During our subscriber drives, we look back at what we’ve been up to over the past year. 2020 didn’t bring a lot of fuzzy moments, but we’re proud of how we persevered.
As the Covid-19 pandemic ramped up in the spring, we struggled with how to proceed and cope, not just as members of an organization but on a personal level. With all-volunteer reporters and columnists, we told everyone to take their time. It was hard to be productive amidst all the chaos, but we wanted to be there for each other.
Covid’s threat to urbanism
Beyond organizational capacity, Covid was destabilizing for the whole urbanism movement. The pandemic provided ample opportunity for skeptics and doomsayers to declare cities over and density and mass transit to blame for the spread.
We pushed back against those ridiculous claims which even a cursory glance at world history (not to mention Seattle home prices) could prove wrong. The pandemic changed the narrative, but fundamentally the case for sustainable walkable urbanism with a housing and transportation system that serves the least privileged as well as the most privileged is still a strong case.
Cities rebound after pandemics–even a near-death experience may not be up to the task of livening up a cookie-cutter suburb or making a drive-everywhere lifestyle more enjoyable. The fears around urban living were overblown. Transit is not a major site of Covid transmission according to the research, and cities that have contained the spread and taken proper precautions have seen ridership surge back. Meanwhile many suburban and rural areas have seen their Covid rates soar even with their sprawling living patterns.
Nonetheless, in America the impulse for many pundits has been to declare transit antiquated: why bother investing in it? This couldn’t be farther from the truth. We argued for transit investment and against austerity with allied organizations. We must hold off deeper economic decline and be ready to hit the ground running when we emerge from this crisis. We must invest in the city we want to see. We should not be jettisoning transit, street safety, and climate mitigation projects, as Mayor Jenny Durkan has proposed.
Seattle transit ridership has seen some rebound from deep lows around May, particularly as more precautions have been taken, lessening the spread and allowing economic activity to pick up a bit.
Fighting back with progressive policy and taxation
And there’s light at the end of the tunnel. While the Trump administration trainwreck has tripped up momentum on transit projects nationwide, an administration led by Joe Biden and Kamala Harris would be much more bullish about investing in transit and hopefully provide a needed boost to high speed rail ambitions across the nation.
Crisis has also brought opportunity for action. After years of flirting with major investment in housing via corporate taxes, Seattle finally did it as Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda deftly shepherded the “JumpStart Seattle” package through Seattle City Council, which overrode a Mayor Durkan veto to defend its year one spending plan. The progressive payroll tax will raise at least $214 million per year from the largest companies in town–revenue that the Council intends to invest in Covid relief, affordable housing, equitable development, and the Green New Deal. That is if Mayor Durkan doesn’t swipe the money first as her budget attempts to do.
Black-led uprising against police brutality
Without the pandemic, it’s also questionable whether Black Lives Matter protests would have swept the nation this summer. An unprecedented number of protesters took to the streets demanding an end to police brutality and racial injustice against Black and brown people–which the pandemic had magnified. The Urbanist joined the call in favor of Black Lives movement and defunding the Seattle Police Department (SPD) by 50% in order to invest in communities or color. We hosted organizer and former City Council candidate Shaun Scott to talk about the protests and police reform in June (video here).
SPD’s repeated brutality against protests and everyone caught in the crossfire–including journalists, small kids, medics, nurses, legal observers, councilmembers, etc.—only made the case stronger. The police department–with the Mayor’s blessing–deployed tear gas on its own people and fought a chemical weapons ban on these dangerous munitions, which constitute a Covid risk factor and have long been banned in war under the Geneva Convention. Seattle is a decade into police reform efforts and it’s time to admit our failure, change course, and try deeper structural change.
Mayor Durkan has so far resisted these calls and blocked the City Council’s efforts and sought to divert attention with her $100 million pledge to communities of color–which it turns out she would fund by swiping JumpStart revenue and draining emergency reserves (the same thing she vetoed the Council’s Covid relief package for doing.) Also, the promised $100 million per year would be disbursed by her hand-picked committee which she has yet to unveil. What could go wrong?
Please become a subscriber if you’re along with us in this fight for justice–even against the toughest circumstances–and if you’re ready to jumpstart an era of progressive change extending the right to the city to all.








