成人X站

MYNORTHWEST NEWS

City Council responds after Seattle mayor vetoes COVID relief bill

Aug 2, 2020, 9:14 AM

seattle, high rises...

(Photo by Donald Miralle/Getty Images for Rock'n'Roll Marathon )

(Photo by Donald Miralle/Getty Images for Rock'n'Roll Marathon )

Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan vetoed the city council’s $86 million COVID Relief bill that would have used the city’s emergency funds to help families and small businesses.

“The Mayor鈥檚 veto will flatline Seattle鈥檚 recovery,鈥 Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda (Position 8, Citywide) on Saturday.

The council unanimously passed the JumpStart COVID Relief bill on July 20, so Durkan’s veto could be overridden. Because of the veto, the council must wait at least five days to take any action. Mosqueda, sponsor of the legislation, said she plans to bring the bill for another vote in the coming weeks.

According to the city council, the bill would use the $86 million to provide small business grants for child care, expand food vouchers, help with rent and shelter space, and support immigrants and refugees. The plan would replenish the emergency fund in 2021.

Mayor Durkan said that it’s irresponsible to drain the entirety of the rainy day and emergency funds in the first few months of what’s likely a multi-year crisis.

鈥淚f 2020 is any indication, no one can responsibly project that Seattle will not have additional emergencies this year and next,” Durkan said. “Already this year, in addition to the health and economic crisis, we have seen a significant unplanned infrastructure emergency with the closure of the West Seattle Bridge.鈥

The mayor cautioned that the council’s hypothetical plan to use the new payroll tax to restore some of the emergency and rainy day funds leaves the city open to risk as those funds aren’t potentially collected until 2022. It’s also unclear exactly how much revenue will be collected through the tax and whether it’ll cover a projected budget shortfall of $300 million.

MyNorthwest News

Trader Joe's...

Frank Sumrall

Seattle man humped fridge, threatened to kill everyone in Trader Joe鈥檚 outburst before arrest

The SPD arrested a man after he "humped" a refrigerator inside of a Trader Joe's grocery store before making threats against employees and customers with a knife.

43 minutes ago

sound transit beacon hill...

成人X站 Newsradio Newsdesk

Mechanical issue disrupts Sound Transit at Beacon Hill station

Sound Transit's 1 Line is temporarily suspended at Beacon Hill Station due to a mechanical issue.

1 hour ago

king county primary...

Frank Sumrall

Tightest primary races in King County, WA Legislature

King County residents voted to narrow down the races for King County executive and five positions on the County Council during the primary election. Additionally, nine state-level legislative seats were on the ballot.

2 hours ago

Washington Little League World Series...

Jason Sutich

Washington teams dominate as Little League World Series dreams stay alive

Two Washington teams remain in the Little League World Series: the Bonney Lake-Sumner baseball team and the Mill Creek softball team.

2 hours ago

seattle primary election results...

Frank Sumrall

Seattle primary election results: Incumbents, including Mayor Harrell, stumble out of the gate

Results from the 2025 Washington state primary were being tallied and recorded Tuesday night as voters decided the races for Seattle mayor, Seattle city attorney, spots on the Seattle City Council, and the Seattle School Board.

4 hours ago

wa newlyweds head-on crash...

Deborah Horne, 成人X站 7 News

‘They had each other:’ WA newlyweds killed in head-on crash; family raising money to bring them home

A young couple with ties to Western Washington was killed in a crash, just 22 days after getting married.

5 hours ago

City Council responds after Seattle mayor vetoes COVID relief bill