HomeMy WebLinkAboutCOW 2022-07-25 COMPLETE AGENDA PACKET Tukwila City Council Agenda
COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE
Allan Ekberg, Mayor Councilmembers: Kathy Hougardy De’Sean Quinn
David Cline, City Administrator Kate Kruller Cynthia Delostrinos Johnson
Thomas McLeod, Council President Mohamed Abdi Tosh Sharp
THE MEETING WILL BE CONDUCTED BOTH ON-SITE AT TUKWILA CITY HALL AND ALSO VIRTUALLY.
ON-SITE PRESENCE WILL BE IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBERS (6200 SOUTHCENTER BOULEVARD ).
THE PHONE NUMBER FOR THE PUBLIC TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MEETING IS:
1-253-292-9750, ACCESS CODE: 670077847#.
Click here to: Join Microsoft Teams Meeting
For Technical Support during the meeting call: 1 -206-433 -7155.
Monday, July 25, 2022; 7:00 PM
This agenda is available at www.tukwilawa.gov, and in alternate formats with advance notice for those with dis abil ities.
Remote Tukwila Council meetings are audio taped (and video taped as of 9/14/20). Available at www.tukwilawa.gov)
1. CALL TO ORDER / PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
2. LAND
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The City of Tukwila is located on the ancestral lands of the Coast Salish people.
We acknowledge their continuing connections to land, waters and culture.
We pay our respects to their elders past, present and emerging.
3. PUBLIC COMMENTS—
including comment
on items both on and
not on the meeting
agenda
Those wishing to provide public comments may verbally address the City Council
both on-site at Tukwila City Hall or via phone or Microsoft Teams fo r up to
5 minutes for items both on and not on the meeting agenda.
To provide comment via phone or Microsoft Teams, please email
citycouncil@tukwilawa.gov with your name and topic by 5:00 PM on the meeting
date. Please clearly indicate that your message is for public comment during the
meeting, and you will receive further instructions.
4. PRESENTATIONS a. Introduction of summer interns.
Amy Duong, Parks and Recreation Department
Farhiya Hersi, Administrative Services Department/Community
Engagement
Safia Sh-Mohamed, Technology and Innovation Services Department
b. Update on Health through Housing Program.
Kelly Rider, Director of External Affairs, King County Department of
Community and Human Services.
Pg.1
5. SPECIAL ISSUES a. Fire/Emergency Medical Services contract “Statement of Principle.”
b. An emergency preparedness tabletop exercise.
Pg.21
Pg.25
6. REPORTS a. Mayor
b. City Council
c. Staff
7. MISCELLANEOUS
8. EXECUTIVE SESSION
9. ADJOURNMENT
WELCOME TO THE TUKWILA CITY COUNCIL MEETING
The Tukwila City Council encourages community participation in the local government process and
welcomes attendance and public comment at its meetings.
MEETING SCHEDULE
Regular Meetings are held at 7:00 p.m. on the 1st and 3rd Mondays of each month. The City Council takes
formal action in the form of motions, resolutions and ordinances at Regular Meetings.
Committee of the Whole Meetings are held at 7:00 p.m. on the 2nd and 4th Mondays of each month. The
City Council considers current issues, discusses policy matters in detail, and coordinates the work of
the Council at Committee of the Whole meetings.
PUBLIC COMMENTS
Members of the public are given the opportunity to address the Council for up to 5 minutes on items both on
and not on the meeting agenda during Public Comment s. The City Council will also accept comments on an
agenda item when the item is presented in the agenda, but speakers are limited to commenting once per
item each meeting.
When recognized by the Presiding Officer, please go to the podium if on-site or turn on your microphone if
attending virtually and state your name clearly for the record. The City Council appreciates hearing from you
but may not respond or answer questions during the meeting. Members of the City Council or City staff may
follow up with you following the meeting.
PUBLIC HEARINGS
Public Hearings are required by law before the Council can take action on matters affecting the public
interest such as land-use laws, annexations, rezone requests, public safety issues, etc. The City Council
Rules of Procedure provide the following guidelines for Public Hearings:
1. City staff will provide a report summarizing and providing context to the issue at hand.
2. The proponent shall speak first and is allowed 15 minutes to make a presentation.
3. The opponent is then allowed 15 minutes to make a presentation.
4. Each side is then allowed 5 minutes for rebuttal.
5. After the proponents and opponents have used their speaking time, the Council may ask further
clarifying questions of the speakers.
6. Members of the public who wish to address the Council on the hearing topic may speak for 5
minutes each.
7. Speakers are asked to sign in on forms provided by the City Clerk.
8. The Council may ask clarifying questions of speakers and the speakers may respond.
9. Speakers should address their comments to the City Council.
10. If a large number of people wish to speak to the issue, the Council may limit the total amount of
comment time dedicated to the Public Hearing.
11. Once the Presiding Officer closes the public hearing, no further comments will be accepted, and the
issue is open for Councilmember discussion.
12. Any hearing being held or ordered to be held by the City Council may be continued in the manner as
set forth by RCW 42.30.100.
For more information about the City Council, including its complete Rules of
Procedure, please visit: https://www.tukwilawa.gov/departments/city-council/
Health Through Housing
Overview and next steps for
Health through Housing (HTH)
Kelly Rider
Director of External Affairs
King County DCHS
July 2022
1
What is Health Through Housing?
King County’s regional initiative to rapidly acquire and perpetually operate up
to 1,600 units of supportive housing for residents experiencing and at risk of
chronic homelessness while reducing racial-ethnic disproportionality.
2
2
The HTH Portfolio So Far
Getting to 1,600 Units
•971 units purchased•10 buildings•6 cities
•MOA with Seattle OH for 350“Operations Only” Units
•Seeking 95 Non-Seattle “Operations Only” Units
•185~ remaining units to purchase•Likely in 2 to 3 buildings
Kirkland
33
The HTH Portfolio So Far
HTH does not replace PSH construction. HTH is strategy in a crisis to harness temporary conditions & rapidly
supplement supportive housing stock across the region with robust, ongoing operations.4
4
Goodbye SeaTac, Hello Renton
Temporary SeaTac Residents
SeaTac’s deintensification site:
•Opened May 20, 2020
•228 Clients
•Average Stay: 327 days
•168 total exits to Permanent Housing
•Since January, 2022, 97% (105 individuals) exited to
permanent housing.
New Renton Residents
Renton Health through Housing site:
•In April, 97 individuals moved into their new home at the Renton
Health through Housing site!
•Catholic Community Services (CCS) is the operator for the building.5
5
HTH Property Siting Process
The Health through Housing Implementation Plan
•Adopted by County Ordinance 19366 in December 2021
•Unanimously approved by the Regional Policy Committee and the
County Council
•Requires, as proposed and adopted, an eight-step property siting
process led by the County
6
6
HTH Property Siting Process
Step 1: Initiate a Potential HTH Partnership
The result of this step will be that executive branch leaders of both the County and
the City identify a shared desire to partner for a HTH building within the City.
•If initiated by the County: An executive branch senior leader, including but not
limited to a division director, department director, or senior member of the
Executive’s staff, will contact a city’s mayor, city manager, or city administrator.
•If initiated by a city: The city’s mayor, city manager, city administrator, or a city
employee who is a delegate of the city’s mayor, manager, or administrator will
contact an County executive branch senior leader.
7
February 22, 2021: Leo Flor and Kelly Rider from King County presented to the Tukwila Planning & Community
Development Committee.
March 16, 2021: Frequently Asked Questions provided by King County
May 7, 2021: King County provided additional responses to Council questions
7
HTH Property Siting Process
Step 2: Consult to Agree Upon Site Requirements and City Process
and Participants
After initiating a potential HTH partnership, staff from the County and the city
consult to agree upon two elements of a potential HTH partnership. The County
and the city create a record of their mutually agreed-upon answers to the following
two questions:
1.What are the necessary characteristics of properties to consider for HTH use?
2.Who will represent the city in steps 3, 4, and 5 of this process?
8
8
HTH Property Siting Process
Step 3: Identify Potential HTH Properties
The County, subject to agreements in Step 2, identifies potential HTH properties within the city.
Step 4: Equity and Social Justice Impact Review
County and city staff conduct an Equity and Social Justice (ESJ) Impact Review to consider
negative and positive equity impacts to the persons who would live within a potential HTH
building and the persons who live or work near a potential HTH location
Step 5: Form a List of Feasible and Acceptable HTH Properties
The County and city representatives confer to consider the results of the ESJ Impact Review and
build a list of sites that meet the city’s criteria defined in Step 2. Sites must not have an
unreasonable negative ESJ impact that cannot be mitigated and an entity willing to sell the
property for HTH use.
9
9
HTH Property Siting Process
Step 6: Authorize King County or a Delegate to Seek a Purchase,
Sale or Use Agreement
The County and city may then pursue mutual agreement, consistent with
the terms established in Step 2, on potential HTH sites at which the County
may seek a purchase sale agreement or similar instrument through which
the County may secure use of the potential HTH property and agree upon
costs of potential use or purchase.
Once mutual agreement is established, the County may then enter into a
purchase and sale agreement.
10
1
0
HTH Property Siting Process
Step 7: Public Meeting and Incorporate Public Feedback
The County and city hold at least one public meeting in which members of
the public may offer input and feedback to consider.
The public meeting must be timed to occur after the County has negotiated
an agreement and at a point in the process that the public meeting does
not risk an increase of price.
The purpose of the meeting will be to inform a joint decision by City and
County staff on whether to proceed or how to proceed.
11
1
1
HTH Community Conversations
12
Examples of in person and virtual public engagement techniques used in other cities:
•Public meeting hosted by City Council, with King County and other “experts” as lead presenters
•Town hall co-hosted by City Council/County Councilmembers, with King County DCHS as presenter
•Meetings sponsored by interested parties, with presentation by King County and attendance by City representatives
•Phone calls to nearby residents and businesses
•Flyer/doorbelling nearby residents and businesses
•Focus groups of interested parties
•City notice of e-newsletter distribution, connected to website, blog posts, etc.
1
2
HTH Property Siting Process
Step 8: Close on the Purchase or Otherwise Finalize an Agreement
for Purchase or Use
13
1
3
After purchase, King County continues to partner with
host cities on:
•Operator/Provider Selection
•Local Referral Pathways & Lease Up
•Ongoing Communications
14
HTH Then What?1
4
King County Procurement Process
King County is committed to partnering with host cities on the
procurement of the Building Operator/Service Provider and ensuring the
process incorporates and reflects community feedback.
4 Step Process:
Request for qualifications
2.Community/business engagement prior to building purchase
3.Request for bid with pre-qualified applicants
4.Announce operator
Staffing, wages, recruitment and retention play a significant role in the
procurement process and may have profound impacts on these efforts.
1
5
Local Referral Process
The County and the onsite provider collaborate with the local city on the local referral
protocols and procedures for housing assignments, including:
•Identify local providers and City staff that provide homeless outreach services.
•Initial street outreach to people living unsheltered in the local community.
•Create a list of eligible individuals experiencing homelessness locally and provide
referrals.
•In additional to local referral, refer residents through King County Regional Homelessness
Authority’s Coordinated Entry (CEA) system.
16
1
6
The Health through Housing Implementation Plan adopts
the following communication plan for host cities:
•Annual meeting between the county, city staff and the service provider.
•Annual city council briefing to discuss the performance of the building and answer
any questions regarding site performance.
•HtH operator contracts require providers to report to, and problem solve with, King
County and the host city on any challenges regarding program outcomes and the
status of applicable good neighbor agreements.
•If any concerns are identified through these communication channels, King County
will work with the provider to ensure they follow up directly with the city staff to
resolve the problem.
17
HTH Communications Plan
1
7
Partnership With Operator
What We’ve Heard from Communities so far and what will inform
how we move forward with operators:
•24/7 Staffing
•Onsite Substance Use Treatment
•Employment and Housing Assistance
•Building and Property Conditions
•Security Cameras
•Partnerships and Impact with First
Responders
•Increased Communication
•Neighborhood Advisory Group
•Screening and Preparation for Housing
•Observing Laws on Registration
Requirements
•Connections to Local Service Providers
•Ability to Help People Experiencing Chronic
Homelessness In and Near Kirkland
•Controlled Access
•Safety In and Around the Housing
•Code of Conduct
•Privacy Fencing
•Concerns About Enabling vs. Treatment
•Ensuring Food Access
•How Quickly Occupancy Will Increase
•Operator Responsiveness to Concerns
18
1
8
Questions?
Kelly Rider
Director of External Affairs
King County DCHS
Thousands of people sleep outside every night.
We can bring them inside.
Learn More About Supportive Housing At:
National: Corporation for Supportive Housing –www.csh.org
•Supportive Housing 101
•CSH Guidebook
Local: Third Door Coalition –www.thirddoorcoalition.org
•Research and sources -permanent supportive housing
•Infographic
19
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ITEM INFORMATION
STAFF SPONSOR: LAUREL HUMPHREY ORIGINAL AGENDA DATE: 7/25/22
AGENDA ITEM TITLE Fire/EMS Service Contract Statement of Principle
CATEGORY Discussion Motion Resolution Ordinance Bid Award Public Hearing Other
Mtg Date 7/25/22 Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date
SPONSOR Council Mayor Admin Svcs DCD Finance Fire P&R Police PW
SPONSOR’S
SUMMARY Staff is seeking Council input on a draft Statement of Principle regarding the Fire/EMS
Service contract with Puget Sound Regional Fire Authority.
REVIEWED BY Trans&Infrastructure Svcs Community Svcs/Safety Finance & Governance Planning & Community Dev.
LTAC Arts Comm. Parks Comm. Planning Comm.
DATE: COMMITTEE CHAIR:
RECOMMENDATIONS:
SPONSOR/ADMIN.
COMMITTEE
COST IMPACT / FUND SOURCE
EXPENDITURE REQUIRED AMOUNT BUDGETED APPROPRIATION REQUIRED
$ $ $
Fund Source:
Comments:
MTG. DATE RECORD OF COUNCIL ACTION
7/25/22
MTG. DATE ATTACHMENTS
7/25/22 Draft Statement of Principle
COUNCIL AGENDA SYNOPSIS
----------------------------------Initials --------------------------------- ITEM NO.
Meeting Date Prepared by Mayor’s review Council review
7/25/22 LH 5.A.
21
22
DRAFT
Tukwila Statement of Principle
Fire/EMS Service Contract with Puget Sound Regional Fire Authority
July 25, 2022
The City of Tukwila seeks a short-term service contract with Puget Sound Regional Fire Authority (PSRFA)
as a bridge to voter-approved annexation as recommended by the Future of Fire/EMS Services
Community Advisory Committee and agreed upon by the Tukwila City Council.
The service level provided by PSRFA should be the same or better than currently offered by Tukwila Fire
Department, with options to secure enhanced services (expanded fire marshal services, a CARES unit,
and public education programming).
The contract should include commitment to two annexation votes, the first no later than April 2024,
with an annexation effective date no later than August 1, 2024; if the first annexation vote is
unsuccessful, the second annexation vote should be no later than April 2025, with an annexation
effective date no later than August 1, 2025.
In the event the annexation votes are unsuccessful, the City should have the option to either extend the
contract or terminate on not less than one-year's notice.
The contract should address the need to reconstitute the Tukwila Fire Department if the contract is
terminated, including advancing the City’s ability to hire a range of employees needed to operate a
Tukwila Fire department, as well as apparatus and equipment needs.
The costs for services should be fair, equitable and reasonable. Recognizing the contract is a short-term
bridge to annexation, reserves and the true-up process need to be clearly evaluated.
The City’s fire stations should remain under the ownership of the City during the contract, under a
nominal cost lease.
Work to develop terms of an annexation plan should start immediately after the contract is effective.
The contract should acknowledge key principles for the annexation plan, including equitable voting
membership on the PSRFA governing board, and equitable financial contributions in support of the
PSRFA operations.
23
24
ITEM INFORMATION
STAFF SPONSOR: MINDI MATTSON ORIGINAL AGENDA DATE: 7/25/22
AGENDA ITEM TITLE Emergency Preparedness Tabletop Exercise (Cascadia Rising Elected Officials
Workshop)
CATEGORY Discussion Motion Resolution Ordinance Bid Award Public Hearing Other
Mtg Date 7/25/22 Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date Mtg Date
SPONSOR Council Mayor Admin Svcs DCD Finance Fire P&R Police PW
SPONSOR’S
SUMMARY As the final part of the Cascadia Rising 2022 Exercise Series, council will receive a briefing
on the responsibilities of elected officials during disasters, followed by some discussion
questions.
REVIEWED BY Trans&Infrastructure Svcs Community Svcs/Safety Finance & Governance Planning & Community Dev.
LTAC Arts Comm. Parks Comm. Planning Comm.
DATE: COMMITTEE CHAIR:
RECOMMENDATIONS:
SPONSOR/ADMIN. Emergency Management
COMMITTEE N/A
COST IMPACT / FUND SOURCE
EXPENDITURE REQUIRED AMOUNT BUDGETED APPROPRIATION REQUIRED
$0 $0 $0
Fund Source:
Comments:
MTG. DATE RECORD OF COUNCIL ACTION
7/25/22 NA
MTG. DATE ATTACHMENTS
7/25/22 N/A
COUNCIL AGENDA SYNOPSIS
----------------------------------Initials --------------------------------- ITEM NO.
Meeting Date Prepared by Mayor’s review Council review
7/25/22 mm 5.B.
25
26
UPCOMING MEETINGS AND EVENTS
JULY - AUGUST 2022 City Council meetings and Council Committee meetings will be conducted in a hybrid model, with in-person and virtual attendance available.
JUL 25 MON JUL 26 TUE JUL 27 WED JUL 28 THU JUL 29 FRI JUL 30 SAT
Community Services and Safety Committee
5:30 PM
City Hall – Hazelnut Room
Hybrid Meeting
Finance and Governance
Committee
5:30 PM
6300 Building – Duwamish
Room on 2nd Floor
Hybrid Meeting
City Council
Committee of the Whole
Meeting
7:00 PM
City Hall Council
Chambers
Hybrid Meeting
SEE YOU IN THE PARK
Join Parks & Recreation
staff for “Mini…The Dough-
Nut” dessert food truck,
music and “Sing 2” movie in
the park. Music by Beat
Frequency starts at 8:00 PM.
8:00 PM – 11:00 PM
Tukwila Community Center
12424 42nd Ave S
Click here for more information.
FREE celebration of music,
dance and food at the
Farmers Market! Live
performance by Adefua
African Music & Dance.
Hosted by Tukwila Arts
Commission, 4Culture and
The Food Innovation
Program.
5:30 PM
Click here for more
information.
Arts Commission Rescheduled to July 28
Arts Commission 6:00 PM
Tukwila Community
Center – Executive
Conference Room
(Rescheduled to July
28)
Planning
Commission
6:30 PM
Virtual Meeting
DONATE BLOOD IN JULY
AND ENTER TO WIN A
BOTE RACKHAM AERO
INFLATABLE KAYAK!
Your donation is critical! Our
community is dangerously low
on the platelets and Type O
blood needed to supply each of
the cancer and surgery patients.
To schedule an appointment,
call 1-800-398-7888.
Click here for more
information and to schedule
an appointment online.
Monday, July 25, is the deadline
to register or update your
registration online or by mail for
the Primary Election. You can
register in-person up to
Election Day on August 2.
8:30 AM – 4:30 PM
King County Elections
919 SW Grady Way
Click here for more information.
TUKWILA
INTERNATIONAL
BOULEVARD ACTION
COMMITTEE
TRASH PICK-UP DAY
For more information, call
Sharon Mann at
206-200-3616.
SUMMER CELEBRATION
Join Westfield Southcenter
Mall for a FREE summer
celebration! Stop by one of
the many booths for sweet
treats, crafts, face painting,
character appearances and
so much more.
Enjoy music by DJ Justin
Murta.
2:00 PM – 5:00 PM
Westfield Southcenter
Mall
Click here for more
information.
AUG 1 MON AUG 2 TUE AUG 3 WED AUG 4 THU AUG 5 FRI AUG 6 SAT
Planning and
Community
Development Committee
5:30 PM
City Hall – Hazelnut Room
Hybrid Meeting
Transportation and
Infrastructure
Committee
5:30 PM
6300 Building – Duwamish
Room on 2nd Floor
Hybrid Meeting
City Council Regular
Meeting
7:00 PM
City Hall Council
Chambers
Hybrid Meeting
Register your event for
special visits from Tukwila
Police and Fire staff as well
as City Council members,
and other City
representatives.
Click here to register.
Library Advisory Board 6:30 PM
Tukwila Community Center
Hybrid Meeting
All communities welcome.
The Farmers Market accepts
EBT cards.
4:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Tukwila Village Plaza
14350 Tukwila Int’l Blvd
Free Summer Meal is
offered to youth 18 years
and younger.
Meal service time is
4:30 PM– 6:30 PM.
Click here for more information on FREE
Summer Meal Programs
for youths 18 years and
younger.
Equity and Social
Justice Commission
5:30 PM
Tukwila Justice Center
Hybrid Meeting
MUST BE WM
CUSTOMER
Place all your materials
curbside by 7:00 AM today.
Call WM by
Monday, August 1
to schedule collection of
your bulky items at
1-855-885-9452.
Click here for more
information.
POLICE DEPARTMENT HIRING PROCESS VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
Tukwila Police Department is seeking members of the community who are interested in volunteering with the Police Department hiring
process as members of an interview panel for selection of Police Department staff. Click here for more information and to apply.
NATIONAL NIGHT OUT AGAINST CRIME REGISTER YOUR EVENT NOW!
Hundreds of Tukwila residents join their neighbors in celebrating an evening of fun while sending the message to criminals that they are
not welcome in Tukwila! Register your event for special visits from Tukwila Police and Fire staff as well as City Council members, and
other City representatives. Click here to register.
THE CITY WANTS COMMUNITY FEEDBACK ON 2023-2024 BIENNIAL BUDGET
The new budget cycle will be challenging for the City. Revenues are slow to return to pre-pandemic levels. Inflation is at its highest level in
40 years, resulting in higher costs for supplies, materials and wages. We have a budget tool that you can make budget adjustments. Your challenge is to develop a
balanced budget. Click here for more information.
DRIVE THRU PICK-UP 3118 S 140TH ST TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM
VOLUNTEERS – In need of volunteers between 8 AM – 1 PM for food packaging Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and food distributions
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Click here to sign-up to volunteer.
DONORS – Please donate at TukwilaPantry.org.
FREE SUMMER YOUTH ORCA PASS
KC Metro is providing free Summer Youth ORCA passes to all 8th – 12th grade students who are eligible for free or reduced-price lunches at their schools.
Click here to sign-up.
NEW TRANSPORTATION SERVICE TO TUKWILA COMMUNITY CENTER MON THRU SAT 5 AM – 1 AM SUNDAYS 6 AM – 12 AM
KC Metro has launched a new pilot program that will provide on-demand transportation service from anywhere in Tukwila to the Tukwila Community Center. Click here for more information and rates.
COVID-19 TESTING
Rapid, over the counter COVID tests are now widely available around King County. These tests are also known as home-based self-collected COVID tests or antigen tests and
provide results in 15 minutes. Click here for more information. Click here to find COVID testing sites by location in King County.
COVID-19 VACCINATION
All Washingtonians ages 5 and up are eligible to receive a COVID-19 vaccination—and now also babies and children 6 months and older. For more information, visit
Getting vaccinated in King County or call 206-477-3977. You can also search at vaccinelocator.doh.wa.gov Interpreters available for assistance. Telephone-to-text
relay service: Dial 711 or 1-800-833-6384. Tactile interpretation: seattledbsc.org.
SURVEY ON INTERNET ACCESS FOR ALL WASHINGTON RESIDENTS
Do you experience challenges using and connecting to the internet? Take a survey shared by the Washington State Office of Equity. Your feedback will
help improve internet access for all people in Washington. Go to https://survey.alchemer.com/s3/6803644/DEFSurvey
2727
Tentative Agenda Schedule
MEETING 1 –
REGULAR
MEETING 2 –
C.O.W.
MEETING 3 –
REGULAR
MEETING 4 –
C.O.W.
JULY 4
Regular Meeting cancelled
due to the holiday.
JULY 11
See below link for the agenda
packet to view the agenda items:
July 11, 2022
Committee of the Whole /
Special Meeting
JULY 18
See below link for the agenda
packet to view the agenda items:
July 18, 2022
Regular Meeting
.
JULY 25
See below link for the agenda
packet to view the agenda items:
July 25, 2022
Committee of the Whole
MEETING 1 –
REGULAR
MEETING 2 –
C.O.W.
MEETING 3 –
REGULAR
MEETING 4 –
C.O.W.
AUGUST 1
APPOINTMENT
Confirm the appointments to the
Pro/Con Committee for Initiative
Measure #1 – Minimum Wage
Petition.
CONSENT AGENDA
- Accept as complete the Boeing
Access Road Over Airport Way
Seismic Retrofit Project with Razz
Construction; authorize release of
retainage, subject to the standard
claim and lien procedures (final
cost of project, including retainage:
$1,468,314.87).
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report
AUGUST 8
PUBLIC HEARING
2022 Code Amendment Ordinances:
- TITLE 8: An ordinance of the City
Council of the City of Tukwila,
Washington, amending TMC Title 8,
“Public Peace, Morals and Safety,”
including Ordinance Nos. 2370 §1 and
2292 §13, as codified at TMC Section
8.22.120.B, to amend language on
public notice requirements for
residential parties; providing for
severability; and establishing an
effective date.
- TITLE 17: An ordinance of the City
Council of the City of Tukwila,
Washington, amending TMC Title 17,
“Subdivisions and Plats,” including
Ordinance Nos. 2649 §2 and 1833 §1
(part), as codified at TMC Section
17.08.030, “Preliminary Approval,” to
add clarifying language regarding
zoning requirements for boundary line
adjustments providing for severability;
and establishing an effective date.
- TITLE 18: An ordinance of the City
Council of the City of Tukwila,
Washington, amending various
ordinances as codified in TMC Title 18,
“Zoning,” as delineated herein, to
incorporate a variety of housekeeping
code amendments including definitions
(TMC 18.06), and regulations related
to: shoreline conditional use permits
(TMC 18.44), single-family dwelling
design standards and exceptions (TMC
18.50), landscaping requirements
(TMC 18.52), tree exception permits
and procedures (TMC 18.54),
nonconforming structures (TMC
18.104); as well as revisions ot the
basic development standards in various
sections of the TMC as detailed herein,
and an update to Table 18-6, “Land
Uses Allowed by District,” providing for
severability; and establishing an
effective date.
- TITLE 19: An ordinance of the City
Council of the City of Tukwila,
Washington, amending TMC Title 19,
“Sign and Visual Communication
Code,” including Ordinance Nos. 2375
§6 and 2303 §5 (part), as codified at
TMC Section 19.20.030.B.7; Ordinance
Nos. 2375 §7 and 2303 §5 (part), as
codified at TMC Section 19.20.040; and
Ordinance Nos. 2375 §10, as codified
at TMC Section 19.32.075, to amend
language regarding changes to sign
copy and to clarify language on
freestanding and monument sign
regulations; adding a new definition for
“Mural,” providing for severability; and
establishing an effective date.
SPECIAL ISSUES
- 2022 Code Amendment Ordinances
- Economic Development Plan –
Community Engagement
AUGUST 15
PRESENTATIONS
- Seattle Seawolves End of Season
Recap
- Seattle Southside Tourism
Authority Update
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
- COVID-19 Bi-weekly Report
- 2022 Code Amendment
Ordinances
AUGUST 22
PUBLIC HEARING
Zoning Code Amendment Streamlining
SPECIAL ISSUES
Zoning Code Amendment Streamlining
Special Meeting to follow
Committee of the Whole Meeting.
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