REGIONAL Washinaton state faces $15 billion headache OLYMPIA (AP) - Washing ton's mild recession, coupled with lawmakers’ determination not to raise taxes while special interests make expensive de mands. will give lawmakers a $15 billion headache this ses sion. The possibility of war in the Persian Gulf is an added threat as legislators convene Monday for their 105-day session. State Economist ('hang Mook Sohn has predicted a war could knock a $400 million hole in projected revenues. That would mean massive cuts in the two year budget lawmakers must write. Conversely, if a peaceful set tlement is negotiated over Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, the state's March revenue forecast could rise by $100 million. Gov. Booth Gardner has pro posed a $15.4 billion, two-year spending plan. That's nearly $000 million out of balance However. Gardner has recom mended cutbacks in agency spending and increased fees that would erase the red ink. In any event, don't expect any substantive action on the budget until late March or early April. Before that time, hearings will be held for state agency heads and interest groups to justify their money requests. But the real work on the budget won't begin before March 1H. when Sohn releases the rev enue forecast. i ms year me nrsi urun oi me budget will be written by House Appropriations Chair man Gary Locke. D-Seattle. From there tiie inulget will go to the Senate and go through another rewrite by Ways and Means Chairman Dan McDon ald. R Bellevue. The final budget will be the product of a House-Senate con ference committee. When that will happen is anybody's guess. It must be on the books, however, by next July 1. the be ginning of the new two-year fiscal period. Gardner predicts the final legislative product will 1m; simi lar to his proposal. l^ocke and McDonald say probably not Both men say the governor's budget is no more than a starting point and that they will make major adjust ments to reflect changes in the revenue picture and to produce a document that can gain a ma jority of votes in both houses. Probably the hottest issue will Ik; pay increases for state employees and public school teachers. Gardner has proposed a 4.4 percent raise the first year of the biennium, followed by a 3.8 percent increase the second year. The Washington Education Association and state employee unions already have rejected the proposal, calling it an in sult. However, the governor's pro posal could be the high-water * MfUNOCRUUIP * GREAT f on PARTIES AND BIRTHDAYS [0VIDEO > GAMES ACL GAMES WORK with menus ADMISSION ’1 SO STM STREET PMUC MARKET EUfiiRi • MJ-MA4 <8*. mark. McDonald and Locke have said pay increases an’ low on their priority lists. The rest of the governor's budget plan is a patchwork of spending cuts — 5 percent in the colleges and universities — and various belt-tightening steps, fee increases and select ed spending increases. One highly visible tax in crease. a penny a pack on ciga rettes. isn't a budget-balancer, but a way of financing a new slate ad campaign against smoking Most of the budget increases recommended by (Gardner would pay for maintaining cur rent state programs, including anticipated higher social ser vice caseloads and school en roll merits A few programs would get actual increases, such as envi ronmental protection, urban growth management. Puget Sound cleanup and early child hood education UO BOOKSTORE CASSETTE PLATER ■ Auto s^t;0H ^Patibie ■ Recharge qaiF 29.95 b£G. 39.95 SALE asss&» vwM-F 2061 1AM/^Tu"e tor io99®r|eries * ° ,SALE 49.95 BEG. 59.95 S/lt-E-_ aiVVA NE\N FROM MWA H*Auto°Bevers® • amifm fune' .Super Bass SALE 49.9« >ur most popular AIWA HS T-40 ■ Auto Reverse New BBE "High Definition Sound AM/FM Tuner I DSL Dynamic Super Loudness REG 89 S iSALE i79.95i CSSETIEP^EK L1Q.G15 - Compact s>ze Turner REG 39 95 SALE 29.95 • • Having a garage sale? Get the word out with an ODE classified