Skip to main content

SGA 9177

In Committee

Senate

YONGMI E. YIM

This status may be delayed. See Action History below for the latest updates.

How does a bill become law?
  1. Introduced: The bill is filed and assigned a number.
  2. Committee: A subject-matter committee holds hearings, takes public testimony, and decides whether to advance the bill.
  3. Floor Vote: The full chamber (House or Senate) debates and votes on the bill.
  4. Opposite Chamber: The bill repeats the committee and floor vote process in the other chamber.
  5. Governor: The Governor reviews the bill and decides whether to sign or veto it.
  6. Signed: The bill has been signed into law.
Introduced: January 14, 2025
Last Action: April 15, 2025
Status: S Confirmed

AI Analysis

This analysis was generated by AI and may contain errors. It is not legal advice. Always refer to the official bill text for authoritative information.

This bill formally appoints Yongmi E. Yim to the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges for a four-year term. The appointment was made on October 18, 2024, and the term ends on September 30, 2028.

  • Appoints Yongmi E. Yim as a member of the State Board for Community and Technical Colleges
  • Sets the term of service from October 18, 2024, to September 30, 2028
  • Fills a vacancy on the board created by the expiration of a prior appointment

Who is affected

  • Students and staff at Washington's community and technical collegesThe State Board for Community and Technical Colleges oversees Washington's 34 community and technical colleges; this appointment adds one member to the board.
Effective: October 18, 2024
Model: Intel/Qwen3-Coder-Next-int4-AutoRoundGenerated: Mar 19, 2026 at 10:04 PM

Who Is Most Affected

Students and staff at Washington's community and technical collegesMixed Impact

This appointment does not directly alter policies, funding, or regulations affecting students or staff; it simply adds one member to the governing board. Any downstream impact would be indirect, long-term, and highly uncertain—dependent on the appointee’s future decisions, which are unknown.

State and local government agenciesMixed Impact

The bill has no fiscal impact and does not change budget authority, tax policy, or spending priorities. It does not affect state or local government operations beyond the routine administrative act of filling a board seat.

Businesses (including small, mid-size, and large)Mixed Impact

The bill does not create new regulatory burdens, liability protections, or operational changes for businesses. It does not alter labor rules, procurement standards, or market conditions.