PubliCola on News, Views, and Brews With Brian Callanan
We discuss the mayor's budget, the city's JumpStart payroll tax, and what to do with green tomatoes.
By Erica C. Barnett
I filled in as a guest host on this week's "News, Views, and Brews" podcast hosted by Brian Callanan, and I highly recommend it if you're looking for a high-level look at Mayor Bruce Harrell's proposed budget for the next couple of years.
The budget proposal represents a wholesale change in how the JumpStart employer payroll tax—which taxes large tech and other businesses to pay for affordable housing and programs to boost equity in Seattle—is used by the city. Instead of primarily funding programs that offset the increased cost of living in a booming tech hub, Harrell and the council plan to use JumpStart as an all-purpose money spigot, repurposing the majority of its revenues for police, fire, transportation, and anything else that needs funding.
Brian and I discussed the risks and impact of repurposing JumpStart to pay for anything and everything, getting into the (important!) weeds about the city's dubious numbers. (In short, by using a conservative early estimate as the baseline for spending on affordable housing, green jobs, and other programming areas for which JumpStart was earmarked, and increasing it by a fictitious 2.5 percent inflation rate every year, the city is ensuring that funding for these programs erodes steadily year after year.)
We also got into the details of what the mayor's budget plunders JumpStart, and cuts programs like the Seattle Channel, to fund—two new jail contracts, police emphasis patrols at perennial Seattle "hot spots," and 24/7 remote camera surveillance of neighborhoods across the city.
Listen to the end to hear me talk about "panic canning"!