Big News from Seattle City Hall

Update:

Readers, I got one important point very wrong. Herbold and Juarez are NOT in open seats (I could swear that's what I read but I was probably reading too quickly). Thank you to those who pointed it out. I can say just as there are parents who establish residency in one area to go to a specific school, I would think in the history of elections, more than one person has established residency to run for an elected position that is based on regions. 

A few of you spoke up about who has been connected to SPS that I thought might run someday. 

Jill Geary - Jill is a likable person but she is not always honest about what she does (professionally). She ran as the parent of a Sped student who, as a lawyer, really understood those issues. She got on the Board and then did very little for Special Education. 

She also lied to me. When the discussion first started about the "anti-racism" policy - the one that Hampson was pushing through during COVID times - I wrote to Geary. Because she appeared to be working ONLY with the SCPTSA and I asked her when she would be including other groups. It would seem if you were going to pass a sweeping policy that would affect every single school, you might have some public meetings. and I wanted to pass that information on here. She told me she would be doing that.

She did not do that. She appeared to be working with just a handful of people and primarily Hampson.  (If she reads this, I still have the email.)

If there is a smile to this situation it's that each woman seems to think SHE originated the idea. 

So if it were me, I would not vote for Geary for either the Board OR the City Council.

Hampson - a clear no to any future office

DeWolf and Smith have each tried to get into another office and neither achieved a favorable outcome. I don't see why it would be different in a couple of years.

I can see Hersey running for higher office but I believe he is weighing where he might go next and I think perhaps the legislature rather the City. But time will tell.

End of update

Now initially this post was to be about the annual cat adoption event at Seattle City Hall as reported by The Seattle Times.

The annual event, hosted by the Seattle Animal Shelter and returning from hiatus after the pandemic, lets adoptable kittens and cats take over Seattle City Hall for a day.

Members of the public can visit “kitty stations” to meet about 16 kittens and three adult cats and snap a photo in the Kitty Cam Photo Booth. Visitors will also have the opportunity to vote for the adult cat who will be crowned “Kitty Council President.”

Folks who cannot make it to Kitty Hall but still want to adopt or foster can visit www.seattle.gov/animal-shelter for more information. 

But I see there is other big news, some of which may influence next year's Board elections. 

Last Friday, Councilmember Lisa Herbold announced she would not be running to retain her office. She has an open seat in District 1. From The Urbanist:

“When a segment of the Seattle left says that they intend to ‘primary’ sitting Council members who are not proposing a 50% cut to SPD’s budget, I am reminded that we cannot repeat the 2021 race for the City Attorney when a very strong and proven progressive didn’t advance to the general, forcing a choice between a carceral system abolitionist and a Republican,” Herbold wrote. “In a similar 2023 scenario, progressives could lose District 1, and a seat on the Council.”

Now it appears that Council President Debora Juarez, who reps District 5, will also not be running again. She announced this at a City Council briefing with just a slight comment. (Word is that she has a number of health issues so serving may be taking its toll on her. This may be one reason she's leaving.) 

So that means two open seats on the Council in 2023. (Other Council seats are up in 2023 as well but they are district seats.) 

Over the years, I have stated many times that Seattle School Board is generally NOT a stepping stone to higher office. However, it seems over the last 10 years that there appear to be more and more directors who are fairly ambitious. And nothing wrong with that but it sure does make you wonder who will be running for what next year.

Among the possibilities: 

  • Former director Jill Geary, 
  • Director Chandra Hampson who may think she can escape her woes by running for City Council,
  • Former director Zachary DeWolf who has been laying low since he left office  
  • Maybe even director Brandon Hersey who is current Board president. He has been named - by other directors and the Superintendent, no less - as someone who is an up and comer in politics.  
  • Maybe Emjah Smith who is a southeast Seattle advocate. She did just lose in her bid to represent the 37th in the Legislature but maybe she could do better in a city race?

Any thoughts?

Comments

Anonymous said…
Love the nod to Kitty Hall, nine felines sitting on the dais for Kitty Council gives me all the fuzzy/furry feelings!

God forbid Chandra Hampson run for a citywide seat but maybe that would at least get her off the school board. I have many opinions, feelings, news articles and screenshots that I will share liberally if she runs. I also think she crossed a line when she deleted her official FB “politician” account in 2021. Get those records requests in now.

Jill Geary might be someone I can get behind. I don’t know her politics but so far she has proven herself to be reasonable.

I expect urbanist Ron Davis to challenge Alex Pedersen in D4, He’s been very cozy with op-eds and the Stranger, and posturing like someone who might seek public service on Twitter (showing up at ribbon cuttings and whatnot). But it seems like Seattle’s politics might be coming around to Pedersens POV, that would be a tough race.

I have also heard rumors that Sawant isn’t running again, but we will see.

One selling point for voting Harrell to me was him acknowledging that SPS was struggling and committing to support. His challenger essentially told me “not my job.”

Cat Fight
WallyMom said…
Please sign me up for the hell no Hampson campaign
Anonymous said…
That’s a hard no on Jill Geary for anything. Ran on the pity special ed platform, only to totally screw it once she secured to position. School Board is the road to nowhere else! They’ve all messed up SPS by common consensus so no second chances at public office.

Seattle Light

Wow said…
Geary tried to ditch her school board gig and ran for state legislature while serving on the Seattle School Board. Geary ran on a platform to help special education students and did nothing.

Hersey helped lead the effort- with Hampson and Rankin- to kill committee meetings from October 2022- July 2023. None of these individuals are worthy of another elected position.

Thanks for letting us know about E. Smith.
Anonymous said…
It is true that Hampson is considering running for City Council. This would be the most comical, absurd, and frightening thing I can imagine for Seattle, no matter where you sit on the political spectrum. It is a testament to Hampson's delusional narcissism that she thinks she has a chance at this. She clearly does not understand how little the public wants to give an anti-black, anti-union politician who has destroyed the school district a chance to do the same to the schools.

Amazed
Anonymous said…
What Seattle Light said rings true, "School Board is the road to nowhere else! They’ve all messed up SPS by common consensus so no second chances at public office."

It's already a power trip for each of the current and former Board members to be DOE Directors, from whatever they used to be. And have they been able to make this school district a better place for education, health and safety? Quite the opposite. Did they help clean up mismanagement at the central office? No, they installed one average (or much less than average) superintendent after another and even helped the central office conceal more of the same mismanagement issues under their watch (ex. use of Capital Levy money, accountability in special education, transportation contracts, etc).

It's laughable if they feel like running for a higher office only because they had nothing great to go back to or were just more spoiled than average bears.

Go Home
Anonymous said…
There have been a couple of ok board directors over the years. Mary Bass from a million years ago. A legend of public service. Sue Peters was another. I agreed with neither 100%. And Mary Bass lost her magic at some point. But these would or be as good as any city council or even state government. I think they are remembered well for their service. But that’s it.

Seattle Light
Recruitment Effort! said…
In addition to Peters and Bass, Smith-Blum was an excellent board director. I'd love to see anyone of these individuals on the City Council.
Anonymous said…
Correction: the “DOE” was a typo. I meant “BOE” in my comment earlier.
Not talking about the DOE here, thank god.

Seattle Light is correct. Precisely, just the last several boards were absolutely toxic.

Go Home

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