor Inslee signed into law!
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB1204 was pulled in Senate Rules and died on the floor calendar.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1566 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5403 did not make it out of Rules in the Senate and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5235 was signed into law!
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1734 was not heard in Appropriations prior to the cut-off and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1140 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5170 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections. It was not scheduled for a vote and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5689 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5565 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5162 did not come up for executive action in the House Committee on Judiciary and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5585 did not come up for a vote in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5315 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5460 was passed by the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and referred to Ways and Means, but eventually died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1190 was referred to the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1560 was heard in the Appropriations Committee but was not scheduled for a vote.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1284 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5531 was not heard in Ways and Means and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5763 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5461 passed by the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and was sent to Ways and Means. It was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, it died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SHB 2069 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5330 was amended and passed by the House Committee on Education. It was referred to the House Appropriations Committee, but did not get scheduled for a hearing prior to cut-off. Therefore the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB1285 was not heard in Senate Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5454 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Instead of hearing the bill, a work session on obesity in early learning settings was held on March 15th at 1:30pm.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1336 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6227 did not come up for a vote in the Senate prior to cut-off and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SHB 2034 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5365 did not come up for a vote by the Senate and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
5100 was heard and passed in the House Public Safety Committee. Since HB 1352 (companion bill) passed, SB 5100 died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1680 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1228 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HI 591 was heard in the House Judiciary Committee on Jan. 28th but has not been scheduled for executive action. It is very unlikely that the legislature will act on 591 and as a result, it will go to a vote of the people in Nov.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5825 was referred to the Senate Health Care Committee but was not been scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5244 died in House Rules.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5822 was referred to the Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5117 was heard in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education on Feb. 6th at 1:30. It was never scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
ESHB 1313 was introduced last session and made it to the House floor (it was not, however, brought up for a vote). The bill reverted back to House Rules, where it was pulled, brought to the House floor and passed by the House (52-45-1 excused). The bill was heard in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee but was not brought up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1671 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5730 was referred to the Senate Higher Education Committee, but was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5094 was heard in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education. It did not come up for a vote and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1869 was heard in the House Education Committee but did not come up for a vote. The bill is therefore dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5087 was introduced and referred to the Senate Higher Education Committee. It was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6447 was referred to the Senate Law and Justice Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5223 was not heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5237 died in House Rules.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1810 has not been scheduled for executive action in the House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services, and therefore has died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The Senate passed ESSB 5157 in the 2nd special session.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2556 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5044 was introduced and referred to Senate Higher Education. It was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1477 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1352 was signed into law by the Governor on April 18th.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1594 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1723 was signed into law on May 21st. The Governor vetoed section 4, the technical advisory committee.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1283 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2202 did not get out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5904 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5245 was heard in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education Committee on Jan. 28th at 1:30. It has not been scheduled for executive action; however, it appears that SB 5244 incorporates much of SB 5245.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5809 has been signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5595 was signed into law on May 21st.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5155 was heard in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education. The bill was never scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6525 was referred to the Senate Commerce and Labor committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing prior to the cut-off. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1873 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1369 did not come up for executive action in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1871 was referred to House Appropriations but was not scheduled for a hearing. The bill is therefore dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5026 was introduced and referred to the Senate Higher Education Committee. It was never scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6485 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5563 has been signed into law by the Governor. It goes into effect on July 28th.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1815 did not come up for a vote in the House Education Committee. Therefore, the bill died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1203 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5566 did not get out of the Senate Rules committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1172 died in Senate Rules.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5163 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections. It was not scheduled for exec action and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5578 was heard in the House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services but did not come up for executive action and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6540 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6393 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2164 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2737 was heard in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee but did not move out of Committee. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2610 was heard but not exec’d in Senate Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5955 was heard in the Senate Committee on Financial Institutions and Housing & Insurance, but did not come up for executive action. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6383 was referred to the Senate Health Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2537 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6492 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SSHB 2639 died in the Senate, however, the companion, SB 6312 passed.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6297 did not come out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2793 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee but did not come up for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6312 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2462 did not come up for a vote by the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6469 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6364 was heard in the Senate Law and Justice Committee, however, it was not brought up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6048 was referred to the Senate Energy, Environment & Telecommunications Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2065 did not come up for a hearing in House Appropriations. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
E2SHB 2572 passed the legislature and was partially vetoed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
While this bill did not pass, a similar bill, SB 5875, did pass.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
ESHB 1651 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2086 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2721 was referred to the House Finance Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6261 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections but did not come up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6481 was heard and passed in the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee. It was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee, but was not heard/exec'd. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2252 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6403 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2643 did not come up for a vote in Ways and Means and therefore is dead. There was, however, funding/proviso language in the final budget that incorporates much of what the bill would have done.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6313 was heard in the Senate Committee on Financial Institutions and Housing & Insurance and is now in Senate Ways and Means. The bill was not heard in Ways and Means and therefore is dead. However, a similar bill (SB 5875) did pass.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2158 was referred but not heard in House Appropriations and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6468 was referred to the Senate Health Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6338 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2144 was heard in House Appropriations but did not come up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1294 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6291 was heard in the Senate Committee on Financial Institutions and Housing & Insurance on Jan. 23rd. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6493 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6363 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2410 did not come up for a vote in Senate Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2772 was referred to the Government Accountability & Oversight committee but did not come up for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2315 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2415 heard and passed by the Senate Committee on Financial Institutions and Housing & Insurance. It was then referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee, where it was heard but not passed. The bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2714 was heard and passed in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee and was sent to Rules. The bill did not come out of Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2559 was heard in the House Judiciary Committee on Jan. 30th at 8:00 am. It was scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5984 was not heard in the Senate Energy, Environment and Telecommunications Committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6484 was heard in the Senate Committee on Governmental Operations on Feb. 6th. It did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6558 did not come up for a vote in House Appropriations and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
ESSB 5875 passed and was signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6398 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6257 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections at on Jan. 30th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2519 was passed by the Senate and sent back to the House for concurrence. The House concurred and the bill was passed and sent and eventually signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2598 was not pulled in Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6093 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2317 was referred to Appropriations, but was not heard. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6245 did not get out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2683 was referred to the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6396 was heard in the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6209 was heard in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education on Jan. 29th but was not scheduled for executive action. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2582 was amended on the Senate, however the House refused to concur with the bill as amended. The House then asked the Senate to recede from their amendments, they did not, and the bill went back to House Rules. The bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2138 was referred to the House Public Safety Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Although HB 2665 died in the Senate Human Services and Corrections committee, the extension of the Advisory Committee until June 30, 2015, was included in the House budget, as well as the final budget.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2641 died in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2535 passed the House (97-0-1 excused). It was amended onto SB 6095 in the House Early Learning Committee so although the bill itself died, the substance passed by way of SB 6095.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6127 was heard and passed in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee and referred to Ways and Means. It was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2335 did not originally come up in Ways and Means. But on the last day of the legislative session, an unexpected nighttime meeting of the Ways and Means Committee was called and the bill was amended and exec’d out. Agreement was reached to bring the bill to the Senate floor for a vote, and HB 2335 was passed unanimously, sent to the House for concurrence, and eventually signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Although HB 2585 did not come up for a vote in the Senate prior to the March 7th cutoff, it did come up on the last day of session, in fact was one of the last bills passed! Because it had not been amended, it did not have to go back to the House for concurrence and was signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2616 was amended and passed in the Senate. It was sent back to the House for concurrence. The House concurred with the changes made by the Senate and was signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6327 was brought to the Senate floor on the 12th for a vote. The bill passed and was sent to the House where it died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2350 did not come out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2373 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore died, however, its companion, SB 6074 passed the House.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6101 was heard, amended, and passed by the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections. It was then heard in Senate Ways and Means but did not come up for a vote. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6211 passed the Senate (34-14-1 excused) and was heard in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee on Feb. 24th. It did not come up for a vote in committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2554 was heard in the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Education at 3:30 on Jan. 29th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6387 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6095 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2282 was passed by the House (90-8) and was heard in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee. It did not come up for a vote in Committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2699 was passed by the House (96-2 excused) and referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee. It was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6491 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2536 passed the House (67-31) and was referred to the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee. It was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6374 was referred to the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HI 594 was heard in the House Judiciary Committee on Jan. 28th but has not been scheduled for executive action. It is unlikely the legislature will take further action on 594 and as a result it will be on the Nov. ballot.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6074 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6429 was heard in the Senate Committee on Human Services & Corrections on Feb. 4th at 10:00am. It did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2672 was referred to the House Committee on Labor & Workforce Development and will be heard on Feb. 4th at 1:30 PM. The bill was voted on in the Labor & Workforce Development committee and referred to Appropriations. It was heard in Appropriations but did not come up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6390 did not come up for a vote in the Senate before cut-off and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6234 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1675 died on the Senate floor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2483 was heard in the House Judiciary Committee on Jan. 30th, 8:00 am. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SHB 1285 was amended (consistent with the Senate bill) and passed by the House Judiciary Committee. It was referred and heard in Appropriations but did not come up for a vote. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6394 did not come up for a vote by the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6168 did not come out of Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6181 was passed by the Senate 47-0-2 excused. It was heard in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee but did not come up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6126 unanimously passed (1 excused in the House) the House and Senate and was eventually signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2505 was heard in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee on Jan. 29th at 8:00 am. It was not scheduled for executive action. The bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6365 was heard and passed in the Senate Financial Institutions, Housing & Insurance Committee. It was then heard in Ways and Means but did not come up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2337 was heard, amended, and passed by the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee. It was referred to Appropriations, but did not come up for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2399 was heard in the House Public Safety Committee; however, it did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2377 did not come up for a vote. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6479 passed the house (97-0-1 excused) and will go back to the Senate for concurrence. The Senate concurred on the changes made by the House and the bill was eventually signed by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2416 was heard in the Community Development, Housing & Tribal Affairs committee on Jan. 28th but was not scheduled for executive action. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6555 did not come up for a vote in the Appropriations Subcommittee on Education and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6470 was heard in the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee but did not come up for a vote. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2686 was referred to the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6535 was referred to the Senate Early Learning and K-12 committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1840 was referred to the House Education Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6068 was heard in the Early Learning and K-12 Committee on Jan. 17th but was not scheduled for executive action. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6439 was passed by the Senate 45-1-1 absent-1 excused, but died in the House.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6520 was referred to Early Learning & K-12 Education Committee, but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2191 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6336 was heard and passed in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education Committee. It was referred to Senate Ways and Means where it was heard but not exec'd. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6529 was referred to the Early Learning & K-12 Education committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2166 died in Senate rules.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2174 was referred to the House Judiciary but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2695 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2763 was heard in the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Education on Feb. 6th, but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6029 was referred to the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6431 passed the House. The Senate concurred and it was eventually signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6523 was signed into law by the Governor!
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6067 was heard in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee on Jan. 17th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6444 was heard and passed in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education. It was referred to Ways and Means, heard, but not exec'd. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6538 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2165 did not come up for a vote on the Senate floor and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6247 was referred to the Senate Law and Justice Committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2739 was signed into law by the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5924 was referred to the Human Services, Mental Health & Housing Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5063 was heard, amended and passed in the Senate Ways and Means Committee and did not come up for a vote in the Senate, was referred back to Rules, and moved to the Rules X files. The bill died there.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1932 is dead; however, for the most part was amended onto HB 1879.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1673 was heard, amended and passed in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee. The bill was referred to Appropriations, but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1862 was referred to the House Education Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5999 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect on July 24th, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5752 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5459 was referred to the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2133 was not brought up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SJR was heard in Senate Ways and Means on April 20th was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5384 was referred to the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5898 did not come up for a vote on the Senate floor and therefore is dead. However, language related to the information system was amended onto the House budget.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5656 was heard in the House Transportation Committee on March 25th. It was not brought up for a vote in Committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5667 was referred to and heard in the Senate Ways and Means Committee, but was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead. The bill was amended onto another bill, SB 5915, that was passed by the Senate. See SB 5915.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1364 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1035 was referred to the House State Govt. Committee. A work session and public hearing was held on the bill on Jan. 13th. The bill was not exec’d and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HJR was referred to the House Finance Committee but was not been scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HJR was referred to the House State Government Committee, but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1273 was heard, amended and passed in the House Committee on Labor. It was referred to Appropriations, but was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2028 was heard in House Finance Committee, but did not come up for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5608 was heard in the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee on Feb. 13th. The bill did not come up for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2135 died in the House Community Development, Housing & Tribal Affairs Committtee.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1840 was referred to the House Education Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5388 was referred to the Senate Law and Justice Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6029 was referred to the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6102 was heard in Senate Ways and Means on April 20th but was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SHB 1501 was heard in Appropriations, but was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2113 was not brought up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1801 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1643 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1355 was heard and passed in Appropriations, pulled in Rules and passed by the House. The bill has been referred to the Commerce and Labor Committee in the Senate and was heard on March 30th. It was not brought up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2076 was referred to the House State Government Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1701 was not brought up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6050 was introduced initially on Feb. 25th, but did not move out of Senate Ways and Means. It was a title only bill, meaning all that it said was: This act may be known and cited as the fiscal matters act. On April 29th, it was reintroduced and retained in Ways and Means. On May 28th, the bill was amended and passed, then sent to Senate Rules. It did not come up for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5594 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5477 was heard in the Commerce and Gaming Committee on March 16th. It did not come up for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SJR 8200 was referred to the Senate Govt. Operations and State Security Committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. This bills is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1879 was signed (in full) by the Governor on May 18th and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1257 passed the House and was referred to the Senate Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee. It was not heard or passed in Committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6103 was heard in the Senate Ways and Means Committee but has not been scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SJR 8201 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but has not yet been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SHB 1472 reverted back to House Rules after sine die; however, on April, 29th the bill was pulled out of Rules and placed on the 3rd reading calendar in the House; but it was not brought up for a vote so went back to Rules. On June 10th, the bill was once again pulled in Rules, placed on the House 3rd reading calendar but once again on June 11th, when the House was on the floor, did not come up for a vote. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5944 was in the House Appropriations Committee when the legislature adjourned. It was sent back to Senate Rules, then brought to the floor of the Senate for a vote on the first day of the special session. The bill died in the 2nd special session.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5728 was not brought up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2191 was referred to the House Education Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. This bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5578 was not brought to the Senate floor for a vote and therefore is dead. Note: SB 5578 was the companion to HB 1633.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5063 was heard, amended and passed in the Senate Ways and Means Committee and is now in Senate Rules. The bill did not come up for a vote in the Senate, was referred back to Rules, and moved to the Rules X files. This bill died in the 3rd special session.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1365 was heard and passed in the House Health and Wellness Committee. However, it was not scheduled for a hearing in Appropriations and therefore is dead. However, funding for the screens was included in the House and Senate budgets. See SB 5317.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5064 was passed by the Senate (47 yeas, 2 excused) and referred to the House Appropriations Committee. The bill died in the 3rd special session.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5684 was heard in the Senate Energy and Environment committee on Feb. 17th. It did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2024 was heard in House Higher Education, but it appears that it did not come up for a vote. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Substitute HB 1106 was heard, amended and passed in the House Appropriations Committee and passed by the House on April 2nd. On June 1st the House Rules Committee was relieved of further consideration and the bill was referred to the Appropriations Committee. A proposed 2nd substitute version was heard on June 2nd; however, the bill has not yet come up for executive action. This bill died in the 3rd special session.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5143 was pulled in House Rules but did not come up for a vote by the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5378 was referred to the Senate Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee and re-referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing Committee. It was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5729 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1642 was heard in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee, but was not voted on and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1685 did not come out of Senate Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5076 was referred to the Sen. Ways and Means Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2009 was not brought up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1436 was heard in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health, and Housing Committee, but was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 6104 was heard in the Senate Ways and Means Committee but has not been scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SJR 8202 was referred to the Senate Ways and Means Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5406 has been referred to the Senate Environment Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5915 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. The bill was referenced (and funded) in the Senate budget, however, which means it could resurface in the context of the budget discussions.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1932 is dead; however, for the most part was amended onto HB 1879.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5123 was heard in the Senate Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee on Jan. 21st, but it did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Governor Inslee signed Engrossed HB 1633 into law on May 1, 2015 and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5278 was heard in the Senate Committee on Accountability and Reform on Jan. 21st. It was not scheduled for executive action. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1458 was heard, amended and passed in the House Health and Wellness Committee. The bill did not come up for a vote in the Finance Committee; however, it is possible language related to the legal age may be amended onto another House bill. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1477 was referred to the House Finance Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead. However, the companion, SB 5064, passed the Senate and was referred to the House Appropriations Committee. In spite of neither bill making it through both the Senate and House, the forecast did take place in February.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1174, which had been referred back to House Rules after the end of the regular session, was brought out of Rules, passed by the House, and referred to the Energy, Environment, and Telecommuniciations Committee. No executive action was taken, therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5932 was heard in the Human Services, Mental Health & Housing Committee. The bill did not come out of committee and therefore is dead. It should be noted, however, that some aspects of the bill were amended onto SB 5404.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SHB 1105 was signed by the Governor on Feb. 19th.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1295 was heard in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee on March 16th, 1:30. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
The Governor signed the bill into law on April 24th. It went into effect on July 24th, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5736 was heard in the Senate Committee on Accountability and Reform on Feb. 4th, but was not scheduled for executive action. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1747 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee and was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
This bill is dead. However, language directing the Office of Homeless Youth Programs to conduct the analysis and make recommendations was amended onto the House budget.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Substitute SB 5077 was released and heard on March 31st, passed by Ways and Means on April 1st, and debated on the Senate floor on April 2nd. The Senate finished going through and voting on the amendments around 2:30am or so on the 3rd, did not get enough votes for the necessary procedural bump to actually vote on the bill immediately. And, instead of coming in on Saturday, the next day they could take up the budget, they voted it off the floor on Monday, April 6th. Now that both the House and Senate have passed a budget the two can begin the process of working through their differences and coming up with a budget both bodies can support.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5924 was referred to the Human Services, Mental Health & Housing Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5376 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5776 was referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing Committee and was scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5651 was heard in the Human Services, Mental Health & Housing Committee on Feb. 16th at 10:00. The bill did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1673 was heard, amended and passed in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee. The bill was referred to Appropriations, but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5005 was referred to Sen. Law and Justice but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, it is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1728 was heard and passed in Appropriations and went go to Rules. HB 1728 was put in the Rules X file, (which means not coming out of Rules) in great part because the Senate companion, SB 5486, passed the Senate and was referred to the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee. Therefore this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5883 did not come out of Senate Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2037 was heard in the House Education Committee on Feb. 16th, but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5794 was referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing Committee and was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1305 died, but the companion bill, SB 5107, was signed into law by the Governor on May 18th and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1760 was not heard in Appropriations and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1735 was amended and exec’d in Senate Ways and Means (without a hearing) and is now in Senate Rules. This bill is dead. It is very likely the Senate bill will be the vehicle (SB 5740).
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5745 died in the Senate Rules Committee.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1713 passed the House and was sent to the Senate. The Senate amended and passed the bill and sent it back to the House for concurrence. The House refused to concur and asked the Senate to recede from their amendments. When the legislature adjourned, agreement between the House and Senate had not been reached so the bill was sent back to House Rules. Rules was relieved of further consideration and the House passed the bill. It now goes back to the Senate. The Senate did not take up the bill during the 1st special session and therefore was referred back to the House. This bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5631 was signed into law by the Governor on May 18th and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1481 did not come up for a vote in the House and therefore is dead. Note: The Senate version of the bill passed the Senate. See SB 5564.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5245 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1800 reverted back to House Rules since it did not come up on the concurrence calendar during the regular session and did not come up for consideration during the 1st special session.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1245 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
Governor Inslee signed HB 1674 into law on May 1, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1568 was heard and passed in the House Education Committee. It was then referred to Appropriations, but was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5107 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1424 was signed into law and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2220 was introduced on March 30th and referred to Appropriations. It was considered a bill necessary to implement the budget so was not subject to the cut-off for introduction. The bill has not been scheduled for a hearing and therefore died.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5564 was signed into law by the Governor (with a partial, expected, veto) and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
2SSB 5486 (second substitute senate bill) was signed into law by the Governor. The law went into effect on July 24th, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1794 did not get pulled in Rules (or come up for a vote in the House) and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5865 was referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health and Housing Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5078 was passed by the Senate Committee on Human Services and Mental Health & Housing committee and referred to Ways and Means. The bill was not heard and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1875 did not come up for a vote by the Senate before Sine Die so therefore is dead. It now returns to House Rules. Efforts will be made to have it brought back during the special session.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5663 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead. However, the companion, HB 1674, was signed into law. See HB 1674.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5440 was referred to the Senate Health Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5740 was signed into law by the Governor and although it goes into effect on July 24, 2015, the final category of youth, those with a medical condition, actually went into place on July 1, 2016.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5884 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect immediately.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1862 was referred to the House Education Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1729 was pulled in Senate Rules but did not come up for a vote in the Senate. The Senate companion bill, SSB5631 passed. See SSB 5631.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1505 was pulled in Senate Rules, but did not come up for a vote by the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5688 did not get out of House Rules and therefore is dead. However, both the House and Senate budgets included funding for social-emotional learning , which means that it potentially be considered ‘necessary to implement the budget’ or solely be addressed through a budget proviso.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1734 was not been scheduled for a hearing in House Appropriations and therefore died. However, funding for the planning process was included in the House and Senate budgets.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1553 was heard in the Senate Law and Justice Committee on March 19th, 8:00. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1717 has not been heard in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee. Therefore, the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
ESSHB 2136 passed the House and was referred to Senate Ways and Means. At the end of the 1st special session, the bill was referred back to the House Rules Committee. The bill was signed into law by the Governor on June 30, 2015 and went into effect on July 1, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1281 was signed into law by the Governor on May 18th and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1134 was heard and passed in the Senate Health Committee and is now in Rules. The bill did not get pulled in Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5692 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1886 was referred to the House Judiciary Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5605 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5879 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1139 was heard and passed in the House Public Safety Committee, sent to Rules, and passed by the House. The bill was referred to Senate Law and Justice, was not scheduled for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1138 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect July 24th, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5787 was heard, amended and passed in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee. It was then heard in Ways and Means, but did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5452 was heard, amended and passed by the House Appropriations Committee. It is currently in House Rules, where it is expected to stay, as the House bill is the likely vehicle. If the bill moves out of Rules, the bill as amended in Appropriations will be summarized. SB 5452 did not come out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1682 was passed in the House Education Committee and referred to Appropriations. This bill is dead.
Note: This is not a new bill, however, it has been newly added to the weekly update.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1767 was heard on Feb. 13th in the House Higher Education Committee. It did not come up for a vote and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1476 did not come up for a vote on the House floor and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5718 was heard in the Senate Committee on Early Learning & K-12 Education on Feb. 9th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1236 will be heard in the Senate Higher Ed Committee on March 24th, 1:30. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1541 was amended on the House floor and passed. The bill was referred to the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee and was heard on March 16th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2095 was referred to the House Appropriations Committee, but did not come up for a hearing and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2006 was referred to the House Education Committee but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5675 was referred to the Early Learning/K-12 Committee and was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5079 did not come out of House Rules and therefore is dead. SB 5079 was passed by the Senate and the House on May 28th. The bill now goes to the Governor. It has not yet been scheduled for action.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5690 was referred to the Senate Early Learning/K-12 Committee and was not heard. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1164 did not come out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2108 was referred to the House Health and Wellness Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5856 was heard and passed in the Early Learning/K-12 Committee, but was not heard in Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1795 was referred to the House Education Committee and has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5888 was signed into law by the Governor on May 18th and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5098 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1999 was heard in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee on March 19th, 8:00 am but was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1820 was referred to the Senate Human Services, Mental Health, and Housing Committee and is scheduled for a hearing on March 30th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5803 was signed into law by the Governor and took effect immediately (4/25/15).
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5506 was heard in the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee on Feb. 2nd, but was not scheduled for executive action. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1898 was signed into law by the Governor on May 18th. It went into effect on July 24th, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1001 was not heard in Appropriations and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1970 was heard in the House Early Learning and Human Services Committee on Feb. 17th at 8:00 and was scheduled for executive action on Feb. 20th. HB 1970 did not come up for a vote in the ELHS committee and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5408 was not voted on by the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1899 was referred to the Education Committee but has not been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5317 was heard in the House Health and Wellness Committee on March 25th, but did not come up for executive action and therefore was initially dead. However, funding is included in the proposed Senate budget. SB 5317 did come back to life on May 27th when it was pulled out of Senate Rules. On May 28th,the Senate passed the bill and sent it to the House. The House brought it to the floor and passed it before the end of the 1st special session! SB 5317 was signed into law on June 10th and went into effect on Aug. 27th, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5437 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2140 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect on June 30, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2149 was not heard in Appropriations and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5547 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1150 is dead, and the Senate companion bill (SB 5079) has also initially died later in the session. However, SB 5079 had reverted to the Senate Rules Committee and on May 27th it was pulled in Rules and placed on the Senate floor calendar. The Senate passed the bill on the 28th and sent it to the House. The House suspended the rules, placed the bill on the floor calendar and passed it. It will now go to the Governor.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
A proposed substitute version of the bill was heard in Senate Ways and Means on June 11th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5160 was referred to the Senate Early Learning/K-12 Committee and was heard on Feb. 16th, 1:30. It was not scheduled for exec action so the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
ESSHB 1491 was heard, amended and passed in the Senate Ways and Means Committee, was pulled in Senate Rules, and voted on by the Senate on April 9th. Differences between the version of the bill that passed out of the House and the version that passed out of the Senate went into a “conference committee.” This small group, made up of House and Senate members, Rs and Ds, worked to resolve their differences and bring an agreed upon substitute back to both houses for final passage. The bill was signed by the Governor on July 6 and went into effect October 9, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2067 was referred to the Early Learning and Human Services Committee but has not yet been scheduled for a hearing. Therefore the bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 2100 did not get out of House Rules and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1783 was referred to the Senate Early Learning and K-12 Committee and was heard on March 17th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5897 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect on July 24th, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1126 was signed into law by the Governor and went into effect on July 24, 2015.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5852 was heard in Ways and Means and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5637 was heard in the Senate Higher Education Committee on Feb. 12th. It did not come up for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1900 was not heard or passed in Appropriations and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1408 was passed by the House and has been referred to the Senate Early Learning/K-12 Committee. The bill was heard on March 17th, but was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1883 was referred to the Early Learning and Human Services Committee, but was not scheduled for a hearing. Therefore, this bill is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5065 was not scheduled for a hearing in Ways and Means, however, the data collection portion of the bill was amended onto SSB 5404. Therefore, SB 5065 is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
SB 5823 did not come up for a vote in the Senate and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
HB 1672 was heard in the Senate Human Services, Mental Health, and Housing Committee on March 12th. It was not scheduled for executive action and therefore is dead.
Bill
Jun 19, 2015
POC is working to develop Oliver, a new technology solution that will help child welfare social service providers better understand their collective impact and streamline time-consuming business processes.
Blog
May 29, 2015
POC's Director of Research, Dr. J. Mark Eddy, to receive the International Collaborative Prevention Research Award from the Society for Prevention Research.
Blog
May 21, 2015
Letter-to-the-editor by POC’s executive director, Benjamin de Haan, about the importance of home visiting programs.
News
May 21, 2015
This 2014 summary brief provides background on parenting programs, the challenges the state faces in reaching families with tailored, evidence-informed parenting programs and one potential solution – the new Strive parenting program.
Brief
May 15, 2015
This 2014 policy brief provides background on the McCleary vs. State lawsuit and emphasizes that changes made only to the education system (and not social service system) threatens to widen the achievement gap for low-income and poor students.
Brief
May 15, 2015
This 2015 policy brief provides an update on the implementation of Family Assessment Response (FAR) in Washington State.
Brief
May 15, 2015
The Annual Report helps Washington better understand how children served by the state child welfare system are faring in the areas of safety, permanency, and well-being & education.
Report
May 11, 2015
SB 5486 will improve the Parents for Parents program, which engages families who have children in foster care and connects them to parents who have successfully gone through dependency and are prepared to offer support.
Blog
May 06, 2015
This study examines how foster care can affect a child's educational outcomes, and whether school transitions or foster care has a greater overall impact on a child.
Project
Apr 28, 2015
Oliver is a new technology solution that will help child welfare and youth/young adult homeless social service providers streamline business processes within their organizations.
Project
Apr 28, 2015
Data shows that the risk of foster teens and children running away is decreasing.
Blog
Apr 14, 2015
Connecting aims to improve bonds between teens and foster parents, which in turn can make teens less vulnerable to risky behaviors. So far, the program has showed promising results.
Project
Mar 24, 2015
The Alliance strengthens the professional expertise of social workers and community members by sharing curricula, delivery methods and evaluation tools.
Project
Mar 24, 2015
As state legislators debate the budget, they should keep in mind the 2011 decrease in TANF funding that is still hurting needy families today.
Blog
Mar 11, 2015
Legislative Update
Mar 05, 2015
The Data Portal provides access to data about children and families who interact with the child welfare system in Washington State.
Project
Mar 05, 2015
Strive is a set of new parent support and education programs being designed specifically for parents involved in the child welfare system
Project
Mar 04, 2015
Read our first Annual Report on how children served by the child welfare system are faring in safety, permanency, well-being and education.
Blog
Feb 23, 2015
Radio segment about Strive, POC’s new open source parenting program.
News
Feb 12, 2015
The McCleary decision and I-1351 will make it difficult to fund education requirements without cutting social services.
Blog
Feb 01, 2015
Strive is a low-cost, open-source program designed to help the parents of children in foster care.
Blog
Jan 07, 2015
New POC program, Strive, featured in UW News.
News
Jan 06, 2015
Parenting stress for child welfare involved families is caused by many factors, including mental health and food insecurity. This study examines predictors of stress for parents receiving in-home services and those with children in out-of-home care.
Publication
Dec 31, 2014
It's been an eventful year for POC! Read highlights about our work in 2014.
Blog
Dec 18, 2014
Research is critical to evidence-informed social policies, but funding cuts are making it harder for researchers to ask important questions.
Blog
Dec 04, 2014
This 2014 brief provides an overview of POC's open source parenting program, Strive, which will be non-proprietary, free or low-cost, adjustable and widely disseminated in Washington State and beyond.
Brief
Dec 04, 2014
POC and Children's Administration presented child welfare trend data to an audience of more than 120.
News
Nov 18, 2014
Efforts to reduce child maltreatment will have a better chance for long-term success if interventions address the full range of primary factors associated with child maltreatment.
Brief
Nov 10, 2014
Read a guest post from Children’s Corps about their efforts to build a workforce of dedicated child welfare workers in NYC.
Blog
Nov 02, 2014
Learn about the big issues facing vulnerable children and families before the Washington State legislative session begins.
Blog
Oct 21, 2014
Data shows that Washington falls in the middle when it comes to providing support and services for foster care youth.
Blog
Oct 10, 2014
We just released new features to make the Data Portal a more useful tool for learning about child welfare system trends.
News
Sep 30, 2014
Laurie Lippold, POC Policy Director, received Amara's first-ever "Shining a Light" award.
News
Sep 24, 2014
Read our last Systems Spotlight installment to learn about the child welfare system in New Jersey.
Blog
Sep 09, 2014
Data shows that disrupting foster children's lives as little as possible is key to reducing trauma.
Blog
Aug 27, 2014
POC’s executive director interviewed about the Washington State Child Well-Being Data Portal.
News
Aug 25, 2014
Learn about Dr. J. Mark Eddy's work with PREVENIR, a youth violence prevention program in Central America.
Blog
Aug 04, 2014
Learn how the U.K. handles maintaining a child protection-oriented child welfare system.
Blog
Jul 24, 2014
Read about how New Hampshire has approached the state's child welfare system challenges.
Blog
Jul 24, 2014
Despite U.S. efforts to ensure the safety of American children, the outcomes for our children still lag behind other developed nations.
Blog
Jul 13, 2014
Children age out of foster care at 18 and many are left to face adulthood without support or preparation.
Blog
Jun 30, 2014
SB 6126 will go into effect July 1, ensuring that children whose parents' right have been terminated will be appointed an attorney.
Blog
Jun 23, 2014
Let us know how you use the Data Portal and whether you have used it to inform child welfare-related decisions.
Blog
Jun 12, 2014
If you suspect child abuse or neglect, report it immediately by calling 1-800-ENDHARM.
Blog
Jun 05, 2014
Ryther, one of Seattle's oldest child-serving nonprofits, weighs in on the current budget situation for social services in Washington.
Blog
May 29, 2014
How do you parent a child if you’re behind bars? Drs. Benjamin de Haan and J. Mark Eddy collaborated on a parenting program that addresses this and similar questions.
Blog
May 21, 2014
POC’s Susan Barkan interviewed for her work on a new program to better connect teens and their foster parents.
News
May 13, 2014
POC's Susan Barkan tailored a parenting program proven to improve communication in non-foster families for use in foster families.
Blog
May 12, 2014
HR 4980, a bipartisan bill, would require states to take steps to identify, prevent, and address sex trafficking of youth in foster care.
Blog
May 06, 2014
Listen to the stories of veteran parents who successfully reunified with their children.
Blog
Apr 29, 2014
This paper describes the process used to adapt an evidence based, prevention-focused parenting program, Staying Connected with Your Teen™, for use with foster teens and their relative or foster caregivers.
Report
Apr 29, 2014
Though the Data Portal, POC has been at the forefront of the effort to increase government transparency through data reporting.
Blog
Apr 22, 2014
So far, families involved with FAR have responded positively to the intervention. FAR is scheduled to roll out in phases during 2014.
Blog
Apr 14, 2014
Data shows that late night referrals are more likely to result in a substantiated allegation of child abuse or neglect.
Blog
Apr 09, 2014
Learn about how Washington prepared for FAR implementation and what we can expect next.
Blog
Mar 24, 2014
This brief discusses the statewide uptick in in court involvement with children entering care and opportunities for future exploration to better understand the implications of this trend.
Brief
Mar 24, 2014
Washington made positive strides during the 2014 legislative session for vulnerable children and families.
Blog
Mar 23, 2014
Jane Messerly has received the UW Distinguished Staff Award for her "inspiring work for the families and children in Washington State."
News
Mar 19, 2014
POC strongly encourages the House to recognize the importance of a FAR evaluation by including funding for it in the budget.
Blog
Mar 10, 2014
Even with scientific evidence and years of experience, making decisions about child maltreatment cases can be very difficult.
Blog
Mar 06, 2014
HB 2699 allows foster parents increased flexibility in making decisions around extracurricular, enrichment and social activities.
Blog
Feb 24, 2014
Learn about what FAR is and how it will help families who are reported for suspected child maltreatment.
Blog
Feb 20, 2014
After a year of work, the Data Portal now provides information on three critical areas of the child welfare system in Washington State.
News
Feb 05, 2014
The new POC blog will cover aspects of the child welfare system including hot topics, policy trends, research, data analysis, and practice.
Blog
Jan 29, 2014
POC’s work is referenced in article exploring social impact bonds in Washington State.
News
Jan 23, 2014
Children of incarcerated parents are twice as likely as their peers to exhibit antisocial behavior problems. The Parent Child Study compares outcomes for incarcerated parents who undergo Parent Management Training versus services as usual.
Publication
Dec 31, 2013
This book chapter highlights the characteristics and needs of children with incarcerated parents and presents the professional literature on both the theory and the research regarding the value of mentoring for these children.
Publication
Dec 31, 2013
This volume presents findings from five new studies that focus on child- or family-level resilience processes in children with parents currently or recently incarcerated in jail or prison.
Publication
Dec 31, 2013
Lifetime suicide attempt history was linked to higher initial depressive symptoms and greater increases in the symptoms. Preventive intervention prior to the developmental period in which suicidal thoughts and behaviors are highest is expected to prevent suicide.
Publication
Dec 31, 2013
This brief gives an overview of Family Assessment Response (or differential response) and how it might impact children and families.
Brief
Dec 11, 2013
Ben deHaan, POC Executive Director, writes about what the data shows about child fatalities and Children's Administration in Washington.
News
Dec 11, 2013
Laurie Lippold was named in Crosscut's "5 grownup heroes of foster care."
News
Dec 06, 2013
The Data Portal now offers county reports and a county comparison tool for accessing geographic data about child well-being in Washington.
News
Nov 20, 2013
This interim report is part of an evaluation of Washington State DSHS Children's Administration’s implementation of the Solution Based Casework Practice Model.
Report
Oct 18, 2013
The grants demonstrate POC’s commitment to rigorous research that helps improve outcomes for vulnerable children and families.
News
Oct 15, 2013
Dr. Eddy was invited to the White House to take part in a 1-day listening session “Mentoring Children of Incarcerated Parents.”
News
Oct 01, 2013
POC’s policy director, Laurie Lippold, quoted in article about kinship care in Washington State.
News
Sep 03, 2013
Please join us to discuss HB 1774, which measures performance of the child welfare system.
News
Aug 27, 2013
This report reviews research and strategy literature related to foster parent recruitment and retention, looks at trends in recruitment and retention, and outlines Washington State's policies and practices.
Report
Aug 26, 2013
This brief explores Social Impacts Bonds: what they are, how they are created, and what elements are necessary to implement them.
Brief
Aug 20, 2013
This brief reports that children with frequent family contact while in foster care experience a greater likelihood of reunification, shorter stays in out-of-home care, overall improved emotional well-being, and positive adjustment to placement.
Brief
Aug 20, 2013
Partners for Our Children recently collaborated on an op-ed about transparency in the child welfare system, which was featured on Crosscut.
News
Jul 24, 2013
Op-ed by POC’s executive director, Benjamin de Haan, Jennifer Strus (Children’s Administration) and Casey Trupin (Columbia Legal Services) about HB 1774.
News
Jul 16, 2013
This report outlines how to use the Type of Count filter used on the Child Well-Being Data Portal count and rate measurements for Investigations & Assessment, In-Home
Services, and Out-of-Home Care.
Report
May 12, 2013
POC's J. Mark Eddy, Maureen Marcenko, and Susan Barkan will present at the Society for Research in Child Development's Biennial Meeting.
News
Mar 15, 2013
This brief describes POC's formative evaluation of the early stage of the Case Resolution Meeting (CRM).
Brief
Mar 05, 2013
This study provides evidence that children of parents who reported that they were "engaged" (e.g., trusted the child welfare system and/or their worker), had stable housing, and had completed a high school education reunified significantly faster.
Report
Feb 13, 2013
In the early 1990s, kinship care emerged as a child welfare model. This brief presents a model based on a "collaborative mode of practice" designed to work for the maximum benefit of children in kinship care.
Report
Feb 13, 2013
Partners for Our Children is pleased to announce the release of Version 1.0 of the Washington State Child Well-Being Data Portal.
News
Feb 13, 2013
This report analyzed the results from a baseline survey of Children’s Administration supervisors. A summary of the findings highlights the supervisors’ perceptions of obstacles to helping families, the organizational climate, and job satisfaction.
Report
Jan 24, 2013
The 2010 Foster Parent Support Pilot (FPSP) study was designed as the first step in a process to determine whether the Mockingbird Family Model (MFM) could be an efficacious foster care model.
Report
Jan 18, 2013
This brief discusses the Parents Representation Program (PRP), which was developed to enhance the quality of defense representation for parents in dependency and termination hearings.
Brief
Jan 16, 2013
This brief provides highlights from the 2008 Parent Survey, which shows that parents involved with Washington State's child welfare system are poor, unemployed, disproportionately of color, and living in unstable situations.
Brief
Jan 16, 2013
This brief examines the two-way link between poverty/homelessness/substandard housing and child welfare involvement.
Brief
Jan 16, 2013
This legislative brief provides highlights from the 2008 Parent Survey, with an emphasis on parents’ economic hardships, parents’ risk factors, and the differences between parents' and social workers' views of the parents' service needs.
Brief
Jan 12, 2013
This study measures cortisol levels in Latino immigrant farmworkers in Oregon and compares measures of stress against the general population. Preliminary results suggest chronic stress plays a role in health risk among the Latino immigrant population.
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
This article examines the joint, longitudinal trajectories of symptoms of disruptive behavior problems and of depression in a community sample drawn from neighborhoods with high rates of delinquency.
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
This article describes lessons learned from two family-focused longitudinal prevention research studies of Latino immigrants in Oregon —the Adolescent Latino Acculturation Study (ALAS) and the Latino Youth and Family Empowerment Project-II (LYFE-II).
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
This article evaluates the impact of an enhanced parental legal representation program on the timing of permanency outcomes for 12,104 children who entered court-supervised out-of-home care in Washington State for the first time between 2004 and 2007.
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
This article examines differences between incarcerated mothers, incarcerated fathers, and their families on factors that might be important to consider when creating the content and process of preventive intervention programs.
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
Utilizing data from a 20-year longitudinal study, this article examines the relationship between symptoms of conduct disorder, ADHD, and depression during late childhood and mid-adolescence and body mass index (BMI) during emerging adulthood.
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
This article discusses adaptations to make Staying Connected, an evidence-based parenting program designed to support adolescent children in avoiding high-risk behaviors, more relevant for foster families.
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
Following 36,797 children who first entered out-of-home care in Washington State between 2001 and 2007, this article identifies significant variation in the rates at which children experience legal permanency among jurisdictions within the state.
Publication
Dec 31, 2012
This report provides a brief overview of four parent engagement/mentoring models (Icebreaker meeting, Parent to Parent Program, Parent Mentoring Program, and Parent Partners Program) currently being implemented in Washington State.
Report
Dec 18, 2012
This review of the book Fostering Accountability concludes that the editors provide child welfare administrators with a cogent and comprehensive description of how results-oriented accountability might be implemented in a modern child welfare agency.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
Using DSHS data for children entering out-of-home care for the first time between 2001 and 2007, this study examines how involvement in the dependency court process is related to the timing of reunification, adoption, or guardianship in Washington State.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
This study compares adolescents who had had an incarcerated parent to those who did not across four areas: family social advantage, parent health, the family parenting strategies, and youth externalizing behavior and delinquency.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
This article explores how former foster youth who aged out of care in Illinois, Wisconsin, and Iowa are faring in the labor market at age 24 and examines the variability in employment and wages for these youth.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
This article introduces the special issue of Children and Youth Services Review related to the well-being of single mothers with children in foster care.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
Using data from the Adolescent Latino Acculturation Study, this article discusses factors contributing to the social, behavioral, and emotional adjustment of young immigrants to life in the U.S.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
This article examines the characteristics and service needs of child welfare-involved mothers: Mostly impoverished, struggling to meet basic needs, as well as coping with early trauma, mental health problems, substance abuse, and domestic violence.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
A 2008 survey of parents in Washington's child welfare system found that 20% of the parents are neither employed nor receiving public assistance. Controlling for demographic factors, these parents engage less with the child welfare system.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
This study finds that middle school students with greater absenteeism at the start of the study tended toward increased depression and behavior problems after a year.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
This article examines the direct and indirect relationships of four specific domains (parental incarceration, social advantage, parent mental and physical health, and effective parenting) as they relate to youth antisocial behavior.
Publication
Dec 31, 2011
Includes sections on historical background and current trends, Developmental Research, Intervention Research, and Implications and Conclusions.
Publication
Dec 31, 2010
The article provides logic models for the Parent Mentoring Program and Parent Partners Program.
Publication
Dec 31, 2010
An evaluation of the Parent to Parent Program in Pierce County, WA suggests that it reduces parents’ feeling of social isolation, resistance, and hopelessness, while providing valuable information about the child welfare and court systems
Publication
Dec 31, 2009
This report examines the evolution of U.S. policy towards foster youth using the concept of “corporate parenting” and concludes that lingering challenges still exist
Publication
Dec 31, 2009
This article draws on factors that shape efforts to involve and engage child welfare involved parents and proposes a typology of six cost-effective strategies that can be readily employed by caseworkers to enhance and retain parent engagement.
Publication
Dec 31, 2009
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969
Budget Component
Dec 31, 1969