Almost 100 New Nonprofits Join Employee Giving Program

Whether your passion is protecting animals, improving literacy, preventing hunger, helping seniors or supporting the arts, there are 950 participating nonprofit organizations that you can choose to contribute to in the 2014 Annual Giving Drive, which kicked off September 24. Pledging-Button

Almost 100 new nonprofit organizations were approved to participate in this year’s Giving Drive across a range of categories. Some of the new participants include:

  • Animals – Best Friends Animal Society (9132), Seattle Area Feline Rescue (9224)
  • Educations and Literacy – Literacy Council of Seattle (9656)
  • Food and Hunger – Emergency Feeding Program of Seattle & King County (9625), Thurston County Food Bank (9699)
  • Senior Services – Eastside Friends of Seniors (9624)
  • Arts – Museum of Northwest Art (9660), Velocity Dance Center (9702).

Meet four of this year’s new participating nonprofits (see full list of participating nonprofits here):

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AFIS employee works behind the scenes for law enforcement 

Coy Hodge’s line of work can sometimes mean the difference between guilty and innocent.  Coy Hodge

“We’re really behind the scenes but we make a big difference for the law enforcement side of it,” Hodge said.

Hodge works for the King County Regional Identification Program, also known as Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS). AFIS is the fingerprint database King County uses to identify people.

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Message from Sheriff John Urquhart and Rhonda Berry, Chief of Operations

Dear Fellow King County employee,

King County employees work each and every day to make our community and the world a better place, for ourselves and for our families.  Another way we do that is through our King County Employee Giving Program.  We are very proud to be this year’s Annual Giving Drive Honorary Co-Chairs.

The Employee Giving Program empowers each of us to personally connect to causes we care about, such as providing clean air and water, food, shelter, clothing, counsel, comfort or help in times of crisis.  Regardless of what your connection is, we can all play a role in building a better community – safer, more equitable, more caring – a place where everyone has the opportunity to reach their full potential.

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Proposed 2015/2016 biennial budget address

Dear fellow King County employee –

Dow_headshot_lg

King County Executive Dow Constantine

Here is the full text of the speech I delivered this morning to the King County Council, transmitting the first full biennial budget in county history. You can see the speech in its entirety here.

As I told the Councilmembers, a budget is more than just another spreadsheet; its numbers impact the lives of real people. Like I shared with you Friday, I outlined how our revenues are constrained by the state to a level below that of population growth plus inflation. I discussed how the repeal of progressive state taxes and the loss of state and federal funds affect our ability to provide public transit, public health, and the services you provide every day.

I outlined the consequences in this proposed budget of “smaller government by default” – the unavoidable elimination of more than 500 positions – in particular at Metro Transit, where volatile sales taxes that support transit have not recovered since the recession, and at Public Health, where services funded primarily by state and federal funds have seen continual decline and even abrupt withdrawal.

After accounting for vacancies and attrition, the number of actual employee layoffs is just over 200 today. Full details are contained in this Executive Summary.

I told the Council we need a long-term strategy to reduce demand on services funded in the King County Budget, a strategy to prevent such crises as incarceration, violence, diabetes, and mental illness that require the bulk of our budgets today.

So today I called for a regional investment in healthy children and communities. I asked the Council and our community partners to join me – and I ask you to join me – in the process of developing a levy to build a more prosperous and equitable King County by assuring that every baby born in our community and every child raised here has a strong start in life. Call it “Best Starts for Kids.”

Prevention is the key. Over the next several months, I will work with partners in our Health and Human Services Transformation Plan partners, the Youth Action Plan Task Force, and other community leaders to forward a funding proposal to the Council in 2015.

Once again, I assure you that I will keep working to fix systems and create the innovations and partnerships we need to deliver the services the public expects.

The budget address is only the first step in a two-month public process, leading to Council adoption in November of a final County budget. You can learn more about my budget proposal at the Office of Performance, Strategy and Budget website, and keep track of the Council’s deliberations at the Council Budget site.

Thank you for your hard work and commitment to serving the people of King County.

Sincerely,

dow signature

Dow Constantine

King County Executive

 

 

Watch 2015/2016 budget proposal today at 11 a.m.

King County Executive Dow Constantine will transmit his 2015/2016 budget proposal to the Metropolitan King County Council today, Monday, Sept. 22, at 11 a.m. You can watch the 2015/2016 Executive Proposed Budget address at 11 a.m. by visiting http://www.kingcounty.gov/KCTV.aspx and clicking the link on the right hand side that says “Watch Us Live”.

You can also watch a short video featuring Budget Director Dwight Dively giving an overview of what’s causing King County’s revenue shortfall. Dively explains the state’s tax structure and the broken system of providing revenues for King County, even when property taxes increase and the economy is booming. Watch the video.

Kudos! Public Defense employees help client build career path

Edwin Aralica, a felony attorney at Associated Counsel for the Department of Public Defense’s Accused Division (ACAD), and Sue Wood, a mitigation specialist at ACAD, recently learned that their efforts to help a young single mother have made a profound difference in her life. Edwin and Sue successfully kept their client out of prison and got her into the new Family Offender Sentencing Alternative program, despite the prosecutor’s opposition. Edwin also helped her address some other legal issues in her life, including a problem with her driver’s license. She now has her GED, has completed chemical dependency treatment and is enrolled in an apprenticeship program. Her Department of Corrections Community Corrections Officer (CCO) sent an email to Edwin recently, thanking him for his ongoing support. “It made a world of difference for her,” the CCO said. Without his helping her keep her driver’s license, the CCO added, “She might not ever have gotten into the college trade classes.”

Firefighters and County employees get valuable emergency training

Area firefighters and County employees are getting some valuable emergency training this week thanks to the County’s Wastewater Treatment Division (WTD). WTD is hosting one of the largest and most successful regional fire department hazardous materials drills at the South Treatment Plant in Renton. Exercises like this provide reality-based scenarios, spaces and equipment for the emergency responders to test, train and advance their skills. WTD hosted similar events in 2010 and 2012.

This exercise is held and coordinated in and around the old decommissioned chlorine building and chemical tanks. It features some very unique and advanced chemical spill response scenarios. The cities and fire departments participating include Kent, Eastside, Renton, Redmond, South King County, Duvall, Bellevue, Tukwila, Woodinville, Bothell, and Kirkland.  The four-day long series of drills and response exercises runs through Monday, Sept 15 through Thursday Sept 18. Find out more.

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Bailiff enjoys variety of job minus the TV drama

Jacqueline “Jaye” Ware considers herself a traditional bailiff. Jaqueline Ware

“I could be defined as an old fashioned bailiff in that I take courtroom conduct and decorum seriously,” Ware said. “It is rare for me to joke or kid around with lawyers or parties in the courtroom as I believe it is essential that the court maintain every appearance of fairness, even more so if there are spectators.”

But she also realizes that putting jurors at ease is an important part of her role.

“I am more relaxed around the jurors, as I think it is important to put them at ease and help them feel valued and appreciated, particularly when they are essentially volunteering their service and time at $10 a day. I make every effort to avoid partiality and to do what is within my power to ensure members of the public contacting the court have a positive encounter and experience,” Ware said.

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Department of Retirement Systems Updates

Benefits, Payroll and Retirement Operations wants to ensure our employees are notified of some important changes regarding their pension plans.

New DRS Employee Rates in 2015

Based on an actuarial review of the state pension plans, the Washington State Pension Funding Council approved a graduated approach to increasing member and employer contributions. This approach will spread out the impact of increased contributions over a number of years while still ensuring the impacted pension plans remain stable and robust. For employees participating in the Public Employees’ Retirement System (PERS), the rate will increase on July 1, 2015, from 4.92% to 6.12%. For the Public Safety Employees’ Retirement System (PSERS), the employee rate will increase on July 1, 2015, from 6.36% to 6.59%. No changes are anticipated for LEOFF.  For more information on these rate changes, please click on http://www.drs.wa.gov/news-announcements/.

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Kudos! Detective Edward Christian and Deputy Michael Cavell, King County Sheriff’s Office

A huge thank you to Detective Christian and Deputy Michael Cavell for their concern and prompt response when my cell phone was stolen at Century Link event center before the WSU game on August 28th. These two gentleman jumped right in to help me, and actually figured out who the thief was by doing a quick, intelligent investigation on the spot. Within 90 minutes, they were able to identify the thief, confront her and arrest her; and I got my phone back that evening… Deputy Cavell and Detective Christian… went above and beyond to locate the thief (it was a woman who worked at the event center) and make sure it was returned to me in time to make it to the airport and return to Spokane that evening.  All I can say is THANK YOU!  Without Detective Christian and Deputy Cavell, I would have lost a $600 iPhone and this thief would continue to burglarize people at the event center.  I am so grateful for their willingness to get involved and their intelligence to figure it out. Thank you to the King County Sheriff’s Department–your employees are the BEST! 

– Kelly S