Former Seattle City Council president and the city’s 55th mayor, Tim was the lead architect of the Seattle Preschool Program and a strong advocate for early childhood education, police reform, and building the common good.
If we set our minds to it, Washington State could make high-quality, universal, voluntary preschool available for all of our…
Seattle’s City Council will tomorrow morning consider cutting more funding — approximately $5.4 million — from police services; it’s part…
With national and local attention rightly being focused on policing and criminal justice reform, it is very important that we…
This is my personal blog where I share thoughts on public policy related to early childhood education, criminal justice and police reform, and how we can all build the common good.
He was first elected to an at-large position on the Seattle City Council in November 2007 and re-elected in 2011 and 2015. He became Seattle’s 55th Mayor in September 2017, when the City Council appointed him to complete the previous Mayor’s term.
While a member of the City Council, Tim was the lead architect of the Seattle Preschool Program, first approved by Seattle voters in 2014. He wrote legislation and signed into law new requirements that social service contracts be competitively awarded, include specific outcomes, and allow for incentive pay for performance.
Tim developed the Seattle Tourism Improvement Area, which raises approximately $20-23 million annually for Visit Seattle to promote regional tourism; reached agreement with community stakeholders that allowed the stalled Convention Center Expansion Project to move forward and win approval from the Seattle Design Commission; expanded the authority of the City Auditor to evaluate city government program performance; led police reform efforts, including legislation that allowed hiring of police command staff from outside the police department; and, co-authored the 2017 police accountability ordinance that expanded and strengthened civilian oversight of the police.
As Mayor in late 2017, Tim signed an agreement with the Seattle Public Schools to jointly design and build a new Memorial Stadium at Seattle Center, which will be completed in 2027. Tim retired at the end of 2025 after serving as Deputy Mayor to Mayor Bruce Harrell (2022-2025) with a portfolio covering public safety, economic development, and the Seattle Center.
