City Council Approves Resolution 5434: Affirming Black Lives Matter

Published on August 05, 2020

City Council Approves Resolution 5434: Affirming that Black Lives Matter and Approving the Framework for Kirkland to Become a Safe, Inclusive and Welcoming Community

Media Contact:
Kellie Stickney
Communications Program Manager
kstickney@kirklandwa.gov
(425) 979-6562

KIRKLAND, Wash. – During their meeting on Tuesday, August 4, 2020, the Kirkland City Council approved Resolution 5434(PDF, 859KB) : Affirming that Black Lives Matter and Approving the Framework for Kirkland to Become a Safe, Inclusive and Welcoming Community Through Actions to Improve the Safety and Respect of Black People in Kirkland and End Structural Racism by Partnering with Those Most Affected.

R-5434 was drafted based on four key guiding principles:

• Build on previous City work to become safe, inclusive and welcoming.
• Listen, learn and partner with the Black community and People of Color on actions and outcomes.
• Create broad community engagement to identify actions to increase the safety of Black residents and visitors and reduce structural racism.
• Create policy and program outcomes that are specific, measurable, timely and funded.

“The City Council has long been committed to doing the hard work to achieve our vision of being a safe, inclusive and welcoming community,” said Mayor Penny Sweet. “R-5434 continues that commitment and helps us to ensure that Black voices are partners in our efforts to dismantle systemic Anti-Blackness.”

The City Council also approved early action funding requests to facilitate immediate implementation of community outreach elements, transparency elements, and national best practice research elements in the resolution. The Council will approve a fiscal note for these items during their meeting on September 1. These early actions total $380,000 and will fund staff, consultants and technical support to begin the extensive community outreach needed to implement the items in the resolution.

“The City Council recognizes that funding is required to make real change,” said Council member Kelli Curtis. “Creating a community where Black people feel safe is going to take both an investment of dollars and a collective investment of time from all members of our community. The Council has made a down payment on these efforts, and we strongly encourage everyone to get involved in this conversation as we move forward.”

More information about R-5434 is available on the City website(PDF, 859KB) . Any community members wishing to be involved in this process can contact David Wolbrecht, Neighborhood Services Outreach Coordinator at dwolbrecht@kirklandwa.gov.