Deadline is  June 28 to gather signatures on petitions giving Seattle voters a chance to vote this November  to designate five City Council positions as district positions, and to allow  citizen-initiated Charter amendments to be voted on yearly
  
 Petitions (with a deadline  of June 28) are being circulated that would allow Seattle voters to decide, at  the November 2009 general election, two important issues.  Following is the  language of the two petitions (the complete text of each Charter amendment is a  part of each petition, and available at the web site below):
    (1)  Shall the Charter of the City of    Seattle be amended to change the structure of the City Council from an    at-large council of nine (9) positions to a council with five (5)    district-based and four (4) at-large positions?
    
   (2)  Shall the Charter of the City of    Seattle be amended to allow amendments presented by voters to be placed on    ballots for BOTH state and municipal elections?  Currently amendments    presented by voters are only allowed in odd years when municipal elections    occur.
 A new group called Action Seattle filed the  petitions, and many other organizations and individuals are or will be  supporting the effort.  Seattle voters deserve the chance to vote on  both petitions this November 2009.  As presently constituted, the City  Council will not vote to put either issue on the ballot--citizen  petitions are the only way.  
  
 It is contrary to democracy that, while the  City Council can put amendments to the City Charter before the voters every  year, the Charter allows amendments proposed by citizen petition to be put  before the voters only every two years.  Allowing an annual vote on  citizen-initiated Charter amendments seems only fair--a  "no-brainer."  
  
 And while reasonable people can  disagree about the districts issue, the current proposal is a  compromise leaving four positions at-large (previous proposals, and  the actual system during most of Seattle's history, had all City Council  positions as districts).  Most of the nation's large cities currently have  all or part of their City Council positions as districts.  This measure  would bring Seattle more into line with present practice, and could improve the  City Council's responsiveness to the public.  We need this debate, and  the voters should decide.   
  
 If sufficient signatures are not turned in by June  28, it will be another two years (2011!) before either issue can be raised  again.  Time is short, as 29,500 signatures of registered Seattle voters  are needed.  This is doable, if plenty of people pitch in.  A  particular effort will be made to collect signatures at the Northwest  Folklife Festival and other fairs and events in the next few weeks.   Remember, these petitions do not endorse a yes or no vote, but would  put the two issues on the November ballot.  If you  wish, you can help with one petition and not the other.
  
 To download the petitions:  http://actionseattle.org/82064/94901.html    Extra copies of the petitions are also available at Action Seattle, 2817  South McClellan Street (just east of Rainier Avenue).  If the office is  closed, blank petitions are in the black mailbox to the right of the front  door.  Also, blank petitions can be mailed to you, or a volunteer can  deliver copies to your home or business, if you call (206) 774-9146 or e-mail to  info@actionseattle.org     
 
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