| Seattle City Council | |
|---|---|
| City Council | |
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| Type | |
| Type | City Council of Seattle, Washington |
| Leadership | |
| President of the Council | Richard Conlin,
Nonpartisan since January 1, 2008 |
| Structure | |
| Members | 9 |
| Committees |
Council Committees
Culture, Civil
Rights, Health & Personnel Committee
Energy & Technology Committee Environment, Emergency Management & Utilities Committee Finance & Budget Committee Housing & Economic Development Committee Labor Policy Committee Parks & Seattle Center Committee Planning, Land Use & Neighborhoods Committee Public Safety, Human Services & Education Committee Transportation Committee |
| Election | |
| Voting system | Plurality at-large with staggered four year terms |
| Last election | November 6, 2007 |
| Meeting place | |
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| Seattle City
Hall 600 Fourth Avenue #1 Seattle, Washington 98104 |
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| Website | |
| http://www.cityofseattle.net/council/ | |
The Seattle City Council, the 9-member legislative body of Seattle, Washington, consists of nine members elected at large. Each member's term is four years, and there are no limits on the number of terms a member may serve.
Election of city council members occur on odd-numbered years, with either 4 or 5 council members up for election based on position number. The 4 even-numbered positions are up for election November 3, 2009. The 5 odd-numbered positions are up for election November 6, 2011. All council members' terms begin January 1.
Since January 1, 2008 the makeup of the council has been:
Even-numbered positions
Odd-numbered positions
Based on the results of the November 3, 2009 elections Sally Bagshaw will replace Jan Drago and Mike O'Brien will replace Richard McIver starting in 2010.
The council positions are officially non-partisan, and the ballot gives no party designations. However, all current council members are avowed Democrats [citation needed]
Contents |
The Seattle City Council picks amongst its peers a council president to serve a 2-year term, beginning January 1 of the year following an election. The function of the council president is to serve as the official head of the city's legislative department. In addition, he/she is tasked with:
The Seattle City Council has taken several forms over the years. During the years of the Washington Territory, Seattle was incorporated by the Territorial Legislature as a town from January 14, 1865 until January 18, 1867 when the legislation was repealed based on a citizens' petition. During this time, Seattle was governed by a Board of Trustees. Seattle was re-incorporated as a city on December 2, 1869. Its original unicameral legislature, known as the Common Council, was elected at large. At large election was replaced in 1884 by a system of 14 wards and four members elected at large. The First Home Rule Charter replaced this in 1890 with a bicameral legislature consisting of a house of delegates and a board of aldermen. In 1896, a new charter returned the city to a unicameral City Council.[1][2]
The present council structure of nine at-large members dates from 1911. That year, the size of the council was halved to 9 members, and all seats came again to be elected at large; this arrangement survives nearly a century later. Until 1946, all council terms were 2 years; from 1946, terms have been 4 years, with alternating groups of five and four elected every two years.[1][2]
The Seattle City Council is the second highest paid in the country. Currently, council members earn $103,878, with only Los Angeles paying a higher wage to its city council members [3].
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