Category: This Week on PubliCola

This Week On PubliCola: August 3, 2024

The city orders more jail beds, the council cracks down on drug users and sex workers, and Seattle Nice discusses the upcoming council election and jail as a “solution” to disorder downtown.

By Erica C. Barnett

Tuesday, July 30

Seattle Nice: Will Locking Up More People Fix What Ails Downtown Seattle?

On the first of two Seattle Nice podcast, we brought in a guest expert—Purpose Dignity Action Co-Director Lisa Daugaard, whose organization established the LEAD diversion program in Belltown—to discuss the latest efforts to address misdemeanor criminal activity in downtown Seattle, which (as of last week, when we recorded) involved efforts to open up more jail beds for people accused of committing misdemeanors, including at the downtown King County jail and the SCORE jail 15 miles south of Seattle.

City’s Plan to Jail Misdemeanor Offenders at SCORE in Des Moines Moves Forward Despite Concerns

The city’s proposed contract with SCORE—where six inmates have died over the last 18 months—moved forward this week despite significant concerns about its feasibility, including the cost to the city (millions of dollars a year, including police overtime to drive people to and from the downtown Seattle courthouse) and the logistical challenges of cramming more people into the city’s already overburdened court system.

Wednesday, July 31

Council Fizz: Moore To Propose “Prostitution Loitering” Bill, Anti-Woo Graffiti May Be Coming From Inside the Building

PubliCola broke the news that North Seattle City Councilmember Cathy Moore planned to roll out legislation barring sex workers from Aurora Ave. N and reinstating a crime called “prostitution loitering” for sex workers who work in the open. Also, graffiti targeting Councilmember Tanya Woo inside the apartment building she owns call an earlier narrative into question.

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Thursday, August 1

City Attorney Davison Proposes No-Go Zones for People Charged With Drug Crimes, Including Possession and Public Used

In the first part of a one-two punch against people whose visibility causes discomfort to businesses, tourists, and some comfortably housed Seattleites, City Attorney Ann Davison proposed reinstating 1990s-era Stay Out of Drug Areas, from which people who commit drug-related misdemeanors will be banished. Violating Seattle’s new law against public drug use or possession is a misdemeanor, but once a person is under a SODA order, merely stepping foot inside one of the no-go zones will be a gross misdemeanor, punishable by up to 364 days in jail and a $5,000 fine.

Council Legislation Would Ban Sex Workers from Aurora Ave. North

In the 1990s and 2000s, Stay Out of Area of Prostitution (SOAP) orders were the other side of the SODA coin: Anyone convicted of a prostitution-related offense, including the “prostitution loitering” offense Moore’s proposal would reinstate, could be banned from certain areas. This proposal would target sex workers who are caught on or near Aurora from 85th Avenue N all the way to Seattle’s border with Shoreline, who could also be charged with a gross misdemeanor if they’re under a SOAP order and step foot in the no-go zone.

Council Committee Approves Contract With SCORE Jail in Des Moines; SCORE Inmate Died of Overdose in June

As anticipated, the SCORE contract passed out of the council’s public safety committee, with Joy Hollingsworth abstaining. Also this week, PubliCola obtained new details about one of the six recent deaths at SCORE—a man who died in his jail cell of an overdose in June.

Friday, August 2

Seattle Nice: Is Seattle Still in its Backlash Era?

The answer to the headline: Duh, yes. But is the city ready to elect a City Council candidate whose views are to the left of the current council majority? We discussed the upcoming primary election between appointed incumbent Tanya Woo and challenger Alexis Mercedes Rinck.

This Week on PubliCola: July 27, 2024

Monday, July 22

“Unacceptable”: Burien City Manager Complained to Police Chief, Sheriff About Lack of Immediate Response to His 911 Calls

When Burien City Manager Adolfo Bailon didn’t get the swift response he expected to his non-emergency 911 call about unsheltered people he believed were using drugs, he went straight to the top, complaining to the then-police chief, Ted Boe, before going to Boe’s boss, King County Sheriff Patti Cole-Tindall.

Tuesday, July 23

“A Shameful Legacy of Defund the Police”: Council Blames Protests, COVID for Current Public Safety Issues

The city council continued to blame the actions of past council members for current issues in downtown Seattle during a public safety committee meeting this week. Interim Seattle Police Chief Sue Rahr said police hiring tests should be as easy to pass as possible, and City Attorney Ann Davison said the city has no way to hold people accountable as long as the downtown jail won’t book most misdemeanor offenders.

Wednesday, July 24

Facing Rising Costs and Dwindling Reserves, King County Audits Employees’ Health Care Coverage

A recent audit aimed at reducing the cost of health care by ensuring that employees aren’t falsely claiming dependents is one way the county is trying to address ballooning medical costs and a reserve fund that recently dipped below a critical level.

County Jail Will Begin Booking Again for Drug Use, Other Misdemeanors In the “Downtown Activation Zone”

The downtown King County Jail has agreed to begin booking people arrested for misdemeanors committed between the Chinatown-International District and South Lake Union Seattle, including violations of the recently adopted law criminalizing drug use and possession. The decision reverses a policy, in place since COVID, that restricted downtown bookings to the most serious misdemeanors.

 

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Thursday, July 25

Fact Check: No, It Doesn’t “Take Five Convictions” Before Youth Can Be Detained for Firearms Felonies

Interim Chief Rahr said she was “astounded” to learn recently “it actually takes five convictions [for firearm possession] before [young people] are actually held in detention. That’s astounding to me. That is absolutely frightening to me.” But it isn’t really true—kids can be held in the county’s youth jail without a conviction, and often are, and convictions often lead to more detention. The only thing that requires five convictions is a stint in the juvenile equivalent of state prison.

Friday, July 26

Burien City Manager Accuses King County Executive of “Establishing” Encampment Outside Courthouse

In another letter demanding action from the county, Burien City Manager Bailon accused King County officials of setting up an encampment at its courthouse in downtown Burien, and asked the King County Council to take action against County Executive Dow Constantine. The county executive’s office said they did not “establish” any encampment: “I can only assume that individuals began camping on this property given they had no place else to go.”