Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Washington House Votes to Remove 'Branch' From Campus Names

Flickr-Governor Inslee's office
WSU Spokane may no longer be referred to as a 'branch campus'.

The Washington House this week approved a bill that symbolizes the growth of higher education statewide during the last quarter century.

That bill, passed Tuesday, removes one word from the titles of campuses such as WSU Spokane. That word is ‘branch’, as in Spokane is a branch campus of WSU.

In 1989, the legislature established five ‘branch’ campuses, three for WSU, two for the University of Washington, as a way for the major universities to provide better service to the rest of the state.

The bill’s prime sponsor, Kennewick Republican Representative Larry Haler, has WSU Tri-Cities in his district. During a recent public hearing, he said those ‘branches’ have matured and developed their own identities and his legislation recognizes that.

“Dropping the term ‘branch’ doesn’t break our campuses away from the main campuses. They still have a reporting relationship, organizational relationship,” Haler said.

WSU also has a campus in Vancouver. The UW’s campuses are in Bothell and Tacoma.

The bill was approved Tuesday by a 91-to-six vote and now moves to the Senate.

Doug Nadvornick is the program director at Spokane Public Radio. He previously covered North Idaho and Eastern Washington for the Northwest News Network. Before that, he worked in commercial radio, weekly newspapers, and served as Spokane Public Radio's news director for about 17 years. He lives in Spokane and is a graduate of Washington State University.