Tag Archives: Michael McGinn

the Other Washington … news (November)


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Click on the Virtual Paper above for Stories in Seattle and Washington State

$15 minimum wage passes in SeaTac, but recount coming

Microsoft to chip in $33M for pedestrian bridgeons at flagship McDonald’s

CITY COUNCIL GIVES GREEN LIGHT TO RIDE-SHARING COMPANIES

CONSTRUCTION ON SEAWALL SETS FOUNDATION FOR NEW WATERFRONT

KIRO TV

Senate win may help Republicans for years to come

** Join
the Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility, and add your name in
support of simple criminal background checks on all gun sales — endorse
I-594 today!

                                                                                      King County plans to  reduce its snowplowing                   

** Get Your Youth Sport Athlete checked

.** Gov.Inslee stated:  We have unfinished business on transportation, and I need your help. While we did some good things last legislative session, I was disappointed that the legislature finished without passing a much-needed transportation package.

  WA State may implement tolling booth on the I90 V a Gas Tax … most choose gas tax

** Petition | SAVE the UW Nurse Midwifery Education Program …

** Petition | University of Washington Officials and Admissions …

** More delays, more dead fish at Buckley dam

** EPA Sues Lynden Farm 

** Diver sheds light on Puget Sound’s underwater trash

** U.S. envoy says no guarantee North Korea will free Lynnwood man mom will visit with son 10/11

** Apartment shares on the rise as Seattle rents soar

** Feds: King County jail proposal would free hardened criminals

** Join
the Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility, and add your name in
support of simple criminal background checks on all gun sales — endorse
I-594 today!

** Progressive Radio NW ~  http://www.nwprogressive.org

 

** Weak regulation fosters more abuse   

The state allows hundreds of doctors, counselors, others to keep practicing despite their sexual misconduct.

Breast Cancer Awareness: Early Detection Saves Lives


Age-standardised death rates from Breast cance...
Age-standardised death rates from Breast cancer by country (per 100,000 inhabitants). (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Breast cancer affects 1 in 8 women. Although it’s one of the deadliest cancers in the United States, breast cancer is often treatable when detected early.


Mammograms, which are low-dose x-rays of the breast, continue to be vital in the early detection of breast cancer. To learn more, read the publication Mammograms by FDA’s Office of Women’s Health. You can read it online, download it as a PDF, and order print copies for yourself and loved ones.


Visit WomensHealth.gov for additional information about breast cancer, including symptoms, risk factors, treatment, and more. 

the Other Washington : Whole Foods


SeattleWAthumbpixs

Tessa Bean via CREDO Action : My campaign on CREDO’s new site that allows activists to start their own petitions.

My petition, which is to Seattle City Council members Sally J. Clark, Sally Bagshaw, Tim Burgess, Richard Conlin, Jean Godden, Bruce A. Harrell, Nick Licata, Mike O’Brien, and Tom Rasmussen, asks the following:

The Whole Foods-anchored megaproject being proposed by developers is wrong for Seattle. Handing over public land to the project would mean good jobs at unionized grocers would be replaced by low-wage/low-benefits, non-union jobs at Whole Foods. I urge you to stand with Mayor McGinn, workers, and Seattle residents, and reject developers’ request to transfer the city-owned alley required for the ill-advised Whole Foods megaproject.

Developers are now pushing Seattle City Council members to approve a massive new megaproject that would snarl traffic, disrupt the local workforce, and require the transfer of public land to create private profits. And despite the presence of multiple grocery stores in the immediate area, including six with well-paid, unionized workers, developers want non-union Whole Foods to be the anchor.

Mayor Mike McGinn has already stood up to the developers, who have demanded the city vacate and transfer ownership of an alley needed to complete the project. Mayor McGinn sent a letter recently instructing the Seattle Department of Transportation to recommend rejecting the street-vacation request, based on city guidelines that require granting such requests to serve the public interest. As Mayor McGinn stated, in this particular project “family health benefits and employee wage scales offered by the proposed anchor tenant are significantly lower than other similar businesses.”

Whole Foods has defended its record, claiming its wages are excellent and its benefits package is more than fair. Yet, it refuses to share the actual wage scale it uses to determine the pay of its “team members.” Its catastrophic health-care policies are also more expensive and provide lesser benefits to workers compared to the health insurance provided to union workers at nearby grocers.

If concerns about threats to the local workforce weren’t enough, it’s also clear that, with dozens of delivery trucks servicing the new businesses, hundreds of apartment dwellers entering and exiting the 370 new apartments proposed, and hundreds more shoppers using the proposed 650 parking spaces, there will be very high potential for dangerous accidents and expensive infrastructure costs associated with the project.

Community development goals are important to communities like Seattle. When government officials sign onto these goals, they help ensure that economic development provides real public benefits and help voters understand where their elected officials stand. If enough of us speak out and demand that the members of the Seattle City Council follow the goals of Seattle’s Comprehensive Plan and reject the street-vacation request the Whole Foods megaproject requires, we can ensure the quality and values of our community remain intact for years to come.

Click here to learn more and add your name to my petition to the Seattle City Council, to demand they stop the ill-advised Whole Foods megaproject by denying the developers’ street-vacation request.

Thank you for your support.

Tessa Bean

Protect Seattle from dangerous coal exports!


RSVP for Seattle‘s Waterfront Business Appreciation Event and protect Seattle from dangerous coal exports!
Seattle's Waterfront
RSVP Now

We all love Seattle’s waterfront because of its great restaurants, entertainment, art and culture — but mostly for views of our beautiful Puget Sound. It is part of why we choose to live here.

But imagine up to 18 coal trains, each a mile and a half long, rumbling through the waterfront daily — disrupting this vital economic tourist engine, polluting our water with toxic coal dust and making already-congested traffic worse.

That is what we will face if coal companies’ proposed 50-million-ton coal export terminal in Whatcom County gets built.

It doesn’t have to be this way.

Join Mayor McGinn and Seattle waterfront businesses at a Seattle Waterfront Business Appreciation event and protect Seattle’s waterfront from dirty coal exports!

Here are the details:

WHO: Mayor Mike McGinn, Kyle Griffith, Pier 57 and Great Wheel owner, and Cary Moon, Co-Founder of People’s Waterfront Coalition

WHAT: Waterfront Business Appreciation Event

WHEN: Saturday, May 4from 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.

WHERE: Waterfront Park, 1301 Alaskan Way in between the Great Wheel and the Aquarium [Map]

 

Questions: Contact Robin Everett at robin.everett@sierraclub.org

NOTE: We will be giving out free prizes so that you and your family can enjoy the waterfront.  Wear red and get ready to have some fun!

Seattle’s waterfront businesses and economy will bear the cost of coal exports. It’s a bad deal for us and we need to stop it.

Join us on Saturday for our Waterfront Business Appreciation Event with Mayor McGinn, have fun with your family and learn how you can help protect Seattle from dangerous coal exports!

Thanks for all you do to protect the environment,
Robin Everett Beyond Coal Campaign
Sierra Club
P.S. After you take action, be sure to forward this alert to your friends and colleagues!

Higher utilities, parking fees, layoffs in McGinn budget


Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn‘s 2011 budget proposal calls for layoffs of more than 200 city workers, higher parking fees and library fines, a hiring freeze for police officers and cuts to arts, culture and recreation.

By Emily Heffter

Seattle Times staff reporter

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Mayor Mike McGinn delivers his 2011 city budget address Monday at the Rainier Beach Community Center. Even with cuts, he hopes to rebuild the facility.

Enlarge this photoCLIFF DESPEAUX / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Mayor Mike McGinn delivers his 2011 city budget address Monday at the Rainier Beach Community Center. Even with cuts, he hopes to rebuild the facility.

Enlarge this photo

Enlarge this photo

Seattle budget hearings

The Seattle City Council will hold public hearings on Mayor Mike McGinn’s 2011 proposed budget. All hearings begin at 5:30 p.m., with sign-in at 5 p.m.Wednesday, Sept. 29: Northgate Community Center Gym, 10510 Fifth Ave. N.E.

Wednesday, Oct. 13: The Brockey Center at South Seattle Community College, 6000 16th Ave S.W.

Tuesday, Oct. 26: Seattle City Hall, Council Chambers, second floor, 600 Fourth Ave.

Watch Mayor Mike McGinn’s budget proposal address

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Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn’s 2011 budget proposal calls for layoffs of more than 200 city workers, increased parking fees and library fines, a police hiring freeze and cuts to arts, culture and recreation.

Residents also would pay more for electricity and other utilities under McGinn’s plan.

He addressed a roomful of people just after noon Monday at the Rainier Beach Community Center. Amid many cuts to departments, McGinn proposed funding a $20 million rebuild of the aging community center in Rainier Beach — something that was included but unfunded in last year’s budget.

The City Council, which is hearing a budget address from the mayor Monday afternoon, must adopt a budget before the end of the year.

The mayor and council must fill a $67 million shortfall in the $888 million proposed 2011 general-fund budget. In 2010, the general fund was $905 million.

“We did not attempt to balance this budget simply by asking the public for more money. We know it’s tight out there,” McGinn said.

The mayor proposed cutting 294 positions, 214 of which are currently filled.

Parks and community centers

The parks department would take an $8.1 million cut, with 105 jobs on the chopping block.

The good news is that swimming pools wouldn’t close and lifeguards would remain at all public beaches.

But seven of the city’s 22 wading pools would stay closed.

In a move sure to draw criticism from neighborhoods, hours would be reduced at five of the city’s 26 community centers — Alki, Ballard, Laurelhurst, Queen Anne and Green Lake.

“I didn’t take these decisions lightly,” McGinn said.

The Rainier Beach center would close for two years for its renovation.

Parks fees would increase.

Libraries

The library system would absorb 8.5 percent in cuts, but keep hours as they were in 2010. Libraries would be closed for a week in late summer, as they were this year.

His budget would maintain library hours, but remove librarians from eight branches, making them “circulating branches.” Those libraries would remain open for 35 hours a week, but no librarian would be on duty.

Library fines would go up.

Public safety

McGinn called for a halt to police hiring, but proposed re-deploying 30 officers to patrol jobs.

Parking

The mayor called for paying more at the meter, including charging for parking 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays (Sundays are currently free) and extending paid parking for two hours, until 8 p.m., Mondays through Saturdays.

The hourly parking meter rate would rise by $1.50 an hour downtown and 50 cents in other parts of the city. Current rates are $2.50 an hour downtown and between 75 cents and $2 an hour elsewhere.

The City Council, meanwhile, voted last week to raise commercial parking taxes by 2.5 percentage points, to 12.5 percent total.

Higher utility rates sought

Seattle City Light rates would increase by 4.3 percent in 2011 and another 4.2 percent in 2012.

Solid-waste rates would increase 7.5 percent, and drainage rates would increase 12.8 percent.

Water rates would increase 3.5 percent.

City employees’ pay

McGinn announced Sept. 11 that he had made a deal with a coalition of the city’s unions to lower their cost-of-living increases to the rate of inflation, saving $2.3 million from the city’s general fund. That deal affected about 6,000 workers, most of the unionized workforce.

The mayor also froze executive salaries. The budget situation could get worse or better depending on what voters do in November.

Mayor made “value decisions”

McGinn said he relied on “values” to make cuts and raise fees in his budget proposal. They included living within the city’s means, being effective, considering race and social justice, maintaining public safety and health, sharing prosperity, and being environmentally sustainable.

For every cut and fee increase, McGinn said, “I’ve made a value decision that I hope reflects the public’s value decisions.”

After the nearly one-hour speech dominated by the nuts and bolts of his plan, McGinn concluded by urging people to use the tough economic times to consider the “shared destiny” of people who live together in a city.

“I believe we will ultimately say to ourselves, ‘Look at our city. Look how proud we are of it. Look what we can do.’ ”

McGinn is delivering his budget to the council amid a power struggle between the two branches of government. Last week, McGinn accused Council President Richard Conlin of violating the city charter by signing a state environmental study about the Alaskan Way Viaduct replacement project. McGinn says only the mayor had the authority to sign that document.

The revenue picture

If voters pass state Initiative 1107, removing new sales taxes on candy, soda, gum and bottled water, the city would lose about $1.2 million next year, according to the city budget office. If one of two liquor-privatization initiatives were to pass, the city projects it would lose between $2 million and $4 million in 2011.

But if a countywide sales-tax increase passes, the city says it would gain $8.7 million, a third of which would have to be spent on public safety.

The council spent much of the city’s rainy-day fund last year, hoping the economy would rebound. It didn’t, and the city still suffers a loss of revenue tied to sales taxes and building permits.

Trying to stay ahead of the falling revenues, the mayor made $12.4 million in midyear budget cuts in June. He closed some wading pools, postponed hiring 21 new police officers and laid off 13 city employees, along with a variety of other cuts.

Staff reporter Sonia Krishnan contributed to this report. Emily Heffter: 206-464-8246 or eheffter@seattletimes.com