Council Wants to Increase Lateral Police Hiring Bonuses to $50,000 and Make Bonus Program Permanent

By Erica C. Barnett

City Council President Sara Nelson is sponsoring legislation, proposed by Mayor Bruce Harrell’s office, that would increase the bonuses paid to lateral Seattle Police Department hires—those who transfer to SPD from other departments—from $30,000 to $50,000.

The proposed new one-time signing bonus is the equivalent of a year’s pay for a full-time worker making $24 an hour, or $4 more than Seattle’s minimum wage, on top of six-figure starting salaries for cops in the first year of their careers. (It’s also $6.75 an hour more than many council members think tipped workers should be paid; supporters of a plan to adopt a sub-minimum wage for tipped workers argue that tips should count toward the minimum).

Councilmember Maritza Rivera, who represents Northeast Seattle, suggested at a council committee meeting on Monday that the new hiring bonuses are necessary to save children from shootings. “We have more gun violence in the schools, and our ability to address that really relies on having a police force that can go out to the schools when these things happen. No matter how people feel about policing, at the end of the day, it is a fact that we are having kids getting killed across the city.”

There is little evidence to suggest that Seattle’s already generous one-time signing bonuses have increased police hiring (and substantial evidence to suggest that one-time bonuses are ineffective as a hiring and retention strategy). The city began paying out bonuses to both new and lateral recruits in 2019, under then-mayor Jenny Durkan. Despite repeated boosts to the size of the bonuses, city officials and continued to panic over the size of the police department before, during, and after the 2020 COVID pandemic.

In contrast, the number of applicants did increase dramatically after the city approved a contract earlier this year that boosted starting salaries to $103,000, not counting overtime, suggesting that higher pay is an effective recruitment incentive.

Nelson had not responded to questions by press time. Previously, she said there was no reason to study whether bonuses are effective, because public safety was “such a crucial issue.”

Funding for Nelson’s proposal—about $1.5 million a year— would come out of SPD’s budget, which includes ample funding every year for positions that won’t and can’t be filled. The city routinely dips into this fund to pay for new and expanded SPD programs.

Councilmembers Joy Hollingsworth, Rivera, Bob Kettle, Rob Saka, and Nelson all made comments emphasizing that the new hiring bonuses are already paid for. Saka, getting animated, said it was important to “debunk some of the most egregious myths” members of the public are perpetuating about the source of the funding, and Kettle said public commenters who opposed the bonuses were confused about where the money is coming from.

In fact, every year at budget time, members of the public express concern about the fact that SPD has so much extra money sloshing around inside its budget, allowing the department to fund new programs on an ad hoc basis outside the regular budget process. There’s even a common term for this phenomenon: “Ghost cops”—phantom positions that will never be filled that provide a ready source of money for other purposes. Far from being confused, people who oppose programs such as police hiring bonuses argue every year that SPD should have to live within its means, just like other city departments.

The legislation would also remove an incentive for new officers to actually stay at the department, rather than taking their bonus money and leaving. Instead of requiring officers to pay the bonuses back if they leave SPD within five years, the legislation would “pro-rate” the amount officers are required to pay back, allowing them to keep the pay for each year they stayed at the department before leaving.

The bill would also would make the bonus program permanent, rather than requiring it to go through regular evaluations to determine whether it’s necessary. It also removes a requirement that the incentives be based on market demand.

The city is facing a $250 million budget deficit, and Mayor Bruce Harrell will introduce a budget that will likely include significant cuts to other departments next month.

Former Community Police Commission Director’s 2025 Budget Slashed Staff Unnecessarily

Former Community Police Commission Director Cali Ellis and Co-Chair Joel Merkel

By Erica C. Barnett

Cali Ellis, the former executive director of the embattled Community Police Commission, has reportedly threatened to sue the CPC for discrimination, alleging that she was fired because of a disability she recently disclosed to the commission.

Ellis was quietly put on indefinite administrative leave earlier this year and replaced on an “acting” basis in August by former CPC director Bessie Scott, who just accepted a position as city manager of Antioch, California.

Before leaving, Ellis proposed eliminating the positions of several staffers, apparently in lieu of firing or disciplining the people currently in those positions.

Although Mayor Bruce Harrell asked every city department to identify potential cuts of 8 percent to help close the city’s $250 million budget gap, the CPC and its 10-person staff were exempt from this directive because the police department is still under a federal consent decree, with a hearing on the agreement coming up in Judge James Robart’s courtroom on October 16.

Nonetheless, PubliCola has learned, Ellis submitted a 2025 budget that cut two of the CPC’s community engagement staffers—a reduction that would represent far more than 8 percent of the commission’s budget. The move caused immense consternation among commissioners, who were unaware of Ellis’ decision until it was too late to undo it.

PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you.
CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.

Support PubliCola

Although the City Budget Office finessed the budget-in-progress to reduce the the proposed cut by half, they did so by keeping both positions but cutting them in half—a move designed to satisfy no one, except perhaps Judge Robart, because the budget would not show a reduction in the number of CPC positions.

Because the mayor’s budget proposal is balanced and almost out the door, the CPC will have to go to the city council and propose cuts to some other department if it wants to claw back the positions—a potentially daunting task with a new, inexperienced council just going into its first budget cycle, with an agenda that has so far been heavy on police hiring and light on police accountability.

The CPC recently hired a deputy director, but currently lacks a policy director and is short several several staff, including a community engagement staffer who’s on loan to another department and may not return. Another community engagement staffer recently resigned in a mass email to the commission, CPC staff, and a list of CPC stakeholders.

“I was excited by the CPC’s mission to uplift the voices of the underrepresented and those most impacted by unconstitutional policing, along with helping to build bridges between SPD and the community for healthy police reform,” the staffer, Jo-Nathan Thomas, wrote. “However, I believe the CPC has become a farce that I can no longer serve with true integrity.”

Neither Ellis nor the commission’s most recent policy director, Linnea Lassiter, responded to PubliCola’s questions. Lassiter worked for the CPC briefly this year but also reportedly left involuntarily. CPC co-chair Joel Merkel declined to respond to questions, except to confirm that Ellis is “on leave.”

The CPC has stopped holding regular meetings, which used to happen every two weeks; the most recent meeting, in early September, consisted entirely of an executive session to discuss pending litigation.

Harrell Opposes Funding Social Housing; County Councilmember Zahilay Seeks $1 Billion Housing Investment

1. Mayor Bruce Harrell told members of the City Council that he opposes Initiative 137, which would fund social housing by imposing a tax on employers who pay workers more than $1 million a year. Instead, he wrote in a Tuesday email, he supports putting a competing alternative on the ballot that would provide no new funding—for example, an alternative proposed by the Seattle Times editorial board that would force the social housing developer to “compete for Housing Levy dollars.”

The housing levy, funded through a property tax, primarily pays for low-income housing built by nonprofit housing developers; the social housing developer hopes to build mixed-income developments where higher-wage workers’ rent would help subsidize housing for lower-income residents.

“Social housing as a concept may prove to have benefits, but the City has also been advised that Initiative 137 comes with legal risk,” Harrell wrote. “Voters interested in exploring the concept of social housing ought to have an option to do so that allows social housing to be established as a successful proof-of-concept before further increasing taxes.”

In the email, addressed to Council President Sara Nelson, Harrell said he had “spoken to you and members of the City Council individually last week and this week.” But Tammy Morales, the council’s most progressive member and a supporter of social housing, was not among them. In an email to Harrell’s deputy chief of staff, a staffer for Morales said Harrell has consistently “iced out” Morales, despite the fact that she is one of the council’s two longest-serving members.

“The Mayor has never returned a phone call from Councilmember Morales, hasn’t reached out to meet with her (at least not this year, I can’t speak to previous years), consistently does not invite us to events, and does not seem interested in even trying to extend an olive branch to our office,” the staffer wrote. “We have been working hard to pass the Mayor’s legislation through Land Use Committee. The very least he could do is meet with her.”

Morales challenged Harrell, then the District 2 council member, in 2015 and lost; she was elected four years later.

PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you.
CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.

Support PubliCola

 

2. King County Councilmember Girmay Zahilay has proposed his own potential funding measure that’s strikingly similar to the social housing proposal, except that it would not require a new development authority or taxing source. Instead, Zahilay’s legislation would ask County Executive Dow Constantine to establish a “regional workforce housing initiative” that would develop a plan to use at least $1 billion of the county’s $9 billion in available debt capacity to build permanently affordable housing at a variety of income levels.

Much like the social housing proposal, Zahilay’s legislation anticipates that higher-income renters would subsidize apartments for their lower-income neighbors through higher rents.

“If we are going to have a functioning society, we need our workers, especially essential workers, to live closer to where they work,” Zahilay said.

Instead of creating a new public developer, like the one voters approved for social housing last year, Zahilay’s plan would rely on existing public developers, like the King County Housing Authority, and nonprofits that already develop and operate housing. He said he doesn’t consider his idea a competitor to social housing, although it would fill a similar niche in the market—permanently rent-restricted housing for people making up to 120 percent of the are median income. The rents would be set “at whatever monthly cost it takes to maintain and operate the buildings and pay down the interest and principal on the debt,” Zahilay said.

Also like social housing, the new housing Zahilay envisions would operate essentially outside the housing market, with rents that would remain “constant, other than to reflect interest rate changes on debt service,” according to the legislation. How all this would work, what kind of rents would be required to make the plan feasible, and how much housing the county could fund with $1 billion are all to be determined: Zahilay said he’s “asking [the executive] to do the analysis and create an implementation plan in a way that pencils. I think there would be some pushback if it was directive.”

King County Prosecutor’s Office Hired Attorney Who Was on Brady List for Falsifying Documents

Photo showing the front of the the King County Courthouse
Image via kingcounty.gov

By Erica C. Barnett

Last year, the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office hired a new prosecutor with an unusual professional pedigree: Before she was hired as a prosecutor, in 2023, the prosecutor, Ayana Hawk, was a juvenile corrections officer for the Department of Adult and Juvenile Detention.

In December 2018, the DAJD was investigating Hawk for an allegation of serious misconduct (later found to be unsubstantiated) when it came across video showing Hawk committing a different offense: Falsifying government documents. According to Hawk’s internal investigation file, she falsely reported she had done bed checks while working an overnight shift at the juvenile jail; in reality, the video showed, she was chatting with coworkers at the main desk.

Ultimately, Hawk received a five-day suspension that was “held in abeyance for two years from the date of occurrence,” according to DAJD spokesman Noah Haglund—effectively, a suspended sentence. But the findings of the investigation landed Hawk on the King County Prosecutor’s Brady list—a list of law enforcement officers whose testimony in court is suspect because they have a history of dishonesty, calling their future testimony into question.

The allegations against Hawk were more significant than they might seem at first blush. In jail, security checks are required not only to make sure no one escapes, but to ensure the safety and health of people locked up in jail. In 2022, a guard at the adult jail falsified a security check less than two hours before a man committed suicide; although that officer avoided discipline by quitting, the DAJD disciplined at least eight other employees for falsifying security checks between 2021 and 2023.

PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you.
CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.

Support PubliCola

Hawk’s investigation file shows four alleged violations of DAJD policy and state law, all of them sustained, or found to be true: Falsifying government records, “causing loss or injury,” conduct unbecoming, and violating the law by “fraudulently document[ing] security checks which she did not perform.”

Despite this setback, she retained her job as a juvenile corrections officer; earned a law degree; won admission to the state bar; and was hired by the King County Prosecutor’s Office last year—the very agency that put her on its Brady list.

The prosecutor’s office was unaware that Hawk was on their Brady list, and spokesman Casey McNerthney said the office does not have a policy of checking attorneys’ Brady status. “[Hawk]”is in good standing with the State Bar Association, which also handles a background check and requires attorneys to meet ethical obligations under the Rules of Professional Conduct,” McNerthney said.

Hawk had positive recommendations from her supervisor and a coworker, and former DAJD director John Diaz wrote after an internal hearing, addressing Hawk, that he “appreciated your honesty during the hearing and for taking ownership of your conduct” and believed she had “learned from the incident.”

Contacted with questions about Hawk’s Brady status, WSBA spokesman Jessica Olegario said the WSBA’s applications  “do not specifically request disclosure of inclusion on a ‘Brady list,'” although this “could be disclosed if related to an answer otherwise provided in response to an application question.”

Hawk did not respond to a request for comment.

In an interview with investigators in April 2019, Hawk said she learned on the job that it was was okay to falsify bed checks. Describing a culture of laxity at the youth jail, she told investigators, “Generally… you are told [that] if the kid is in there and you miss one [bed check], then just fill it in, because that’s easier. I’m not sure if I sought out to intentionally not do the checks. I think that the time passed and the checks weren’t done.”

Council Committee Reinstates “Stay Out” Zones for Drug Use and Sex Work, Along With Prostitution Loitering Law

Photo of Councilmember Rob Saka in council chambers

The council called in two top police officials to subdue a small group of people who wanted to give public comment against the proposals.

By Erica C. Barnett

When then-King County Prosecutor Norm Maleng first proposed Stay Out of Drug Areas (SODA)—parts of town from which people accused of drug-related crimes, including use and possession, could be banned—in 1990, city leaders and the Seattle Times hailed the innovation as a solution to “open-air drug dealing,” particularly in an area centered around Pike Street and Third Avenue downtown.

At the time, crack was the drug most people were using in public, and supporters of the new banishment zones, located in neighborhoods across the city, said they would disrupt drug activity and reduce problematic drug use by making crack less available; addicts, the idea went, would stop smoking so much crack if the city made it harder to get by arresting people for going inside the new “drug areas.”

At the same time, supporters of the banishment areas—which also included Stay Out of Area of Prostitution, or SOAP, zones—were explicit that the primary goal was to “clean up” neighborhoods where homeowners said they were frightened and disgusted at the sight of sex workers and drug users. One neighborhood activist from the Denny Regrade area told the Seattle Times in 1992 that she was glad the orders would prevent “a very small number of people to control our lives”; a police officer added that that the program was successful because drug users and sex workers were “going somewhere else.”

Over time, the crack epidemic waned and the drugs causing successive waves of SODA orders changed, from Oxycontin to heroin to meth. Research has shown that the orders did not reduce drug use or sex work, but they did make the lives of drug users and sex workers harder, by physically banning them from areas in which they used to access services and by turning them into hunted people who could be, and were, jailed when they were caught simply being inside the areas from which they were banished. Eventually, some 25 years after the first SODA orders, the city largely abandoned the experiment, concluding on the basis of decades of evidence that it hadn’t worked.

On Tuesday, a majority of the Seattle City Council voted to start the cycle over again, by legislatively creating six new banishment zones for drug offenders and one for clients of sex workers and pimps. The new SODA areas, approved by the council’s public safety committee in a 5-0 vote, will include parts of Belltown, downtown around Third and Pine, Pioneer Square, Capitol Hill, the University District, and the Chinatown/International District; anyone accused of violating the city’s misdemeanor drug law, which bans people from using or possessing illegal drugs in public, may be subject to a ban—even if they are never convicted of a violation.

The new SOAP zone, which will stretch several blocks to the east and west of Aurora Avenue North from 85th to 145th Street, is included in legislation that will also reinstate a repealed “prostitution loitering” law that will allow police to arrest people for engaging in behavior that, according to the legislation, suggests they are sex workers, such as waving at people, repeatedly “engag[ing] passersby in conversation,” or asking someone if they are a police officer. The law will make it significantly easier for police to arrest sex workers and men attempting to buy sex; under current law, undercover cops must obtain a verbal agreement to trade money for sex before they can make an arrest.

PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you.
CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.

Support PubliCola

 

Council members added five new drug areas to the bill, each arguing that a particular spot in their council district was especially dangerous and that this danger would be fixed by creating a no-go zone for drug users; although the bill explicitly refers to the misdemeanor drug law, which targets users, many council members suggested it would target a completely separate group of “dealers” who were preying on addicts. In reality, many drug users sell drugs as a form of subsistence income.

Arguing for a new SODA area encompassing 21 blocks of Capitol Hill, including all of Cal Anderson Park, for example, Councilmember Joy Hollingsworth said, “the outdoor drug consumption [in the area] has been incredibly unsafe. It is a severe hazard and has created an incredibly dangerous environment for our community.”

Maritza Rivera, supporting a SODA zone encompassing 18 blocks around University Way NE, said she had grown up in an “inner-city neighborhood” where, as a child, she had to “walk every day through those areas, constantly fearing for being caught in the crossfire between between the drug dealers … in my neighborhood.” The new SODA area on the Ave, she said, would disrupt a similarly dangerous situation there.

And Rob Saka, adding a new SODA zone in Pioneer Square, said, “the headline for this piece of legislation is clear, and let it be known from the rooftops, Seattle is no longer a safe place, a safe space to do your dirt. It’s no longer a tolerable, permissive place where pushers and drug dealers can come and take advantage and exploit our most vulnerable residents and neighbors suffering from debilitating behavioral health crisis and drug addiction challenges.”

Saka also inadvertently acknowledged the expansionary nature of SODA zones, noting that with new SODA areas to the east and west of Pioneer Square, there would be a “spillover effect” unless Pioneer Square was also made off-limits to drug users.

As PubliCola has reported, SODA and SOAP zones were not effective in improving the lives of the people they targeted (by reducing addiction, for example), or eliminating drug use and sex work in the areas where they were in effect. Instead, drug users and sex workers generally returned to the areas from which they were banished, dodging police or facing arrest again and again.

Nonetheless, Council President Sara Nelson said it was incorrect to say these zones didn’t work in the past, because according to a council central staff report, between 2006 and 2009, “defendants in 83 percent of SODA cases did not violate their orders, and 58 percent did not commit another drug offense.”

Although Nelson suggested that people who were banished from SODA areas stopped going into those areas and ceased using drugs, it is far more likely—according to research by academic Katherine Beckett into the impacts the bans had on the people they targeted—that during those years, only 17 percent of people were caught inside the areas from which they were banned. Back then, SODA areas only applied to felonies, and a relatively small number of people faced prosecution—the 58 percent of people who “did not commit another drug offense” represent just 121 people prosecuted for felony drug offenses who were subject to SODA order, a tiny sample that says nothing about overall drug use in the city.

Speaking in favor of her SOAP zone proposal, Councilmember Cathy Moore said she had heard repeatedly from constituents that sex workers were a threat to their safety, including “constituents whose elderly parents were actually assaulted” by sex workers, that “school children” were being “solicited” by sex workers on their way to and from school, and that “a tremendous amount of violence,” robberies, and assaults in her district, including shootings, have “truly been fueled by the sex trade.”

This, like the rhetoric about drug use, is a common refrain in Seattle’s history; residents near Aurora have blamed sex workers for crime in the area since at least the late 1960s, when the city began pushing sex workers out of downtown, and successive crackdowns, including thousands of arrests for prostitution loitering and SOAP order violations, have failed to eliminate the sex trade in the area.

The council’s votes for the new banishment areas came after an hour and a half of public comment, most of it opposed to the two proposals, which committee chair Bob Kettle cut off in the interest of “time.”

More than 100 people had signed up to speak, and comments were already reduced from the standard two minutes to 60 seconds, strictly enforced—public commenters, including Alison Eisinger of the Seattle/King County Coalition on Homelessness and King County Department of Public Defense director Anita Khandelwal, were cut off mid-word, as if the council couldn’t abide letting a single person finish their sentence. Kettle’s decision to cut off public comment prompted an entirely predictable outburst of anger from the crowd, which demanded that the council listen to the remaining people who had taken time out of their days to give feedback to their elected representatives.

Ironically, Kettle sent out an email before the meeting encouraging people to show up and comment on the legislation; he may have assumed that the response to his request would be a groundswell of supportive comments, rather than the overwhelming opposition to both laws the council has heard in public comment so far.

Faced with negative feedback, the council has repeatedly shut down public comments, marching off the dais en masse and retreating to their offices for recesses that typically last longer than it would have taken to let people speak.  Yesterday was no exception. As people began to yell things like “shame!” “this is going to exacerbate the problem!” and “You wouldn’t listen to all the people!,” Kettle, Council President Sara Nelson, and Councilmember Joy Hollingsworth shouted “point of order!” and accused the crowd of being “disruptive” and violating council rules.

After calling out “security!” several times, Kettle summoned the captain of SPD’s West Precinct, Steve Strand, and Assistant Police Chief Thomas Mahaffey, along with several other officers, to deal with with a small group of stragglers who continued to demand that the council let them speak.

Moore went so far as to suggest that sex workers who showed up to explain how the bill would impact them, among others who spoke in opposition to her bill, were “delegitimizing” the experiences of women who were trafficked, “which is very, very traumatizing in itself.” And Hollingsworth said members of the public who continued to speak were being disrespectful and preventing people with actual “lived experience” from delivering a planned presentation—never mind that many of the speakers who opposed the bill were people who took the risky step of identifying themselves as sex workers in a very public forum.

The “people with lived experience” Hollingsworth was referring to turned out to be two representatives from a one-year-old group called The More We Love run by Kirkland mortgage broker Kristine Moreland, plus a sex trafficking consultant who supports Moore’s bill.

PubliCola has extensively covered Moreland’s strange rise to prominence, from a volunteer with the Union Gospel Mission to the owner-operator of The More We Love, originally a private business offering encampment “sweeps” at $515 per person removed, or $20,000 for a “40-person sweep.” Earlier this year, Burien City Manager Adolfo Bailon ended the city’s longstanding contract with REACH, an established outreach organization, and transferred their million-dollar contract to The More We Love and Moreland, who has claimed—without offering evidence—to be more successful than any organization in Burien’s history at housing and providing services to unsheltered people.

Lately, Moreland has been positioning herself as an expert on getting women out of the sex trade, and now refers to The More We Love as a “direct service provider that works with commercially exploited people.” Moreland’s rebrand has apparently convinced the Seattle City Council; Moore has invited Moreland and people affiliated with The More We Love to council chambers twice to give extensive presentations, and has described Moreland—who previously volunteered with Real Escape from the Sex Trade (REST)—as an expert on the sex trade.

Moore has repeatedly said she wants to proposed funding for a “receiving center” for women wanting to escape sex trafficking—the carrot to go along with the stick of prosecutions and jail for people caught “loitering” on Aurora. Moreland’s group, conveniently enough, has proposed just such a receiving center, which would “offer transitional housing to survivors” of sex work, according to the Federal Way Mirror. All they need is for money to begin flowing from some new government source—like, say, the City of Seattle.

Seattle Nice: Is Design Review Dying In Seattle?

Look at all those CGI people enjoying their beautiful outdoor space!

By Erica C. Barnett

This week’s Seattle Nice takes on one of the wonkiest, yet most contentious, issues facing Seattle: Design review!

Specifically: Should the city exempt housing, hotels, and life sciences buildings in the downtown core from design review, a protracted process in which panels of architects and activists (yes, activists) get to raise objections, and force changes, to new buildings. Historically, design review has been weaponized to delay the development of new housing.

In neighborhoods across the city, design review has forced housing developers to change details as picayune as the color of exterior brick and the orientation of exterior landscaping. It has also been used to reduce the number of housing units available to renters (requiring additional setbacks from the street, for instance, or forcing “wedding cake”-style tiered buildings) as well as dictate what kind of amenities a building must have.

In one example I covered several years ago, the Northwest Design Review Board delayed a 57-unit, four-story apartment building on Greenwood Ave., an arterial street, because neighbors insisted that each of the 57 studio apartments should have its own washer and dryer and central air conditioning; they were also furious that the building would have a common space on the roof, because you know how THOSE kind of people get with their wild parties. (Seriously: They wanted to kill the outdoor space because people would, quote, “party.”)

 

PubliCola is supported entirely by readers like you.
CLICK BELOW to become a one-time or monthly contributor.

Support PubliCola

Design review can add hundreds of thousands of dollars and months, sometimes years, of delay to a project—costs that get passed on directly to the renters who will ultimately live in the building. Still, advocates (including our own devil’s advocate on the podcast, David) argue that if we didn’t have it, Seattle would be chock full of ugly buildings.

Um… Have they looked around Seattle lately? I would argue that design review, which focuses intensely on “neighborhood character,” has contributed greatly to the homogenization of the city, shaving off any and all unique design elements in pursuit of the sameness we see in new developments all around us. After agonizing for months over whether a building’s brick cladding should be dark brown or brown, or whether some apartment should be removed to achieve a curvilinear exterior wall that gestures toward the riparian history of blah blah blah, design review still spits out ugly buildings—at significant cost to the people who will ultimately have to foot the bill.

Listen to Seattle Nice on Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.