A young man testified in front of the City Council on Tuesday.
Bob Kettle accused Tammy Morales of failing to do due diligence before proposing legislation to release funds collected from a payroll tax increase this year.
By Erica C. Barnett
The Seattle City Council narrowly rejected a proposal from Councilmember Tammy Morales to release the full $20 million that’s supposed to be collected this year to fund youth mental health services. The previous council voted 6-3 to approve an increase in the JumpStart payroll tax for this purpose.
Dan Strauss, who voted with Sara Nelson, Maritza Rivera, Cathy Moore, and Bob Kettle against Morales’ proposal, then introduced an amendment that added $2.25 million for gun violence prevention to the $10 million the council has agreed to spend this year; the remaining funds will go back into the city’s JumpStart fund and can be used to address the city’s $260 million budget deficit.
The vote was virtually identical to the one the council, convened as the nine-member budget committee, took last week. What was different was the level of vitriol council members directed at both the original tax increase, adopted by a previous council that the new council has turned into a synecdoche for government waste.
Rivera kicked things off by asking Deputy Mayor Tiffany Washington a series of leading questions about the actions of the previous council in order to establish that that council, unlike this one, “didn’t do the research,” chose $20 million as “an arbitrary figure that was not actually needed,” and “did not get guidance from mental health professionals.”
Saka (who ultimately voted for the proposal) piled on, saying there had been “no rational basis” for increasing the JumpStart tax to fund programs to improve student mental health, a comment that prompted astonished looks from some of the kids who had just testified about how such programs had benefited them.
Then Kettle jumped in, saying the previous council (which also included Lisa Herbold, Alex Pedersen, Debora Juarez, and Teresa Mosqueda, now on the King County Council) had shown an “absolute lack of good governance… lack of coordination, lack of anything, really.” Kettle then launched into a little interrogative exercise with Washington and Human Services Department director Tanya Kim, who were both on hand to answer questions.
Speaking about Morales as if she was not sitting right there, Kettle asked both executive staffers to confirm that Morales had not coordinated with the mayor or HSD when drafting her legislation to release the $10 million to the Department of Education and Early Learning. (Council members are part of the legislative branch, and are not required to seek approval from the executive branch before proposing legislation). Then, he turned to Council Central Staff director Ben Noble, who contradicted him—saying that “yes,” Morales did work with Central Staff on the legislation.
Kettle didn’t appear to like that answer, and corrected Noble, saying he clearly only meant yes “in the sense of getting the amendment into the system, calendaring, you know, into the system.” Noble responded that in fact, central staff put the same work into Morales’ amendment that they would put into any amendment, including an analysis of the underlying policy. Kettle switched tacks again, summarizing for Noble: “So, clearly, not with the executive, the people who have to carry out what needs to be done.”
It was a weird moment, made weirder by all the leading questions that gave the mayor’s office an opening to talk about how personally insulted and hurt Harrell and his staff were by the suggestion that the mayor would use mental health funding to close the budget gap.
“The mayor cares about this issue very greatly,” Washington said, “and so to just hear it put out there like he’s just going to take this money for mental health and [use it to] close the deficit gap was hard for me to hear, and very untrue, because he doesn’t have the power to do that.”
As the central staff analysis of the underlying legislation notes, in the absence of explicit action by the council to spend the full $20 million, “the remaining $10 million in appropriation authority will go unused, and the funds will either remain in the JumpStart Payroll Expense Tax Fund balance and be available for spending in 2025 or future years, or the appropriation could be abandoned, and the monies diverted to other eligible purposes in 2024.”
Screenshot from one of SPD’s new recruitment ads, produced under a $2.6 million marketing contract that the city council just voted to expand.
By Erica C. Barnett
The Seattle City Council approved Mayor Bruce Harrell’s midyear budget adds virtually unchanged on Wednesday, despite several efforts by Councilmember Tammy Morales to amend the proposal.
Morales wanted to release all of the the approximately $20 million the city will collect in payroll taxes for youth mental health programs this year, instead of waiting until next year or later to spend all the money. Morales said her amendment would “maintain the commitment” the council made to students, who organized in response to a shooting at Ingraham High School in 2022, during last year’s budget.
The mayor’s office, which recently released its plan to spend $10 million of the money collected this year, has said that because the tax was only proposed, and approved, at the end of last year’s budget process, the city needs more time to come up with a plan to allocate all the funds in the future. Channeling this argument, Councilmember Bob Kettle called Morales’ comments “an injustice to the executive,” then went further, arguing that the proposal to fund student programs “came out of nowhere” and emerged “out of the blue” last year.
Council President Sara Nelson jumped on that one, saying she could tell Kettle exactly why there was suddenly an extra $20 million for youth mental health care: Because former councilmember Kshama Sawant wanted to raise taxes before exiting the stage, essentially creating a budget problem by providing too much money for students without a clear spending plan.
Obviously, it takes time to figure out how to spend a sudden windfall and, having done that, to get the money out the door. A larger concern, for those who want to see the full $20 million go to mental health services for young people in the future, is that once the funding is rolled back into the larger JumpStart fund this year (and used, as it inevitably will be, to help patch the city’s ongoing budget hole), it will be harder to claw back for its intended purpose in future years. Council members have already expressed skepticism about the entire $20 million, suggesting that perhaps the city should reconsider getting into “a whole new line of business” and let the funding lapse back into the larger, easy-to-pilfer JumpStart fund.
PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you. CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.
The council also rejected a Morales proposal to redirect funding for 19 new members of the Unified Care Team, which removes encampments, toward the similarly named CARE Team, a group of social workers who are dispatched, along with police, to certain non-emergency 911 calls. Earlier this year, Harrell announced the city would take back funding it had been providing the King County Regional Homelessness Authority for outreach, reallocating it to the UCT.
The 19 new UCT members would include 14 people with the title “counselor,” who would “support outreach-led encampment resolutions, provide referrals to shelter during encampment removals and provide support to individuals to move out of immediate hazard/obstruction locations,” according to a budget memo.
Finally, the council approved adding $800,000 to an existing $2.6 million police marketing contract, with a new provision from Councilmember Cathy Moore stipulating that half the money has to be aimed at recruiting women. Moore’s amendment replaced a proposal from Morales that would have not allowed SPD to spend the same $400,000 until it reported to the council on how it is currently spending the marketing dollars to recruit women and a status update on its goal of a 30-percent female recruit class by 2030.
Public safety committee chair Kettle objected to Morales’ amendment, saying that while he is “110 percent behind” efforts to recruit more women to SPD, I don’t think [the amendment is] needed in the sense that everything I see regarding recruitment, everything I see, is already including women in those recruitment efforts.
In fact, Kettle added, “I haven’t seen anything but women in [SPD’s] recruitment efforts.”
As PubliCola reported earlier this week, the marketing firm SPD hired on a no-bid “piggyback” contract, Copacino Fujikado, produced three video ads that exclusively feature male, apparently white, officers rescuing people from dangerous situations, including one in which a male officer saves a crying woman bound with rope from a man who is holding her and another woman hostage.
Nearly 1,200 city employees represented by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, which includes the line workers, tree trimmers, electricians, and other workers at Seattle City Light, won’t get their approved raises and retroactive pay until November at the earliest, even though the city approved their most recent contract in June. The contract covers the years 2023 through 2026, so the city owes these workers retroactive pay increases for 2023 and 2024, in addition to wage increases going forward.
The city is blaming the implementation of Workday, a new payroll and HR management system, for the delay. If this sounds familiar, that’s because the city gave the exact same explanation for delaying wage increases for about 7,000 city employees covered by the Coalition of City Unions (CCU), whose own contracts were approved in April.
The city’s plan was to hold on to the money for those workers’ pay increases until October, when the city then said Workday would be fully implemented and stable, but union members pushed back (and PubliCola stayed on the story), and the city decided it could get their checks out the door before Workday implementation after all.
According to the city, the reason Local 77 employees will have to wait until the end of 2024 for their 2023 and 2024 raises is that their contract was approved months after the Coalition contracts, making it impossible to plug the pay changes into Workday before it goes live in the fall.
“The Workday project was closed to any additional configuration changes by the time the IBEW contract was ratified, and therefore could not be implemented prior to go-live,” said Callie Craighead, a spokeswoman for Mayor Bruce Harrell. “It is a standard best practice for software projects in the final phase of implementation to hold on further configuration changes prior to go-live as we want to ensure City employees are paid correctly. Once Workday is live and the system is through the initial stabilization period, the City will implement outstanding ratified agreements.”
But the union isn’t buying that explanation. In a July 3 letter to Harrell and the City Council, IBEW 77 Business Representative Steve Kovac said it was “beyond comprehension” that the city found a way to implement pay increases for most of its employees, but not IBEW-represented workers.
PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you. CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.
“It was explained to me that payroll management reported that ‘it’s just too hard’ to pay the increases and retro prior to implementing Workday,” Kovac wrote. “I hope this isn’t the new mantra for the City. Our members don’t have the option of saying they won’t do their job because ‘it’s just too hard.'” Kovac told PubliCola the contract was actually ready to go last year, but the city’s labor relations division kept delaying negotiations, citing the need for new members of the city’s Labor Relations Policy Committee, which includes three brand-new council members, to get up to speed.
Kovac said no one at the mayor’s office or any city council office has responded to the union’s letter.
“These are people who haven’t had a pay raise in two years. They dealt with double-digit inflation in those two years, and the city doesn’t seem to care,” Kovac said. The union has filed an Unfair Labor Practice complaint against the city over the delays, along with grievances for discrimination against the city for not following the terms of the contract. “It says ‘full force and effect,’ and it says … that payroll errors will be fixed within two pay periods. As far as I’m concerned, not paying our raises is a payroll error.”
The new contract includes retroactive pay increases of 5 percent and 4.5 percent for 2023 and 2024, respectively; compounded, that’s almost 10 percent. Starting in 2025, workers’ pay increases will be based on inflation and set at a minimum of 2 percent and a maximum of 4 percent.
One worker represented by the union, who requested anonymity, said she has been unable to pay her mortgage and had to stop paying union dues because she had made financial decisions—including buying a house—based on the understanding that her raise, which will add up to about $7.50 an hour starting next year, would go through once the city approved the new contract. Now, she’s wondering how she’ll be able to pay her expenses while she waits several more months for her raise, and retroactive pay for 2023 and 2024, to take effect.
“This is not something new,” she said. “It certainly is something that they knew they were planning for. If our contract expired at the end of 2022, then you’ve known that you’re going to have to give retroactive wages since 2022. This is not a surprise.”
“I don’t think the city realizes how much this is having a real effect on our finances and our wellbeing,” the employee said.
The city sets aside money to pay for retroactive and future wage increases well in advance, Kovac noted. “That money goes into an account and makes interest, and we don’t get any interest.” PubliCola has asked the city whether funds for future wage increases are invested in interest-bearing accounts, and if so, what kind.
Craighead, from the mayor’s office, said Workday is expected to launch in September. Problems with Workday delayed hundreds of research grants at the University of Washington earlier this year, and employees for the city of Los Angeles have been dealing with under- and overpayments for months after the city implemented Workday, at about double its initial price tag, earlier this year.
1. The Seattle Police Department recently released a set of recruitment ads featuring cartoon versions of police officers in various heroic scenarios—saving a bus rider’s
life with CPR, saving a man from drowning, and saving two women from a hostage situation—each based on “a real story of the Seattle Police Department,” according to the ads.
Last year, PubliCola reported that SPD had signed a $2.6 million contract with the Seattle-based marketing firm Copacino Fujikado to produce a marketing campaign, including video and radio ads, aimed at boosting recruitment. Copacino Fujikado was able to procure the contract without competitive bidding because it was structured as a “piggyback” onto an existing contract the company signed with Sound Transit in 2018.
The ads each feature what appears to be a white, male officer rescuing people from various scenarios. Over each, a female narrator describes the scenario in a tone of deep, almost reverent concern. “On a weekday afternoon in Seattle’s Lake City neighborhood, an emergency dispatch went out on the radio. A man on a bus wasn’t breathing,” the narrator intones on the first ad, titled “First On the Scene”:
“The first to arrive was the newest officer in the North Precinct. Just weeks out from the academy. He approached the bus. … The officer could see the man’s face was pale. Even from afar, he knew that he had to take action quickly.” The ad continues in this overwrought style until the final scene, when the man—rescued by CPR—looks into the officer’s eyes and says “Thank you” before the image dissolves into a blue SPD badge on a white background. “A job with impact. From the first second,” it reads.
The other two ads are similar, each featuring what appears to be a young, white male officer in the hero role. (SPD has struggled to recruit officers who don’t fit this stereotype, particularly women, amid widespread complaints that the culture of the department is unwelcoming and misogynistic.) In one video, an officer saves a man from drowning; in the other, he rescues two women, one of them weeping and bound with rope, from a man holding them hostage in an apartment.
Mayor Bruce Harrell’s mid-year supplemental budget includes $800,000 for Cupertino Fujikado to produce additional ads and marketing materials for the recruitment campaign. In an announcement last month, the CEO of the firm, Scott Foreman, said, “We are proud to share these untold stories, which demonstrate the depth and richness of a career in the Seattle Police Department and the diverse opportunities available within the department.”
A spokesman for Harrell noted that SPD recruitment has increased since “we’ve ramped up our advertising,” increasing to 16 applications a day, on average, in July. However, most of that increase occurred well before the current ad campaign. According to a June 16 announcement from the Public Safety Civil Service Commission, applications increased to an average of 15 a day in May and June. While the PSCSC noted SPD’s marketing efforts, a more influential factor might be the 24 percent raises that went into effect under a new police contract adopted in May that raised the starting salary for a brand-new officer to $103,000 a year—more than any other police department in the region.
2. On Monday, Mayor Harrell informed thousands of city and county employees that they will be required to return to their offices or work sites three days a week starting in November. King County Executive Dow Constantine sent a similar email to county employees, saying he was asking department leaders to come up with a return-to-office plan by next year, and Sound Transit is expected to follow suit.
The city, Harrell told employees, is “committed to learning the best lessons from the pandemic—and that includes recognizing the benefits of in-person work.
According to Harrell’s “return to worksite” email, working in physical offices has already “improved collaboration, a strengthened ability to foster conversations and explore new ideas, enhanced community and relationship building, and a real commitment to mentorship and employee growth, while still allowing flexibility that remote work can provide.” This is a common, if largely unsupported, argument for traditional office arrangements: Get everybody back at the watercooler, and those creative juices will really have a chance to flow!
Surveys of US workers have shown over and over that employees greatly prefer remote work because it provides better work-life balance, allows daytime flexibility (particularly for caregivers, who tend to be women), and gives people more autonomy over their own time. Working from home can also reduce distractions, allowing people to work in a more quiet and controlled environment than a busy, noisy office. It also eliminates commutes, which can add hours of stressful unpaid time to every work day, clogging freeways, and contributing to climate change, a problem the city of Seattle is constantly claiming it wants to address.
And while Harrell has suggested it is the obligation of workers, including government workers, to save businesses in downtown Seattle by coming back to the area and spending money there, working from home benefits businesses in neighborhoods outside the downtown core, which are also part of Harrell’s “One Seattle.”
Harrell’s email does not cite any data or examples of concrete benefits from office work.
After Harrell’s announcement, City Councilmember Maritza Rivera released her own statement, saying Harrell’s order was inadequate and that city employees “can’t provide” the “most complete and highest quality services” unless they are physically located at desks in downtown Seattle. Rivera said she supports an immediate four-day-a-week in-office mandate.
Donnitta Sinclair Martin, whose son was killed at CHOP in 2020, confronts the Community Police Commission at a meeting in May.
The CPC, which is supposed to represent community views and come up with recommendations to improve police accountability, has struggled for years, with frequent staff upheavals, political disputes, and a lack of internal accountability.
By Erica C. Barnett
In late April, as the Seattle City Council considered a contract with the Seattle Police Officers Guild that would give all police officers a 24 percent pay increase, the city’s Community Police Commission held a public meeting at the Van Asselt Community Center in Southeast Seattle to get the public’s input on the agreement.
The CPC is the community-based arm of the three-pronged police accountability system Seattle established in response to a federal consent decree in 2012; its mission is to listen to feedback from diverse communities and advocate for policies that improve police accountability. In 2017, the city adopted a landmark police accountability law that professionalized the CPC and made it fully independent.
“This is the first of many meetings that we’re going to have on the contract,” CPC executive director Cali Ellis told the small crowd, who were sparsely distributed on folding chairs throughout the community center’s gym.
Right away, though, it was clear that most people hadn’t shown up to talk about the SPOG contract. Donnitta Sinclair Martin, whose 19-year-old son, Horace Lorenzo Anderson, was fatally shot in the CHOP protest area in 2020, stood up. The city, she said, had failed to take accountability for her son’s death—and the CPC had failed to put pressure on them to do so. “And we sit here having these meetings. I came here to ask you: What are we going to do? And when are we going to do it?”
CPC co-chair Joel Merkel, sitting with Ellis at the front of the room, responded, “Thank you,” prompting Martin to snap, “No, that’s not the answer!” Ellis remained silent, wearing a placid smile. “Don’t smile at a mother that lost their child. Please don’t smile. Because you could be in the same position. What happened to me can happen to you. So don’t. Don’t smile. This is not funny,” Martin said.
Other speakers criticized the CPC and the city’s police accountability system, prompting the CPC’s other two co-chairs, Rev. Patricia Hunter and Rev. Harriett Walden, to argue that the CPC’s role was to recommend policies for SPD to adopt, not protest against the police. “Marching in the street is important,” Hunter said. “We may feel good at the end of the day because we marched the street, but if the policies didn’t change, then nothing happened.”
As the meeting wound down, SPD staffer Victoria Beach stood up and apologized to Ellis and Merkel. “I have to say, this was a waste of time coming here. This isn’t the time or place for these kinds of conversations,” she said. “I’m sorry about you being humiliated. I support you. This is ridiculous.”
Afterward, accusations flew about who was to blame for the poorly attended forum, which ended up being the only meeting the CPC ever held on the contract, despite the commission’s promises that it would be the first of many meetings. One staffer told PubliCola that the CPC had failed to engage with the community before holding the meeting, which was scheduled on the same night as a major public safety forum in the Central District. Another said the fact that the CPC had not allowed public comment for more than a year made it inevitable that pent-up frustrations would come pouring out. A consultant who was hired to facilitate CPC meetings filed a critical internal report about the meeting, and was quickly relieved of her duties. And commissioners pointed the finger at staff, saying they failed to rise to the occasion or had even tried to sabotage the event.
It was, in other words, a mess. And if it had been a one-off planning failure, it probably wouldn’t matter. The CPC could figure out what went wrong, regroup, and hold another meeting. It could do better outreach in the future. Heads, if necessary, could roll.
But the fiasco was a sign that something was fundamentally amiss with a group whose primary purpose is to channel public input on police accountability and turn it into policy
For the better part of a decade, the CPC’s internal and external problems have recurred on a predictable cycle, suggesting that the flaws in the agency aren’t due to any particular director, set of staffers, or group of commissioners, but are endemic to the body itself. After more than a year of dramatic upheavals and messy meetings—including a different public forum, last February, that devolved into a tearful screaming match—the CPC is once again at a critical inflection point. I wanted to understand why this commission, among all the other agencies in the city, keeps falling apart.
Over the past two months, I spoke to many current and former CPC members, staff, and people involved in establishing the CPC. They describe a top-down organization where employees have no formal outlet to complain about abusive behavior by management or commissioners; where community engagement staffers are devalued and required to carry out menial tasks; where communities affected by violence are ignored or harmed; and where a few people at the top dictate the priorities and practices of an organization that was meant to be a bottom-up reflection of community values.
Most of the people I talked to have come to the conclusion that the CPC isn’t workable in its current form. While many, especially current and recent staff, were deeply critical of Ellis’s leadership, they also described structural issues that go beyond current staff and commissioners—issues that have been present for many years.
In addition to the CPC, the 2017 accountability ordinance established two other “accountability partners”: The Office of Police Accountability, which investigates police misconduct claims and the Office of the Inspector General, which oversees OPA and SPD. Of the three city-funded bodies, only the CPC is administratively separate and independent from the city, with no direct line of accountability to the executive or legislative branch. Three of its 15 members serve as co-chairs; these co-chairs are the direct supervisors of the executive director, who in turn oversees of staff of about seven people.
Of the three accountability agencies, the CPC is supposed to be the one most responsive to, and representative of, communities impacted by violence and police misconduct.
“For the CPC’s first five years, it functioned as it was intended—as a platform for the combined insights of various community sectors on public safety, policing and police accountability,” said Lisa Daugaard, a founding CPC member who served through 2019. Daugaard is the co-director ofPurpose Dignity Action (formerly the Public Defender Association), which created the LEAD diversion program. “The whole point was to ensure that community expertise was not shoved to the side or steamrolled over by officials’ pronouncements that everything was solved.”
“We were also intended to forge consensus from divergent points of view, and we did that, bridging the gap from accountability activists to active duty police officers and commanders,” Daugaard said.
But since the city formalized the three-prong police accountability structure in 2017, the CPC has struggled to have an impact. For years, commissioners have complained that the city ignores the CPC’s recommendations, and over time, many insiders say, the commission has become less like a committee of dedicated subject matter experts and more like a club overseen by an insular group of leaders who preside over a constantly changing cast of characters.
Former commissioners described arriving to their first meetings eager to gather community feedback and come up with policy recommendations that would make a meaningful difference in people’s lives, only to leave months or years later, convinced that their time had been wasted.
“The CPC is a great idea in theory, but the CPC does not have the power to change things,” a former commissioner, Alina Santillan, said. “The entire time I was there, we wrote a lot of letters, recommended a lot of things, expressed disappointment. … I don’t think the CPC has ever been bold in the statements we’ve made or the things we’ve advocated for, and that has resulted in a lot of harm, both internally and externally.”
“A Lack of Leadership”
Current and former CPC staff point to the current executive director, Cali Ellis, as the source of recent problems within the agency.
Ellis, originally hired as the CPC’s policy director, was promoted to the top position after the commission put then-director Brandy Grant on leave in late 2022 (Grant subsequently resigned.) Although some on the City Council questioned whether Ellis—an academic and policy expert who had never held a management position—was prepared to take on the permanent job, the council approved her appointment in December 2023 after a delay of about four months. Ellis’ husband, Steven Ellis, is a legislative aide for Sara Nelson, who is now city council president and who voted to approve Ellis’ appointment.
Several staffers and commissioners praised Ellis’ work as policy director, where her job involved overseeing a small staff of analysts who do research and come up with proposals to improve police accountability in Seattle. But once she became head of the entire CPC, staff began raising concerns about her management style, which staffers and a CPC commissioner described to PubliCola as condescending, indecisive, and controlling.
As an example, several people independently mentioned a CPC work group that was asked to research and make recommendation on two potential police surveillance tools—a Shotspotter-style acoustic gunshot locator system and CCTV cameras—earlier this year. Ellis assigned a CPC staffer to help the group with their work.
Once the group was ready to present their recommendations, however, Ellis and the CPC co-chairs used a flurry of procedural objections to delay their presentation, telling the group that commission bylaws required them to attend the commission’s governance subcommittee meeting, which is made up of the CPC co-chairs and Ellis, prior to the regular CPC meeting. Members of the group, which was made up entirely of Black commissioners, expressed frustration that they were being sidelined, and some suspected that the reason was that the recommendations didn’t explicitly support the surveillance technologies.
Co-chair Harriett Walden, who has served on the commission since 2013, is a veteran of the police accountability movement, founding a group called Mothers for Police Accountability in 1990. In recent years, Walden has become a vocal advocate for more police presence in communities of color, and she was an avid supporter of the surveillance tools, arguing they would help reduce gun violence in Black communities.
Her views are generally shared by her co-chair, Rev. Hunter, and decried by other Black advocates for accountability—a reminder, if anybody needed one, that no group of people impacted by city policies is monolithic. (Hunter resigned her CPC position in June, leaving Merkel and Walden as the two co-chairs).
The delay in the Shotspotter and CCTV recommendations led one staffer to make the unusual move of calling out Ellis in a public meeting for her “lack of leadership.”
“Thiswassomethingthatwewereaskedto dobyourexecutivedirector, Cali,withtheexpectationthatwewouldbetalkingaboutittoday,” the staffer said during a regular CPC meeting in February. “ItwassomethingthatweweretoldwasurgentandapriorityfortheCPC,andthatweneededtoworkreallyquicklytogetitdone.Sowegottogetherandwegotitdone,andthenweweretoldthatwecouldn’ttalkaboutittoday.” Moments later, the staffer said Ellis had instructed them over Teams to stop talking, so they did.
The work group was finally able to present their recommendations in March. But at the following meeting, the CPC didn’t even bring the recommendations up for a vote. Instead, they put out a statement written by a white CPC member, attorney Lynne Wilson, who was not involved in the work group; it said the CPC “does not oppose a time-limited and location-limited surveillance pilot with the primary aim of reducing gun violence in our City,” given that “a significant number of CPC Commissioners report that the communities they represent are profoundly suffering from the daily trauma of increasing gun violence in Seattle.”
At a meeting in March, Wilson said she worked with Walden on the statement and had proposed it on a fast time frame in what she called “my Mothers [for Police Accountability] mode,” which she had developed over 30 years of working with Walden.
PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you. CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.
The statement did not go over well with those who researched and drafted the original recommendations. “All the people who worked on it were people of color, and what we used was something one white lady put together from her own brain,” one CPC staffer said. “They felt super disrespected by that, and since then they have been super disengaged from the commission and the work groups.”
Ellis was abruptly put on administrative leave in late July for reasons co-chair Merkel declined to discuss; she did not respond to questions sent to her personal email. The commission’s co-chairs are currently in the process of hiring a deputy executive director to support her or a future executive director—in the hope that that person can share the load of a role that has been a challenge for every person who has filled it over the past eight years.
“A Vacuum of Accountability”
Current and former staffers say they were unable to get anyone to listen or take action on issues with Ellis’ management—not the City Council that approved of her appointment, not the mayor, and not the human resources department that ordinarily adjudicates internal workplace disputes. This, they say, is because of the CPC’s unique position as an independent agency: Other than the appointment process, the council and mayor are supposed to have no direct involvement in internal CPC decisions, and the CPC’s bylaws provide no recourse for staffers to complaint to HR about the director.
In practice, staffers say, they did talk to HR and the CPC’s internal ombudsman about Ellis but were told nothing could be done. This lack of internal accountability, current and former staffers said, is a key reason internal issues tend to escalate to the point where everyone goes on leave or quits.
“We were operating in a vacuum of accountability,” a former staffer said.
As the council deliberated over Ellis’ appointment, several staffers who opposed her appointment sought a meeting with then-City Council public safety committee chair Lisa Herbold, a longtime champion for police accountability who held considerable sway over the decision. Ellis, who had access to the email account of another staffer who had just quit in response to her nomination, found out about the meeting from an email to that staffer and ordered her staffers not to go, according to several people who were on staff at the time.
Eventually, staffers did meet with Herbold to express their concerns about Ellis. Although Herbold ultimately voted to approve Ellis’ appointment, she conditioned her support on the requirement that Ellis get executive coaching, according to emails PubliCola obtained through a records request.
The CPC’s three co-chairs—Walden, Merkel, and Hunter—pushed back on the coaching requirement, according to an email exchange. They argued that Ellis had performed “admirably” in the face of “unprofessional and insubordinate conduct” by staff, including the request for a meeting with Herbold, and showed “emotional intelligence, professionalism, and clarity on the vision and goals of the CPC.”
Herbold, who was wrapping up her final year on the council, told PubliCola that the four-month delay in Ellis’ appointment “was related to a number of factors ranging from the budget process to my efforts to secure agreement from the CPC co-chairs on several matters related to the confirmation process.” Herbold declined to comment on Ellis’ performance.
Community Police Commission Director Cali Ellis and Co-Chair Joel Merkel
“We Were Constantly Told That We Weren’t Doing Work”
Community engagement is the core of the commission’s work; as the city’s only police accountability agency designed to reflect and represent community input, the CPC’s small community engagement staff is critical to its mission. But current and former CPC staffers and commissioners say community engagement staffers, and their work, have been devalued for many years.
At the CPC, community engagement involves listening to community concerns, gathering feedback for the commission, and helping direct the policy staff toward solutions the commission can then advocate for with the mayor, city council, and state legislative leaders.
Current and former staffers said Ellis’ behavior toward the community engagement staff could be dictatorial and demeaning.
“One of the things that has been consistent with the CPC is their lack of respect for community engagement staff and not valuing community engagement as much as they value policy work,” Roxana Pardo Garcia, who served as the CPC’s first community engagement director, said. Commissioners told staff that they suspected them of not doing any actual work, Pardo Garcia said, and that “we were resistant and defiant.” In reality, she said, “we would do all this work and it would never make it to the CPC agenda.”
Exit interview documents from several other staff paint a similar picture; according to a memo submitted by a former community engagement staffer when she quit, “Commissioners and executive directors repeatedly characterized the Community Engagement team as untrustworthy, lazy, and unskilled,” and accused them of “riding the gravy train.”
Last year, all three community engagement staffers went on medical leave because of stress and stress-related illnesses, as did Ellis’ executive assistant; all four are Black, and three have since left the agency. (Historically, community engagement staffers have been mostly people of color, and policy staff have been mostly white).
According to one staffer, CPC employees “take the appropriate avenues by going to HR and [the CPC’s internal] ombudsman, but there is literally nothing they can do or are willing to do. “They were like, ‘You can take unpaid medical leave,” so that’s what they all did.”
Two community engagement staff, both Black women, quit the CPC while I was reporting this story.
One, Mergitu Argo, is a former SPD community service officer, OneAmerica staffer, and case manager who chaired SPD’s East African Advisory Council and served on the Seattle Women’s Commission. She said Ellis often treated her more like a personal assistant than an experienced community advocate and subject-matter expert.
“She would pull me out from staff meetings—like, ‘Come here,’ from the hallway, saying ‘Go make phone calls to remind the commission about the meeting,” Argo recalled. (Other staffers backed up this account.) “I said, ‘I can do it when I finish the staff meeting,’ [but] she said, ‘No, you can do it now.” According one former staffer , “she was dismissed—literally waved out of the meeting to go make phone calls.”
On another occasion, multiple staffers recall, Ellis ordered Argo to carry commission co-chair Walden’s purse across the street to her car. Felicia Cross, who was Argo’s supervisor, recalls telling Ellis, “She will not. And [Ellis] is saying, ‘Well, somebody needs to carry Reverend Walden’s purse,’ and I said ‘Why don’t you take it?’ I said, ‘Mergitu’s not leaving, and if Reverend Walden can’t carry her own purse she shouldn’t bring it.'”
On another occasion, prior to the November 2023 election, commission co-chair Joel Merkel asked a community engagement staffer, Felicia Cross, if she could volunteer for his wife, Sarah Reyneveld’s, King County Council election campaign, and ask others to volunteer. Argo agreed to pose for a group photo, and later volunteered to doorbell for Reyneveld, but later felt that “I was being used” to make it look like Reyneveld had support from diverse communities.
“I’m an immigrant and a Black Muslim woman,” Argo said. “I’m always afraid when someone in that position—someone white—talks to me because I feel like I just have to get up and do it.”
Shortly after the incident when Ellis reportedly asked her to go make phone calls, Argo said she decided to take medical leave to deal with stress-related health problems; the other community engagement staff took leave around the same time, also citing stress-related medical issues.
When they returned this past March, Argo and other staffers recalled, Ellis told them she was going to “micromanage” the community engagement team, deciding when they could take breaks and requiring them to keep a detailed accounting of how they spent their time. Cross recalled that another staffer asked Ellis, “is that just for us? Because you let all the white people go.’ And she said, ‘You’re the only ones I have trouble with.'”
The city council’s public safety committee will consider a contract with the South Correctional Entity (SCORE) this week; the agreement would grant the city “the use of at least 20 beds” at SCORE for Seattle misdemeanor offenders, at an estimated cost of around $2 million a year, not counting transportation to and from the Des Moines jail, which is owned by six south King County cities. The legislation anticipates moving people to SCORE as soon as September, and would use an underspend of $600,000 to pay for the beds in 2024.
The beds at SCORE would be in addition to those at the downtown Seattle jail, where King County just agreed to begin booking people for minor misdemeanors committed in downtown Seattle, after a long period of booking restrictions imposed during the COVID pandemic.
Due to an ongoing shortage of jail guards, the King County Department of Adult and Juvenile Detention (DAJD) has limited bookings to people accused of serious misdemeanors, like domestic violence and DUI, along with frequent offenders and people who commit lower-level offenses in “hot spots” identified by the city. The new policy has no end date and there are no specific limitations on how many jail beds the city can use.
A shortage of corrections officers can lead to dangerous and inhumane conditions, including a lack of access to health care and basic hygiene for people incarcerated at the jail. Staffing at the downtown jail has improved, but there are still about 70 vacant guard positions, according to the DAJD.
Seattle elected officials, including Mayor Bruce Harrell, City Attorney Ann Davison, and a supermajority of the City Council, have argued that the proliferation of drug use and other criminal activity in Seattle is partly the result of a lack of penalties that would otherwise deter people from committing crimes.
According to a memo from the mayor’s office, failing to approve the contract with SCORE will lead to “continuing public safety concerns” in Seattle. “Without an immediate ability for law enforcement to respond and disrupt the harmful impacts crime can have on our property and injury victims, we leave the community no option for respite for repeated criminal behavior,” the memo says.
The city council’s public safety committee—whose chair, Bob Kettle, frequently decries what he calls a “permissive environment” toward crime in Seattle—will consider the contract with SCORE on Wednesday.
Critics have pointed out a number of logistical and legal concerns with any potential contract.
PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you. CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.
In a memo to Harrell’s office last month, the SMC court administrator, Josh Sattler laid out some of the impacts a contract with SCORE would have on the court.
Transferring misdemeanor defendants to SCORE would also require a new data exchange linking SCORE, the municipal court, SPD, and the city attorney’s office, Sattler wrote—a “sizeable technology project” that would “introduce a high level of risk as this information is critical to ensure defendants have timely hearings, access to counsel, transport is arranged, and release is timely.”
“Establishing a new data exchange with a new jail is one of SMC’s greatest concerns with a secondary jail,” the memo said.
There are also more immediate, practical concerns.
Driving to SCORE to meet with a client and back to Seattle would use up more than an hour of an attorney’s work day—one of the issues the union raised in the Unfair Labor Practice complaint it filed last year with the Public Employment Relations Commission, which noted that having to drive to SCORE would “add multiple dead hours” to attorneys’ workdays, which already involve rushing back and forth between a county jail (either the downtown Seattle King County Correctional Facility or the Maleng Regional Justice Center and Kent) and nearby courts.
The city says that it would be a simple matter for the court to conduct hearings remotely with people jailed at SCORE, and for defense attorneys to meet with clients using tablets and the jail’s wifi connection.
But Molly Gilbert, the president of the union that represents King County Department of Public Defense employees, said that during brief, aborted pilot to house King County inmates at the Des Moines jail, the wifi would frequently “just shut off, and [the clients] were never in confidential areas.” It’s unclear whether people with severe mental health conditions would be expected to attend hearings at mental health court via iPad; the mayor’s office said the city will create guidelines about who can be detained at SCORE at some point in the future.
“The City feels comfortable that they have addressed these previous issues around Wi-Fi effectively and will continue to monitor and assess performance through the ongoing workgroup,” a spokesperson for the mayor’s office said.
Currently, the municipal court requires in-person appearances for every hearing after a person’s first appearance—and the interlocal agreement makes the city responsible for transportation. This means the city would have to pay, and arrange a ride, for every inmate held at SCORE every time they need to appear before a judge. The court owns a small van that it sometimes uses to transport a handful of defendants at a time, but “If SMC Marshals will be expected to handle defendant transport, this could be a sizeable cost for the City of Seattle,” Sattler’s memo says.
“What we experienced [during the county’s pilot with SCORE] was, it was frequently the wrong people” being transported, “people were not showing up when they were supposed to be there, and people were left behind when they were supposed to be transferred back,” Gilbert said.
A spokesperson for the mayor’s office said the city “will be transporting clients from jail to SMC for hearing and back throughout the day. We are still working through operational requirements for transport and will not begin booking people into SCORE until these details are worked out.” The city doesn’t have any cost estimate for transportation.
Nor is there any plan yet for where to hold people who are jailed at SCORE while they await their hearings; there’s a small holding cell at the courthouse building where people detained at the downtown jail can be held immediately before their appearances, but the cell wasn’t meant to hold a large number of inmates or to detain people all day. “How long are we leaving people in a holding cell? Who’s feeding them? Is it even humane to even keep them there for that long?” These are questions, according to Gilbert, that the city and SCORE have not addressed.
According to Sattler’s memo, the court doesn’t have the capacity to take on the number of cases they would need to hear if the city adds jail beds at SCORE. By law, first appearances have to happen within 48 hours of an arrest, and adding more hearings to the court’s six-day-a-week calendar would probably require adding another judge to the court—something the mayor and council would have to change the law to accommodate. An eighth courtroom, of course, would add more expenses to the city budget, which is currently facing a shortfall of around $260 million a year.
As PubliCola has reported, at least six people have died in custody at SCORE in the past year and a half, including a woman who died of severe malnutrition and a 21-year-old who died of unknown causes. The mayor’s spokesperson noted that SCORE completed an accreditation program “that certifies it is operating under best practices and standards for law enforcement” earlier this year, and “also has accreditation with the National Commission on Correctional Healthcare (NCCHC), among others. NCCHC’s stated mission is to improve the quality of health care in jails.”
The mayor’s spokesperson also said people will have access to mental health services and drug treatment at SCORE. This is inconsistent with what judges and defenders have told us about services at SCORE, and Sattler’s’ memo notes that the “seven independently elected Judges will likely have concerns or objections related to access to medical facilities, treatment and release planning services at a secondary jail.”
Editor’s note: An earlier version of this post characterized the court administrator’s memo as a reflection of the seven municipal court judges’ views, rather than those of the court administrator. We have edited the post to correct this error.