Burien Moves Forward on Tiny House Village as Mayor Vilifies Police Chief for Not Enforcing Camping Ban
Two veteran officers predict an exodus if the city ousts its popular police chief for not enforcing what the sheriff's office calls an "unconstitutional" sleeping ban.
By Erica C. Barnett
The Burien City Council advanced a zoning change during its meeting last night that would allow a tiny house village on a piece of property owned by Seattle City Light. The zoning rule, as amended by the council, will allow future transitional housing only on properties between one and two acres, and will cap the size of such housing at 30 residents—a change that cuts the potential size of the long-planned tiny house village by half.
The council voted 6-1 (with Stephanie Mora dissenting) to place the rezone on next week's consent agenda, after a public comment period in which two veteran Burien police officers denounced City Manager Adolfo Bailon and the council for demanding the removal of longtime Burien Police Chief Ted Boe. Boe works for the King County Sheriff's Office, which provides police services to the city under a contract; Sheriff Patti Cole-Tindall recently sued the city after the council banned sleeping or "living" outdoors 24 hours a day.
Boe provided a statement supporting the lawsuit, which claims the ban violates the 8th and 14th Amendments, and has not been enforcing the law.
Both officers who spoke said they were speaking on their own accord and did not tell Boe they planned to testify on his behalf.
"I cannot sit back and let one man be insulted, demeaned and vilified for issues that are clearly failures by the city government for the last several years," Officer Mark Hayden told the council. A second officer, Henry McLauchlan, said that if the city ousts Boe, it will result in an officer exodus to "more supportive organizations within the county. ... Nobody, except the least senior deputies and sergeants, will be forced to work a place that does not support constitutional policing."
Burien Mayor Kevin Schilling has claimed repeatedly (including a meeting of the council majority that apparently violated the state Open Public Meetings Act last week) that Boe could simply choose to "enforce the parts of the ordinance" that ban unsheltered people from occupying public space during the day. (In city manager-council governments like Burien's, the council picks one of their members to serve as mayor every two years, and the city manager serves as the executive.)
In fact, the total ban the council passed last year "repeal[s] and replace[s]" the older law. Boe has no legal authority to enforce a law that doesn't exist, even if the council later regrets repealing it.
Schilling also claimed, during an interview on KIRO Radio, that the city never stopped paying the King County Sheriff's Office for its services (as Bailon, in fact, directed city staff to do in response to the lawsuit earlier this year). "The only part that we're not paying them for is the part that they're not enforcing," Schilling said, referring to the homeless ban. "So we're not paying for that element of it because they're not doing their job." PubliCola has reached out to the sheriff's office to find out whether Burien is paying them, and for what.
It's unclear how long the tiny house village will be able to stay at the City Light property, assuming the council approves it next week. The city has delayed approval of the project, which includes a $1 million no-strings contribution from King County, for most of the last year. PubliCola has reached out to City Light for more information about how long the property will be available and will update this post when we hear back.