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Spokane block parties will often be cheaper after City Council waives fees
Spokane block parties will often be cheaper after City Council waives fees

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Spokane block parties will often be cheaper after City Council waives fees

May 19—Neighborhoods in Spokane will soon be able to more easily and cheaply close down their block for a party or community event between June and Halloween. Championed by City Councilman Zack Zappone and cosponsored by Councilwoman Kitty Klitzke, the Spokane City Council on Monday voted unanimously to approve the "Play Streets" program, which authorizes the mayor's office to reduce the barriers to blocking off a residential street for a block party. The proposal was first unveiled in April during a news conference touting a number of measures to increase pedestrian and bike safety on Spokane's streets, including banning right turns on red lights on Main Avenue downtown. "Whether it's neighbors wanting to come together and close our street to allow kids to play on the street, do a spontaneous chalk art festival, close down the street and have a barbecue ... this is an opportunity for people in your neighborhoods to come out, meet your neighbors, have that connection and bring back that life to our neighborhoods," Councilman Zack Zappone said at the April event. Outside of the cost of the festivities themselves, local leaders have identified two costs for hosting a block party that the city would like to eliminate in many cases: application fees for a permit to shut down the street, and the physical road barriers themselves. While it will mostly be up to the administration to craft the program, Monday's ordinance does specify that application fees will be waived for closing down a residential, nonarterial street so long as it is open to the public and limited to a single block. Administration personnel have expressed interest in the purchase of signage and road barriers that residents could check out from the local library for free, further reducing costs for a block party, though this purchase would likely have to be approved by the City Council at a later date. "I think we need this," Klitzke said at an April committee meeting where the ordinance was briefed. "I think it will be an improvement over the folding chair with an 8.5 -by -11 sign that my neighborhood has been using for a decade." Councilman Jonathan Bingle, who noted he owns a trivia business, argued that the program would spur events and encourage neighbors to meet each other and better appreciate their neighborhood. Neighborhood councils often also don't have much money to put on events, so easing those costs could allow for more activity, he added.

Spokane City Councilman Zack Zappone running for reelection
Spokane City Councilman Zack Zappone running for reelection

Yahoo

time25-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Spokane City Councilman Zack Zappone running for reelection

Apr. 24—Spokane City Councilman and high school teacher Zack Zappone is running for re-election, saying he wants another four years to work on public safety, homelessness, housing affordability and city infrastructure reforms. Zappone is one of two council members representing council District 3, which covers the northwestern third of the city stretching north from the Spokane River and west of Division Street, and after redistricting in 2022 also includes Browne's Addition. Councilwoman Kitty Klitzke is the district's other representative, and her term runs through 2027. He already has two opponents: Meals on Wheels board member Chris Savage, who ran unsuccessfully against Zappone in 2021, and private cigar lounge co-owner and retired SERE specialist Cody Arguelles. Asked for his priorities in the next four years, Zappone said he has learned not to predict what city government will need to respond to. But he did highlight behind-the-scenes efforts to bring forward a compromise version of a failed 2023 sales tax package to build new jails and other, often unspecified, public safety initiatives. Zappone was among those across the aisle in 2023 saying the $1.7 billion ballot measure lacked specifics. "I think both the left and the right realize we can't make any meaningful progress without some meaningful collaboration and compromise to move forward," Zappone said. "It would likely be a detailed proposal to voters about what community health and safety would look like in the next decade or so in Spokane." Zappone also said he was excited to see further reforms to encourage development, particularly residential, and reduce the burden of vacant lots and nuisance properties on neighborhoods. Zappone is the first openly queer leader elected to the council and has spent much of his first term supporting reforms to increase housing density, advocating for pedestrians and bicyclists, trying to eliminate fare to ride Spokane transit, and reducing barriers for community festivals and fairs. In an interview, he also highlighted his work to help secure funding for CHAS health clinics in low-income high schools and for neighborhood business districts, which fund investments to benefit local businesses. Though the progressive politician has frequently publicly clashed with conservatives in city government, he has also on occasions worked with them on policy. He and conservative Councilman Jonathan Bingle have traded barbs on the dais, but the two have also co-sponsored legislation, such as to relax parking requirements for new development and potentially lower costs near bus routes. Zappone joined others on council to later expand that reform citywide. He was the only left-leaning council member to join Bingle and fellow conservative Councilman Michael Cathcart in supporting the reinstatement of Proposition 1, the voter-approved ban on homeless encampments near schools, parks and day cares that was recently struck down by the state Supreme Court on technical grounds. "I've been reflecting on my first term, and I think that one area I've really come to understand better to be effective as a council member, is it really does take a lot of compromise to do stuff," Zappone said. "Being an advocate or activist really pushing for a position, I think that's an important role, but I'm much more pragmatic than purist in my approach." Zappone has also been accused of partisan gerrymandering after he drew the map of council districts that was approved by the City Council, notably drawing a liberal neighborhood into his district and theoretically making it easier for him to be re-elected. A judge ruled in April 2023 that the map was not illegally gerrymandered — but also ruled that council members should not have that level of involvement in the process going forward. Voters in 2024 approved reforms to create more distance between the council and the boundaries of which voters got to elect them. The district was fiercely competitive in 2021, with Zappone edging out his conservative opponent Mike Lish by 1.3%. Klitzke won her election in 2023 against Earl Moore by nearly 20 points, though redistricting that happened between those two elections appears unlikely to account for the majority of that shift.

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