
By Erica C. Barnett
The six men selected by the Seattle City Council as finalists for the District 2 city council seat vacated by Tammy Morales last year—Hong Chhuor, Adonis Ducksworth, Thaddaeus Gregory, Edward Lin, Chukundi Salisbury, and Mark Solomon— sat down with last night for a CityClub-sponsored forum to answer questions about their qualifications and priorities if they’re appointed to the position, for a term that ends in November.
The current council includes six brand-new members, many of whom have faced a steep learning curve over the past year. The person they appoint will also be a rookie, which makes it especially urgent that whoever’s appointed has a solid understanding of what the council does, what it can’t do, and the separation of powers between the legislative and executive branches.
The council will hold a special meeting with the candidates on Thursday at 1pm, but this was the only opportunity for the public to ask them questions directly.
Unfortunately for the general public , the forum, hosted by Seattle CityClub, focused almost entirely on leading questions about issues that are unlikely to come up at the council in the next nine months, including a perennial debate over cars on Lake Washington Blvd., gripes about people parking in front of other people’s houses, SPD’s approach to neighborhood policing, and “the threat of Sound Transit” in the Chinatown-International District.
The shot selection seems even odder (and niche) when you look at the questions submitted by community members during the event, which included substantive questions about the tensions between displacement and growth, the unaddressed issue of deadly collisions on Rainier Ave. S., Seattle’s status as a sanctuary city for immigrants and refugees, and much more.
Although the new council member will chair the land use committee, there were no questions at all about land use or the city’s Comprehensive Plan, which will take up much of the council’s time during the appointee’s nine-month term.
Instead, the forum included multiple questions, spanning 15 minutes, focused on residents of Seward Park and drivers who use Lake Washington Boulevard.
“Pedestrianization of Lake Washington Boulevard has been a long running debate, given that South Seattle has less access to park space than the north end. Do you think the street should be closed to cars for visitors to enjoy?” one question began. “Making Lake Washington Boulevard only accessible to pedestrians and bikes is not something many in D2 desire. Bike lanes were installed in D2 without widespread community input or warning. Will you commit to keeping Lake Washington Boulevard open to vehicles?” (All said yes.)
And a followup, which moderator Tony Benton, of Rainier Avenue Radio, said he was asking on behalf of “me and my fellow community members who live near Lake Washington”: “When Lake Washington is shut down for cars, and it’s just walking, that’s cool, except all those cars park in our neighborhood and take up our parking spaces and sometimes don’t respect the property because they’re just coming to visit. And I know this is a complicated issue, but I’m just sharing with you the experience [of] some of us have who live very near the lake. When … folks park wherever they want to … what do you think about that?”
The city council does not control the Seattle Department of Transportation—the mayor does, and he has shown no interest in removing cars from Lake Washington Blvd. Parking enforcement is a function of the Seattle Police Department, which also answers to the mayor, not the council. SPD could decide to shift resources to foot patrols, but has not done so.
The city did consider making Lake Washington Blvd. car-free after a pilot closure during the pandemic, part of a citywide program to give people places to congregate safely outdoors. But SDOT ultimately rejected the idea of making the closure permanent, and instead has added spot improvements to slow drivers down, such as speed humps. The department has continued to hold its popular summer-only Bicycle Weekends, when a portion of the street becomes car-free for eight hours a day on Saturdays and Sundays.
PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you.
CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.
Another question presented light rail as an existential danger: “What is your position on the threat of Sound Transit to businesses, residents and community members of the Chinatown International District?” Views are sharply divided in the neighborhood about whether a new light rail station should serve the area or skip it; many see the new rail line as a benefit whose construction impacts can be mitigated, not a threat that needs to be moved outside the neighborhood. The new council member will not serve on the council’s transportation committee or the 18-member Sound Transit board, where the Seattle City Council gets just one seat, currently held by Dan Strauss.
One question was about the fate of small businesses like those in Columbia City, several of which, Benton said, recently claimed they were at risk of closing because of crime, lack of police response, and Seattle’s minimum wage. In response, several of the applicants said they’d push to bring police foot patrols back to the neighborhood—a decision that is up to SPD, and which, like ground-level parking enforcement decisions and Sound Transit’s station locations, the city council has no power to control.
Unlike those who submitted “live” questions online, members of the public who showed up to the Columbia City Theater in person did get a few minutes to ask questions, but they had a strict 10-second limit, which made for a strangely clipped and confrontational close to the event. “If you start talking about the circumstance, I’m going to say, ‘take the mic’ and we’re going to give it to the next person,” Benton instructed. Each applicant had just 30 seconds to answer each audience question, with a verbal interruption at 15 seconds—not the best format for responding to questions like “what do you understand the role of a City Councilmember to be?” and “how will you prioritize environmental justice in this district?”
If you’re curious how the six finalists answered all these questions, you can watch the forum for yourself on the Seattle Channel. Or you can read the candidates’ applications and watch tomorrow’s special 1:00 meeting—the second and final opportunity to hear from the applicants before the council chooses a finalist at next Monday’s council meeting.

Sadly, this is pretty typical of both City Club and moderator Tony Benton. City Club could have made it clear to the moderator what the Council actually does and does not do, as well as what the City Council’s stated priorities for 2025 are. By leaving the questions to the moderator, this very D2-centric moderator is going to ask questions that local residents want to know about. While those questions may appear off-base to Erica Barnett, these questions have been raging on social media for the past 5-6 years.
Erica has made clear for a decade that, as a proud urbanist, she much prefers Lake Washington Boulevard closed to cars, or at least closed much more often. She has sided with the bike lobby repeatedly (even though the overwhelming majority of the bike lobby who have participated in SDOTs “outreach” about LWB are from north of the ship canal, not South Seattle. And while the Mayor does “control” SDOT, anyone not new to Seattle would be well aware that not only does SDOT routinely give reports to the full council, they report regularly to the Transportation Committee.
While the person who will fill the D2 seat will Chair the Land Use Committee, if that person runs and retains the seat, they will chair another committee(s) in the future. Also, the previous occupant of the D2 seat, Tammy Morales, did sit on the Transportation Committee, and she was one who had strongly supported closure of LWB. She’s also the one who greatly softened the regulations allowing semi-truck tractors and trailers to park throughout the neighborhood. On any given night, there can be 60-80 big rigs scattered around low- and affordable housing buildings in Rainier Beach. In the (exceedingly rare) even that one is ticketed for violating the ban on daytime parking, the ticket is less than one pays for OT parking downtown. This is another contentious issue that has roiled SE neighborhood social media for years.
Where do I sign up to join the bike lobby? Is there also a pedestrian lobby? It’s almost as if a few visible cyclists are somehow equivalent to AAA and the immensely powerful auto and oil/gas industries.
Someday Seattle’s planners will learn that cities are for people, not cars.
People drive cars (80% of Seattle households own one, by the most recent count).
You can Google the Cascade Bike Club and Transportation Choices Coalition yourself, scooter.
Try Feetfirst.org
Your stat about the surveys is BS btw. The actual reports are clear that 98118 residents overwhelmingly supported both permanent changes to the lanes and more frequent traffic closures on LWB. Just because Coexisit doesn’t like the results doesn’t mean they aren’t legitimate.
Lin clearly has experience working in the city administrative system and seems like the best option. Do voters in D2 have any way to give their input to the council?
D2 residents can submit their opinions to the Council via email, council@seattle.gov
This will get to all 8 Council members, who are the ones who will make the decision known next Monday, January 27.
Out of these options, Lin seems like the best, though he was also nominated by the sole progressive on the council so who knows if he stands a chance.