Other Candidates
Davis faces several less progressive candidates in this race for Seattle City Council in District 4. Maritza Rivera works in Mayor Bruce Harrell's office as Deputy Director of the Department of Arts & Culture. Her number one campaign priority is public safety, in the form of getting 5-minute response times to 911 calls, taking "home and car break-ins seriously," and aggressively targeting people suffering from drug addiction. Like Ken Wilson, Rivera doesn't support rent control and wants the city to continue its expensive and inhumane sweeps of encampments. She has no firm stance on increasing revenue for the 400 additional officers she wants to hire, despite a projected city budget shortfall in the years to come.
Also in this race is civil engineer Ken Wilson, who is similarly focused on public safety. Like many candidates across the district this year, Wilson's top priority is more police. Amid a nationwide shortage of police, a serious budget shortfall for the years to come, and a lack of directive over what all these new officers would do beyond responding to 911 calls, we don't believe this is the most thoughtful public safety platform in District 4.
Voters should also review Wilson's stances from his run against Teresa Mosqueda in 2021. Two years ago, Wilson was not in support of rent control or regulations, stating that Section 8 and other financial assistance give renters enough control to individually provide themselves with their best housing situation. This of course excludes the many renters who don't have Section 8, and fails to adequately protect those who do. This year, Wilson says that the city should provide 18 to 24 months of transitional housing and a life-term plan with on-site professional support for people struggling with mental health issues. However, he also supports encampment sweeps, which have been proven to do immense harm and be a waste of taxpayer dollars. He also answered "maybe" to upzoning single-family housing in his Seattle Times questionnaire, which hardly fits his "pro-growth" strategy - more likely he is fine with upzoning already dense areas, as he mentions in his campaign bio, which forces growth in few neighborhoods and leaves wealthier tracts alone.
Technology professional George Artem supports using public school funding for private and charter schools. He also supports more militarized policing and a return to the failed "War on Drugs" that led to massive increases in incarceration. Artem is not a progressive choice in this race.
Davis faces several less progressive candidates in this race for Seattle City Council in District 4. Maritza Rivera works in Mayor Bruce Harrell's office as Deputy Director of the Department of Arts & Culture. Her number one campaign priority is public safety, in the form of getting 5-minute response times to 911 calls, taking "home and car break-ins seriously," and aggressively targeting people suffering from drug addiction. Like Ken Wilson, Rivera doesn't support rent control and wants the city to continue its expensive and inhumane sweeps of encampments. She has no firm stance on increasing revenue for the 400 additional officers she wants to hire, despite a projected city budget shortfall in the years to come.
Also in this race is civil engineer Ken Wilson, who is similarly focused on public safety. Like many candidates across the district this year, Wilson's top priority is more police. Amid a nationwide shortage of police, a serious budget shortfall for the years to come, and a lack of directive over what all these new officers would do beyond responding to 911 calls, we don't believe this is the most thoughtful public safety platform in District 4.
Voters should also review Wilson's stances from his run against Teresa Mosqueda in 2021. Two years ago, Wilson was not in support of rent control or regulations, stating that Section 8 and other financial assistance give renters enough control to individually provide themselves with their best housing situation. This of course excludes the many renters who don't have Section 8, and fails to adequately protect those who do. This year, Wilson says that the city should provide 18 to 24 months of transitional housing and a life-term plan with on-site professional support for people struggling with mental health issues. However, he also supports encampment sweeps, which have been proven to do immense harm and be a waste of taxpayer dollars. He also answered "maybe" to upzoning single-family housing in his Seattle Times questionnaire, which hardly fits his "pro-growth" strategy - more likely he is fine with upzoning already dense areas, as he mentions in his campaign bio, which forces growth in few neighborhoods and leaves wealthier tracts alone.
Technology professional George Artem supports using public school funding for private and charter schools. He also supports more militarized policing and a return to the failed "War on Drugs" that led to massive increases in incarceration. Artem is not a progressive choice in this race.