State of the City Address
Mayor Greg Nickels
March 6, 2006
Councilmembers and my fellow Seattleites.
I am here today for the fifth time to report that the state of our
City of Seattle is strong. We have weathered the storm of the last five
years and are prepared to sail with the wind at our back toward a future
full of hope and confident that we are headed in the right direction.
As I visit our neighborhoods, I see the faces of our
world alive on every street. I see families of every variety. I see the
face of Seattle.
Like the infinite diversity of life itself, the diversity of our home
is the foundation of our strength. In the life of this city, we have
never been stronger.
Overview of accomplishments
The storm we weathered started earlier, but grew to
a category 5 on September 11 th 2001. It wiped out 98,000 jobs in Greater
Seattle. It forced us to look at our priorities and to cut $120 million
from our core budget.
- We faced a California energy crisis that left
our rate payers $600 million in debt just to keep the lights on in
2000 & 2001.
- The aftermath of WTO and the tragic death of young Kris Kime on
Fat Tuesday, 2001 left our police department demoralized and our public
unsure about their safety.
- And an earthquake left us shaken and the Alaskan Way viaduct on
its last legs. Record low snow packs threatened our source of clean
water and green electricity.
Today we have replaced many of the jobs lost during those stormy days.
We have gone from having the highest unemployment in the US to the highest
job numbers in five years. Over 70,000 new jobs have been created in
Greater Seattle in the last two years.
We are seeing unprecedented private investment in homes and businesses
throughout the city. More permits were issued than at any time since
1998.
City Light has paid off its $300 million of short term Enron notes
and we are making progress on bringing down long-term debt and stabilizing
electric rates for our ratepayers.
People are confident that our streets are safer
and our city more prepared. We are investing in every fire house and
in training police and firefighters. We’ve had the lowest back
to back years for homicides in over 40 years.
Seattle has become a world beacon in the effort
to curb global warming. In 1902 Seattle created the first municipally
owned power plant in America at Cedar Falls. Now Seattle City Light
is America’s first zero
net greenhouse gas emission electric utility.
We started by focusing on four clear priorities: get Seattle moving;
keep our neighborhoods safe; create jobs and economic opportunity for
all; and build strong families and healthy communities.
And before tackling the bigger challenges we restored confidence in
government by taking care of the basics like potholes. (Introduce the
Pothole Rangers)
Because of our focus and determination the state of our city is strong.
Our history serves as a guide to the Future
In the life of any city, there are turning points:
- The Great Seattle Fire of June 6, 1889. We picked ourselves up from
the ashes and rebuilt.
- The Century 21 1962 Seattle's World's Fair put Seattle on the map
as a city of the future and created the Seattle Center campus and the
Space Needle. It promised future transportation would be exciting and
fun!
- In 1976, the City Council decided to reject City Light participation
in WPPSS nuclear power plants and invested instead in conservation.
These and other moments were vital for the life
of Seattle. Because we made the right choices the state of our city
is strong. We’re
at another such point now.
Making Seattle more livable in 2006
Every year there are some things we do that get
at the details of making our city a great place to live. Often it is
the little things that people notice – that tell them someone
is taking care of the basics.
A safe place for walking
Seattle has won many awards as a great city for walking. I want Seattle
to be the best city for walking safely.
Each year, there are more than 400 accidents involving pedestrians.
We need to make our streets safer for walkers.
Last year we began a concerted effort to tackle this problem by launching
a pedestrian and driver awareness campaign.
These efforts are working. Accidents injuring pedestrians are down.
But we must do more. Last year, the council approved $2.5 million for
transportation improvements. I propose that we use a significant portion
of that money to finishing fixing the 85 fading or aging crosswalks and
traffic signals in our city that pose the greatest threat to our pedestrians
this year.
A landscape free from graffiti
Speaking of taking care of the little things, we’ve all heard
of the "Broken Windows" theory. It says that you have to pay
attention to small crimes, because if you don't, things get worse. There
was an old notion that the city didn't have enough time for small crimes.
We can't ever think like that again, because if we do our quality of
life will deteriorate.
I don’t know about you, but I’ve noticed
a lot of graffiti around our city.
We need to re-examine this old problem and find
creative ways to solve it. What makes graffiti a big deal is its high
visibility. That’s
why we’re going to educate, and enlist the help of the general
public and private property owners to eliminate graffiti and related
vandalism.
Here’s how we’re going to do it.
Graffiti-prone locations like I-5 will be identified so that resources
can be prioritized to address the problem.
We’re going to attack all graffiti complaints.
And we will make it a goal to remove graffiti reported on public property
within 48 hours, the same way we address potholes.
We will ask private property owners to clean up their graffiti, quickly,
those that fail to do so voluntarily will be subject to city enforcement
action. Working together we can win the fight against graffiti.
Keeping our neighborhoods safe
Seattle is one of the safest cities in the nation,
but we can do better. While crime overall is low, we have seen a slight
increase in some areas like auto thefts, use of guns in assaults and
violent assaults. We owe it to the citizens of Seattle to prevent crime
and protect our neighborhoods. I thank the council for approving my
request to add 25 new officers. Now let’s continue the pledge to keep our neighborhoods safe by
adding another eight officers. Together these 33 additional police officers
will make a difference. And we’ve done this without raising taxes.
These additional officers mean more eyes and ears on neighborhoods across
the city. We rely on the men and women of our police department every
day.
It will allow us to put more patrol officers in
neighborhoods to combat burglaries, open-air drug dealing and auto
thefts – and occasionally
pull people from burning buildings!
The road ahead
We focus on the details because they are important to the quality of
life in the city. But there are larger, more complex issues today that
challenge the future of our city.
We find ourselves at a turning point in education, affordable housing
and transportation. If we make the right choices today it will keep Seattle
strong for years to come.
The best public schools in America
Seattle kids should have the best public schools in America. I know,
it sounds like predicting the Mariners will win the World Series. But
it really does matter that our schools are the best.
This year’s high school sophomores must pass
the entire WASL test to graduate.
What is most worrisome is that this comes in a year where one in four
of these sophomores have failed so many classes that the district is
reclassifying them as freshmen. Obviously we face a tremendous challenge.
Fortunately, Governor Gregoire stepped up and proposed $38 million to
help high school students throughout Washington who are struggling. The
legislature must pass this before they go home on Thursday.
This new State funding is critical to help prepare
high school students for success. This summer the City is partnering
with the Seattle School District and with our city’s community
colleges and universities. We will offer Summer College to 10th and
11th graders. They will not only get WASL preparation, but to experience
life on a college campus.
We will set the bar high for every student and then help every student
make it over the bar. Give them the tools so they can pass the WASL and
open their eyes to the possibility of entering college and the work force
with hope for the future.
The School District must overcome significant financial and academic
challenges to succeed. The excellent work just completed by the Superintendent's
Citizen Advisory Committee offers a sound path for the future. It combines
necessary cuts in spending with important investments in academic excellence
in the classroom.
I applaud the School Board working to tackle these tough issues. And
I encourage them to take a comprehensive approach and resist the temptation
to take actions in piecemeal.
Decent, affordable housing for all
Anyone who works hard in our city should be able to afford a decent
home in our city.
Seattle is one of the most livable cities but not for those who cannot
afford a place to live in our city. We must dramatically increase access
to decent, affordable housing. Most of it will be produced, not by government
but by the market through private investment.
The Center City plan, the neighborhood business district changes, tax
incentives and reforms that reduce the cost of producing housing will
make a difference in the ability of our workers to become our neighbors.
We’ve taken the first steps, now I want to
make sure that developers throughout the City build housing for families
at different income levels in exchange for density increases or other
zoning changes. Not just in the downtown area.
In addition to decent affordable housing for our
workforce, we have an obligation to those without resource – the homeless. Many of
our efforts come as we implement our Ten-Year Plan to End Homelessness.
I’d like to thank the council for joining with me in supporting
this important initiative. The Connections Center we worked on together
will open later this year and it will make a difference.
Today, we have far too many homeless people in Seattle and King County
emergency shelters, transitional housing and on the streets.
We do a good job helping most transition out of
homelessness quickly. But some, perhaps 500-700 people, are chronically
homeless -- mentally ill or addicted to alcohol. Many of these are
veterans from our nation’s
wars.
These are the hard core of homeless in our city. This group represents
a small portion of the homeless population. But they consume the largest
share of money and resources we devote to helping people out of homelessness.
Let me tell you about Dave, who has lived on our streets for five years.
He is 63 years old, but looks like his is 83. He used to drink so much
that he would pass out in alleys or, if he was lucky, sleep it off in
a sobering center.
His health is gone. Dave has injured himself falling down drunk dozens
of times. Each time, he was rushed to Harborview for stitches, Cat-scans
and other costly tests and treatments.
In 2004, Dave was the third most expensive chronic alcoholic in King
County.
But there is hope for Dave and others like him. The way we get at the
problem of chronic homelessness is by focusing on the very hardest cases
on our streets today. Why?
It can cost taxpayers a more than 50-thousand dollars a year to provide
shelter, food, sobering services, jail and emergency health care to one
chronically homeless person who is mentally ill or addicted or both.
Or for about 13-thousand dollars a year, we can
house, feed and treat that same person at a center like DESC’s
1811 Eastlake, which opened here in Seattle just three months ago and
is home to 75 formerly chronically homeless people, including Dave.
1811 Eastlake represents a new, effective and compassionate
direction for helping the chronically homeless. It’s called putting housing
first. I ask the council to join with me today in building on this promising
effort by approving a proposal to provide housing and services this year
for 20 more people who are chronically homeless and struggling with alcohol,
drugs or mental illness. We will do this in partnership with the Plymouth
Housing Group at its Second & Stewart project.
But that is just a start. I propose we build more housing each year
for the people who suffer this way on our streets until all of the chronically
homeless in Seattle have the shelter and services they need to live in
warmth, safety and hope.
Dave is doing better. He has cut down on his drinking
and, for the first time he can recall, wants to get sober. Simply having
a home, and people around him who care, has done more to stabilize
him than anything else he’s tried.
Providing housing for these individuals will benefit
the community. It is effective, it makes financial sense, and, most
importantly, it’s
the right thing to do.
I thank Plymouth Housing Group and DESC for standing with us to do what
is necessary to end homelessness.
But if we are going to end homelessness in King County, it needs to
be a shared burden. In Seattle we invest about $43 per capita on providing
housing to those in need.
Our good neighbors in Bellevue spend $4.45. That’s not a fair
deal. We cannot house the region’s homeless without the region’s
support, rhetorical and financial.
For the first time that I can remember the symbolic
but important one night count of homeless showed a decrease of 6%.
We need to capture this momentum by putting housing first. It’s
time our neighbors joined us in walking the talk.
A 21 st century transportation system
Finally, it wouldn’t be a state of the city speech if I didn’t
talk about the truly fundamental issue of transportation.
There was another moment in time early in this
community’s life,
May 23, 1853, when some key decisions about transportation were made
that literally shaped the heart of Seattle.
This may come as a surprise, but the discussions
about how to lay out the street grid didn’t go smoothly.
Arthur Denny wanted the streets on his land to run parallel to the
Elliott Bay shoreline. Doc Maynard thought his street should run directly
North and South. The standoff left us with the tangle of roads at Yesler
Street that has confused just about everyone for 150 years.
Seattle has suffered its share of confounding
decisions. Some we’ve
had control over, and some we haven’t.
Since 1995 money to maintain our roads and bridges
has been in rapid decline. We’ve lost about 66 percent of our dedicated funding and
we’re falling behind on basic street and bridge repair.
To put it mildly, we’re in a bit of a fix. Fortunately, thanks
to Councilmember Conlin’s suggestion two years ago to create a
Citizen Transportation Advisory Committee we know the extent of the problem.
We now have only a fraction of what we need to
maintain our streets and bridges. This year, even though we nearly
doubled our paving budget it still isn't enough to keep the backlog
at bay. And it isn’t
sustainable.
If we don’t find fill the gap, our streets
will decay. And when the streets fail, the fabric of our neighborhoods
is put at risk.
How many times have you been sitting at an intersection on a dark raining
night frustrated because you can't read the street sign? Right now, we
can only replace these signs on an emergency basis.
Seattle still has some bridges that are supported by timber posts.
The 1938 NE 45th Street Viaduct is one example. Over the years the west
portion of this bridge has suffered from rotting timber, settling ground
and fires With over 30,000 cars a day using this street, it is time to
replace portions of this bridge.
The need is clear for the routine work of paving streets and the bigger
projects such as our aging bridges. This funding gap presents both a
challenge and an opportunity for our city.
This year I will present to the council a major funding package and
ballot measure to meet our pressing street, pedestrian and bicycle needs.
Starting later this month, we will hold a series of community meetings
around the city to discuss the challenges we face and gather ideas from
the people who use our streets and bridges everyday. Our efforts will
make a difference for many years to come.
Let me take a minute to talk about another opportunity
that we must seize for our city’s future. It’s one of those choices that
mark a generation’s ability to see beyond today.
We have an extraordinary opportunity to make our plans to revitalize
the waterfront leap off the drawing boards and into reality.
When the Alaskan Way Viaduct was envisioned in 1949, it was a modern
double-decker freeway that replaced a tangle of railroad tracks along
the shores of Seattle's working waterfront.
It might have made sense to some at the time to wall off the gritty
waterfront from the city with a noisy concrete curtain. Maybe.
So, over 50 years later, we finally have the chance to do the right
thing and take our waterfront back for the people of Seattle. But some
would argue that we should make the same mistake all over again.
Let me state this plainly: The day of building
elevated freeways in the heart of great American cities is dead. We
are a city of the future and we will not tolerate a larger and more
disruptive new freeway blocking Seattle’s waterfront for another
50 years.
Since the birth of our city, every generation has left its mark and
created the Seattle we love.
- Where would we be if City Engineer R. H. Thomson
said in the 1890s, we "can't" build a pure, clean water
system on the Cedar River?
- If a few years later the Olmsted brothers said,
we "can't" build
a remarkable parks system?
- Where would we be if civic activist Jim Ellis
said we "can't" afford
to clean up Lake Washington or build a Metro bus system in the 1960s
and '70s?
Taking our waterfront back for the public is vital to attracting new
jobs, new families and new opportunities. We cannot afford to wait for
the next earthquake to do the job that must be done. Are we going follow
the example of previous generations who dreamed of a wonderful city and
then built toward it, or miss an opportunity of a lifetime? The answer
is clear.
Conclusion
And that is my challenge to you today.
There are moments in the life of a city when people must act with faith
in the future and themselves. And that moment is now.
Together, we can address the problems that block our path. We can have
schools that give every child the opportunity they need to succeed in
life. We can create affordable housing so that everyone who works in
Seattle can also live in Seattle and that no one is sleeping on our streets.
We can fix the roads and bridges, the sidewalks and bike trails that
connect us all to our work, to our home and to each other.
After weathering the storm, we are enjoying our
success. Success can foster the strength to conquer problem. Or success
can breed complacency. We can glance over our shoulders at the heights
we have scaled and proclaim that we’ve reached the high point.
Or we can keep our eyes focused on the road ahead, draw strength from
all has been accomplished in this city, and say now is the time to
build an even stronger Seattle. That is the path I choose.
Thank you and God bless our home, Seattle.
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