Rainier School is a home, not just a facility. WA lawmakers' proposed closure cruel
There's a deep sense of community at Rainier School.
For decades, it has been more than just a facility — it has been a home for individuals with significant intellectual and developmental disabilities, a place where they receive specialized care, structure and stability. Families rest easier knowing their loved ones are in an environment tailored specifically to their needs, supported by experienced staff who have dedicated their lives to this critical work.
Yet that sense of security is under threat from false promises of budget savings and overstated claims of available community placements.
House Bill 1472 and the proposed operating budget would mandate the closure of Rainier School by June 30, 2027, halting all new admissions immediately. On paper, the proposal promises millions in savings and smooth transitions into community-based services. In reality, viable community alternatives simply do not exist for the majority of Rainier's residents.
Rainier School serves as a safety net — often the last, best hope — for some of our state's most vulnerable individuals. Many residents have cycled through multiple community-based placements, each one tragically ending in failure. They've faced repeated hospitalizations, run-ins with law enforcement and emotional distress when the promised 'community care' couldn't meet their complex medical and behavioral needs.
These are not isolated incidents; this revolving door is tragically common.
One parent shared the heartbreaking story of their child's perilous experience outside Rainier. After moving to a community placement, the child's health rapidly declined due to inadequate support. In one terrifying incident, the lack of appropriate supervision led to a dangerous confrontation with law enforcement — an encounter that could have ended in tragedy. Returning to Rainier didn't just stabilize this individual; it most assuredly saved their life.
We've seen similar consequences from previous closures, such as the Frances Haddon Morgan Center. Residents did not smoothly transition to less costly community placements; many faced homelessness, emergency hospitalizations, or ended up in far more expensive crisis care. Some died. Promised budget savings turned into escalating expenses and, far worse, human suffering.
Moreover, Rainier School's staff provides specialized care and medical services unmatched elsewhere. These dedicated individuals possess decades of irreplaceable expertise, offering around-the-clock medical, dental and psychiatric care — critical support that isn't easily or quickly replicated elsewhere. Losing Rainier doesn't just remove housing; it dismantles an irreplaceable network of compassionate, highly trained professionals. It decimates a community.
Families consistently describe Rainier School as their lifeline, ensuring loved ones live with dignity, safety and stability. Removing this lifeline thrusts families into agonizing uncertainty. What happens to these families when the promised community-based placements fail yet again? How do we measure the emotional toll — the fear, anxiety and trauma inflicted by forcing vulnerable individuals from their homes?
Rather than closing Rainier School, we should invest in necessary improvements, strengthen oversight, and uphold the safety and dignity of its residents. This approach reflects true compassion and fiscal responsibility, acknowledging that human lives cannot be reduced to simple budgetary calculations.
Closing Rainier School is not just irresponsible — it's cruel. Families deserve certainty, not empty promises. Staff deserve respect, not displacement. Above all, residents deserve to be protected, not cast aside for budgetary convenience.
This is a defining moment for lawmakers to choose compassion and responsibility over short-sighted cost-cutting. Rainier School must remain open, and we must ensure its continued operation for the sake of those who depend upon it most.
Rep. Joshua Penner is a Republican who represents the 31st Legislative District.

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A heated debate concerning the future of the Rainier School in Buckley has winded down for now. On April 27, the state legislature passed Senate Bill 5393, an amended bill that will prohibit new admissions to the Rainier School and to the Yakima Valley School in Selah. The bill will allow current residents to stay at the facilities indefinitely. The bill now heads to the desk of Gov. Bob Ferguson, who has not approved or vetoed the bill yet. The Rainier School and Yakima Valley School are two of the state's four residential habilitation centers, which provide housing, employment and care for individuals with developmental and intellectual disabilities. 'I think we made the bill infinitely better,' said Josh Penner, a Republican from Orting who represents District 31 in the House. 'I think we created a sense of safety for the residents of Rainier.' 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'Washington state is not turning its back on folks that need it.' In a March interview with The News Tribune, Dym pointed out that Washington is the only state on the west coast that has residential habilitation centers, with 18 states across the country closing the centers completely. She also mentioned the Frances Haddon Morgan Center in Bremerton, which she said the legislature closed in 2013 with successful results. On May 16, 2013, DSHS released a report that said 52 people who had been living at the Frances Haddon Morgan Center found new homes in community-based settings or at one of the state's other residential habilitation centers. It also said those 52 people were 'remain[ing] stable in their new homes.' Dym has also said residential habilitation centers are relics from a past where people with disabilities were treated poorly. 'I think that supported living and adult family homes offer exactly the same level of care, same level of training,' Dym told The News Tribune on Wednesday. 'We have a robust system of people living in the community, living closer to their families, and so we're making sure that the state plans for serving everyone.' The News Tribune asked Dym in March if she thought moving residents to community-based facilities was the safer choice. She said that while abuse is always a possibility, residents can experience better care in smaller settings because they have more autonomy and are treated as individuals. However, Dym does understand the fears that come up when moving out of a residential habilitation center. Her sister was a resident at Fircrest School and in 2003, the legislature ordered the school to be downsized. 'When [my mom] finally found a place that had other individuals my sister's age … that my mom felt was close enough for her to visit and she felt like the home was nice looking and met my sister's need, and she was willing to give it a try — she was really frightened,' Dym said. 'It took her time to build trust in those communities and those community providers.' Her sister ended up thriving, Dym said, because of the care and freedom that came with the community setting. 'My sister, she got to paint her room purple,' Dym said. 'She got to have a cat, she got to pick out the food she wanted to eat for dinner and lunch, she made new friends, she got a job at the food bank.' The News Tribune archives contributed to this report.
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Sunday marked the final day of Washington state's 2025 legislative session, an occasion known as Sine Die. Much has happened in the 105 days since the session started Jan. 13. Tears were shed, brawls were fought. Descriptors for this year's proceedings have ranged from 'really hard' to 'grueling.' 'Certainly today, it feels like the toughest one that I've been through,' House Majority Leader Joe Fitzgibbon, a West Seattle Democrat, said at a Sunday evening press conference. 'But I'm sure every session to come will have its own challenges, too.' Earlier this year, then-Attorney General Bob Ferguson traded in his old title for a new one: governor. Washington said goodbye to longtime Gov. Jay Inslee. And residents got a glimpse of how the state could fare under the second administration of President Donald Trump. The Capitol saw policy squabbles and budget quarrels, thousands-deep protests and unexpected deaths. Washington lawmakers received a stormy revenue forecast in March, unwelcome news at a time when the state is facing a budget gap estimated between $7.5 billion and $16 billion, depending on the source. But it remains to be seen whether a special session will need to be called. Ferguson has kept mum about whether he'd approve lawmakers' final operating-budget offering; Democrats also passed capital and transportation budgets, too. In a lengthy statement Sunday, the governor thanked lawmakers for their hard work this session. 'I look forward to carefully reviewing the budgets line by line over the next few weeks,' he said. 'When that review is complete, I will share my thoughts with the public in greater detail.' Here are some of the highlights — and lowlights — of the regular session. Some of the biggest fights of the 2025 session centered around housing. Among the most hotly debated bills: one that would cap rent hikes. House Bill 1217 would limit annual rent increases to 7% plus inflation or 10%, whichever is lower, and up to 5% for manufactured homes. Another bill that divided lawmakers would allow striking workers to receive unemployment insurance benefits for up to six weeks. Democrats also pursued the closure of the residential habilitation center Rainier School for people with developmental and intellectual disabilities, located in Buckley in Pierce County. One short-lived, but quite controversial, proposal would have created a redesign committee charged with overseeing a makeover for the state flag. Democrats broadcast a slew of revenue options this year. Republicans, naturally, objected — and Ferguson also poo-pooed the suggested mountain of taxes as being far too high, citing looming federal threats to funding, programs and jobs. The majority party this session gave the green light to a 6-cent increase on the state's gas tax to help address the transportation budget's own multi-billion-dollar deficit. Tesla would get hit with a new tax under one House proposal. Democrats also attempted to tax the state's wealthiest residents, a concept that Ferguson has said he'd be open to discussing with a $100 million figure. The bill cleared the Senate but stalled out in the House. Republicans pushed back against Democrats' efforts to lift the 1% annual property-tax growth cap. They also slammed a proposed 50% increase on the price of state-park Discover passes and other taxes on 'joy.' Ferguson hasn't said which taxes he would support. Republicans registered outrage after House Democrats tweaked the rules on floor debate, accusing majority-party leadership of 'censoring' dissent. Democrats, incidentally, said the rule changes would help focus debate and end redundant filibustering. 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