Seattle’s “snow day” doesn’t appear like it will stop a marathon public hearing Wednesday night on Seattle’s update to its comprehensive growth plan. Wednesday marks ...
The Seattle City Council appointed Mark Solomon to represent District 2, which Tammy Morales resigned from this month.
Seattle's comprehensive plan lays out where new housing can be built in the city. The plan would allow more apartment buildings in more places than before. Public testimony at city hall ran late into ...
Solomon has worked as a crime prevention coordinator with the Seattle Police Department since 1990. SEATTLE — The Seattle ...
Councilmember Tammy Morales announced that she will resign from Seattle ... City, and Chinatown-International District, made the announcement Wednesday in a press release while accusing the ...
SEATTLE – The Seattle City Council chose Mark Solomon, a crime prevention coordinator with the Seattle Police Department, to fill the open District 2 seat left earlier this year by former member ...
Twenty people are in the running to replace Tammy Morales on the Seattle City Council. The batch of résumés, released Monday, showed a field of candidates with a range of both public and private ...
Now the council is tasked with selecting an interim appointee, who will represent the more than 100,000 residents of Southeast Seattle living in District 2 until a special election is held in November ...
A Seattle City Council committee approved ... who is also the chair of the public safety committee. Advertising The bill will now go to the full council for approval, despite concerns voiced ...
The Seattle Times reported the city council needs to finalize density rules by June. Several public comment sessions will be held in the early months of 2025 regarding the most recent edition of ...
The Seattle ... him with the Council's public safety priorities. He was one of six finalists — all men — selected from a list of 20 candidates. "If this is the future of our city, our future ...
All politics is local,” former U.S. Speaker of the House Tip O’Neill is often quoted as saying, reprising the 1932 axiom credited to Associated Press Washington Bureau Chief Byron Price.