Tag: Licata

Home » Licata » Page 7
Post

Councilmember Licata to unveil City Hall Ping-Pong table with Northeastern University – Seattle

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 8/6/2013

Councilmember Nick Licata
Dean & CEO Tayloe Washburn, Northeastern University - Seattle

Councilmember Licata to unveil City Hall Ping-Pong table with Northeastern University - Seattle
Table available for public use

Seattle - Councilmember Nick Licata will unveil a new City Hall Ping-Pong table Wednesday, August 7, in partnership with Northeastern University- Seattle. The Ping -Pong table will be housed on the lower level of City Hall and be available for public use.

Councilmember Licata and Northeastern University - Seattle Dean & CEO Tayloe Washburn will provide remarks on the origin story of the table and explain how members of the public can sign up to play. Ping-Pong aficionados Licata and Washburn will then face-off for the table's first game.

Councilmember Nick Licata said, "City Hall is host to public concerts, public protests, public rallies; why wouldn't we add a public Ping-Pong table to the mix?"

"Ping-Pong is one of the most popular recreational activities on our South Lake Union campus, largely because simple, low energy activity can improve thought processes and spark innovation," said Tayloe Washburn, Dean and CEO of Northeastern University - Seattle. "The more innovation the better, so Northeastern was happy to spread the wealth."

The Ping-Pong table, paddles and Ping-Pong balls were sold to the City of Seattle by the non-profit Northeastern University - Seattle for one dollar.

WHAT:
City Hall Ping-Pong table unveiling; Ping-Pong showdown between City Councilmember Nick Licata and Northeastern University - Seattle Dean & CEO Tayloe Washburn

WHEN:
12 p.m., Wednesday, August 7

WHERE:
Seattle City Hall
Lower Level, Room adjacent to the red paneling on the 4th Avenue public plaza
600 Fourth Ave, Seattle 98104

WHO:
Councilmember Nick Licata
Tayloe Washburn, Dean & CEO of Northeastern University - Seattle
Council President Sally J. Clark
Office of the Mayor [invited]

About Northeastern University - Seattle
Founded in 1898, Northeastern University is a top-tier, non-profit private research university founded in Boston. Northeastern opened its Seattle Graduate Campus in January 2013 in South Lake Union, offering 28 high-demand graduate degrees in flexible formats designed for working professionals, including science and technology; healthcare and education; non-profit, public, and business administration; and more. Learn more at northeastern.edu/seattle.

[View in Council Newsroom]

Post

Councilmember Licata’s statement on Full Council vote against bill to permit transitional homeless encampments on private land

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 7/29/2013

Councilmember Nick Licata

Councilmember Licata's statement on Full Council vote against bill to permit transitional homeless encampments on private land

SEATTLE - Councilmember Nick Licata issued the following statement on today's Full Council vote rejecting ordinance C.B. 117791, which would allow transitional homeless encampments as an interim use on City-owned or private property. Councilmember Licata voted in favor of the bill:

"While I'm disappointed this proposal didn't pass, I remain no less committed to finding solutions for people living on the streets.

"This bill was never intended to be a solution to homelessness, rather, it was introduced to provide an interim step between living exposed on the streets and permanent stabilized housing. Encampments are a way to improve the public safety and public health of homeless people who have no shelter whatsoever. Further, regulated encampments can be gateway to housing by providing people a safe and legal place to stay while they are trying to access services. However, I acknowledge the perspectives of my colleagues who disagree.

"Through the Council's annual budget process and via the Housing, Human Services, Health and Culture Committee which I chair, I will continue to represent those people looking for a roof over their head. We need to acknowledge the progress we have made, and the gaps that remain, and not to pretend that there is no way to respond until more housing is built."

[View in Council Newsroom]

Post

Seattle City Council Votes on Bill to Restore Publicly Financed Elections in Seattle

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6/24/2013

Council President Sally J. Clark
Councilmember Sally Bagshaw
Councilmember Tim Burgess
Councilmember Richard Conlin
Councilmember Jean Godden
Councilmember Bruce Harrell
Councilmember Nick Licata
Councilmember Mike O'Brien
Councilmember Tom Rasmussen
           

Seattle City Council Votes on Bill to Restore
Publicly Financed Elections in Seattle

Proposal to be sent to voters in November

Seattle - City Council voted on legislation today to restore public financing for local elections. Seattle was the first municipality in the country to introduce public financing, also called "voter-owned elections," in 1979, but has not had an operating program since 1992.  The proposal will now be sent to Seattle voters on the November ballot.

Public financing is a system in which qualifying campaigns are funded in part with public dollars in order to increase the number of candidates running for office and increase the role of small donors in the electoral process. The Council's public financing proposal would only apply to City Council races and would be instituted in the 2015 elections.

"I'm looking forward to the robust debate about the role of money in politics in the months ahead," said Councilmember Mike O'Brien.

To opt into the program, candidates must first qualify by collecting contributions of $10 or more from at least 600 Seattle residents. Once qualified, donations up to $50 would be matched six-to-one on the first $35,000 raised. Candidates who fully utilize the matching system would receive $210,000 in public funds throughout the entire campaign, split between the primary and general elections. Voters would be asked to approve a 6-year, $9 million property tax levy to finance the program, which would cost an estimated $2 million per year, or about $5.76 for a home valued at $350,000. Candidates would have the option to run for office without participating in the public financing program.

In December 2012, Councilmembers Sally J. Clark, Nick Licata, Mike O'Brien and Tom Rasmussen sent a letter to the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission (SEEC) asking the body to recommend a public financing model that meets three goals: (1) increases electoral competitiveness, (2) reduces financial barriers to entry for candidates and (3) increases the role and emphasis of small donors in the electoral process. In March, the SEEC delivered its recommendations to Council for consideration, over which the City Council's Public Campaign Finance Committee has been deliberating since April.

Seattle had partial public financing of campaigns in 1979 and 1981, and from 1987-1991. In 1992, state Initiative 134 passed, prohibiting public financing. In 2008 the State legislature adopted legislation allowing local jurisdictions to establish programs to publicly finance campaigns, if approved by a public vote, and the funding is derived from local sources only.

[View in Council Newsroom]

Post

City Council Adopts Bold Climate Action Plan Plan provides pathway to carbon neutrality by 2050

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6/17/2013

Council President Sally J. Clark
Councilmember Sally Bagshaw
Councilmember Tim Burgess
Councilmember Richard Conlin
Councilmember Jean Godden
Councilmember Bruce Harrell
Councilmember Nick Licata
Councilmember Mike O'Brien
Councilmember Tom Rasmussen

City Council Adopts Bold Climate Action Plan
Plan provides pathway to carbon neutrality by 2050

Seattle - Seattle City Council voted unanimously to adopt Seattle's Climate Action Plan (Resolution 31447) today. The Climate Action Plan is composed of recommended actions to be taken to meet Seattle's goal of becoming carbon neutral by 2050.

The Seattle Climate Action Plan is the result of a three year collaborative effort between the City and community to produce a blueprint for a prosperous and climate-friendly city. "With this bold plan to reduce our carbon emissions now in place, we must now get to work on implementing the actions called for in the plan," said City Councilmember Mike O'Brien. "In the Energy & Environment Committee, we will begin exploring how to make energy use more visible to consumers and developing the tools we need to improve Seattle's home and building energy performance."

The Climate Action Plan includes specific short- and long-term actions the City needs to meet its ambitious goal of carbon neutrality by 2050. For example, the transportation sector accounts for 40% of Seattle's greenhouse gas emissions, but the biggest challenge Seattle faces to reducing emissions in this sector is funding. The plan calls for new funding sources like extending the Bridging the Gap levy and securing local authority for a motor vehicle excise tax (MVET) to help improve bus service and reliability, invest in improvements that make it easier and safer to walk or bike and take steps to build out the region's light rail system. The plan also calls for supporting the adoption of low carbon vehicles and fuels.

In the building energy section, the Plan calls for accelerating Seattle's already strong conservation work by enhancing the tracking of utility use, providing better energy performance information to building owners and users, and generally help to improve the public's understanding and manage their energy consumption. Additionally, the Plan calls for getting the right mix of policies and incentives to spur retrofitting in Seattle's housing stock and commercial buildings.

"Making Seattle carbon neutral is an audacious goal that takes time, hard work, creativity and the commitment of the City, business community and Seattle residents," said City Councilmember Richard Conlin. "We have laid out the path to meet this preeminent moral challenge of our time and we will lead the way to secure the future for generations to come."

"We must ready the city's infrastructure for climate change meanwhile leading in reducing carbon emissions," said City Councilmember Jean Godden. "Recycling and composting, as well as preparing for more intense rainstorm episodes with green stormwater infrastructure, are the first steps my committee will take."

"This policy document sets very ambitious environmental goals to stride towards, 62% and 91% greenhouse gas emissions reduction by 2030 and 2050 in the vehicle and building energy sectors. At each step, our strategies to reach these targets must go through the lens of the Race and Social Justice Initiative. In order to get residents and businesses to support climate action and include it as a part of their lives, we must be inclusive in our education and outreach with all communities," said City Councilmember Bruce Harrell.

"While I'm pleased that Council adopted the Plan today, we know the real work is just beginning," said Jill Simmons, Director of the Office of Sustainability & Environment.

The Plan focuses on three sectors where the City of Seattle can have the greatest influence in reducing carbon emissions: transportation and land use, building energy and solid waste. The Plan also includes a section outlining how the City should prepare for the impacts of climate disruption we expect to occur, as well a section on actions individuals can take to reduce emissions through purchasing decisions.
The Climate Action Plan can be viewed online at: http://www.seattle.gov/environment/climate_plan.htm

[View in Council Newsroom]

Post

Councilmembers to host discussion of fast food workers’ issues in wake of May 30 strikes

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6/13/2013

Councilmember Mike O'Brien
Councilmember Nick Licata

Councilmembers to host discussion of fast food workers' issues
in wake of May 30 strikes

Brownbag event will feature workers and policy experts on conditions facing workers
and what industry trends could mean for Seattle

Seattle - The May 30th "Strike Poverty" day of action, which included hundreds of fast food workers and impacted dozens of restaurants across Seattle, raised questions and concerns about the job security and working conditions facing low-wage fast food workers in Seattle. City Councilmembers O'Brien and Licata will host a "brownbag" discussion to continue exploring the issues raised by striking fast food workers. Councilmembers will discuss the growth of poverty-wage jobs and hear from fast food workers and policy experts about a range of workplace issues, including illegally withholding wages or the denial of benefits owed to an employee, or "wage theft", health and safety concerns, and threats of retaliation by managers for union organizing. 

"It often falls on local governments to help the working poor meet their basic needs.  As an elected official, I have a responsibility to hear more about the issues these workers raised on May 30th. From subsidized housing to energy assistance to health care, these workers' struggles impact all of us," said Councilmember Mike O'Brien.

"This will be an opportunity for me and my colleagues and to hear more from the workers who took a huge risk in walking off the job to speak out for better pay and working conditions in the fast food industry," Councilmember Nick Licata said.

The brownbag will be held on Thursday, July 11 from 12:00-1:30 in Council Chambers on the 2nd floor of City Hall (map). Council will invite workers to share their experiences and insights on working in the industry and the challenges they face. A local representative from the National Employment Law Project will discuss findings from a report on wage theft and other labor law violations many low-income workers regularly experience.

The public is welcome to join the conversation and there will be an opportunity for comments, questions and feedback on the presentations or by email in advance:  council@seattle.gov

[View in Council Newsroom]