Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox legislature

The Seattle City Council is the legislative body of the city of Seattle, Washington. The Council consists of nine members serving four-year terms, seven of which are elected by electoral districts and two of which are elected in citywide at-large positions; all elections are non-partisan. It has the responsibility of approving the city's budget, and passes all legislation related to the city's police, firefighting, parks, libraries, and electricity, water supply, solid waste, and drainage utilities. (The mayor of Seattle is not considered part of council.)

MembersEdit

Last election: November 2024<ref name="RinckFox13">Template:Cite news</ref>
District Member Party preference First elected
1 Rob Saka Template:Party shading/Democratic |Democratic 2023
2 Mark Solomon Template:Party shading/Democratic |Democratic 2025Template:Efn
3 Joy Hollingsworth Template:Party shading/Democratic |Democratic 2023
4 Maritza Rivera Template:Party shading/Democratic | Democratic 2023
5 Cathy Moore Template:Party shading/Democratic |Democratic 2023
6 Dan Strauss Template:Party shading/Democratic|Democratic 2019
7 Bob Kettle Template:Party shading/Democratic |Democratic 2023
8 (at-large) Alexis Rinck Template:Party shading/Democratic |Democratic 2024
9 (at-large) Sara Nelson Template:Party shading/Democratic|Democratic 2021
Notes

Template:Noteslist

ElectionsEdit

Election of city council members occur on odd-numbered years, with at-large seats staggered from district seats. City council members' terms begin January 1 although public ceremonies are held on the following Monday.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The council positions are officially non-partisan and the ballot gives no party designations.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Party identification is based on candidates' voluntary self-identification. Like other elections in Washington, all candidates run together in the primary with the top two progressing to the general election. Beginning in 2027, Seattle will begin to use ranked-choice voting to determine the top two candidates from the primary who will compete in the general election.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Candidates may participate in Seattle's unique democracy voucher program, which provides residents with vouchers to give candidates for public campaign funding.

DistrictsEdit

File:2015 Seattle City Council final results.gif
Results of the 2015 City Council election. Size of circle shows total votes cast in each District or Position. Names and percentages given for top two candidates, and incumbent, in each race.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Beginning in 2015, the geographic outline of the 7 districts and 2 citywide positions are as follows. Some neighborhoods overlap more than one district, indicated with an asterisk*.<ref>"Seattle City Council Districts - City Clerk - seattle.gov" - http://www.seattle.gov/cityclerk/municipal-code-and-city-charter/council-districts</ref> Redistricting occurs every 10 years following the decennial U.S. census, beginning in 2022.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

District Neighborhoods
1 West Seattle, Delridge, South Park, Harbor Island, Industrial District*
2 Beacon Hill*, Central District*, Downtown*, Rainier Valley*, Georgetown, Columbia City, Seward Park, Chinatown/International District, Industrial District*
3 Beacon Hill*, Capitol Hill*, Cascade*, Central District*, First Hill*, Montlake, Rainier Valley*
4 Bryant, Cascade*, Fremont, Laurelhurst, Maple Leaf*, Ravenna, Roosevelt, Sand Point, University District, View Ridge, Wallingford*, Wedgwood*
5 Bitter Lake, Broadview, Greenwood*, Haller Lake, Lake City, Maple Leaf*, North Beach/Blue Ridge*, Northgate, Roosevelt*, View Ridge, Wedgwood*
6 Ballard, Crown Hill, Fremont*, Green Lake*, Greenwood*, North Beach/Blue Ridge*, Phinney Ridge, Wallingford*
7 Belltown, Capitol Hill*, Cascade*, Downtown*, First Hill*, Interbay, Magnolia, South Lake Union, Queen Anne
8 At-large position, citywide
9 At-large position, citywide

HistoryEdit

Seattle was first incorporated as a town by an act of the Territorial Legislature on January 14, 1865. The town charter established a five-member board of trustees to govern Seattle, which appointed citizens to other positions.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The act was repealed January 18, 1867, after most of the town's leading citizens petitioned for its dissolution. Seattle was again incorporated, this time as a City, on December 2, 1869. The new unicameral legislature, known as the Common Council, was elected at-large to one year terms.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At-large election was replaced in 1884 by a system of 14 wards and four members elected at-large, all elected to two-year terms.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Home Rule Charter, adopted in 1890, reorganized the city council into a bicameral legislature, with a nine-member Board of Aldermen and a sixteen-member House of Delegates.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

District-based electionsEdit

In 2013, Seattle voters approved Charter Amendment 19 calling for the nine citywide Seattle City Council positions to be divided into seven district-elected seats and two citywide, at-large seats.<ref>"SEEC Law & Filer Info" - http://www2.seattle.gov/ethics/lawrules/lawrules.asp?ElCycle=el15a</ref> The elections for the two at-large seats are held as separate contests, thus results are not proportional. Each seat is filled in two-step process - a primary election is held in August, with the two most popular candidates going on to a general election in November.<ref name="ballotpedia.org">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The partial transition to districts started with 2013 elections for Positions 2, 4, 6, and 8 being truncated, two-year terms.<ref name=charter19/>

The 2015 election cycle featured all nine seats, except the seven district positions were elected to full, four-year terms, and the two at-large positions would be for truncated, two-year terms.<ref name="charter19">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="ballotpedia.org"/> The first primary based on the new combined district/at-large system was held on August 4, 2015, with the general elections held on November 3, 2015.<ref>"Current and Prior Election Information 1998 - present" - King County Elections - http://www.kingcounty.gov/elections/election-info.aspx</ref>

The seven district seats were up for election again in 2023; the two at-large seats will be up for election again in 2025. Only two of the seven districts retained their incumbent member in the 2023 election.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

TimelineEdit

  • 1869–1883 – Seven at-large Council members elected for one-year terms.
  • 1884 – Nine Council members elected: three from each of the three wards, elected to two-year terms.
  • 1886 – One ward added, Council reduced to eight members: two elected from each ward for two-years terms.
  • 1890 – The Home Rule Charter established eight wards and bicameral legislature. A Board of Delegates composed of nine at-large members was elected for four-year terms. House of Delegates had 16 members – Two from each ward, elected for two-year terms.
  • 1892 – One ward added to make nine. Both houses to have nine members – all elected from wards.
  • 1896 – New Home Rule Charter reestablished unicameral legislature with nine wards. One Council member elected from each ward for two years and four elected at large for four-year terms.
  • 1905 – Two wards added to make 11. One Council member from each with four at-large – 15 council members total.
  • 1907 – The Charter was amended twice during the year, the first time adding two more wards, increasing the size of Council to 17. Later, another ward was added (to make 14), increasing Council to 18 members.
  • 1910 – The Charter was amended to abolish wards, reduce Council to nine at-large positions elected to three-year terms. This took effect in 1911 and remained constant until 1946. The 1910 Charter amendments also made the elections non-partisan. Prior to that candidates for Council (and other City offices) ran on party tickets.
  • 1946 – The new Charter created the four-year term.<ref name="archive-chrono">Seattle City Council Members, 1869–Present Chronological Listing, Seattle City Archives. Accessed online February 1, 2011.</ref>
  • 2013 – City voters pass measure changing councilmember elections to a mostly-district-based scheme.
  • 2015 – First councilmember elections held under new combined district/at-large scheme.

SalaryEdit

In 2006, Seattle City Council salaries exceeded $100,000 for the first time. This made Seattle's city council among the highest paid in the United States, behind only Los Angeles and Philadelphia.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

As of 2021, salaries of district councilmembers are authorized to be $65.32 per hour.<ref>"2021 Salary Schedule and Compensation Plan" - Seattle Department of Human Resources - https://www.seattle.gov/Documents/Departments/HumanResources/Class%20Comp/SalarySchedule.pdf</ref> Annually, councilmembers make as much as $140,000.<ref>Council Connection (September 19, 2021). Councilmember Sawant: We Must All Back the Courageous Carpenters Strike Template:Webarchive. Council Connection. Retrieved September 19, 2021.</ref>

Council PresidentEdit

The Seattle City Council picks among its peers a Council President to serve a two-year term, beginning January 1 of the year following an election. The Council President serves as the official head of the City's legislative department. In addition, they are tasked with:

  • Establishing of committees and appointment of committee chairs and members.
  • Presiding over meetings of the full council.
  • Assuming the duties and responsibilities of Mayor if the Mayor is absent or incapacitated.

Notable past council membersEdit

  • Bailey Gatzert, council member 1872–1873 and 1877–1878, in between was elected the city's first (and, Template:As of, the only) Jewish mayor
  • Arthur A. Denny, council member 1877–1879, leader of the Seattle pioneers known as the Denny Party
  • A. W. Piper, pioneer, baker, socialist member 1877–1879. Eponym of Pipers Creek and Piper Orchard
  • Henry Yesler, council member 1884–1885, Seattle pioneer, sawmill-owner, and twice mayor
  • Hiram Gill, council member 1898–1902, 1904–1910, then mayor. Famous as an "Open Town" advocate, he later allied with "Closed Town" reformers.
  • Reginald H. Thomson, council member 1916–1922. City Engineer and visionary. Championed the Denny Regrade, 1904 Great Northern Tunnel, development of the Cedar River watershed, railroad, electricity and sewage infrastructure improvements and member of team that designed Lake Washington's first floating bridge.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Recent councilmembersEdit

citation
CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Elect. year Pos 1 Pos 2 Pos 3 Pos 4 Pos 5 Pos 6 Pos 7 Pos 8 Pos 9
1991 Sue Donaldson Jane Noland Sherry Harris George Benson Margaret Pageler Tom Weeks Jim Street Cheryl Chow Martha Choe
1994 Jan Drago
1995 John E. Manning Tina Podlodowski
1996 Charlie ChongTemplate:Refn
1997 Richard Conlin Peter Steinbrueck Nick Licata Richard McIverTemplate:Refn
1999 Judy Nicastro Heidi Wills Jim Compton
2001
2003 Jean Godden Tom Rasmussen David Della
2005
2007 Bruce Harrell Tim Burgess Sally J. Clark
2009 Sally Bagshaw Mike O'Brien
2011
2014 Kshama Sawant
2015 John Okamoto Template:Refn
- Distr 1 Distr 2 Distr 3 Distr 4 Distr 5 Distr 6 Distr 7 Pos 8 Pos 9
2015 Lisa Herbold Bruce Harrell Kshama Sawant Rob Johnson Debora Juarez Mike O'Brien Sally Bagshaw Tim Burgess Lorena Gonzalez
Kirsten Harris-TalleyTemplate:Refn
2017 Abel Pacheco Jr.Template:Refn Teresa Mosqueda
2019 Tammy Morales Alex Pedersen Dan Strauss Andrew Lewis
2021 Sara Nelson
2023 Rob Saka Joy Hollingsworth Maritza Rivera Cathy Moore Bob Kettle
2024 Tanya WooTemplate:Refn
Alexis Mercedes RinckTemplate:Refn
2025 Mark SolomonTemplate:Refn
Notes

Template:Reflist

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

|CitationClass=web }}

ArchivesEdit

  • Hugh DeLacy Papers. 1938–1985. 4.87 cubic feet (11 boxes, 1 map tube, 1 package). Contains records from DeLacy's service with the Seattle City Council from 1938–1939.
  • Frederick G. Hamley Papers. 1933–1963. 6.83 cubic feet. Contains records from Hamley's service with the Seattle City Council from 1935–1936.
  • Austin E. Griffiths Papers. 1891–1952. 11.73 cubic feet (25 boxes). Contains records from Griffiths' career as Settle city councilman from 1910–1913.

Template:Seattle City Council Template:Seattle Government Template:Authority control