Houston Chronicle

Seattle to help homeless with tax on large companies

Plan’s backers say area’s prosperity causes soaring rents

- By Phuong Le

Feelings ran strong before the Seattle City Council passed a new tax — dubbed the “Amazon Tax” — that will fund homeless services in a city whose economic boom has caused housing costs to soar.

SEATTLE — Seattle leaders on Monday unanimousl­y approved a tax on large businesses such as Amazon and Starbucks to fund the fight against homelessne­ss after weeks of heated debate and raucous hearings.

The City Council backed a compromise plan that will charge large businesses about $275 per full-time worker each year, lower than the $500 per worker initially proposed. It would raise about $48 million a year to pay for affordable housing and homeless services.

Council members who sponsored the initial proposal said the amount wasn’t enough to address urgent housing needs but conceded they couldn’t get the six votes to override a potential veto by the mayor.

The compromise measure emerged over the weekend after Mayor Jenny Durkan indicated Friday that she wouldn’t support the tax at the higher rate.

Council member Lisa Herbold, one of the tax’s sponsors, said she struggled with the compromise package given how many people are struggling but that it was the “strongest proposal” they could bring forward.

“People are dying on the doorsteps of prosperity. This is the richest city in the state and in a state that has the most regressive tax system in the country,” said council member Teresa Mosqueda, a co-sponsor of the measure who said the plan gives the opportunit­y to build the housing the city needs.

They voted as people packed the meeting, holding signs saying “People before profits” and chanting “housing is a human right.”

Other cities have implemente­d similar taxes, but critics say Seattle’s tax could threaten the booming local economy and drive away jobs.

Nearly 600 large employers making at least $20 million in gross revenue would pay the tax that would begin in 2019. Amazon, the city’s largest employer with 45,000 workers, would take the biggest hit.

The debate over who should pay to solve a housing crisis exacerbate­d by Seattle’s rapid economic growth comes amid skyrocketi­ng rents and rising homelessne­ss. The Seattle region had the third-highest number of homeless people in the U.S. and saw 169 homeless deaths in 2017.

Supporters insist the online retailer and others that have benefited from Seattle’s prosperity and contribute­d to growing income inequality and skyrocketi­ng rents should pay.

Businesses and other critics say the tax is misguided and potentiall­y harmful. They question whether the city is effectivel­y using the tens of millions of dollars it already spends on homelessne­ss each year.

Amazon raised the stakes this month when it halted constructi­on planning on a 17-story tower near its hometown headquarte­rs as it awaits a tax vote. It also is rethinking filling office space in another leased building. The two office spaces would accommodat­e about 7,000 new Amazon jobs.

The company’s threat to pause its growth in Seattle comes as 20 cities vie to lure the company’s second headquarte­rs and as it expands its workforce in Boston and Vancouver, British Columbia.

Proponents say people are dying on the streets, and while city-funded programs found homes for 3,400 people last year, the problem deepens.

Shannon Brown, 55, who has been living a tiny home at a south Seattle homeless encampment, said there’s simply not enough housing for the city’s poorest people.

“I live in a little shed, but it’s better than living in a tent or in a sleeping bag on the street,” she said as she stood in line an hour before Monday’s meeting began. “There’s no away I can afford to live in Seattle. I don’t understand why businesses think it’s wrong to help.”

 ?? Associated Press ??
Associated Press
 ?? Elaine Thompson / Associated Press ?? Demonstrat­ors air their views Monday before the Seattle City Council approved a tax on large businesses to fight homelessne­ss.
Elaine Thompson / Associated Press Demonstrat­ors air their views Monday before the Seattle City Council approved a tax on large businesses to fight homelessne­ss.

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