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Will Consult for Food

Ethics rules restrict Peter Steinbrueck's local work opportunities. Except, ironically, from being employed by his former colleagues.

By Aimee Curl

March 26, 2008

Peter Steinbrueck has been gone from City Hall for barely three months, and already he's looking back—for a job.

He'd like the city to hire him as a consultant on the civic square development, the transformation of the former Public Safety Building a block west of City Hall into office, retail and restaurant space, and a 30,000-square-foot public plaza. It's the last piece of the city's civic center plan, which included acquiring the Municipal Tower, building a new Justice Center and constructing a new City Hall, something that Steinbrueck worked on for nearly a decade as a council member and most recently as chairman of the Urban Development and Planning Committee.

And if the city doesn't take him up on his offer for that project, Steinbrueck says he'll try for something else: "I intend to get on the city's consultant's roster and go after [requests for proposals]," he says. "I'm in business for myself now. I have to hustle for it."

Steinbrueck is indeed in business for himself (in January he launched Steinbrueck Urban Strategies LLC), but this is both by design and by necessity. According to municipal ethics laws, for one year after leaving the city, the former council member can't influence, or even interact, with the city or council on behalf of someone else if it relates to something he worked on during his tenure there. But these restrictions don't apply if he is directly on the city's payroll.

"You can't assist anyone else in dealing with the city, but you can assist the city," says Ethics and Elections Commission Executive Director Wayne Barnett. "The idea is that you're still playing for the same team."

Same team or not, Steinbrueck may face a tough go of it with some of his former colleagues.

"While it might be legal and not a violation of ethics code, I just don't feel real comfortable with a recent city employee, particularly a council member, getting a contract to advise us. To come back and work for the city such a short time after they've left office," says council member Tom Rasmussen. "While I'm sure he has a lot of expertise, I personally don't feel comfortable."

When Steinbrueck announced last year he was leaving office, he said he was doing so to fight against the Alaskan Way Viaduct, new or otherwise, on the waterfront. He wanted to help organize community efforts to ensure the elevated freeway is torn down and that surface streets and mass transit are improved to take its place.

But even if that work's volunteer, it may be difficult for him to navigate during his first year out of office because the rules apply whether you're getting paid or not. So he can participate as an individual, but he can't in any way assist other stakeholders in their dealings with the city, even if that means something seemingly innocuous such as revealing information about the leanings of his former colleagues on the council.

Of course the difference from participating and assisting is one big grey morass. Says Barnett: "Where he goes from Peter Steinbrueck interested citizen to Peter Steinbrueck spokesperson is a difficult line to draw."

Some of those lines have already been drawn in Steinbrueck's newest gig: serving as an ambassador of sorts for the expansion-minded Children's Hospital in its dealings with the surrounding Laurelhurst neighborhood.

Ethics commissioners voted in February to give Steinbrueck the go-ahead as long as he walks that fine line between assisting the various interests with each other and assisting them with the city.

So far so good, says Laurelhurst Community Council president Jeannie Hale. "We'll continue to do the best we can to work with him. If issues surface where there's conflict, you can bet we'll be in contact with the ethics commission."

Though glad to be working for Children's, Steinbrueck says the ethics rules have made it tough for him to find work, period. "I'm basically prohibited from doing most of the things I have the skills and experience to do," he says, adding that he wasn't aware of the full reach of the restrictions before he left office.

Steinbrueck, an architect by trade who just wrapped up teaching an urban-sustainability class at the University of Washington, could of course get a job at a private firm. But he doesn't want to. "My interests have extended beyond building to the design of cities," he says.

So Steinbrueck's looking for work in eastern Washington and California. This week he gave a speech to policy makers and planners in Philadelphia on reinvigorating older communities by tearing down freeways. Though widely rumored to be eyeing a run for mayor in 2009, Steinbrueck says he's putting off any thought about running for office, "until further notice."

acurl@seattleweekly.com

Comments (5)

Reader Comments

1. Comment by Arthur M. Skolnik — March 27, 2008 @ 8:13PM
Shame on you Peter. You know very well what is ethical and proper professional behavior. Get out there a get a job or clients like the rest of us consultants who want to design cities. Don't try to use your insider connections to circumvent the open government we all want and desire. If you want to help design the city, you should not have resigned from your safe seat on the Council. Not good planning on your part. So, keep away from Seattle Government for the requsit one year and see if anyone will pay for your services if they know you cannot influence the city. Don't let this issue hang out there in the public if you shoot for the mayors office. You will self distruct!
I'm watching!
2. Comment by Seemore Butts — March 28, 2008 @ 2:38PM
Peter, I guess you cannot collect unemployment - maybe you should have put more thought into your post-elected official plans. Are you smokin some serious crack to think that the City would hire you to guide it? You couldn't manage your way out of a paper bag while you held office, why would you add anything now? When was the last time you actually designed anything, are you even still licensed to practice, who would hire you to stamp a blueprint just because you once designed a deck for Margaret Pageler? Get a job you bum!
3. Comment by Joanne D'Arco — March 30, 2008 @ 2:08PM
This doesn't seem legal to me (unless Steinbrueck signed his life away in a non-compete agreement when he was elected). The city is basically saying that elected officials can no longer work in the public interest once they've left office; they have to work in the private sector. Unless of course they work for the city as a consultant -- and I can tell you firsthand that this is why MANY city employees leave the city only to return as a much more highly-paid consultant. It's like the city has a monopoly on public-sector employees in addition to wasting tax dollars by inevitably hiring back former employees at a higher salary. Seems like it would be more cost-effective to just lift the rule. Seattle is such a small place anyway that you really can't avoid working for someone who works with the city.

More evidence that when it comes to government, management, and social skills, Seattle is the most bass-ackward city in the country!
4. Comment by sick of steinbrueck already — April 02, 2008 @ 9:41AM
I was in Architecture school at the UW with this bozo Steinbrueck 23 years ago. He was a whiner then, he's a whiner now.

He whined about the "unfairness" of having to serve an apprenticeship under a licensed Architect to be eligible to take the Architectural Registration Exam.

He got elected to public office on his Papa's name, not because of ANY of his own "accomplishments".

Now, he's whining "I can't get a job" unless it's in the exact field he wants....for one year. Big deal.

Hey, Peter, here's some career advice. Move to another city wherethere isn't a park named after your Papa and try to get a job there, on your own "accomplishments".

Then you can come back here after a year and resume playing off your Papa's name. Sheesh.

Loser!
5. Comment by payattention — April 03, 2008 @ 6:41PM
Unbelievable. I'm guessing 'sick of steinbrueck already' barely made it through Architecture college and now can hardly stand the fact that someone made use of his career that looked up and had a vision for the city, rather than staring down at your drawing board working for someone better than you.....im just guessing here.

And, sorry, but his father was a great man, but it's been a long time and guess what, Peter did more for the city than most elected officials - and for little pay, so it's not like he can go and 'wait a year' before doing what he is trained to do.

Whining? Maybe. But more should do it if it gets things that are right, done.

Loser? look in the mirror.

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