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Seattle City Council

SEA-BRF-2026-03-23 March 23, 2026 Committee Meeting City of Seattle
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The Seattle City Council held its regular weekly briefing featuring a comprehensive update on the concluded 2026 Washington State Legislative Session. Director Mina Hashemi and her Office of Intergovernmental Relations team presented an extensive overview of legislative outcomes affecting Seattle, with particular focus on budget impacts, new revenue sources, and policy changes across housing, public safety, transportation, and climate action. The session wrapped up as a fast-moving 60-day short session shaped by challenging budget dynamics, with the state ultimately balancing a $71.4 million shortfall through one-time fixes, reserve fund withdrawals, and targeted spending cuts. Despite these constraints, Seattle secured significant victories including passage of the millionaire's tax, new local revenue authority, and millions in capital funding for key city projects. Council members engaged in detailed questioning about the fiscal impacts of sales tax changes, Sound Transit bonding failures, childcare funding reductions, and compliance requirements for new state mandates. The briefing concluded with individual council member reports on committee activities, community engagement, and upcoming priorities across all nine districts.

This was a briefing meeting with no formal votes taken. The primary action items were informational presentations and committee updates. Council members received updates on the state legislative session outcomes and provided reports on their committee work an…

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**State Budget Impacts**: The discussion centered on Washington State's $71.4 billion supplemental budget, which addressed budget shortfalls through one-time fixes including $375 million from the rainy day fund and $100 million from pension funds. Notable cuts included $81.1 million reduction to working families childcare subsidies, reductions to law enforcement assisted diversion grants, and behavioral health programs. **Revenue Changes**: Extensive discussion of Senate Bill 6346, the millionaire's tax imposing 9.9% on income over $1 million starting in 2029. The bill also repeals sales tax on services enacted in 2025, creating significant revenue impacts for local governments. King County faces potential losses of $175 million over two years, Sound Transi…
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**Office of Intergovernmental Relations**: Director Hashemi expressed pride in her team's work during the session, noting they achieved strong results with the smallest contract lobbying team in recent memory. The office advocated against cuts to programs like law enforcement assisted diversion and gun violence prevention. **Council Member Rinck**: Expressed concerns about transportation funding impacts, particularly regarding Sound Transit's West Seattle extension delivery capability following bonding authority failures. **Counc…
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**Mina Hashemi, on legislative session challenges:** "Lawmakers returned for a fast-moving 60 day short session shaped by several powerful voices. A deeply challenging budget situation, complex federal environment and the shadow of the 2026 election cycle." **Council Member Strauss, on Sound Transit priorities:** "We need to get light rail to Ballard and West Seattle full stop. End of sentence and period." **Council Member Strauss, on Ballard deferral:** "It's completely unacceptable to defe…
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**Immediate Committee Actions:** - Council Member Strauss shelter legislation: Monday March 30th presentation, amendments due Tuesday, committee vote April 7th, full council April 14th - Public Safety Committee meeting tomorrow on ALPR/CCTV legislation - Libraries levy committee meeting Wednesday March 25th with mayor's presentation - Land Use Committee meeting April 1st **State-Level Follow-ups:** - Governor has 20 days to sign …

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Following this briefing, council members have clarity on the state legislative session's outcomes and their implications for Seattle. The office committed to providing presentation materials in advance of future briefings and more detailed compliance analysis for new state mandates. The accelerated timeline for shelter legislation creates specific deadlines that didn't exist before, with amendments due within days rather than th…
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