Administration costs: How does Marysville SD compare?
The amount of money spent on administration for K-12 education has always
been an issue, never more so than during a strike.
Some have questioned how much the Marysville school district spends on
administration versus other educational costs. As the chart below shows,
Marysville spends about the same as other similarly sized districts.
School District
Student Enrollment
Teaching Budget
Other Support
Admin Budget
Avg. Teacher Salary*
Bellingham
9,839
72%
16%
12%
$50,370
Central Valley
10,810
70%
18%
12%
$49,470
Marysville
10,985
69%
18%
13%
$54,169
Battle Ground
11,550
67%
20%
13%
$48,649
Clover Park
11,941
68%
18%
14%
$47,972
Renton
12,360
71%
16%
13%
$49,543
North Thurston
12,351
71%
16%
13%
$47,902
Other notables
School District
Student Enrollment
Teaching Budget
Other Support
Admin Budget
Avg. Teacher Salary*
Issaquah
14,080
68%
19%
13%
$48,433
Everett
17,391
72%
17%
11%
$55,460
Tacoma
30,785
69%
18%
13%
$51,465
Seattle
44,731
69%
18%
13%
$48,353
*Does not include benefits
Source: OSPI - Data for 2003-04 school year (Teaching Budget
includes: Teaching activities and teaching support; Admin Budget includes:
Building administration and central administration). Teacher salaries from
2002-03 school year.
Contact: Jason Mercier | Budget
Research Analyst | 360.956.3482
At a March 23, 2005, House Appropriations hearing on a bill to gut the voter-approved I-601 spending limit, Rep. Jim McIntire (D) asked a supporter of I-601’s two-third supermajority requirement for the legislature to raise taxes the following question:
"Can you name a time when we [legislators] have actually not just set it [supermajority requirement] aside by majority vote? I mean, this is in many respects a procedural motion that has no bearing. It’s a statutory constraint that cannot constrain any legislature that chooses as a majority to set it aside . . . have we ever used a supermajority [to raise taxes]?"