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COMPASSION SEATTLE FILES NEW VERSION OF PROPOSED CHARTER The critique that the revised version of the charter amendment doesn’t address is the allegation that it is an “unfunded mandate.” Compassion Seattle released a “cost fact sheet” with their press release this morning, maintaining its argument that the city already has sufficient funds to address the requirements in the charter amendment, especially given the new COVID relief funding 911 CALL CENTER MOVES TO NEW CIVILIAN PUBLIC SAFETY AGENCY This afternoon the City Council passed an ordinance transferring the employees of SPD’s 911 call center to the newly-created Community Safety and Communications Center (CSCC), a civilian-led sister organization to the police department. But after a last-minute amendment, SPD’s parking enforcement officers were left in place until consensus can be reached on the right place to move them. APPEALS COURT REVERSES CHARLEENA LYLES CASE DISMISSAL It took 25 months from beginning to end, but today the Washington State Court of Appeals finally issued a ruling in its review of the dismissal of the Charleena Lyles wrongful death case brought against the City of Seattle and the two police officers who shot and killed her. The appeals court overturned the lower court’s dismissal of the case and set it up to proceed to trial. JUMP START TAX ARCHIVES This morning the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce announced that it has filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court arguing that the “Jump Start” payroll tax passed by the Seattle City Council last summer violates the Washington State Constitution. SPD PUSHES BACK HARD ON COUNCIL'S PROPOSED BUDGET CUT Today’s meeting agenda included time for SPD to present its best case for holding on to the money, with Herbold intending for amendments and a vote on the bill to occur at her next meeting two weeks from now.. Since last summer when SPD came under intense criticism for its violent response to protests, it has generally approached meetings with the Council with its tail between its legsand a
NEW REPORT PRESENTS CLEARER PICTURE ON E-SCOOTER SAFETY ISSUES Last May, I wrote an article discussing the safety of e-scooters, as Seattle was beginning to discuss a scooter-share program modeled after its existing bike-share program, and as other cities aggressively rolled out scooter share. My conclusion was that there simply was not enough data to draw a definitive answer on e-scooter safety, though the early results presented reasons to be concerned. LATEST SPD "STOPS AND DETENTIONS" REPORT SHOWS JUMP IN Last week the Seattle Police Department published its annual report on stops and detentions, with numbers for 2018. It begins by noting that Terry stops are up substantially over 2017 numbers — but then it provides another 25 pages of text, tables and charts that offer little help in understanding why. WHAT THE 9TH CIRCUIT ACTUALLY SAID ABOUT CRIMINALIZING The ruling itself is a messy 72 pages; it’s an amended version of a ruling a 3-judge panel from the 9th Circuit handed down last September, along with a denial of a petition for the same three judges to rehear it, and also a denial of a petition for an en banc rehearing by the entire 9th Circuit. Several of the other judges who weren’t among the original three who heard the case decided to SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL INSIGHT It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. 2021 ELECTION CANDIDATES Here are the candidates who have filed for city elections in 2021, with links to their campaign filings on the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission website, and the candidates’ financial disclosure forms where available. This page will be updated as candidates file or drop out. Mayor: Jeffrey Applegate Henry Clay Dennison Financial disclosure James Donaldson Financial disclosureColleen
COMPASSION SEATTLE FILES NEW VERSION OF PROPOSED CHARTER The critique that the revised version of the charter amendment doesn’t address is the allegation that it is an “unfunded mandate.” Compassion Seattle released a “cost fact sheet” with their press release this morning, maintaining its argument that the city already has sufficient funds to address the requirements in the charter amendment, especially given the new COVID relief funding 911 CALL CENTER MOVES TO NEW CIVILIAN PUBLIC SAFETY AGENCY This afternoon the City Council passed an ordinance transferring the employees of SPD’s 911 call center to the newly-created Community Safety and Communications Center (CSCC), a civilian-led sister organization to the police department. But after a last-minute amendment, SPD’s parking enforcement officers were left in place until consensus can be reached on the right place to move them. APPEALS COURT REVERSES CHARLEENA LYLES CASE DISMISSAL It took 25 months from beginning to end, but today the Washington State Court of Appeals finally issued a ruling in its review of the dismissal of the Charleena Lyles wrongful death case brought against the City of Seattle and the two police officers who shot and killed her. The appeals court overturned the lower court’s dismissal of the case and set it up to proceed to trial. JUMP START TAX ARCHIVES This morning the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce announced that it has filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court arguing that the “Jump Start” payroll tax passed by the Seattle City Council last summer violates the Washington State Constitution. SPD PUSHES BACK HARD ON COUNCIL'S PROPOSED BUDGET CUT Today’s meeting agenda included time for SPD to present its best case for holding on to the money, with Herbold intending for amendments and a vote on the bill to occur at her next meeting two weeks from now.. Since last summer when SPD came under intense criticism for its violent response to protests, it has generally approached meetings with the Council with its tail between its legsand a
NEW REPORT PRESENTS CLEARER PICTURE ON E-SCOOTER SAFETY ISSUES Last May, I wrote an article discussing the safety of e-scooters, as Seattle was beginning to discuss a scooter-share program modeled after its existing bike-share program, and as other cities aggressively rolled out scooter share. My conclusion was that there simply was not enough data to draw a definitive answer on e-scooter safety, though the early results presented reasons to be concerned. LATEST SPD "STOPS AND DETENTIONS" REPORT SHOWS JUMP IN Last week the Seattle Police Department published its annual report on stops and detentions, with numbers for 2018. It begins by noting that Terry stops are up substantially over 2017 numbers — but then it provides another 25 pages of text, tables and charts that offer little help in understanding why. WHAT THE 9TH CIRCUIT ACTUALLY SAID ABOUT CRIMINALIZING The ruling itself is a messy 72 pages; it’s an amended version of a ruling a 3-judge panel from the 9th Circuit handed down last September, along with a denial of a petition for the same three judges to rehear it, and also a denial of a petition for an en banc rehearing by the entire 9th Circuit. Several of the other judges who weren’t among the original three who heard the case decided to NOTES FROM TODAY'S COUNCIL MEETINGS A lot was said AND done today. This afternoon the Council passed several bills related to tenant protections. The first extends the Council’s moratorium on redevelopment of mobile-home parks for another six months while the city tries to resolve an appeal to its SEPA determination of a draft bill re-zoning the properties.. The second provides a defense to eviction for families with THURSDAY NEWS ROUNDUP Break out the raincoats; we’re about to get a ton of rain.. Here’s the news. The Seattle Times, Capitol Hill Seattle Blog, and West Seattle Blog note yesterday’s announcement that Seattle is the first major city in the U.S. to reach the magical 70% vaccination rate.. The Urbanist reports that Tacoma is issuing housing permits three times faster than Seattle. THIS WEEK IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS: JUNE 7-12, 2021 A trio of tenant-rights bills come up for approval Monday afternoon. Plus the Council starts to put together the Districting Commission. Monday morning’s weekly Council Briefing has no special presentations or executive sessions scheduled. SEATTLE PAYROLL TAX UPHELD IN SUPERIOR COURT RULING The legal challenge to the tax ordinance, brought by the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce, argued that it was an impermissible tax on employees’ right to earn a living, which the state Supreme Court found unconstitutional in Cary vs. Bellingham.The judge agreed with the City of Seattle that Cary didn’t apply here, since the tax was levied on employers, not employees, and barred THIS WEEK IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS: MAY 24-28, 2021 (UPDATED) Plenty of new bills being introduced this week that should keep the Council busy for the next few weeks. Monday morning’s weekly Council Briefing will include an executive session for the Councilmembers to discuss legal matters with the city’s attorneys. TUESDAY NEWS ROUNDUP There is much to read this morning. Let’s dig in. The Seattle Times, Seattle PI, KING, MyNorthwest, and Capitol Hill Seattle Blog cover the Council’s passage yesterday of several tenant protection bills.. KIRO reports that SPD has a large hiring class this year, which will almost make up for its large officer attrition over the past year.. The Urbanist covers a judge’s ruling upholding WEDNESDAY NEWS ROUNDUP Renter protections, light rail, and more. The Urbanist looks at the renter-protection bills passed by the City Council on Monday, while the South Seattle Emerald reports out from a protest demanding rent cancellation.. KING reflects on the CHOP, one year later.. The Seattle Times and KIRO cover the Council’s new interest in decriminalizingpsychedelic drugs.
MONDAY NEWS ROUNDUP
It looks like we’ll be getting some much-needed rain over the next few days. Here’s the Monday morning news. KING looks at how small landlords are reacting to Seattle’s recent string of renter protection ordinances.. The Seattle Times reports that a King County judge has ruled in favor of the city in the first challenge to Seattle’s payroll tax. CITY ROLLS OUT $30 MILLION "STRATEGIC INVESTMENT FUND" RFP It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. SPD CHIEF DIAZ DEMOTES ASSISTANT CHIEF FOR ROLE IN Two weeks ago, SPD Interim Chief Adrian Diaz announced that he was overruling a disciplinary recommendation by the Office of Police Accountability for a supervisor who had a central role in the “pink umbrella” incident during last summer’s protests. Diaz came under fire for asserting that he would not punish the supervisor for decisions that were made above him, while not providing any SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL INSIGHT It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. 2021 ELECTION CANDIDATES 2021 Election Candidates. Here are the candidates who have filed for city elections in 2021, with links to their campaign filings on the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission website, and the candidates’ financial disclosure forms where available. This page will be updated as candidates file or drop out. Mayor: Jeffrey Applegate. SAWANT SETTLES ETHICS CHARGE, ADMITTING VIOLATION Sawant settles ethics charge, admitting violation. On Monday, the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission will hold a special meeting at which it will vote on whether to approve a negotiated settlement with Councilmember Kshama Sawant over an ethics charge stemming from last year’s “Tax Amazon” ballot proposition campaign. THE SOCIALIST ALTERNATIVE DOCUMENTS Here is a collection of internal documents from Socialist Alternative. This is a topical guide, so some documents appear in more than one section. For context, please read this article. The “Smoking Guns” Letter from Council member Kshama Sawant acknowledging her “accountability” to Socialist Alternative Resolution approved by the Socialist Alternative National Committee (NC) and the CITY COUNCIL PASSES PAYROLL TAX City Council passes payroll tax. On 07/06/2020. By. Kevin Schofield In tax. This afternoon, the City Council passed by a 7-2 vote the much-touted “Jump Start Seattle” payroll tax proposal — with a couple of last-minute amendments. The tax bill was adopted largely unchanged from the form in which it was voted out of committee last JUSTCARE PROGRAM FACES FISCAL CLIFF NEXT MONTH, SCRAMBLES Here’s the catch: the JustCare program is extremely expensive. The price tag for the proposal to extend through September is $10.5 million. Once the program ramps up to full capacity, it will cost about $5,800 per month, per person, or just under $70,000 per person for a full year. About half of that is housing costs: leasing hotelrooms.
NEW REPORT PRESENTS CLEARER PICTURE ON E-SCOOTER SAFETY ISSUES New report presents clearer picture on e-scooter safety issues. On 01/11/2020. By. Kevin Schofield In transportation. Last May, I wrote an article discussing the safety of e-scooters, as Seattle was beginning to discuss a scooter-share program modeled after its existing bike-share program, and as other cities aggressively rolledout scooter share.
JUMP START TAX ARCHIVES Chamber of Commerce files legal challenge to Seattle payroll tax. This morning the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce announced that it has filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court arguing that the “Jump Start” payroll tax passed by the Seattle City Council last summer violates the Washington State Constitution. WHAT THE 9TH CIRCUIT ACTUALLY SAID ABOUT CRIMINALIZING What the 9th Circuit actually said about criminalizing homelessness. Last week there was a lot of press coverage, much of it inaccurate, regarding a ruling from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals related to whether cities can make it a criminal offense to “camp” or sleep on public property. Here’s what the ruling actually says, and whatit
LATEST SPD "STOPS AND DETENTIONS" REPORT SHOWS JUMP IN Here is SPD’s top-level numbers of Terry stops in 2018: All told, Terry stops increased by 18.5% from 2017, with the increase concentrated in three precincts: East, West and South. East Precinct had by far the biggest increase, both in absolute numbers and by percentage. According to the report, SPD is at a loss for what causedthis big spike
SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL INSIGHT It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. 2021 ELECTION CANDIDATES 2021 Election Candidates. Here are the candidates who have filed for city elections in 2021, with links to their campaign filings on the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission website, and the candidates’ financial disclosure forms where available. This page will be updated as candidates file or drop out. Mayor: Jeffrey Applegate. SAWANT SETTLES ETHICS CHARGE, ADMITTING VIOLATION Sawant settles ethics charge, admitting violation. On Monday, the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission will hold a special meeting at which it will vote on whether to approve a negotiated settlement with Councilmember Kshama Sawant over an ethics charge stemming from last year’s “Tax Amazon” ballot proposition campaign. THE SOCIALIST ALTERNATIVE DOCUMENTS Here is a collection of internal documents from Socialist Alternative. This is a topical guide, so some documents appear in more than one section. For context, please read this article. The “Smoking Guns” Letter from Council member Kshama Sawant acknowledging her “accountability” to Socialist Alternative Resolution approved by the Socialist Alternative National Committee (NC) and the CITY COUNCIL PASSES PAYROLL TAX City Council passes payroll tax. On 07/06/2020. By. Kevin Schofield In tax. This afternoon, the City Council passed by a 7-2 vote the much-touted “Jump Start Seattle” payroll tax proposal — with a couple of last-minute amendments. The tax bill was adopted largely unchanged from the form in which it was voted out of committee last JUSTCARE PROGRAM FACES FISCAL CLIFF NEXT MONTH, SCRAMBLES Here’s the catch: the JustCare program is extremely expensive. The price tag for the proposal to extend through September is $10.5 million. Once the program ramps up to full capacity, it will cost about $5,800 per month, per person, or just under $70,000 per person for a full year. About half of that is housing costs: leasing hotelrooms.
NEW REPORT PRESENTS CLEARER PICTURE ON E-SCOOTER SAFETY ISSUES New report presents clearer picture on e-scooter safety issues. On 01/11/2020. By. Kevin Schofield In transportation. Last May, I wrote an article discussing the safety of e-scooters, as Seattle was beginning to discuss a scooter-share program modeled after its existing bike-share program, and as other cities aggressively rolledout scooter share.
JUMP START TAX ARCHIVES Chamber of Commerce files legal challenge to Seattle payroll tax. This morning the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce announced that it has filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court arguing that the “Jump Start” payroll tax passed by the Seattle City Council last summer violates the Washington State Constitution. WHAT THE 9TH CIRCUIT ACTUALLY SAID ABOUT CRIMINALIZING What the 9th Circuit actually said about criminalizing homelessness. Last week there was a lot of press coverage, much of it inaccurate, regarding a ruling from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals related to whether cities can make it a criminal offense to “camp” or sleep on public property. Here’s what the ruling actually says, and whatit
LATEST SPD "STOPS AND DETENTIONS" REPORT SHOWS JUMP IN Here is SPD’s top-level numbers of Terry stops in 2018: All told, Terry stops increased by 18.5% from 2017, with the increase concentrated in three precincts: East, West and South. East Precinct had by far the biggest increase, both in absolute numbers and by percentage. According to the report, SPD is at a loss for what causedthis big spike
NOTES FROM TODAY'S COUNCIL MEETINGS A lot was said AND done today. This afternoon the Council passed several bills related to tenant protections. The first extends the Council’s moratorium on redevelopment of mobile-home parks for another six months while the city tries to resolve an appeal to its SEPA determination of a draft bill re-zoning the properties.. The second provides a defense to eviction for families with THIS WEEK IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS: JUNE 7-12, 2021 A trio of tenant-rights bills come up for approval Monday afternoon. Plus the Council starts to put together the Districting Commission. Monday morning’s weekly Council Briefing has no special presentations or executive sessions scheduled. SEATTLE PAYROLL TAX UPHELD IN SUPERIOR COURT RULING The legal challenge to the tax ordinance, brought by the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce, argued that it was an impermissible tax on employees’ right to earn a living, which the state Supreme Court found unconstitutional in Cary vs. Bellingham.The judge agreed with the City of Seattle that Cary didn’t apply here, since the tax was levied on employers, not employees, and barred HERBOLD CHALLENGES DIAZ ON REVERSAL OF OPA FINDINGS IN Last Thursday and continuing today, Councilmember Lisa Herbold and SPD Interim Chief Adrian Diaz have been exchanging emails over Diaz’s reversal of an OPA discipline recommendation last week.. Herbold chairs the City Council’s public safety committee, which hasoversight of SPD.
TUESDAY NEWS ROUNDUP There is much to read this morning. Let’s dig in. The Seattle Times, Seattle PI, KING, MyNorthwest, and Capitol Hill Seattle Blog cover the Council’s passage yesterday of several tenant protection bills.. KIRO reports that SPD has a large hiring class this year, which will almost make up for its large officer attrition over the past year.. The Urbanist covers a judge’s ruling upholdingMONDAY NEWS ROUNDUP
It looks like we’ll be getting some much-needed rain over the next few days. Here’s the Monday morning news. KING looks at how small landlords are reacting to Seattle’s recent string of renter protection ordinances.. The Seattle Times reports that a King County judge has ruled in favor of the city in the first challenge to Seattle’s payroll tax. CITY ROLLS OUT $30 MILLION "STRATEGIC INVESTMENT FUND" RFP It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. 911 CALL CENTER MOVES TO NEW CIVILIAN PUBLIC SAFETY AGENCY This afternoon the City Council passed an ordinance transferring the employees of SPD’s 911 call center to the newly-created Community Safety and Communications Center (CSCC), a civilian-led sister organization to the police department. But after a last-minute amendment, SPD’s parking enforcement officers were left in place until consensus can be reached on the right place to move them. THIS WEEK IN COUNCIL CHAMBER: MAY 17-21, 2021 The Council extends “cafe street” permitting, talks labor standards, and discusses how to spend federal ARPA relief funds. Monday morning’s Council Briefing will have a final presentation from the Office of Intergovernmental Relations on this year’s state legislative session. I-976 APPEAL GOES STRAIGHT TO THE STATE SUPREME COURT I-976 appeal goes straight to the state Supreme Court. Last week the parties challenging the constitutionality of Initiative 976 filed notice that they intended to appeal Judge Marshall Ferguson’s recent ruling directly to the state Supreme Court. Today they kicked off the arguments, with an emergency motion to stay Ferguson’s ruling until SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL INSIGHT It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. 2021 ELECTION CANDIDATES Here are the candidates who have filed for city elections in 2021, with links to their campaign filings on the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission website, and the candidates’ financial disclosure forms where available. This page will be updated as candidates file or drop out. Mayor: Jeffrey Applegate Henry Clay Dennison Financial disclosure James Donaldson Financial disclosureColleen
SAWANT SETTLES ETHICS CHARGE, ADMITTING VIOLATION On Monday, the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission will hold a special meeting at which it will vote on whether to approve a negotiated settlement with Councilmember Kshama Sawant over an ethics charge stemming from last year’s “Tax Amazon” ballot proposition campaign. The ethics charge is the basis for one of the three charges in the recall petition against Sawant. COUNCIL PATCHING UP PAYROLL TAX ORDINANCE TO TRY TO AVOID Tomorrow afternoon the City Council will likely give its final approval to a modification to the “Jump Start” payroll tax ordinance it passed last summer. If you read the memo written by Council staff, you will see a feel-good story about the city making this change as a result of feedback from companies. But that’s not what’s really going on with this change: in truth, it’s an NEW MCKINSEY REPORT DIVES INTO SEATTLE-AREA HOMELESSNESSMCKINSEY SEATTLE HOMELESSNESSMCKINSEY SEATTLE JOBSMCKINSEY SEATTLE OFFICEMCKINSEY COMPANY LOCATIONSMCKINSEY HEADQUARTERSMCKINSEY OFFICELOCATIONS
Late last month, the consulting firm McKinsey published a new report looking at the cause of the deep homelessness crisis in the Seattle/King County area — despite the obvious prosperity the region is enjoying.. The report is a follow-up from one the firm published two years ago in the midst of Seattle’s head-tax deliberations. The new report gets right to the point: the homelessness JUSTCARE PROGRAM FACES FISCAL CLIFF NEXT MONTH, SCRAMBLES The JustCare program, which takes a compassionate and constructive approach to bringing off the streets 130 of downtown Seattle’s homeless individuals causing the greatest issues, is set to run out ofmoney next month.
NEW REPORT PRESENTS CLEARER PICTURE ON E-SCOOTER SAFETY ISSUESHOVERBOARDS SAFETY ISSUESELECTRIC HOVERBOARD SCOOTERHOVERBOARD SAFETY RATINGSHOVERBOARD SCOOTER ATTACHMENTHOVERBOARD SCOOTER COMBO Last May, I wrote an article discussing the safety of e-scooters, as Seattle was beginning to discuss a scooter-share program modeled after its existing bike-share program, and as other cities aggressively rolled out scooter share. My conclusion was that there simply was not enough data to draw a definitive answer on e-scooter safety, though the early results presented reasons to be concerned. JUMP START TAX ARCHIVES This morning the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce announced that it has filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court arguing that the “Jump Start” payroll tax passed by the Seattle City Council last summer violates the Washington State Constitution. LATEST SPD "STOPS AND DETENTIONS" REPORT SHOWS JUMP IN Last week the Seattle Police Department published its annual report on stops and detentions, with numbers for 2018. It begins by noting that Terry stops are up substantially over 2017 numbers — but then it provides another 25 pages of text, tables and charts that offer little help in understanding why. WHAT THE 9TH CIRCUIT ACTUALLY SAID ABOUT CRIMINALIZING The ruling itself is a messy 72 pages; it’s an amended version of a ruling a 3-judge panel from the 9th Circuit handed down last September, along with a denial of a petition for the same three judges to rehear it, and also a denial of a petition for an en banc rehearing by the entire 9th Circuit. Several of the other judges who weren’t among the original three who heard the case decided to SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL INSIGHT It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. 2021 ELECTION CANDIDATES Here are the candidates who have filed for city elections in 2021, with links to their campaign filings on the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission website, and the candidates’ financial disclosure forms where available. This page will be updated as candidates file or drop out. Mayor: Jeffrey Applegate Henry Clay Dennison Financial disclosure James Donaldson Financial disclosureColleen
SAWANT SETTLES ETHICS CHARGE, ADMITTING VIOLATION On Monday, the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission will hold a special meeting at which it will vote on whether to approve a negotiated settlement with Councilmember Kshama Sawant over an ethics charge stemming from last year’s “Tax Amazon” ballot proposition campaign. The ethics charge is the basis for one of the three charges in the recall petition against Sawant. COUNCIL PATCHING UP PAYROLL TAX ORDINANCE TO TRY TO AVOID Tomorrow afternoon the City Council will likely give its final approval to a modification to the “Jump Start” payroll tax ordinance it passed last summer. If you read the memo written by Council staff, you will see a feel-good story about the city making this change as a result of feedback from companies. But that’s not what’s really going on with this change: in truth, it’s an NEW MCKINSEY REPORT DIVES INTO SEATTLE-AREA HOMELESSNESSMCKINSEY SEATTLE HOMELESSNESSMCKINSEY SEATTLE JOBSMCKINSEY SEATTLE OFFICEMCKINSEY COMPANY LOCATIONSMCKINSEY HEADQUARTERSMCKINSEY OFFICELOCATIONS
Late last month, the consulting firm McKinsey published a new report looking at the cause of the deep homelessness crisis in the Seattle/King County area — despite the obvious prosperity the region is enjoying.. The report is a follow-up from one the firm published two years ago in the midst of Seattle’s head-tax deliberations. The new report gets right to the point: the homelessness JUSTCARE PROGRAM FACES FISCAL CLIFF NEXT MONTH, SCRAMBLES The JustCare program, which takes a compassionate and constructive approach to bringing off the streets 130 of downtown Seattle’s homeless individuals causing the greatest issues, is set to run out ofmoney next month.
NEW REPORT PRESENTS CLEARER PICTURE ON E-SCOOTER SAFETY ISSUESHOVERBOARDS SAFETY ISSUESELECTRIC HOVERBOARD SCOOTERHOVERBOARD SAFETY RATINGSHOVERBOARD SCOOTER ATTACHMENTHOVERBOARD SCOOTER COMBO Last May, I wrote an article discussing the safety of e-scooters, as Seattle was beginning to discuss a scooter-share program modeled after its existing bike-share program, and as other cities aggressively rolled out scooter share. My conclusion was that there simply was not enough data to draw a definitive answer on e-scooter safety, though the early results presented reasons to be concerned. JUMP START TAX ARCHIVES This morning the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce announced that it has filed a lawsuit in King County Superior Court arguing that the “Jump Start” payroll tax passed by the Seattle City Council last summer violates the Washington State Constitution. LATEST SPD "STOPS AND DETENTIONS" REPORT SHOWS JUMP IN Last week the Seattle Police Department published its annual report on stops and detentions, with numbers for 2018. It begins by noting that Terry stops are up substantially over 2017 numbers — but then it provides another 25 pages of text, tables and charts that offer little help in understanding why. WHAT THE 9TH CIRCUIT ACTUALLY SAID ABOUT CRIMINALIZING The ruling itself is a messy 72 pages; it’s an amended version of a ruling a 3-judge panel from the 9th Circuit handed down last September, along with a denial of a petition for the same three judges to rehear it, and also a denial of a petition for an en banc rehearing by the entire 9th Circuit. Several of the other judges who weren’t among the original three who heard the case decided toMONDAY NEWS ROUNDUP
It looks like we’ll be getting some much-needed rain over the next few days. Here’s the Monday morning news. KING looks at how small landlords are reacting to Seattle’s recent string of renter protection ordinances.. The Seattle Times reports that a King County judge has ruled in favor of the city in the first challenge to Seattle’s payroll tax. THIS WEEK IN COUNCIL CHAMBERS: JUNE 7-12, 2021 A trio of tenant-rights bills come up for approval Monday afternoon. Plus the Council starts to put together the Districting Commission. Monday morning’s weekly Council Briefing has no special presentations or executive sessions scheduled. CITY ROLLS OUT $30 MILLION "STRATEGIC INVESTMENT FUND" RFP It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. HERBOLD CHALLENGES DIAZ ON REVERSAL OF OPA FINDINGS IN Last Thursday and continuing today, Councilmember Lisa Herbold and SPD Interim Chief Adrian Diaz have been exchanging emails over Diaz’s reversal of an OPA discipline recommendation last week.. Herbold chairs the City Council’s public safety committee, which hasoversight of SPD.
STATE SUPREME COURT DECIDES WHO COUNTS AS "NEWS MEDIA Last week the Washington State Supreme Court handed down a decision in a case where it was asked to decide whether a guy with a YouTube channel counts as “news media” for the purposes of certain state laws. It said “no,” but in the process made a broad ruling that has serious consequences for small news sites such as SCC Insight.. The Seattle times posted an editorial on the ruling EQUITABLE COMMUNITIES INITIATIVE TASK FORCE UNVEILS Mayor Durkan’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force today announced its recommendations for how to invest $30 million into the city’s BIPOC communities.. The task force, convened by the Mayor last fall, was chartered with deciding how “to make unprecedented and sustained investments in Black, Indigenous and people of colorcommunities.”
911 CALL CENTER MOVES TO NEW CIVILIAN PUBLIC SAFETY AGENCY This afternoon the City Council passed an ordinance transferring the employees of SPD’s 911 call center to the newly-created Community Safety and Communications Center (CSCC), a civilian-led sister organization to the police department. But after a last-minute amendment, SPD’s parking enforcement officers were left in place until consensus can be reached on the right place to move them.FRIDAY NEWS ROUNDUP
Welcome to the weekend! Here’s the news. The Seattle Times has a warning about scammers pretending to be from Seattle City Light.. Northwest Asian Weekly reports on the demotion of SPD’s first AAPI assistant chief for his role in last summer’s protests.. Capitol Hill Seattle Blog reports on the reawakening of Seattle, through the lens of Cal Anderson Park. THE SOCIALIST ALTERNATIVE DOCUMENTS Here is a collection of internal documents from Socialist Alternative. This is a topical guide, so some documents appear in more than one section. For context, please read this article. The “Smoking Guns” Letter from Council member Kshama Sawant acknowledging her “accountability” to Socialist Alternative Resolution approved by the Socialist Alternative National Committee (NC) and the STRATEGIC INVESTMENT FUND ARCHIVES It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million.Skip to content
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SEATTLE PAYROLL TAX UPHELD IN SUPERIOR COURT RULINGOn 06/04/2021
By Kevin Schofield In legal, tax
This afternoon, King County Superior Court Judge Mary Roberts ruled in favor of the City of Seattle, upholding as “constitutionally permissible” the city’s payroll tax enacted last summer and dismissing a lawsuit challenging it.Continue reading
CITY ROLLS OUT $30 MILLION “STRATEGIC INVESTMENT FUND” RFP FOR ANTI-DISPLACEMENT EFFORTSOn 06/04/2021
By Kevin Schofield In housing , neighborhoods It’s been a big week for investments in Seattle’s BIPOC communities. First, the City Council approved $1 million to allow the Office for Civil Rights to move the $30 million participatory budgeting program forward; then yesterday the Mayor’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force unveiled their recommendations for how to invest another $30 million. Now this morning, Mayor Durkan announced the release of an RFP for proposals for land and property acquisition “to respond to disproportionate displacement pressures impacting black, Indigenous, and people of color communities.”Continue reading
FRIDAY NEWS ROUNDUP
On 06/04/2021
By Kevin
Schofield In news
Welcome to the weekend! Here’s the news.Continue reading
STATE SUPREME COURT DECIDES WHO COUNTS AS “NEWS MEDIA,” AND IT’SNOT THIS SITE.
On 06/03/2021
By Kevin Schofield In legal Last week the Washington State Supreme Court handed down a decision in a case where it was asked to decide whether a guy with a YouTube channel counts as “news media” for the purposes of certain state laws. It said “no,” but in the process made a broad ruling that has serious consequences for small news sites such as SCC Insight. The Seattle times posted an editorial on the ruling this morning, in which it called this site “helpful.” That may or may not be true, but in either case the editorial muddies the waters somewhat on the issuesand …
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EQUITABLE COMMUNITIES INITIATIVE TASK FORCE UNVEILS RECOMMENDATIONS FOR $30 MILLION IN FUNDING FOR BIPOC COMMUNITIESOn 06/03/2021
By Kevin Schofield In public health , public safety Mayor Durkan’s Equitable Communities Initiative Task Force today announced its recommendations for how to invest $30 million into the city’s BIPOC communities.Continue reading
THURSDAY NEWS ROUNDUPOn 06/03/2021
By
Kevin Schofield In news Apparently the Seattle Times thinks this site is “helpful.”Here’s the news.
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WEDNESDAY NEWS ROUNDUPOn 06/02/2021
By
Kevin Schofield In news There’s a little bit of everything in the news this morning.Continue reading
NOTES FROM TODAY’S COUNCIL MEETINGSOn 06/01/2021
By Kevin Schofield Incouncil briefing ,
full council
It was, as predicted, a marathon City Council meeting this afternoon, with an hour of public comment and an hour and 15 minutes on a singlebill.
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TUESDAY NEWS ROUNDUPOn 06/01/2021
By Kevin
Schofield In news
Welcome back from a beautiful weekend that just won’t quit. Here’sthe news.
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THIS WEEK IN COUNCIL CHAMBERSOn 05/31/2021
By Kevin Schofield In thisweek
With the Memorial Day holiday, the schedule is a bit scrambled: Monday meetings are moved to Tuesday, and Tuesday meetings are on Friday. Here’s what’s up this week.Continue reading
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