Choose a language:
  • English
    Google Translate may not accurately translate all content. Read disclaimer.

    For general City questions, please call 206-684-2489. Tell us your requested language in English, and we can connect you with an interpreter.
  • Español
    Es posible que Google Translate no traduzca con precisión todo el contenido. Lea el descargo de responsabilidad.

    Si necesita ayuda en otro idioma, díganos en inglés nombre del idioma que necesita y lo conectaremos con un intérprete: 206-684-2489
  • 繁體中文
    Google 翻譯可能無法準確翻譯所有內容。閱讀免責聲明

    如果您需要翻譯,請用英語説出您所需要的語言,我們將爲你連接口譯員: 206-684-2489
  • 简体中文
    Google 翻译可能无法准确翻译所有内容。阅读免责声明

    如果您需要翻译,请用英语说出您所需要的语言,我们将为你连接口译员: 206-684-2489
  • Tiếng Việt
    Google Dịch có thể không dịch chính xác tất cả nội dung. Đọc tuyên bố từ chối trách nhiệm.

    Nếu quý vị cần hỗ trợ về ngôn ngữ, xin vui lòng cho chúng tôi biết ngôn ngữ quý vị cần hỗ trợ bằng tiếng Anh (ví dụ “Vietnamese”), chúng tôi sẽ kết nối quý vị với một thông dịch viên: 206-684-2489
  • Af-Soomaali
    Google Translate ayaan si sax ah u turjumi karin dhammaan waxyaabaha ku jira. Akhri afeef.

    Haddii aad u baahan tahay caawimaad luqadeed, fadlan noogu sheeg Ingiriisiga luqadda aad u baahan tahay, ka dib waxaan kugu xiri doonnaa turjubaan: 206-684-2489
  • Tagalog
    Maaaring hindi tumpak na isalin ng Google Translate ang lahat ng nilalaman. Basahin ang disclaimer.

    Para sa mga pangkalahatang katanungan sa Lungsod, mangyaring tawagan ang 206-684-2489. Sabihin sa amin ang hiniling mong wika sa Ingles, at maikokonekta ka namin sa isang interpreter.
  • 한국어
    구글은 정확하게 모든 내용을 번역하지 않을 수 있습니다 번역. 읽기 면책 조항.

    언어지원이 필요한 경우, 필요한 언어를 영어로 말씀해 주시면 통역사와 연결해 드리겠습니다: 206-684-2489
  • አማርኛ
    የጉግል ትርጉም ሁሉንም ይዘቶች በትክክል መተርጎም ላይችል ይችላል። ማስተባበያ አንብብ፡፡

    ኣስተርጓሚ ካስፈለግዎ የሚፈልጉትን ቋንቋ በእንግልዝኛ ይንገሩን፣ ከኣስተርጓሚ እናገናኝዎታለን። 206-684-2489
  • русский язык
    Google Translate не может точно перевести весь контент. Прочтите отказ от ответственности.

    Если вам нужна языковая помощь, сообщите нам на английском, какой язык вам нужен, и мы свяжем вас с переводчиком: 206-684-2489
  • 日本語
    Google 翻訳は、すべてのコンテンツを正確に翻訳するとは限りません. 免責事項をお読みください

    市の一般的な質問については206-684-2489に電話してください。ご希望の言語を英語で教えていただければ、通訳をご案内いたします。
  • ትግርኛ
    Google Translate ንኹሉ ትሕዝቶ ብትኽክል ከይትርጉሞ ይኽእል እዩ። ሓላፍነት ምውሳድ ኣንብብ

    ንሓፈሻዊ ሕቶታት ከተማ ክትድውሉ ትኽእሉ ኢኹም። 206-684-2489። ዝሓተትኩሞ ቋንቋ ብእንግሊዝኛ ንገሩና፡ ምስ ተርጓሚ ከነራኽበኩም ንኽእል ኢና።
  • Oromiffa
    Google Translate qabiyyee hunda sirritti hiikuu dhiisuu danda'a. Itti gaafatamummaa ofirraa ittisuu dubbisaa.

    Gaaffii waliigalaa Magaalaa yoo qabaattan bilbilaa 206-684-2489. Afaan Ingiliffaan isin gaafattan nuuf himaa, nama afaan hiiku waliin isin wal qunnamsiisuu dandeenya.
  • हिन्दी
    हो सकता है कि Google अनुवाद सभी सामग्री का सटीक अनुवाद न करे. अस्वीकरण पढ़ें.

    सामान्य शहर के प्रश्नों के लिए, कृपया कॉल करें 206-684-2489। हमें अंग्रेजी में अपनी अनुरोधित भाषा बताएं, और हम आपको एक दुभाषिया से जोड़ सकते हैं।
  • Français
    Google Traduction peut ne pas traduire correctement tout le contenu. Lisez la clause de non-responsabilité.

    Pour des questions générales sur la ville, veuillez appeler le 206-684-2489. Dites-nous votre langue souhaitée en anglais, et nous pourrons vous mettre en contact avec un interprète.
  • Українська
    Перекладач Google може не точно перекласти весь вміст. Прочитайте застереження.

    За загальними запитаннями про місто, будь ласка, телефонуйте 206-684-2489. Розкажіть нам про вашу мову англійською мовою, і ми можемо зв’язати вас із перекладачем.
  • ภาษาไทย
    Google Translate อาจแปลเนื้อหาทั้งหมดไม่ถูกต้อง อ่านข้อจำกัดความรับผิดชอบ

    สำหรับคำถามทั่วไปเกี่ยวกับเมืองโปรดโทร 206-684-2489 บอกภาษาที่คุณต้องการเป็นภาษาอังกฤษและเราสามารถติดต่อคุณกับล่ามได้
  • ភាសាខ្មែរ
    កម្មវិធីបកប្រែហ្គូហ្គោលមិនអាចបកប្រែមាតិកាទាំងអស់បានត្រឹមត្រូវទេ។ អានការបដិសេធ។

    សម្រាប់សំណួរទូទៅរបស់ទីក្រុងសូមទូរស័ព្ទមក 206-684-2489 ។ ប្រាប់យើងពីភាសាដែលអ្នកស្នើសុំជាភាសាអង់គ្លេសហើយយើងអាចភ្ជាប់អ្នកជាមួយអ្នកបកប្រែភាសា។
  • ພາສາລາວ
    Google Translate ອາດຈະບໍ່ແປເນື້ອຫາທັງ ໝົດ ຢ່າງຖືກຕ້ອງ. ອ່ານປະຕິເສດ.

    ສຳ ລັບ ຄຳ ຖາມທົ່ວໄປຂອງເມືອງ, ກະລຸນາໂທຫາ 206-684-2489. ບອກພວກເຮົາເປັນພາສາອັງກິດທີ່ທ່ານຮ້ອງຂໍ, ແລະພວກເຮົາສາມາດເຊື່ອມຕໍ່ທ່ານກັບນາຍແປພາສາ.
  • ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
    ਹੋ ਸਕਦਾ ਹੈ ਕਿ Google ਅਨੁਵਾਦ ਸਾਰੀ ਸਮੱਗਰੀ ਦਾ ਸਹੀ ਅਨੁਵਾਦ ਨਾ ਕਰੇ। ਬੇਦਾਅਵਾ ਪੜ੍ਹੋ.

    ਸਿਟੀ ਦੇ ਆਮ ਸਵਾਲਾਂ ਲਈ, ਕਿਰਪਾ ਕਰਕੇ ਕਾਲ ਕਰੋ 206-684-2489। ਸਾਨੂੰ ਆਪਣੀ ਬੇਨਤੀ ਕੀਤੀ ਭਾਸ਼ਾ ਅੰਗਰੇਜ਼ੀ ਵਿੱਚ ਦੱਸੋ, ਅਤੇ ਅਸੀਂ ਤੁਹਾਨੂੰ ਦੁਭਾਸ਼ੀਏ ਨਾਲ ਜੋੜ ਸਕਦੇ ਹਾਂ।
  • عربى
    قد لا تترجم خدمة "ترجمة Google" كل المحتوى بدقة. قراءة إخلاء المسؤولية.

    للأسئلة العامة حول المدينة ، يرجى الاتصال 206-684-2489. أخبرنا بلغتك المطلوبة باللغة الإنجليزية ، ويمكننا توصيلك بمترجم فوري.

Find Posts By Topic

Mayor Durkan Announces $5 million to Community Organizations Through the Equitable Development Initiative

Mayor’s “Housing Seattle Now” Establishes New $15 million EDI Revolving Loan Program

Mayor Jenny A. Durkan announced $5 million in awards through the Equitable Development Initiative (EDI), part of the City’s effort to support Seattle’s existing residents and businesses in high displacement risk neighborhoods. Mayor Durkan announced the awards in Pioneer Square at the Chief Seattle Club, a human service agency that provides for the basic needs of their members, many of whom are experiencing homelessness. Chief Seattle Club is a recipient of this year’s funding.

“Seattle’s challenges of affordability have displaced far too many residents and businesses,” said Mayor Durkan. “Our vision is of a city where all communities can build a home for themselves and their loved ones. Through our Equitable Development Initiative, the City of Seattle is making critical investments in community-based organizations that are working to combat displacement and increase access to opportunity in neighborhoods across our city.”

The EDI fund, administered by the Office of Planning and Community Development (OPCD), was created to respond to the needs of marginalized populations, reduce disparities, and support access to opportunity in healthy, vibrant communities. The initiative is championed by community organizations concerned about displacement pressures and historical lack of investment that has occurred in communities of color in Seattle.

“All Seattle residents must have access to a positive future,” said Sam Assefa, Director of OPCD. “EDI takes its lead from the community leaders and organizations that best understand the realities of today’s displacement pressures. We’re proud to fund these grassroots initiatives that build resiliency and community ownership, and most importantly support racial justice.”

EDI fosters community leadership and supports organizations to promote equitable access to jobs, education and childcare, outdoor space and recreation, cultural expression, healthy food, and other community needs and amenities. These partnerships are designed to support leadership and build capacity building among the most historically marginalized groups in Seattle, sharing in decision-making and power, and working towards racial equity outcomes that allows all communities to thrive.

“Thank you, Mayor Durkan for recognizing the importance of investing in community-grown, culturally-based organizations. The EDI program continues to empower and strengthen underrepresented communities by investing in organic, locally-grown programs across Seattle,” said Colleen Echohawk, Executive Director of Chief Seattle Club. “Chief Seattle Club’s vision of affordable homes that support the needs of the American Indian and Alaskan Native community is further reinforced with this investment through the EDI program.”

As part of her Housing Seattle Now plan, Mayor Durkan is proposing to establish a new $15 million EDI revolving loan program funded from the proceeds of the sale of the surplus, city-owned Mercer St. properties. The new revolving loan program will provide funding to support additional land acquisition by community organizations in response to displacement pressures.

The following community-based organizations working in Seattle on anti-displacement strategies and economic development opportunities have been selected for funding in 2019:

Chief Seattle Club — $1 million
The Chief Seattle Club is seeking to purchase and renovate the Monterey Lofts above their current facility and adjacent to the site of their new facility. The project is designed to support the physical, cultural, and spiritual needs of the American Indian and Alaska Native community, with indigenous designs, affordable housing units, services, health clinic, and a café/art gallery space in Pioneer Square.

Byrd Barr Place — $1 million
Byrd Barr Place has been operating out of the City’s surplus Fire Station 23. The City is working to transfer ownership of the property to the organization and the EDI application will support improvements to the building. Completion of this project would renovate the 100+ year old building to meet contemporary ADA and environmental standards, allowing BBP to expand the services it provides.

Cham Refugees Community — $575,000
Cham Refugees Community is seeking to build an upgraded, 12,000 square foot community center at their existing location. They have a need for a sharia-compliant facility, as most of the other existing or proposed community centers will not meet that specific need. The facility will expand their programming while increasing the usability for youth, the elderly, and disabled members of the community.

Duwamish Longhouse — $575,000
The Duwamish Tribe is proposing to purchase property adjacent to the existing Longhouse to support the continued viability of the cultural space. The expansion will help visitors safely access the Longhouse.

Friends of Little Saigon — $225,000
Friends of Little Saigon are seeking to implement the Landmark Project at 1221 S King St, currently owned by Lam’s Seafood Market. Lam’s is seeking to redevelop the site and would remain as the anchor tenant. These funds will support staffing and feasibility studies, including developing a co-ownership and co-development structure with Lam’s.

Lake City Collective — $75,000
Lake City Collective uses a community ambassador model to preserve cultural heritage and increase the ability for local communities to become self-determining. They have been organizing community members to tackle the displacement challenges in the area and are starting to identify potential community development projects. LCC seeks to establish a location in Seattle’s Little Brook neighborhood that would allow them to expand services and establish partnerships that would preserve existing affordable housing sites in the neighborhood.

Queer the Land — $75,000
Queer the Land will use this funding to build its organization as it pursues its goal to create a cooperative of queer, transgender, and Two-Spirit Black/indigenous/people of color. The group seeks to establish a facility with affordable transitional and semi-permanent housing, co-working space, communal space, and a community garden.

Rainier Beach Action Coalition — $575,000
The Food Innovation District concept was developed as part of the Rainier Beach Neighborhood Plan in 2012. RBAC has worked with Forterra to secure property in the Rainier Beach station area; these funds will support predevelopment expenses. The Food Innovation Center will be a multi-purpose facility with a commercial kitchen, food production and training space, and areas to provide supportive services and education. RBAC is pursuing a joint venture with Mt Baker Housing Association, which will develop affordable housing on the site.

Rainier Valley Midwives — $214,700
Rainier Valley Midwives has been operating out of a temporary location in the Rainier Valley Community Clinic that is becoming untenable due to escalating rents. The organization is working to acquire and build a permanent Birth Center in the Rainier Valley that will provide wrap-around services before, during, and after the birth process to people of color.

Wing Luke Museum — $725,000
The Wing is seeking to preserve the Homestead Home one block south of the Museum and to activate its develop its adjacent parking lot. This home is the most intact remaining single-family home in the Chinatown-International District, constructed in 1937 despite the Chinese Exclusion Act and discriminatory barriers to single family homes in the neighborhood. On the lot, the Wing intends to build 60 affordable apartments above a street-level community gathering space.

Since November 2016, OPCD and partner departments, including Office of Economic Development (OED), Office of Housing (OH), Department of Neighborhoods (DON), Office of Arts & Culture (ARTS), and Office for Civil Rights (OCR), have been coordinating the administration of the EDI Fund.

The EDI Fund was established with $16 million in one-time funding from the sale of a property. As part of her 2019 budget, Mayor Durkan established consistent funding using a tax on short-term rentals that provides $5 million in ongoing annual revenues. The fund also receives $430,000 in annual funding from the federal Community Development Block Grant.

An Advisory Board helps guide the EDI and to provide feedback and approval of the criteria and decision-making processes for the fund. The board provided recommendations to the City on the funding decisions announced today.

Projects were evaluated on their ability to positively impact several equity drivers, that lead to racial equity outcomes including:

  • Promoting economic opportunity through education, job training, and enhancing community cultural anchors.
  • Helping marginalized populations, businesses, and community organizations stay in their neighborhoods.
  • Enhancing health outcomes, access to healthy, culturally relevant food, and supporting safe environments.

Successful applicants demonstrated a deep relationship with the community they are seeking to serve and feature an inclusive community process, with community members serving in their organizational leadership.