SGA 9263
In CommitteeSenate
MARK O. BROWN
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 Mark O. Brown to the South Puget Sound Community College Board of Trustees for a four-year term. The appointment begins on November 7, 2025, and ends on September 30, 2029.
- Appoints Mark O. Brown as a member of the South Puget Sound Community College Board of Trustees
- Sets the appointment term to begin on November 7, 2025
- Specifies the term ends on September 30, 2029
Who is affected
- South Puget Sound Community College District — The South Puget Sound Community College District will have one additional trustee appointed to its governing board.
Who Is Most Affected
This appointment has no direct financial, legal, or operational impact on the college district beyond adding one trustee to its governance structure. No budgetary or policy changes are mandated by this bill.
Students and staff at SPSCC may experience no measurable change as a result of this appointment alone, since board membership decisions are made collectively and this is a routine personnel appointment. No programmatic or budgetary shifts are tied to this action.
Local taxpayers and ratepayers in the SPSCC district (including residents of Thurston, Mason, and Pierce counties) are not affected financially, as this bill does not alter levies, tuition, or service fees.
Mark O. Brown, as an individual appointee, gains a formal governance role with fiduciary responsibilities, but the bill itself imposes no new personal obligations or liabilities.
State government operations are unaffected, as this is a procedural appointment with no fiscal impact or statutory changes. No new administrative burden is created.