SGA 9187
In CommitteeSenate
EVANGELINA G. SHREEVE
This status may be delayed. See Action History below for the latest updates.
How does a bill become law?
- Introduced: The bill is filed and assigned a number.
- Committee: A subject-matter committee holds hearings, takes public testimony, and decides whether to advance the bill.
- Floor Vote: The full chamber (House or Senate) debates and votes on the bill.
- Opposite Chamber: The bill repeats the committee and floor vote process in the other chamber.
- Governor: The Governor reviews the bill and decides whether to sign or veto it.
- Signed: The bill has been signed into law.
AI Analysis
This bill formally appoints Evangelina G. Shreeve to the Washington Student Achievement Council for a four-year term. The council helps guide state efforts to improve college and career readiness and success for Washington students.
- Appoints Evangelina G. Shreeve as a member of the Washington Student Achievement Council
- Sets the term of service from December 20, 2024, to June 30, 2028
- Fills a vacancy on the council as part of the state's leadership for higher education coordination
Who is affected
- Washington Student Achievement Council members and staff — This appointment ensures continued representation on the council, which advises on higher education policy and student achievement goals in Washington State.
Who Is Most Affected
This appointment maintains continuity and representation on the council, which coordinates higher education policy across the state. While the individual appointment itself has no direct fiscal or regulatory impact, stable council leadership supports long-term policy coherence in areas like college readiness and equity initiatives.
As a nonpartisan, policy-coordination body, the council’s work influences broader student outcomes — including access, completion, and workforce alignment — but this specific appointment alone does not alter policy or funding. Any downstream effects would be indirect and minimal.
State higher education institutions may benefit from consistent council leadership, but this appointment does not change institutional funding, governance, or operational requirements.
The governor’s appointment power remains unchanged; this is a routine fill of a vacant seat. No new authority or accountability is granted to the executive branch.
This bill is a procedural appointment with no direct impact on local governments, which do not administer or fund the council directly.