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JCD ad in Nov. 2 Port Townsend Leader

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[caption id="attachment_13119" align="aligncenter" width="1024"] General election ad published Nov. 2, 2022, in the Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader[/caption]

'Your voice is your vote,' says Nov. 2 election ad in The Leader

The Jefferson County Democrats published its third ad promoting the Nov. 8 general election in the Nov. 2 Port Townsend Leader & Jefferson County Leader. 

For a list of all candidates endorsed by the Jefferson County Democrats, visit its Endorsements page. The list includes links to candidate websites or their statements in the Washington State Voters’ Guide.

Update from County Commissioner Kate Dean on Hadlock Sewer

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Democratic Jefferson County Commissioner Kate Dean shared the following thoughts this week on the Port Hadlock Sewer project, and emphasized the valuable contributions that infrastructure projects have long played in helping rural areas.

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When I moved to Quilcene in the late 1990’s, talk in the Leader and at the post office revolved around a few predictable topics: spotted owl, Growth Management and the Hadlock sewer.  Our historic dairy farms were selling off their herds due to low milk prices. Rural communities across Washington were facing the loss of familiar jobs amid new environmental regulation.  The future of natural resource-based economies seemed uncertain at best and- depending who you asked- the state’s 1990 Growth Management Act (GMA) was either going to be the nail in the coffin, or provide the key to a better future. Either way, the answer was probably emphatic and strongly-worded. 

Little did I know, over 20 years later, we’d still be arguing over many of the same passionately-held opinions and beliefs about land use.  The most current iteration is about the building of the Port Hadlock sewer.  Will it bring prosperity to all or will it be the demise of rural living?  I’m here to suggest that the answer is neither, but that the cost of doing nothing is highest of all.

Growth Management required counties to determine where (and how much of) different, necessary land uses would go. Port Townsend, an incorporated city, was left to do their own Comprehensive Planning. Rural counties like ours identified commercial forest and farm land and “locked in” zoning to protect those working lands so that they would not be converted and lost to development.  Industrial areas like Glen Cove and the paper mill were identified so that new residential areas were not built too close to them, creating incompatibility issues. And counties were required to decide where, in their unincorporated lands, they would put density and growth in the future.  Jefferson County residents, through public meetings, expensive studies and lawsuits, chose Port Hadlock as the Urban Growth Area (UGA) for this purpose. 

UGAs are intended to prevent sprawl.  When you identify where retail, manufacturing, multi-family housing and services can go, it does not end up spread across the rural landscape.  This development pattern provides an efficient way to provide utilities to businesses and residents.  But density only works where there are the services in place to support it, per GMA, which is why the sewer must be built before the added density is permitted.

Building sewers is nothing new.  In fact, most people on sewer don’t give it much thought.  But at some point, their city or neighborhood decided to invest in this infrastructure for the benefits it provides: density, containment of effluent and potential contaminants, the affordability of monthly service versus septic system installation or replacement.  Building a sewer is not a radical act; it is something that has been done for 200 years, to the betterment of communities served. 

And federal subsidies are usually needed to pull it off.  In fact, it was disagreements about how to fund critical infrastructure that led our country’s founders to establish a constitutional form of government.  FDR used the New Deal to pull the US out of the Great Depression and Eisenhour built the interstate highway system to connect all of America.  Federal investment in infrastructure has, time and again, provided rural areas stability, economic opportunity and improved environmental health. 

The Port Hadlock sewer is also not a new idea; it was a direction set over 20 years ago through an engaged public process.  The new design calls for building it in the core commercial area, where property owners petitioned the Board of County Commissioners to re-ignite the project in 2017.  Affordable housing providers own land in the service area and are waiting for the sewer in order to build at a density that pencils out financially.  Businesses, currently constrained by low-capacity systems or land set-asides for drain fields, want to hire more employees and expand their services.  These outcomes are what infrastructure investments have borne repeatedly.

This project can only be built with state and federal subsidy.  The County knows that it cannot, and will not, be built on the backs of property owners who cannot afford the investment.  But, like rural electrification in the 1930’s, federal support for infrastructure in under-served areas has proven to bring enormous benefits for generations to come.  Providing sewer is a way to bring dignity, equity and opportunity to rural areas that cannot bear the cost alone.

Jefferson County has done a good job of protecting working lands and the environment, but it has arguably failed to provide the necessary infrastructure for our rural communities to innovate and thrive.  Just as people resisted the introduction of the telephone in homes in the 1930’s, change generates fear and speculation.  I urge Jefferson County residents to engage in planning processes, such as the Planning Commission and Comprehensive Planning to learn how carefully and intentionally decision are made, often by their neighbors and friends who volunteer for this hard and often thankless work.

With state and federal stimulus dollars, we have a real shot at getting the Port Hadlock sewer built in the near future.  Let’s rally around this project with our local businesses and housing providers to envision more jobs, more housing and more prosperity. Infrastructure should be the backbone of our communities- not a privilege only for those lucky enough to afford it.

Kate Dean is the Chair of the Jefferson County Board of County Commissioners.  She urges people interested in the project to attend a virtual public meeting on April 15th from 5-8pm. For more information: https://www.co.jefferson.wa.us/1158/Port-Hadlock-Wastewater-System

 

Bills to watch

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A couple of key bills making their way through the state Legislature

JCD Elections Chair Diane Jones provided this information about legislation affecting internet service and health care in Washington state. The state Legislature is holding hearings on both bills the week of March 15, 2021.

HB 1336 would create and expand unrestricted authority for public entities to provide telecommunications services to end-users. HB 1336 has passed through the state House of Representatives and is waiting to be voted out of a state Senate committee.

SB 5383 is a watered-down version of this bill in the state Senate, but it would at least move us in the right direction. SB 5383 has made it through the Senate and will have a hearing in the House committee at 10 a.m. this Wednesday, March 17. You can watch the hearing here.

The pandemic has made it abundantly clear that having internet access is a necessity like water and electricity. Yet for decades, the internet service providers lobby has blocked even public utility districts from doing so in much of Washington.

If this bill were to become law, PUDs and others could apply for federal money to lay fiber and either directly connect end-users or attract and create competition for service providers to provide the service, which they do not want.

SB 5399 has passed through the state Senate and is now working its way through the House. It has a hearing at 10 a.m. this Thursday, March 18. You can watch it here.

Health Care For All - WA endorses SB 5399, stating that the legislation “builds on the actuarial work done for the UHC Work Group and begins the implementation of the plan favored by a majority of the Work Group: a unified plan for universal health coverage run through a state agency.”

Another organization supporting SB 5399 is Health Care is a Human Right, a coalition of 54 sponsor and allied organizations

JCD Elections Chair Diane Jones, who also serves on the Advocacy Committee for Washington State Democrats, urged people to go here to see these bills and many other key bills making their way through the state Legislature.

FYI: Petition related to expansion of Dabob Bay Natural Area

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FYI: Please sign the petition today to Commissioner of Public Lands and Jefferson County Commissioners asking them to support expansion of the Dabob Bay Natural Area to protect globally rare types of native forest on state land proposed for timber harvest-

https://www.change.org/p/state-public-land-commissioner-franz-jefferson-county-commissioners-save-the-heritage-forests-of-thetoandos-peninsula-action-for-climate-protection?cs_tk=Alg56EBs0ScrACKK118AAXicyyvNyQEABF8BvPhbnVdeQdlPTPDg-5j_XZc%3D&utm_campaign=f454fc36ae004db4b9604b023d2e9d13&utm_content=initial_v0_1_1&utm_medium=email&utm_source=petition_signer_receipt&utm_term=cs

Conservation groups, shellfish growers, Tribes, and citizens are working to convince DNR to conserve the largest remaining occurrence of a rare type of native Rhododendron forest left in the world – located along Dabob Bay and Toandos Peninsula - that DNR has plans to log. Dec 9 2020 Port Townsend Leader article–

https://www.ptleader.com/stories/partnership-puts-pressure-on-dnr-for-expansion-of-dabob-bay-natural-area,72526

FYI: JCIRA UPDATE

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We're probably all sharing a sense of optimism about possible changes in immigration policies and actions. JCIRA (Jefferson County Immigrant Rights Advocates) would like to fill you in on major recent changes in WA that have helped the immigrant community tremendously. These changes hold out promise for further state legislative actions that can involve all of us, including the Jeffco Dems.

On October 21, Gov. Inslee announced a $40 Million Relief Fund for ALL immigrants who qualify, including undocumented immigrants for the very first time.

The Fund closed on December 6 after receiving approximately 94,000 applications, a reflection of the desperate need felt across the state. Farm laborers, shellfish workers, caregivers, hospital workers, salal gatherers, restaurant employees, hotel and motel service employees - all have felt the economic impacts of Covid-19.  Some lost their jobs, others had work hours reduced. Most workers received no stimulus payments, no unemployment checks - and many had very little medical insurance, if any. 

Eligible recipients are receiving a one-time payment of $1,000, with a limit of $3,000 per household. The checks can be used for rent, food, medical bills, etc. No questions are asked about immigration status nor is information collected shared with any governmental agencies. 

The Washington Immigrant Support Network (WAISN), a non-profit statewide coalition of more than 300 immigrant rights groups, was the key organization responsible for the successful negotiations leading to the Fund. The group is led by immigrants, many of whom are undocumented themselves, and membership consists of a dynamic and dedicated mix of LGBTQ activists. 

WAISN is now focusing on state legislative priorities for the new year, based on the needs seen during the pandemic. At the top of the list are additional Covid-19 relief funds for 2021 and the extension of unemployment insurance and health insurance to undocumented workers.  JCIRA will continue working closely with WAISN to improve the lives of all immigrants and their families. We're happy to work with all local groups sharing these goals.  

For more details contact JCIRA, 360-232-6070 or jcirawa@gmail.com

Tiny Home Communities as Supportive Housing – Wednesday, Dec 16, 2020 *Online*

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Date: Wed., Dec. 16, 2020
Time: 6:30-8:00 p.m. Location: Online.

Jefferson County’s housing crisis is going from bad to worse as the economic impact of COVID-19 hits. This webinar demonstrates why Tiny Home Communities are an effective, sustainable solution to the housing affordability crisis. This webinar on supported, self-governing tiny home villages for the unhoused and housing precarious features a presentation on Bellingham’s Unity Village by co-founder Doug Gustafson. A panel discussion follows with Gary Keister, Executive Director of Bayside Housing; Josh Castle, Director of Community Engagement for Seattle's Low Income Housing Institute (LIHI); Jesse Thomas, co-founder of the Community Build Project constructing 12 tiny shelters; Barbara Morey, housing advocate and Joint Housing Task Force member; and Brian Thompson, who gives a hand up to fellow tenters through advocacy and teaching survival skills. Register here. Send questions here.

FYI: Jefferson County Immigrant Rights Advocates Need Used Computers

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JCIRA is searching for used computers in excellent condition, for immigrant families. They have been doing this for a few years but they need more. 

Our mission is to support the rights of immigrants and their families, giving priority to those who live or work on the Olympic Peninsula and immigrant detainees within Washington State, through access to legal services, standing witness, family support, community education and advocacy for local, state and national issues.

CONTACT JCIRA AT:

Jefferson County Immigrant Rights Advocates
P.O. Box 647
​Port Townsend, WA 98368

JCIRAwa@gmail.com

360-232-6070

FYI PETITION: REQUIRE ALL NEW SHOOTING RANGES IN JEFFERSON COUNTY, WASHINGTON TO BE BUILT INDOORS.

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The Jefferson County Planning Commission has recommended to the Board of County Commissioners (BoCC) that:

ALL NEW SHOOTING RANGES BE BUILT INDOORS, IN  COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL ZONES, GRANDFATHERING IN THE JEFFERSON COUNTY SPORTSMEN'S ASSOCIATION RANGE, WHICH LEASES COUNTY PROPERTY.

This recommendation was reached after an extensive, required public decision-making process, which is now nearing its completion. The planners voted 7-0, with one abstention on Nov. 20, 2019.

By signing this petition you are indicating that:

- You are a resident of Jefferson County, WA.
- You support the Planning Commission's recommendation stated in bold, capitalized type above.

Click here for details and to sign this petition.