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Policy & Regulations

Seattle City Council Approves 2019 Budget

Plus, the council resolves three outstanding issues.

By Kevin Schofield November 20, 2018

"Seattle, United States- May 19, 2012:  The front steps and sign at Seattle City Hall on a typical overcast Seattle morning. Focus on the sign."
“Seattle, United States- May 19, 2012: The front steps and sign at Seattle City Hall on a typical overcast Seattle morning. Focus on the sign.”

This story originally ran on SCC Insight.

After a handful of tweaks Monday morning, the City Council gave its final approval Monday afternoon to the $5.9 billion city budget for next year.

In Monday mornings final Budget Committee meeting for the year, the Council approved a handful of technical corrections to the budget they assembled last Wednesday. They also resolved three outstanding issues:

Council member Mosqueda found alternate funding for her proposed 2% wage increase for the employees of HSDs contracted service providers, so that it no longer required trimming back the planned expansion of the Navigation Team by three positions. The new funding came via the removal of a B&O tax exemption for nonprofit life-sciences organizations that receive federal funding.

Council members OBrien and Juarez reached a compromise to resolve last weeks standoff over how to spend Sweetened Beverage Tax revenues. The Mayors budget left $270,000 of tax revenues unallocated in 2019; that money is now targeted for food banks. Juarez still voiced her disagreement with spending tax revenues on an educational media campaign, noting that the $250,000 currently allocated in the budget is a drop in the bucket compared to what beverage companies spend on advertising, but the compromise she and OBrien reached also adds a proviso requiring that the city deliver a plan for the media campaign before its funding is released.

Council member Herbolds proposed expansion of the Vacant Building Monitoring Program was amended. The new language eliminates monthly inspections for vacated buildings undergoing permitted renovations, and ends the need for monthly inspections three months after all violations are addressed. Council members Johnson, Gonzalez and Bagshaw still voted no on the program expansion, preferring the bill to go to Johnsons committee for a thorough work-over before it is enacted, but given that it has already been amended to start on June 1 instead of April 1, the other six Council members felt confident that Johnsons committee would have ample time to make any further adjustments needed.

The Council voted 8-1 to approve the budget, with Council member Sawant the only no vote. She reiterated her perennial objections to what she considers to be a business as usual budget, and excoriated her fellow Council members for what she claimed was their unwillingness to put more money into affordable housing and to stand up to big business.

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