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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Pothole Jar Filled By Returned Tax Refunds Seattle Officials Shocked When Nearly 11,000 Residents Send Back More Than $450,000 In Street Utility Tax Refunds - For Pothole Repair

Kim Murphy Los Angeles Times

In Seattle, if you envision some high-minded city project and you want to ask the voters if they would like to raise their taxes to pay for it, don’t even bother printing the ballot. The answer is no.

Twice in the last two years, voters have rejected plans for a spacious urban park to replace a rundown workshop and retail area near Lake Union. A new baseball stadium went down to defeat (only to be resurrected by the Legislature). A new library? Heck no. Rail transit? Thumbs down, at least the first and second times around. Even a vote to keep the schools operating got turned down last year.

So when the state Supreme Court ruled Seattle’s street utility tax was unconstitutional and had to be refunded, everyone in city government figured they could kiss that $12 million goodbye.

But hating to see it go, someone suggested sending a note with the refund checks, inviting residents to return the money as a donation toward street repair.

“We thought we’d be laughed at,” admitted city transportation spokeswoman Michelle McGovern. “The idea of having taxpayers send government money back is unheard of. Why be the butt of jokes?”

But one morning several weeks ago, a check showed up in the mail. “Enclosed please find our street utility refund endorsed to City of Seattle streets. I wish we could refund for the attorneys as well,” wrote Cynthia Todd. “Please fix a pothole.”

Soon, a trickle of returned checks turned into a stream, and by May 14, a total of 10,745 refund checks had been donated back to the city, worth more than $450,000.

It’s been enough to add eight extra street repair crews and extend all street crews to seven days a week - all of them filling potholes.

What skeptics failed to take into account was the power of the pothole in the Seattle psyche. In a city where perpetual rain dribbles its way into the asphalt like Chinese water torture, there is perhaps no more enduring municipal issue than the lowly pothole - little puddle pockets, zigzagging cracks, black yawning chasms that can devour an entire car and passengers (the city has had to settle any number of pothole claims, some with damages ranging into the tens of thousands of dollars).

Charlie Chong, the grass-roots activist elected to the City Council last year, ran on a pothole platform - as in, what are those idiots at City Hall doing with our money when they can’t even fix the potholes?

“I’m not surprised at all,” Chong said of the huge response to the tax refund. “Everywhere I have gone when I was campaigning, it was potholes. Whether you live in L.A. or Seattle, as soon as you drive out of your driveway you’re facing streets that you pay taxes for, that you expect to be maintained. You shouldn’t have to constantly dodge potholes, and at that, some very deep potholes.”

From the notes mailed in with the tax refunds, many residents hoped to fix a few more. Many had maps attached with particular potholes suggested for repair.

“I am returning the check even though I could use it,” wrote Lorie Starr. “I have had the second set of shocks put on a year ago. Please! Let’s fix the pavement! I even had to have an alignment Feb. 4.”

Not everyone, of course, was so civically inclined. A few of the solicitations, indeed, came back without a check, just a note.

“If we see any evidence of street maintenance and repair, we might consider returning the check. Under the circumstances, FORGET IT!” wrote one resident.

City transportation department head Daryl Grigsby estimates the city will be able to fix 70,000 potholes this year with the refund money - an imposing number to be sure, although a blip on the screen of the $55 million a year the city needs to fix its streets, for which the mayor is proposing a new bond issue to be voted on by the City Council June 30.

“The potholes are kind of a symbol, I think, for a lack of focus on basic services that the city needs in order to stay workable and livable. People are saying it’s time to get back to basics,” said Councilwoman Jane Noland.

Noland, who has criticized the city’s maintenance programs and voted against the street utility tax, didn’t send back her refund check. She cashed it.

“There are a lot of deserving charities in this city,” she told local reporters, “but I don’t think the Seattle Transportation Department is one of them.”

xxxx POTHOLE CHIC Now, whether you mailed in your street utility tax check has become a measure of civic responsibility, with the paids and didn’t-paids listed in The Seattle Times. Most of the City Council paid. Gov. Gary Locke didn’t. Grunge rocker Krist Noveselic paid; the Dominican Sisters paid; King County Executive Ron Sims didn’t. Sims’ spokesman, Frank Abe, said Sims’ wife cashed the check. “It was such a small amount, he figured it wouldn’t do very much anyway,” Abe said apologetically. “Plus, he said he figures he’s paid enough city parking tickets to fix 100 potholes.”