Should we or should we not have a county parks system? The question before voters is that simple. Because if voters do not approve this property tax levy, we functionally won’t have one.
The 6-year levy, last approved by voters in 2019, will support 250 parks in King County 185 miles of regional trails, 215 miles of backcountry trails and 50 square miles of open space for we, the people, to frolic, picnic, bike, and aimlessly wander. There’s splash parks, pools, ballfields, and play courts of various kinds for racket-oriented aristocrats. If we renew this levy, we maintain that system and homeowners pay 24 cents per thousand dollars of their home value each month. For the median homeowner, that comes out to $16.38 a month. It would generate $1.45 billion over the next six years.
If we don’t renew this levy, say goodbye to new infrastructure improvements. Advocates say the county would close parks, or put up signs telling people to recreate at their own risk. Lawns will grow long, hedges wild. After-school programs that depend on county parks funding will suffer. We hope you and your kids like pissing yourselves, because we won’t have anybody to open the restrooms. It’s not a world we want to live in.
When the SECB suggested we hold our endorsement meeting in a park, it could not have known we’d meet with this levy’s well-prepared stakeholders on the hottest day of the year so far, a 90+ degree scorcher, with glaring, headache-inducing sunlight bouncing from the concrete like a mirror. We could go on complaining about this thing that was our fault, but it wouldn’t be fair to the people who sat on the porch outside the community center at the genuinely lovely Steve Cox Memorial Park in White Center with us, or the “Log Cabin,” as it is affectionately known. It’d be especially unfair to Fin Crispy Jr., the mascot of the park’s resident summer collegiate baseball team, The DubSea Fish Sticks. They were getting deep fried in there. We didn’t see you leave Fin Crispy Jr., but hope you survived, even if childhood experiences have made some of our stomachs twist into knots whenever mascots are near (it’s a combination of your large size, wide-open, smiling mouths, and mime-like silence. It’s very disconcerting).
Like we said, this levy is a no-brainer. It is also uncontested. The advocates, including County Council Member Teresa Mosqueda and Christie True, the county’s former head of natural resources and parks, could have easily shown up, sat down, told us to “vote for this or the parks are screwed,” and called it a day. But they came with data. With a deep love of the parks. Even answers for why the wealthy, who don’t think the county parks are worth a few quarters a day when their backyard, waterfront tennis courts are right there, should vote for this.
No matter how rich they are, they don’t own Tiger Mountain, where they race wildly-expensive mountain bikes (yet), or the county-owned pool where little Richie Rich III has his swim meets. If this is you, and “eyesores” are one of your top concerns, consider the weeds. Are you going to schlep a bag and a weeder to your local park, or are you willing to cough up less than a dollar a day so someone else will? We’re willing to bet that’s less than the going rate for a gardener. But those homeowners would probably know better than us.
When we pool our money together, we can all have nice things. Even those with little to spare. In Seattle, we’re lousy with parks. But many of the diverse, immigrant populated areas of unincorporated King County aren’t. They depend on this money. Everyone deserves a place to play, to enjoy themselves, to throw a party, to organize a cultural event, and not have to pay for it. Bummed about another property tax? Take it up with the Washington Legislature, which needed to figure out progressive revenue solutions, like, yesterday.
Keeping these parks open and thriving at a time when we’re still trying to recover from the isolation and depression of the pandemic and so much public money is under federal threat is literally our civic duty.
Vote YES, or don’t let us catch you frolicking in a public green space ever again.

Every levy has two options, yes and no. That’s what democracy is all about. The freedom to say no – no matter how important the levies pretend to be. The government is flush with our tax dollars, don’t let “progressive libs” guilt tax you out of your homes and apartment rentals (yeah you folks too). Vote no all property tax levies.
No. You “progressives” allowed some of our best parks to become junkie shitholes for years.
One suggestion to the ideological intern who wrote this piece…
“play courts of various kinds for racket-oriented aristocrats”
Seattle has a history of supporting, for example, tennis for its residents. I recommend the recent transplant learn some local history – in respect to tennis, learn about Amy Ye.
That said, parks are awesome – support the levy (but aside, everyone ends up paying this tax – some directly, some indirectly)
Sorry, but no. I occasionally utilize the city parks but have never found a reason to visit a county park. I’d rather use the $16 to pay my Netflix bill.
If the unincorporated areas of the county want to shoulder the burden themselves, more power to them.
There’s nothing more tedious than people complaining about taxes. White people excel at it.
I voted yes on the levy. I’m a county resident, and the county has some lovely parks.
Don’t be a cheapskate.
@5
@5 It is not near as tedious as paying outrageous amounts of tax to live in a shithole.
Safe to assume you would know nothing about paying outrageous amounts of tax, or any at all for that matter. You are everything you hate, especially a disgusting racist. I would say I am sorry for your pathetic life, but honestly, you deserve it.
Cheers
Spankey dear, there’s no need to be so tense and brusque. If you can’t afford King County, you can always move. It’s still a free country, for the most part.
Personally, I love it here. Sure, my property taxes in Seattle are much higher than they are over at our other place in Grant County, but we get so much more for the dollar on this side of the mountain.
Maybe you just need to stop and smell the roses. After all, the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence. Let go, and let God.
That was a pretty weak response, HUNTY.
You are giving Stockholm syndrome.
I don’t know what to tell you, Spankey. You’re obviously bitter about something. Poor life choices? Genetic shortcomings? Could it be low T?
Maybe if you applied yourself, your life might be better. Go to night school, learn a trade. Or maybe even something as simple as going for a walk in the park.
(Too soon?)
This is a very early aughts level comment.
That said, the last part was genuinely funny and got me a literal LOL.
Peace
I usually lean towards voting against tax increases that aren’t progressively funded but at this point they’ll probably be privatized before that happens. Can anyone explain how this levy equates to ~$16 per month for the average King County homeowner? There’s no way the average value of a house in King County is $68,250 but 68250/1000*0.24 comes to $16.38. Maybe the article meant to say that it’s actually 24 cents per thousand dollars of their home value each YEAR?