Kristin Ang was pretty much a total political unknown when she decided on the Friday of filing week in 2017 that she was going to run for Port of Tacoma commission. She was and still is vocally opposed to the liquefied natural gas plant being built on the Tideflats, which immediately set her apart.

That year, she came out of nowhere to win about 40 percent of the vote and cause a stir among environmentalists and progressives who wanted something different for the Port commission, which has historically dominated by older white people, mostly men.

This year, Ang (who is a lawyer) has a bigger backing and a more established campaign. She was even endorsed by The News Tribune. We talked about her views on how the Port can be more innovative and more environmentally-friendly and what’s been different about this election cycle.

Links

Public Disclosure Commission: Ang Kristin

Kristin Ang for Port website

Cash pours into Port of Tacoma campaigns amid concern over future direction of the port

We endorse: Deanna Keller, Kristin Ang aren’t alike (far from it), but both could help Port of Tacoma

What is TUPAC? (By which we mean the Tacoma Urban Performing Arts Center and not the rapper).

TUPAC help kids who are racially and socioeconomically diverse get access to classical art forms like ballet. An organization that is only two years old, they won an Amocat Award earlier this month for the great work. And coming up soon, they will present The Urban Nutcracker, a reimagining of the classic ballet that earned rave reviews last year.

Listen in!

Links

The race to replace long-serving County Sheriff Paul Pastor is beginning to heat up

By Sean Robinson

One year from now, Pierce County voters will elect a new sheriff. For the first time in 20 years, it won’t be Paul Pastor, who recently announced he will step down in early 2020.

County council members will appoint an interim sheriff to fill the position before next November’s election when Pastor officially departs, but that will provide a prologue to the main event: a race to decide who will lead a law enforcement agency covering a vast territory ranging from the slopes of Mount Rainier to the waters of the Tacoma Narrows and the Key Peninsula. The sheriff oversees 329 commissioned officers, 305 corrections officers and 145 civilian employers. The job pays about $155,000 annually.

Candidates can’t file formally until May of next year. State campaign finance records show no one is raising money yet, but two likely contenders are emerging: Pierce County Councilman Doug Richardson and Det. Ed Troyer, longtime spokesman for the sheriff’s office.

When reached, both men said they hadn’t made formal decisions yet.

“I’m considering it,” Richardson said in a recent interview. “I’m just going through all of the fact finding. You just want to make sure that if you’re gonna do it, you’re gonna do it right.”

Troyer said he is also exploring the possibility of running, but hasn’t decided for certain.

“I’m exploring it — no more, no less,” he said. “Sheriff Pastor has done some great things, and built programs that need to continue.”

Richardson recently spoke to leaders of the Pierce County Sheriff’s Guild, the union representing sheriff’s deputies, and said he was considering a possible run. His candidacy would be unorthodox in one sense: the two-term councilman and former Lakewood mayor has no law enforcement experience, though he is a retired Army Reserve brigadier general, and has spent 30 years managing a private defense contractor.

Typically, county sheriffs are commissioned officers. Richardson isn’t. In theory, he would have to undergo law enforcement training as mandated by state law, and administered by the state’s Criminal Justice Training Commission.

“The plain language says a basic training program,” said Marisa O’Neill, the commission’s policy and accreditation manager. O’Neill said the commission relies on legal advice from the state Attorney General’s Office when determining the necessary protocols for newly elected sheriffs who haven’t completed law enforcement training in the past. Typically, executive-level positions such as sheriff require at least 80 hours of commission-approved training.

Richardson said he has been researching those qualification requirements as he considers a run.

“That’s one of the principal things in my fact finding that I’m doing,” he said. “I think there are some strengths that I have. I spent 32 years in the service, in very large-unit organizations with chains of command, all those things you’d expect to find in the sheriff’s department as well. “Running a large organization is a significant strength, and then you throw in the civilian aspects of it with budgets and how to pull those together. But I don’t have a law enforcement background, so what are the requirements in order to fill that position and what must you do?”

Troyer would face a different set of challenges. Though he is a commissioned officer and part of Pastor’s inner circle, he has not been a commander in the sheriff’s department. His name and face are widely known due to his long service as a spokesman, and he serves as executive director of the nonprofit Crime Stoppers of Tacoma/Pierce County.

“I bring a different type of leadership than just going up through the ranks,” he said. “I have 33 years of institutional knowledge for how our department works. We’ve developed excellent leaders over the years. We roll up our sleeves and get stuff done. There’s still some things to do to continue the good work that Sheriff Pastor has done.”

Troyer and Richardson both said they have spoken to Pastor about their potential pursuit of the office. Both said they received positive reactions, but they added that Pastor prefers to remain neutral rather than anointing or endorsing a successor.

Pastor, 70, is the longest-serving sheriff in county history. He took office in 2000, when the office was still appointment based. County voters altered that dynamic in 2006, voting to amend the county charter to elect the sheriff. Pastor first ran in 2008, and again in 2012 and 2016, without opposition. Term limits prevent him from running again.

Technically the sheriff’s office is a nonpartisan position, but a race between Richardson and Troyer would likely fall along quiet party lines. Richardson ran as a Republican in his county council races. Troyer, who hasn’t sought elected office before, said he would probably run without a party label.

Richardson noted that he expects to make a formal decision before Pastor’s interim replacement is appointed. He would recuse himself from that process if he decides to run, he said, and will not seek the appointment.

“This is really a family decision, because this is a significant decision,” he said. “You don’t just light-heartedly become the sheriff of Pierce County, with that kind of 24/7 responsibility. Our family’s not ready to make a decision yet.”

As for Troyer, he said his decision will rest in part on his continuing interest in public service.

“I want to start and end my career with the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department,” he said. “I want to build leadership from within for the future. It would be devastating if that didn’t happen.”

There are two important state-wide initiatives on the ballot this November:

  • I-976 which reduces car tab fees to $30 and significantly reduces funding for transportation projects, roads and infrastructure improvements, and state patrol funding across the state, and
  • I-1000 (through R-88) which brings affirmative action laws back to Washington and increases access and competition for public jobs, contracts, and college/university admissions.

Host Evelyn Lopez is joined by transportation policy expert Justin Leighton, and affirmative action advocate April Sims to break down what is at issue in these initiatives and how they could help or hinder the residents of Tacoma and Pierce County.

Among other interesting tidbits, both initiatives involve Tim Eyman. He is the primary sponsor of I-976 and is desperate to bring back his $30 car tabs, and he was one of the main movers behind I-200 which eliminated Washington’s affirmative action laws in the 1990s. So, is this all about policy, or is it ego?

Give the episode a listen, and let us know what you think!

Evelyn Lopez    @truetacoma

 

It’s almost time to vote! If you’re a voter in Tacoma, you probably already have your ballot (they’re due Nov. 5, btw). But before you fill it out, listen to our final three candidate episodes of the season!

In episode 63, we talk to Enrique Leon, who was appointed to the board of Tacoma Public Schools in 2018 to replace Catherine Ushka when she was elected to the Tacoma City Council. Now battle-tested after living through the Tacoma teacher strike last year, Leon wants a chance to be chosen by voters to serve for a full term.

Leon is a physician by day. We talked about the teacher strike, but also about some of the health-related initiatives and programs he’s helped bring to Tacoma schools and how he wants to expand them further. We also talked about the many reasons why he thinks Tacoma school kids should have a later start time.

Links

Public Disclosure Commission: Leon Enrique

Enrique Leon chosen as new school board member

Could later start times become a reality at Tacoma schools? ‘Sleepyheads’ are working on it

Elect Enrique Leon Facebook page

Channel 253 membership

This is the first episode of the podcast recorded after the move to abroad to UAE. We open segment one of this episode with a guest appearance from Interchangeable White Ladies co-host, Hope Teague-Bowling. We discussed our transition to life in the UAE and our new lives at the American Community School of Abu Dhabi.

In segment two, we spoke to three teachers. Each person talked about their decision to move abroad, how then enjoy life in Abu Dhabi, and how teaching at an international school is different than teaching in our various home countries.

We wrap with the wind-down, where Jordan confessed to loving Katie Downs and the Kardashians and was almost banned from the studio.

 

Cast of Characters:

Hope Teague-Bowling: Interchangeable White Lady, NBCT, quite a looker

Jordan Moog: US history teacher, formerly of Sumner High School, Parkland Royalty

Jonathan Diaz: IB Theory of Knowledge teacher, in Abu Dhabi via Malta and Venezuela, maker of arepas

Lisa Paterson: PE Department Head, Kiwi, vicious hater of static stretching 

 

The Nerd Farmer Podcast is available on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, and Google Play and is brought to you by Alaska Airlines.

Please consider supporting the podcast by joining Channel 253 as a member.

Lisa Keating was our first interview this year with a school board candidate this year (and our only one with someone with purple hair!). Keating, who founded and heads an organization that advocates for LGBT youth, is challenging the formidable 30-year incumbent Debbie Winskill for position 1 in November.

Keating explains why she decided to run, and we talked at length about equity and inclusion in the school district and her work in Tacoma schools over the last decade. We also vented frustrations with some of the school board’s actions during the strike last year, and she told us how they might have been handled differently.

Check below for some original Channel 253 reporting by Sean Robinson on this high profile school board race. And become a member, everyone’s doing it.

Links

One local school board race typifies generational shifts in Tacoma

A first-time candidate is raising most money in Tacoma school board races. Does it matter?

My Purple Umbrella

Friends for Lisa Keating website

Public Disclosure Commission: Keating Lisa J

Channel 253 membership

Welcome to Tacoma’s Talk Show!  It’s an EARTHQUAKE!!!  Oh no, the VOLCANO IS ERUPTING!!!

We’re getting ready for the 2019 Great Washington ShakeOut by talking earthquakes, volcanoes, tsunamis and how to survive it all.  Joining host Evelyn Lopez is Brian Terbush, Earthquake and Volcano Program Manager at the Emergency Management Division of our state’s Military Department.

So, time to get ready for the big one!  What will you do when the earth starts shaking, the volcano starts oozing, or the giant wave appears off our coast?  Settle in for our discussion and find out.

The Great ShakeOut will take place at 10:17 a.m. on 10/17.  This is a perfect opportunity to duck, cover, and hold, and then look around and think about whether you would be safe in an earthquake, and how you could make your location safer.  Also, the key to success here is preparation, so start with one item to get going.

Here are some helpful links for the ShakeOut, preparing for disasters, and alerts to volcano activity!

Listen and let us know what you think!

Evelyn Lopez    @truetacoma