Approval of a Business Improvement Area on 15th Ave E is all but assured after the members of the Seattle City Council’s Community Economic Development Committee voted unanimously to approve the proposal Tuesday afternoon.
15th Avenue’s BIA is on track to becoming the eleventh in Seattle and would be the second-smallest in the city in terms of assessment, with 37 properties along the street between E Denny Way and E Mercer Street, including large property owners like Kaiser Permanente and Safeway, taxed to pay for community benefits like graffiti removal and neighborhood beautification.
Neither District 3’s Kshama Sawant nor any other committee members made remarks about the proposal before voting to approve it.
The chair of the committee, Councilmember Tammy Morales, also received unanimous approval to amend the ordinance laying out how the BIA would function, adding language that allows the BIA to work on efforts to prevent existing commercial tenants from being displaced. It also directed the BIA’s ratepayer board to include at least two members who are commercial tenants subject to triple-net leases, which can create a particularly precarious financial position for some businesses.
Several 15th Ave E business owners, including Smith owner Christopher Forcyzk, raised concerns about the proposal to raise costs on small business owners via their landlords as the city continues a slow recovery from the impacts of the pandemic.
Ross Kling, the owner of Rainbow Natural Remedies and member of the 15th Ave Merchants Association, told the committee in public comment, “Nobody wants to spend extra money, but we all recognize we want to be proactive as a community, and by proactive, it’s creating a more sophisticated organization to address what will better 15th Avenue East”, citing unanimous support on the merchants association for a proposal to create a BIA.
The ordinance should pass the full City Council this upcoming Monday and take effect starting in 2022.
$5 A MONTH TO HELP KEEP CHS PAYWALL-FREE
Subscribe to CHS to help us hire writers and photographers to cover the neighborhood. CHS is a pay what you can community news site with no required sign-in or paywall. To stay that way, we need you. Become a subscriber to help us cover the neighborhood for $5 a month -- or choose your level of support 🖤


Wonderful to see!
If this had a non-profit component (501c3); I can see people who live in the area contribute tax-deductible dollars towards it over time to strengthen the budget.
If I understand correctly, as the biggest biz on the strip, Kaiser is the main biz contributing the most money…
Since the biggest blight on 15th is the wasteland that used to be QFC, is this sorta using Kaiser’s money to compensate for Kroger’s awfulness? (I see this as a good thing, to be clear… It seems like a big org is gonna be making the strip nicer for all the small businesses?)
Kroger’s move was so upsetting. I wish something like Met Market or TJ’s could move into that space. Having a grocery store; or a few smaller shops there would make a HUGE difference.
If I remember correctly the UW owns that property (QFC to the end of the block towards Walgreens). It was willed to them from previous owners death. I wonder if they will sell off for redevelopment.
Yay! I would be very happy to see 15th cleaned up. I like Ladro coffee better than Macrina, but lately I have been going to Macrina instead because it isn’t pleasant to sit outside Ladro surrounded by weeds, graffiti, and garbage.
Oh but the discussions you have with the mentally unstable folks who sometimes congregate in the Adirondack chairs outside Ladro! True Seattle.