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Quick Facts
Personal Details

Education

  • Bachelors, Landscape Architecture, Rutgers University, 1972-1976

Professional Experience

  • Bachelors, Landscape Architecture, Rutgers University, 1972-1976
  • Owner, ECO3, 2001-present
  • Owner, Briargreen, Incorporated, 1980-2002
  • Employee, Hydroseeding Specification Guide, 1993-1998

Political Experience

  • Bachelors, Landscape Architecture, Rutgers University, 1972-1976
  • Owner, ECO3, 2001-present
  • Owner, Briargreen, Incorporated, 1980-2002
  • Employee, Hydroseeding Specification Guide, 1993-1998
  • Senator, Washington State Senate, District 31, 2017-present
  • Candidate, Governor of Washington, 2020
  • Candidate, Washington State Senate, District 31, 2018
  • Candidate, Washington State House of Representatives, District 31 Position 2, 2014
  • Candidate, Washington State House of Representatives, District 47-1, 2000, 2000, 2002
  • Representative, Washington State House of Representatives, 1998-2000

Former Committees/Caucuses

Member, Mulch Standards Committee, present

Former Member, Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee, Washington State Senate

Former Member, Natural Resources and Parks Committee, Washington State Senate

President/Founding Director, Pacific Northwest Chapter, International Erosion Control Association (IECA), 1991-1994

Current Legislative Committees

Assistant Ranking Minority Member, Environment, Energy and Technology Committee

Member, Housing Stability and Affordability Committee

Member, Transportation Committee

Member, Veterans' and Military Affairs

Religious, Civic, and other Memberships

  • Bachelors, Landscape Architecture, Rutgers University, 1972-1976
  • Owner, ECO3, 2001-present
  • Owner, Briargreen, Incorporated, 1980-2002
  • Employee, Hydroseeding Specification Guide, 1993-1998
  • Senator, Washington State Senate, District 31, 2017-present
  • Candidate, Governor of Washington, 2020
  • Candidate, Washington State Senate, District 31, 2018
  • Candidate, Washington State House of Representatives, District 31 Position 2, 2014
  • Candidate, Washington State House of Representatives, District 47-1, 2000, 2000, 2002
  • Representative, Washington State House of Representatives, 1998-2000
  • Member, King County Stormwater Management Advisory Board, present
  • Member, King County Citizens Water Quality Advisory Board
  • Former Assistant Coach, Little League Baseball

Other Info

  • 1 Dog: Bonney; Chickens; Sheep; Ducks

Reason for Seeking Public Office:

When you elect a State Representative you are electing someone to be your "Chief Negotiator" and "Taxpayer Representative" in Olympia. The issues have not changed since I was a State Representative in 2000. We still don't have a solution to funding roads; government regulation and taxes are strangling small business; and elderly and disabled issues are still being used as leverage for tax increases. It's time for a change.

In addition to the fiscal issues facing the State, we also face "Parents' Rights" issues. If your teenager gets a ticket, you will get a notice in the mail because of me. I ran legislation to prohibit withholding medical information about children from parents and my opponent's party called it a "bitter pill."

  • How many times do we have to vote for a 2/3 majority to raise taxes? My opponent has been totally ineffective in enacting this taxpayer protection as a constitutional amendment within his own party.

    It's time for a change. I would like to ask for your vote and to be your Chief Negotiator and bring Taxpayer Representation to Olympia.

  • Policy Positions

    Fortunato's campaign website highlights the following issues:

    Education

    • The legislature must stop robbing education dollars to fund burdensome regulation! Our children's future is of paramount importance, and it is incomprehensible that we would continue to pass more and more regulations on our schools and teachers. I do not claim to be an expert on education, but I do know that you are not really giving a dollar to schools if costs them 35 cents to get that dollar from you. We must ensure that our schools can get the most from the dollars we give them. We should stop trying to micromanage our educators, let's listen to our teachers and reduce their regulatory burden, so they can do what they do best: teach.

    Parental Rights? What rights?

    • If you think that parents should be notified of their child's driving infractions, what about medical decisions? Do you think that a parent should have a role in planning their child's medical care? I do. I think that parents should be involved in the medical treatment of their children. To that end, I ran a bill that would prevent healthcare providers from withholding medical information about children from their parents. This makes sense to me. Parents are responsible for the life, health and welfare of their child. How can they help their child make decisions or plan their child's healthcare if they aren’t allowed to access the information? It would be like a school withholding a child's grades from the parents but still expecting that the parents will somehow be able to take the steps necessary to ensure their child's success in school. Besides, a child can't even get a tattoo without parental consent; parents should at least be allowed to access to all of their child's medical information. Despite the fact that this seems like a common-sense thing, my bill met with staunch resistance from the Democratic leadership and never made it out of committee.

    Legislative Tunnel Vision and The Zombie Gas Tax

    • The solution is to dedicate the sales tax from the sale of motor vehicles to the gas tax account, and to also reroute all revenue from sales tax on highway projects to the gas tax account as well. This would require the state to cut spending by less than 0.5 %. Currently it takes $80 million per year in bond payments to generate $1 billion in road improvements now; this change would provide an additional $6 billion. It's time for a change.

    Going out of business: Our Troubled Economy

    • Small businesses are the heart of our economy and they are being destroyed by Seattle-influenced policies of taxation and overly burdensome regulations. We have all watched the policies of down-town Seattle wreak havoc on the small businesses within their city limits, and we cannot afford to have downtown Seattle's representation dictating the agenda for the rest of us any more. It's time for a change.

    Government Spending

    • Washington State saw a dramatic increase in government spending recently, but we still can't meet our financial obligations. So in order to "balance" the budget, the legislature has simply left vital services like roads and schools dangerously underfunded. It is like "balancing" your home budget by not paying your car payment and mortgage. We need to prioritize and make smart choices about the way the state spends your money, not simply spend, then fail to live up to our obligations.

    • The voters of this state have repeatedly demanded the protection of a law that would require a super-majority in the legislature to raise taxes. Taxpayers know that this would force fiscal accountability in our government, but our current representation has allowed downtown Seattle idealogues to block this at every turn. Enough is enough! We need someone who can get this done.