Tag: Election 2024

Come to the Seattle Nice City Council Debate on October 1!

By Erica C. Barnett

Seattle Nice—the podcast I co-host with political consultant Sandeep Kaushik and former KUOW producer and reporter David Hyde—will be hosting a Seattle City Council Position 8 debate (that’s incumbent Tanya Woo vs. challenger Alexis Mercedes Rinck) at Town Hall Seattle on Tuesday, October 1 at 7pm!

The Position 8 race is, of course, the most important election on the November 2024 ballot (duh) and there’s no better way to find out what Woo and Rinck are all about than coming to watch them answer direct, tough questions on all the issues that matter to Seattle voters—from homelessness to public drug use to transportation and much, much more.

David, Sandeep and I will be asking the questions, but we need your help: If you have a question you’re dying to ask the candidates for this citywide position, please submit it through this form and we’ll consider including it in the discussion. (Especially if it’s something we don’t talk about or cover frequently—bring it on, utility rate watchdogs!)

Also, please come to the debate! Admission is free (with an option to contribute to Town Hall, which is graciously letting us use their giant room)—we promise to do our best to keep it lively, on-point, and as free of canned speeches as humanly possible.

WHERE: Town Hall Seattle, Great Hall
1119 Eighth Avenue (enter on Eighth Avenue)
Seattle, 98101 United States

WHEN: Tuesday, October 1, 7:00 pm

HOW: RSVP/get your free tickets here.

 

Seattle Nice: Post-Primary Edition, Featuring KUOW’s Scott Greenstone

Seattle election results as of Friday, August 9

By Erica C. Barnett

On this week’s special post-primary edition of Seattle Nice, we welcomed KUOW politics reporter Scott Greenstone to help us break down the statewide and local election results. Scott, who co-hosts the new podcast Sound Politics, helped us keep our arguments civil and our cussing to a minimum (though don’t worry, we still earned our content warning!)

Scott covered the Republican parties on election night, and he reported that despite coming in at under 10 percent, MAGA Republican Semi Bird’s supporters seemed “optimistic,” maybe because they “don’t trust the polls.” Dave Reichert, the more mainstream Republican, is far behind Democratic frontrunner Bob Ferguson, who Sandeep said has the governor’s seat locked down.

At the time of our recording, Sandeep was predicting that Democratic state lands commissioner candidate Dave Upthegrove would eke out a second-place finish in the crowded race to oppose Republican Jaime Herrera Beutler in the general (when we recorded, he was running in third place behind another Republican, Sue Kuehl Pederson). Sandeep is working on Upthegrove’s campaign, and he also some experience running against former District 3 Congresswoman Herrera Beutler, who lost her race for reelection in the 2022 primary; the candidate Sandeep worked for, Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, ultimately took the seat.

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And, of course, we talked about Seattle’s only local election—the race for City Council Position 8, where incumbent Tanya Woo was trailing challenger Alexis Mercedes Rinck by a wide margin on Election Night. (The gap has only widened since then; as of Friday, Woo was in the high 30s while Rinck was on her way to topping 50 percent.)

Woo, who was appointed to the citywide seat after losing last year’s District 2 race to incumbent Tammy Morales, is on shaky ground going into the general election. In a previous episode focusing on this race, Sandeep and I got into a heated debate over what it will mean if Woo loses.

While Sandeep says voters shouldn’t read too much into it, since Woo is new and hasn’t had time to establish a strong identity or presence on the council, I think a Rinck victory could mean that voters aren’t impressed with the new council’s relentless focus on reversing policy decisions by previous mayors, city attorneys, and city councils. Instead of proposing new investments in low-barrier housing, addiction treatment, and diversion, for example, a majority of this council wants to focus on arresting sex workers, creating banishment zones for sex workers and drug users, and renting beds at a jail 15 miles away to hold misdemeanor offenders until they’re charged.

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

Seattle Nice: Is Seattle Still in its Backlash Era?

By Erica C. Barnett 

The 2024 general election for a citywide seat on the Seattle City Council will most likely pit UW state policy planner Alexis Mercedes Rinck against six-month Position 8 incumbent Tanya Woo. Woo was part of the centrist class of 2023 candidates who argued that the previous, more progressive city council had supported dangerous policies, like “defund the police,” that contributed to problems like homeless encampments, “open-air” drug use, and an exodus from the Seattle Police Department. (Once more, for the record, Seattle never defunded the police department.)

Woo didn’t win her race for Council District 2 last year, but the new city council wasted no time in appointing her to citywide Position 8, previously held by progressive council member Teresa Mosqueda, who had moved on to the King County Council.

The Position 8 race will be on the ballot in a Presidential election year, which tend to draw out more progressive voters (and more voters in general) than odd-year local elections. On the other hand, Seattle’s new, more conservative council is still getting settled, and voters may not be ready yet for the inevitable backlash to the backlash. (Backlash/counterbacklash elections being an eternal cycle in Seattle politics.)

So, on this week’s episode of Seattle Nice, we asked: Can a progressive challenger beat a member of the Class of 2023? Or are voters still waiting to see if the latest proposals to lock more people in jail, banish people accused of certain crimes from large swaths of the city, and renege on minimum-wage promises made to workers 10 years ago are effective? Listen to our lively discussion on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.

Social Housing Backers Propose New Tax on Pay Above $1 Million

House Our Neighbors director Tiffany McCoy and social housing supporters at City Hall on Tuesday.

By Erica C. Barnett

House Our Neighbors, the group that in 2023 passed an initiative setting up a new development authority to create permanently affordable, mixed-income housing, filed a Seattle initiative on Tuesday—I-136—that would impose an “excess compensation” tax on employers with workers who make more than $1 million a year. HON’s goal is to put the measure on the ballot in November 2024.

HON will need to collect more than 26,000 valid signatures from Seattle residents to get the initiative on the ballot.

The proposal, if adopted by voters, would impose a 5 percent tax on individual compensation above $1 million, including stock options, bonuses, and deferred compensation; the tax would be paid by businesses, not employees. The proposal is modeled on the city’s JumpStart payroll tax, with at least two significant differences: It would only kick in after the first $1 million in compensation (JumpStart currently applies to companies whose workers make over $182,000), and it would apply to grocery stores and health care companies, both currently exempt from the JumpStart tax.

Also, unlike JumpStart, the social housing tax could not be raided by the mayor and city council to fill budget holes unrelated to its purpose.

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HON estimates that the tax could bring in about $50 million a year and create around 2,000 new units of housing over 10 years, through acquisition of existing buildings and the construction of apartments, including two- and three-bedroom “family-size” units.

At a press briefing outside City Hall on Tuesday, HON director Tiffani McCoy noted that an earlier version of the proposal would have involved building or buying 2,500 units, but those would be all studios and one-bedroom apartments—not the two-and three-bedroom units for which there is much greater untapped demand.

Tomorrow, the city’s Office of Housing will announce which Seattle projects will get funding through the latest annual Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) process; this most recent round of awards, which amount to just over $50 million, represent a fraction of the $147 million the city handed out last year.

McCoy called social housing a way to provide permanently affordable housing outside the existing affordable housing market, which relies on complex funding streams and can be sold off if a nonprofit housing provider is short on funding. While “we have tremendous affordable housing partners” in the city, McCoy said, “there is no level of government that has a plan to address our housing crisis at scale. There isn’t a plan from the private sector. And the affordable housing sector is constrained by what the Housing and Urban Development Department decides year to year.”

Unlike traditional affordable housing, social housing would be funded, in part, by rents from tenants at higher income levels; the buildings would be open to people making up to 120 percent of the Seattle area median income, who would pay rents closer to market rates than lower-income tenants.

Additionally, “social housing will not be vying for the limited funds of the housing levy or JumpStart,” said Ben Maritz, the affordable-housing developer who drafted HON’s high-level business plan. Tomorrow, the city’s Office of Housing will announce which Seattle projects will get funding through the latest annual Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) process; this most recent round of awards, which amount to just over $50 million, represent a fraction of the $147 million the city handed out last year.

Nine PubliCola Predictions for 2024

PubliCola columnist Josh Feit and PubliCola’s hoary original publisher (and Seattle Nice contrarian) Sandeep Kaushik are joining Erica here to kick off the year with some soothsaying.  Specifically tailored for PubliCola’s policy obsessed readership, these aren’t prognostications about 2024’s headlining concerns (like the threat of Trump II), but rather, as you’ve come to expect from the most in-depth local news site in Seattle, this is deep political wayfinding for the year in local politics ahead —The Editors

Sandeep Kaushik:

1. The Real Change, House Our Neighbors crowd announced just before Christmas they will put a measure on the Seattle ballot in 2024 to establish a permanent funding source for I-135, the social housing measure they passed in February. I will take the bait and predict that funding measure will fail.

I say this because I have yet to see any evidence House Our Neighbors has an actual, serious, and detailed proposal (you know, one that includes actual, vetted numbers) to build such mixed-income public housing in a way that is going to be operationally viable and fiscally self-sustaining (which was part of the original promise)—much less one that’s better than the well-established existing model for building affordable housing.

It’s one thing to ask voters to support a gauzily intersectional dream of a new, supposedly self-sustaining form of socialistic self-governing housing when there’s no price tag attached (57 percent of Seattle voters supported I-135), quite another when they’re asking for an endless stream of money before any proof of concept. It also doesn’t help that in developing I-135, its backers spent infinitely more time and thought on calibrating the mix of marginalized identities that are represented on the governing board than on an actual plan showing how this sort of housing would pencil.

Maybe House Our Neighbors will prove me wrong, and come forward in January with a viable proposal rather than just a leap-of-faith money ask. It’s quite possible that famously generous, progressively-inclined Seattle voters will pass the funding even if they don’t. And if that happens, maybe they’ll actually deliver on their dreams and promises. If so, fantastic! I would love to be proven wrong, and would be thrilled to see a new, viable, fiscally defensible model of public housing take root in Seattle. But I’m not holding my breath, and I going to predict that if they don’t have a real plan, Seattle voters won’t hand them a blank check.

2. The King County Regional Homelessness Authority (KCRHA) will die a whimpering death in 2024. It pains me to make this prediction. In theory, a regional approach to homelessness policy makes enormous sense. In practice, though, the promise of regionalizing our homelessness response has—at least so far–face planted.

When KCRHA’s CEO, the charismatic and energetic Mark Dones, came on board in April 2021, and when KCRHA’s signature Partnership for Zero initiative to end visible homeless downtown was announced in February 2022, I was one of the cheerleaders for this promising new model.

But it was all downhill from there.

It soon became apparent that KCRHA had deep problems that seriously curtailed its effectiveness. To begin with, suburban buy-in to the idea of handing off and consolidating homelessness efforts in the KCRHA was nominal at best. Moreover, KCRHA had no independent funding source, and instead relied on pass-through funding from the city and King County, and that funding model quickly became fraught when some of the policies Dones advocated (no sweeps, opposition to tiny homes) ran counter to what some of their funders wanted.

The region’s key agency for dealing with its most serious problem will remain largely rudderless for more than a year, as staff and talent continue to decamp for greener pastures.

The governing structure of KCRHA, with multiple boards and committees, turned out to be an unwieldy mess, and the powers that be made things much worse by ingraining some of the most chuckleheaded aspects of cultural progressivism—for example, the fixation on centering “lived experience” as opposed to, say, prioritizing actual experience running large organizations implementing complex policies—into that governance, leading to several high profile, avoidable scandals. Internal, back office operations were chaotic, and staff turnover high, leading to further credibility-sapping problems.

It all came to a head when Dones announced their resignation in May, and then when KCRHA admitted failure and threw in the towel on Partnership for Zero in September. A huge amount now rests on the search for a new CEO for the organization, and word on the street is there isn’t likely to be a hire for that critical position until the second half of 2024, if it even turns out that anyone with the requisite experience and skill sets wants the job. That means the region’s key agency for dealing with its most serious problem will remain largely rudderless for more than a year, as staff and talent continue to decamp for greener pastures.

Under that sort of slow death spiral circumstances, writing off KCRHA as a misfire—perhaps triggered by the CEO search producing underwhelming candidates—might be best option. Of course, pulling the plug would be a spectacular embarrassment, so maybe the powers that be will allow to KCRHA to limp along in some sort of awful twilight state for at least another year. But I’m going to go out on a limb and bet the end is in sight.

3. The 2024 governor’s race will be the closest since Jay Inslee won his first term in 2012 by narrowly besting Republican Attorney General Rob McKenna, 51-48. First, Washington State voters are in a pretty sour mood, and Inslee, now exiting after his third term, has middling-to-underwhelming approval ratings. There was even a recent poll showing (relatively) moderate Republican Dave Reichert nipping presumed Democratic frontrunner Bob Ferguson in a head-to-head matchup.

To be clear, I don’t think it’s likely Reichert will actually win, given that he’s strongly anti-choice, but if he gets through the August primary —not at all a sure thing, since he faces a semi-serious challenger on the MAGA right in Semi Bird, and moderate Democrat Mark Mullet is also making a play to consolidate a cross-party middle coalition to leapfrog Reichert in the primary—he could (at least conceivably) make a race of it, particularly if Ferguson veers too far left. Anyway, if it is Reichert in the general, this is a race Democrats can’t take for granted the way they have the last couple of gubernatorial races, even if (as is also likely) Trump is the Republican presidential nominee this November.

Josh Feit:

1. Last year at this time, I predicted that after booting single-family-zone preservationist Rep. Gerry Pollet (D-46, North Seattle) from his powerful position as chair of the local government committee earlier that month, the new wave of young Democrats in the state legislature would finally be able to pass some Yes-in-My-Backyard legislation.

Here’s me on December 22, 2022 writing about Rep. Jessica Bateman’s (D-22, Olympia) plan to authorize fourplexes in residential areas anywhere detached single-family homes were allowed: “With much better odds of passing their bills intact out of [new chair] Rep. Strom Peterson’s (D-21, Everett) committee than under Pollet’s provincialism, pro-housing legislators could bring some necessary state governance to Seattle’s failed local policies.”

Bam, they passed it. I was actually a little surprised. Bateman’s legislation made it legal in places like density-phobic Seattle to build four units per lot in residential zones, six units per lot within a quarter-mile walking distance of a major transit stop; and six units per lot in residential zones if at least two units are affordable housing.

Unfortunately, that’s way too progressive for Seattle. So, here’s my prediction for 2024 as the city updates the document that governs local zoning policy, its Comprehensive Plan: The newly elected slow-growth city council (I’m thinking of Joy Hollingsworth, Bob Kettle, and Rob Saka joining incumbent anti-growther Sara Nelson, along with Mayor Harrell himself) will use the Comp Plan update as an opportunity for undermining urbanism. First, they will come up with rules to minimize lot coverage, require setbacks, and establish height limits, along with levying hefty affordable housing fees that will keep housing developers from building any apartments in Seattle’s touchy neighborhood residential zones.

There’s also a provision that anxious city lobbyists statewide forced into Bateman’s bill that allowed local governments to limit the upzones to 75 percent of single-family areas.  I can see Seattle’s anti-housing faction using that “neighborhood character” card to stall density in hand-picked neighborhoods as well.

2. Speaking of pro-housing bills going awry: Watch for an attempt by state legislators to re-do last year’s stalled Transit-Oriented Development billlegislation that would upzone land around light rail stations and bus lines—to disappoint pro-housing urbanists this year.

With the original senate TOD champion, Sen. Marko Liias (D-21, Everett), deciding not to sponsor the bill this year—I’m guessing he was frustrated by the overemphasis on inclusionary zoning (mandatory affordable housing quotas) that House Democrats tried to work into the bill last year—anti-developer lefties like Rep. Julia Reed (D-36, Seattle) are now in control of the legislation. Count on minimal upzones near transit (say five stories as opposed to eight) and steep affordability requirements that will chill development.

TL;DR: The very thing the lefties say they want, lots of housing, won’t get built.

3. I’m going to be vague about this one, but here’s what I will say: Even though Mayor Bruce Harrell got the conservative council he wanted, look for new D-3 council member Joy Hollingsworth—who appears to share Harrell’s brand of homily populist politics (even more so than the others)—to begin clashing with him behind the scenes. By year’s end, her frustrations with Harrell will be evident at City Hall.

Erica C. Barnett: 

1. The pundit class (looking at you, Sandeep) may have convinced voters that a local law governing minor drug offenses, like using drugs in public, was the most critical issue in the 2023 election, when moderate candidates denounced lefties who opposed it. But 2024 will prove that the impact of the drug law will be minimal.

As we’ve reported, the city’s new law does not actually criminalize low-level drug offenses; the state legislature did that already, when it passed the so-called “Blake fix” earlier this year. Instead, it empowers City Attorney Ann Davison to prosecute people for using or possessing drugs in public; without the new law, only the King County Prosecutor’s Office could do so, and they have historically shown little interest in spending scarce county resources on these relatively minor offenses.

While Davison has reportedly been eager to prosecute drug users, the jail isn’t booking people on misdemeanor drug charges alone, making it hard for Seattle’s Republican city attorney to pursue this law-and-order approach to addiction. Meanwhile, as we predicted, putting drug offenders on the “diversion” track—which was supposed to appease progressives— has just meant that other people who would have received help through the city’s main diversion program, LEAD, are being displaced by people who get arrested first.

Seattle always rolls out supposedly transformative (but, in this case, totally unfunded) new initiatives with a big burst of energy, only to let them fizzle—remember “Operation New Day”?

It’s notable, too, that the city has done exactly one big, flashy event to show off its new authority to arrest people for using drugs in public, then send them immediately to LEAD, with no public follow-ups since October. The mainstream press dutifully reported on the event, noting that it resulted in ten people going to jail on outstanding felony warrants (my question: Given that SPD could have located, interrogated, and arrested this group for their serious offenses at any point, why didn’t they?) and 13 entering diversion.

The biggest reason you haven’t seen a spate of similar headlines about drug arrests leading to diversion since that initial push is that the city didn’t provide any additional funding for diversion; as we’ve reported, LEAD—which is no longer accepting community referrals, just referrals from arrests—will run out of money to accept new clients by May. A secondary reason is that Seattle always rolls out supposedly transformative (but, in this case, totally unfunded) new initiatives with a big burst of energy, only to let them fizzle—remember “Operation New Day”? We don’t either.

2. One area where the new council may throw its weight around is by reversing outgoing council members’ renter protection laws, including the $10 maximum late fee, 180-day notice for rent increases, bans on winter and school-year evictions, and the “first-in-time” law that requires landlords to rent to the first qualified applicant. As I reported this week, small landlords complained about the first-in-time law more than any other renter protection. The law, sponsored by outgoing Councilmember Lisa Herbold, was intended to help reduce the potential for landlords to discriminate against prospective tenants based on factors like race, gender, and sexual orientation.

Although most of the city’s renter protections passed before his term, Harrell opposed the $10 maximum late fee, allowing it to pass into law without his signature earlier this year.

3. We may be entering a newly cozy era of mayor-council relations (with Harrell’s picks triumphing in nearly every 2023 council race), but camaraderie alone won’t solve the structural problems facing the city: Fentanyl addiction, a city budget deficit of nearly $220 million, the city’s inability to hire police despite generous financial incentives and a homelessness crisis for which Seattle is on the hook, at least financially.

The candidates who won this year talked a lot about resetting the culture at City Hall, finding fat in the budget and cutting it, letting police know they’re valued and trusted, and using a carrot (diversion) and stick (arrest and jail) approach to the addiction crisis. But the problems these platitudes purport to address are structural, and don’t respond readily to legislation: Every dollar of “waste” in the budget has a constituency (want to cut back on permitting times? Good luck doing that and instituting a hiring freeze) and many of the issues councilmembers brought up during their campaigns are structural and even nationwide, like police hiring. It’s one thing to denounce people for supporting proposals to reduce police funding three years ago, and quite another to solve a nationwide lack of interest among young people in becoming cops.