Tag Archives: bone-marrow transplant

Legislative Update: Feb. 16, 2018

Dear Friends and Neighbors,

We are concluding the busiest week yet of the 2018 legislative session. Seven of the past eight days (including last Saturday morning) have been dedicated to “floor action.” This means being on the floor of the Senate chamber to debate and vote on bills. We had floor action that went late into the evening more than once. In fact, one night we were working on the floor until after 1 a.m.

This Wednesday was “floor cutoff,” meaning the deadline for the Senate to pass its own bills. Now that this long round of floor action is behind us (the same goes for my colleagues in the House), we have reached a key point in the session.

My Senate colleagues and I again are focused on committee meetings, this time on bills that were approved by the House. The House committees are doing the same with Senate bills that are still alive.

Latest revenue forecast: Economic growth stronger than expected; time for property-tax relief

The new state revenue forecast released Thursday showed good news. Because of revenue collections coming in stronger than projected and an improved economic-growth outlook due in part to the recent federal tax reform, the expected revenue collections are up by $1.3 billion over the next three years, since the previous forecast in November. This new money is in addition to the $1 billion in new tax collections that have been projected since the Legislature passed a new state budget last year.

This week’s revenue forecast reinforces my Republican colleagues’ belief that we can and should pass a supplemental operating budget without raising taxes or creating an energy tax.

The positive forecast news strengthens the case for offering property-tax relief this year. SB 6439 proposes a $1 billion property tax cut to deal with a one-time “spike” in 2018 property taxes caused by the new school-financing plan adopted by the Legislature last year.

Senate passes two of my bills!

Two of my bills are now past the halfway point of the lawmaking process:

  • Senate Bill 6155 seeks to increase awareness of the need for bone-marrow donors. It would require the state Department of Licensing to provide each driver’s license or identicard applicant with written materials regarding bone-marrow donation. This proposal was scheduled for a public hearing in the House Health Care and Wellness Committee this morning.
  • Senate Bill 6157 would help patients have access to the health-care benefits for which they have already paid for in their health plans. It would allow people better access to health care by changing an insurance carrier’s initial prior-authorization process so patients can have six consecutive treatment visits, without prior authorization, with specialty-care providers that have been determined to be medically necessary. This bill would not expand health-care benefits. The House Health Care and Wellness Committee will have a public hearing on SB 6157 next Tuesday.

Honoring Canine Crusaders

It was my pleasure to sponsor a Senate resolution Thursday honoring the Kettle Falls Canine Crusaders, one of the many FIRST Robotics teams across America. The Canine Crusaders, led by Naomi Edwards, spend time in elementary and middle schools in our area to help expose younger students to creative, technical and critical thinking, and to let students know the importance and value of STEM (science, technology, engineering and math). It’s a great program that helps so many of our students! You can view my resolution here.

Contact Me

Phone: (360) 786-7612 | Email: Shelly.Short@leg.wa.gov |

Mail: P.O. Box 40407 Olympia, Washington  98504-0407

Online: https://shellyshort.src.wastateleg.org/

Sen. Short gives floor speech

Senate passes Short bill raising awareness of need for bone-marrow donors

The Senate has unanimously approved a bill introduced by Sen. Shelly Short that seeks to increase awareness of the need for bone-marrow donors.

Short’s legislation, Senate Bill 6155, would require the state Department of Licensing to provide each driver’s license or identicard applicant with written materials regarding bone-marrow donation.

“This bill’s goal is to make more people realize the need for bone-marrow donors and to generate more interest and education in the national marrow-donor program,” said Short, R-Addy. “There is no greater thing we can do than to help save a life of someone who is in need of a bone-marrow donor.”

Short introduced the bill after learning about the moving story of one of her constituents, 10-yer-old Deer Park resident Jada Bascom. Soon after Bascom was born in April 2007, she was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia, an aggressive form of cancer that starts in the bone marrow.

After chemotherapy did not work, her family sought a bone-marrow transplant, but out of 7 million people in the National Bone Marrow Registry at that time, not a single match was found. Bascom’s family widened the search to Europe, and a match was found in Germany. On Nov. 27, 2007, Bascom received the lifesaving transplant.

SSB 6155, which was passed 48-0 by the Senate Wednesday, now goes to the House of Representatives for consideration.

Sen. Short testifies on SB 6155.

Short bill seeks to raise awareness of need for bone-marrow donors

A Deer Park fifth-grader who survived cancer as an infant is the inspiration for a bill introduced in the 2018 legislative session by Sen. Shelly Short, R-Addy.

Short’s legislation, Senate Bill 6155, would increase awareness of the need for bone-marrow donors by requiring the state Department of Licensing to provide each driver’s license or identicard applicant with written materials regarding bone-marrow donation.

“The goal is to make more people aware of the need for bone-marrow donors and to generate more interest and education in the national marrow-donor program,” Short said. “If this bill becomes law, I believe Washington would be the first state in the nation to do this.”

Senate Bill 6155 received a public hearing in the Senate Transportation Committee Tuesday afternoon. Among those testifying in favor of it were Deer Park resident Jeana Moore and her 10-year-old granddaughter, Jada Bascom.

Jada Bascom (left) and her grandmother, Jeana Moore, during their testimony on SB 6155.

Short said she decided to introduce the bill after learning about Bascom’s moving story. Soon after Bascom was born in April 2007, she was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia, an aggressive form of cancer that starts in the bone marrow.

After chemotherapy did not work, her family sought a bone-marrow transplant, but out of 7 million people in the National Bone Marrow Registry at that time, not a single match was found. Bascom’s family widened the search to Europe, and a match was found in Germany. On Nov. 27, 2007, Bascom received the lifesaving transplant.

“Jada’s story is inspiring and has a happy ending, but it also shows how important marrow donations are for leukemia patients and how hard it can be to locate a bone-marrow match. If you are of a multicultural descent, that search is even harder,” Short said.

Short’s 7th Legislative District seatmate, Rep. Jacquelin Maycumber, R-Republic, has introduced a companion measure in the House of Representatives, House Bill 2557, which received a public hearing Tuesday in the House Health Care and Wellness Committee.