Otros Candidatos
They are six more candidates competing for retiring Councilmember Debra Juarez's District 5 seat.
Shane Macomber is a payee coordinator at a behavioral health care service agency and a local real estate broker. Macomber also filed as a city council candidate in 2013. If elected, he wants to work on developing housing density around transit centers, improving job training and placement programs, expanding Seattle’s P-Patch programs to respond to food deserts, and investing in public infrastructure to improve livability and affordability for the growing Seattle population. However, when asked about his position on rent control, criminalizing addiction, and expanding the police staff, Macomber did not offer progressive solutions. Further, Macomber lacks elected and community leadership experience, and he has yet to receive endorsements from key progressive leaders and organizations in this race.
Justin Simmons has a long history in Seattle and its organizations. He is a four-term past president of the Metropolitan Democratic Club of Seattle and a past president of the Church Council of Greater Seattle. He served six years on the executive board of the 46th District Democrats, is an elected precinct committee officer in the 32nd Legislative District, has served on the Young Democrats of Washington Executive Board, and is a co-founder of the Progressive Democratic Caucuses of WA. Unfortunately, Simmons policy priorities include support for failed tactics like moving people experiencing homelessness from one area to another, and restricting more affordable types of homes from wealthy neighborhoods.
Lucca Murdoch Howard is an 18-year-old candidate who is currently a student at North Seattle College. He is also a board member of the Aurora Reimagined Coalition, an organization set on re-envisioning the corridor's function and purpose. As a passionate transit advocate, Howard wants the Department of Transportation to plant more trees, widen sidewalks, and more along the corridor, while soliciting further community input on the design. He also wants to see parks within 15 minutes of every Seattleite, and funding for the social housing initiative paid for by a vacancy tax.
Rebecca Williamson also ran for Seattle City Council in 2021, and like this year also raised no money nor published a campaign platform.
They are six more candidates competing for retiring Councilmember Debra Juarez's District 5 seat.
Shane Macomber is a payee coordinator at a behavioral health care service agency and a local real estate broker. Macomber also filed as a city council candidate in 2013. If elected, he wants to work on developing housing density around transit centers, improving job training and placement programs, expanding Seattle’s P-Patch programs to respond to food deserts, and investing in public infrastructure to improve livability and affordability for the growing Seattle population. However, when asked about his position on rent control, criminalizing addiction, and expanding the police staff, Macomber did not offer progressive solutions. Further, Macomber lacks elected and community leadership experience, and he has yet to receive endorsements from key progressive leaders and organizations in this race.
Justin Simmons has a long history in Seattle and its organizations. He is a four-term past president of the Metropolitan Democratic Club of Seattle and a past president of the Church Council of Greater Seattle. He served six years on the executive board of the 46th District Democrats, is an elected precinct committee officer in the 32nd Legislative District, has served on the Young Democrats of Washington Executive Board, and is a co-founder of the Progressive Democratic Caucuses of WA. Unfortunately, Simmons policy priorities include support for failed tactics like moving people experiencing homelessness from one area to another, and restricting more affordable types of homes from wealthy neighborhoods.
Lucca Murdoch Howard is an 18-year-old candidate who is currently a student at North Seattle College. He is also a board member of the Aurora Reimagined Coalition, an organization set on re-envisioning the corridor's function and purpose. As a passionate transit advocate, Howard wants the Department of Transportation to plant more trees, widen sidewalks, and more along the corridor, while soliciting further community input on the design. He also wants to see parks within 15 minutes of every Seattleite, and funding for the social housing initiative paid for by a vacancy tax.
Rebecca Williamson also ran for Seattle City Council in 2021, and like this year also raised no money nor published a campaign platform.