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Select Committee on the Library Levy 4/2/2026: Public Hearing

The Select Committee on the Library Levy held a public hearing on April 2, 2026, from 5:35–6:30 PM on Council Bill 121181, which would place a library property tax levy on the August 4, 2026 ballot. The hearing drew 30 in-person and 5 remote speakers, nearly all in favor of the levy and of proposed amendments to increase its total above the mayor's baseline proposal. No votes were taken; this was a testimony-only session.

Raw + summary Public hearing6 speakers▂▁▄ 6 speakers
7,853 words 2,004 entries 6 speakers x185489 video id

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Transcript file 2026-04-02_select-committee-on-the-library-levy_x185489.srt.

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Preview normalized transcript text
APOLOGIES FOR NEEDING A FEW
MINUTES THERE TO GET OUR TECH.
ALL SET UP AND READY TO GO.
SO HAPPY TO SEE EVERYONE
HERE THIS EVENING.
THE APRIL 2nd, 2026, MEETING
OF THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON
THE LIBRARY LEVY WILL COME TO
ORDER.
IT'S 5:35 P.M.
I'M MARITZA RIVERA,
CHAIR OF THE COMMITTEE.
WILL THE CLERK PLEASE CALL THE
ROLL.
KOUP SILL MEMBER: KOUP SILL MEMBER
LIN?
HERE: HERE.
COUNCILMEMBER RINCK: COUNCILMEMBER RINCK.
HERE: HERE.
COUNCILMEMBER STRAUSS: COUNCILMEMBER STRAUSS.
HERE: HERE.
COUNCILMEMBER FOSTER: COUNCILMEMBER FOSTER.
HERE: HERE.
COUNCILMEMBER JUAREZ: COUNCILMEMBER JUAREZ.
COUNCILMEMBER KETTLE.
VICE-CHAIR HOLLINGSWORTH.
HERE: HERE.
CHAIR RIVERA: CHAIR RIVERA.
PRESENT.
SEVEN COUNCILMEMBERS ARE: SEVEN COUNCILMEMBERS ARE
PRESENT.
THANK YOU, CLERK.
ALL RIGHT, WELL, I WANT TO THANK
YOU ALL FOR COMING
TODAY. I WANT TO THANK YOU,
COLLEAGUES, AND MEMBERS OF THE
PUBLIC
AND ANYONE THAT IS JOINING US
ONLINE SHARING YOUR THOUGHTS AS
PART OF
THIS -- AND I WANT TO THANK
YOU FOR SHARING YOUR THOUGHTS
AS PART OF THIS PUBLIC HEARING.
THESE HEARINGS ARE REALLY AN
IMPORTANT PART OF
OUR LEGISLATIVE PROCESS.
I AM GRATEFUL FOR YOUR
ENGAGEMENT AND I AM REALLY
LOOKING FORWARD TO HEARING
YOUR WORDS TODAY.
BEFORE WE START TODAY, I
WANTED TO QUICKLY RECAP THE
MAYOR'S
$410 MILLION LEVY
RENEWAL PROPOSAL, WHICH I
SUPPORT.
THIS PROPOSAL IS 50% LARGER THAN
THE 2019 LEVY.
THAT'S ON TOP OF ACCOUNTING FOR
INFLATION.
I HAVE RECEIVED SOME EMAILS,
AND, COLLEAGUES, YOU MAY HAVE
AS WELL, DESCRIBING THIS LEVY AS
STATUS QUO.
I'M NOT ALWAYS CERTAIN WHERE
CONSTITUENTS RECEIVE
INFORMATION AND WHAT IS OUT
THERE, BUT AS I
JUST CONFIRMED, THIS LEVY IS 50%
MORE THAN WHAT WOULD HAVE
BEEN THE STATUS QUO.
STATUS QUO WOULD HAVE BEEN
A BASELINE OF $219 MILLION PLUS
INFLATION.
BUT BECAUSE WE CARE ABOUT OUR
LIBRARIES, WE MADE SURE
THAT, DESPITE THE LEVY CAP, WE
HAD
A PROPOSAL THAT INCLUDED NEW
FUNDING. I'M RESTATING THIS
BECAUSE I
WANT TO MAKE SURE THAT
CONSTITUENTS UNDERSTAND HOW MUCH
IS ACTUALLY IN THE PACKAGE.
I ALSO WANT TO ANSWER A QUESTION
THAT CAME UP IN
OUR SELECT COMMITTEE EARLIER
THIS WEEK ABOUT FUNDING TO
COMPLETE THE
HVAC SYSTEMS AT THE FIVE
BRANCHES THAT NEED COOLING.
THERE WAS CONFUSION AS
TO WHETHER OR NOT WE HAD A
GRANT FROM FEMA TO DO THE WORK.
I'M RELIEVED TO REPORT WE
DO HAVE A LETTER, WHICH
YOU RECEIVED TODAY,
COLLEAGUES, CONFIRMING THE GRANT
TO ADD
COOLING TO THESE
FIVE BRANCHES BY THE END OF NEXT
YEAR.
THIS IS AN EXAMPLE OF MY
OVERALL CONCERN WITH GOVERNMENT
SPENDING AND MAKING DECISIONS
BASEDBASED
SPECULATION RATHER THAN REALITY.
THE REALITY IS WE HAVE A FEMA
GRANT.
AS TO ADDITIONAL FUNDING
FOR DEFERRED AND ONGOING
MAINTENANCE, THERE IS ALMOST
$86 MILLION IN THIS PROPOSAL FOR
THAT PURPOSE OF WHICH ALMOST
30 MILLION IS ACTUALLY NEW
FUNDING.
THE LIBRARY INDICATED THEY
WILL HAVE TO DO MORE WORK IN
FIVE TO
TEN YEARS BUT WE WILL HAVE A
LEVY RENEWAL IN SEVEN YEARS
WE CAN ADD MORE FUNDING TO.
AS WE DO WITH ALL LEVY
RENEWALS, WE ADD ADDITIONAL
FUNDING
EACH TIME TO DO MORE WORK.
ADDING THAT MONEY NOW
DIMINISHES OUR ABILITY TO
ADDRESS
PRESSING NEEDS TODAY.
AT THE RISK OF SOUNDING LIKE A
BROKEN RECORD, THIS IS A
SOLID PROPOSAL THAT NOT ONLY
ADDS BASELINE PLUS INFLATION BUT
50%
MORE ON TOP OF THAT.
WE NEED TO MAKE OUR DECISIONS
DEFENSIBLE TO OUR RESIDENTS
WHO ARE FOOTING THE BILL.
WITH THAT, WE'RE GOING TO GO TO
OUR PUBLIC HEARING.
IF THERE'S NO OBJECTION, THE
AGENDA WILL BE ADOPTED.
HEARING NO OBJECTION, THE AGENDA
IS ADOPTED.
WILL THE CLERK PLEASE READ
ITEM ONE INTO THE RECORD.
AGENDA ITEM ONE, COUNCIL BILL
121181. AN ORDINANCE RELATE TO
GO REGULAR PROPERTY TAXES
PROVIDING FOR THE SUBMISSION TO
THE QUALIFIED ELECTORS OF THE
CITY
AT AN ELECTION TO BE HELD ON
AUGUST 4, 2026, OF A PROPOSITION
AUTHORIZING TO LEVY
PROPERTY TAXES UP TO SEVEN YEARS
IN EXCESS OF THE LIMITATION
ON LEVIES IN CHAPTER 84. 55 RCW
FOR
TECHNOLOGY, PROGRAMMING
AND MAINTENANCE WHILE
EXPANDING ACCESS TO OPPORTUNITY
THROUGH LIBRARY MATERIALS,
TECHNOLOGY
AND UNDERTAKING A RETROFIT
OF ONE LIBRARY FACILITY
AND RATIFYING AND CONFIRMING
CERTAIN PRIOR ACTS.
THANK YOU, CLERK.
AS PRESIDING OFFICER, I'M NOW
OPENING THE PUBLIC
HEARING ON COUNCIL BILL 121181.
CLERK, HOW MANY SPEAKERS
ARE SIGNED UP TODAY?
CURRENTLY WE HAVE 30
IN- PERSON SPEAKERS AND
FIVE REMOTE SIGNED UP.
GIVEN THAT AND FOLLOWING: GIVEN THAT AND FOLLOWING
OUR COUNCIL RULES, EACH SPEAKER
WILL HAVE ONE MINUTE.
CLERK, I WILL NOW HAND THIS OVER
TO YOU TO PRESENT
THE INSTRUCTIONS AND THEN I
WILL READ THE NAMES FOR IN-
PERSON
SPEAKERS, AND WE WILL -- I
WILL LET YOU READ THE
INSTRUCTIONS.
I THINK YOU HAVE THAT.
THE PUBLIC HEARING WILL: THE PUBLIC HEARING WILL
BE MODERATED IN THE FOLLOWING
MANNER.
THE PUBLIC HEARING WILL CONTINUE
UNTIL ALL REGISTERED SPEAKERS
HAVE HAD AN OPPORTUNITY TO
SPEAK.
SPEAKERS WILL BE CALLED IN
THE ORDER THEY REGISTERED.
WE WILL START WITH TEN IN-
PERSON SPEAKERS AND ALTERNATE TO
REMOTE
SPEAKERS AND CONTINUE UNTIL ALL
REGISTERED SPEAKERS HAVE SPOKEN.
SPEAKERS WILL HEAR A CHIME
WHEN TEN SECONDS ARE LEFT OF
THE

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Local summary generated Apr 8, 2026, 4:45 PM with sonnet.

Seattle Select Committee on the Library Levy holds public hearing on $410M renewal proposal

The Select Committee on the Library Levy held a public hearing on April 2, 2026, from 5:35–6:30 PM on Council Bill 121181, which would place a library property tax levy on the August 4, 2026 ballot. The hearing drew 30 in-person and 5 remote speakers, nearly all in favor of the levy and of proposed amendments to increase its total above the mayor's baseline proposal. No votes were taken; this was a testimony-only session.

Who mattered

  • Maritza Rivera — Committee Chair, District (unspecified), presided; supports the $410M baseline proposal
  • Councilmember Rinck — Author of amendments on ebook expansion, collections, West Seattle Branch seismic retrofit
  • Councilmember Foster — Co-sponsor of amendments on multilingual/ESL programming and programs generally
  • Councilmember Juarez — Co-sponsor of multilingual programming amendments; present
  • Councilmember Lin — Amendment on deferred maintenance and HVAC/cooling funding; present
  • Councilmember Strauss — Co-sponsor of amendments on library spaces and equipment; present
  • Vice-Chair Hollingsworth — Present
  • Councilmember Kettle — Arrived partway through the meeting
  • Faith Pettis — Seattle Public Library Board of Trustees, spoke in support of amendments
  • Matt Hillman — Board President, Seattle Library Foundation; co-authored op-ed urging a stronger levy
  • Jennifer (last name unclear from transcript) — Board President, Friends of the Seattle Public Library; advocated for ebook amendment
  • Susan Lu — Interim Executive Director, Chinatown-International District (CID); local author; spoke in favor of amendments
  • Janel Blakely — Disputed property tax rate figures reported in the press

What happened

  • The core proposal is Mayor Wilson's $410 million, seven-year library levy renewal (Council Bill 121181), intended to appear on the August 4, 2026 ballot. Chair Rivera emphasized this is 50% larger than the 2019 levy of $219M, not status quo.
  • Multiple councilmembers (Foster, Juarez, Lin, Rinck, Strauss) have filed amendments to increase the levy beyond $410M, targeting collections (physical and digital books/ebooks), deferred maintenance, multilingual and ESL programming, staff capacity, and a seismic retrofit of the West Seattle Branch.
  • Rivera clarified that the library has a confirmed FEMA grant to add air conditioning (HVAC/cooling) to five branches by end of 2027, resolving confusion raised at an earlier committee meeting. She cautioned against adding more maintenance money now given this grant and a planned levy renewal in seven years.
  • The levy proposal includes approximately $86 million for deferred and ongoing maintenance, of which roughly $30 million is new funding.
  • One speaker (Colleen, remote) opposed the amendments as fiscally irresponsible, warning that Seattle property taxes are already among the highest in the state and additional levies burden renters and homeowners. Speaker Ann Tyson (remote) supported the $410M baseline but agreed it should be capped there.
  • Speaker Janel Blakely disputed press reporting that the levy would raise the property tax rate from $3.02 to $3.21, arguing the accurate figure is an increase from $2.96 to $3.03 (7 cents) because the 2019 levy costs are rolling off.
  • The Columbia City Branch seismic retrofit (referred to as fulfilling a commitment from the last levy) and the West Seattle Branch retrofit were both cited as unfunded priorities addressed by Councilmember Rinck's amendment.

What to watch next

  • Council must vote on whether to adopt the $410M baseline levy and whether to include any or all of the proposed amendments before the August 4, 2026 ballot deadline.
  • The FEMA grant for HVAC cooling at five branches is confirmed; the library must complete that work by end of 2027.
  • The library board (represented by Faith Pettis) committed to delivering on funded levy promises, consistent with its track record from the 2019 levy.
  • Speakers noted that digital ebook wait times are a persistent problem; Councilmember Rinck's ebook expansion amendment is intended to address this.

Transcript limitations

The transcript is an auto-generated caption file (SRT format) with frequent transcription errors: names are mangled (e.g., "Cocoru Aronku," "Alifia," last names often unclear), some speaker attributions are ambiguous due to crosstalk markers, and at least one speaker's last name was inaudible or untranscribable by the captioning system. David Haynes and Justin Baird registered but did not appear to speak via phone as expected. The specific dollar amounts attached to individual amendments were not stated in testimony. The district affiliation of Chair Rivera is not stated in the transcript. "Mayor Wilson" is referenced once but not further identified — this appears to be the current Seattle mayor based on context.