Homeless shelters, schools, farmers markets and hot dog carts could soon see costs raised by as much as 300 percent if the King County Department of Public Health implements a plan designed to chip away at the countyโs $92 million budget deficit.
With a massive budget deficit looming, every county department has been asked to make cuts, and the health department is considering cutting 50-to-100 percent subsidies given to school cafeterias, soup kitchens and mobile food vendors, in order to make a โfull cost recoveryโ on all permits.
The cost increase hasnโt yet been finalized, but a preliminary proposal by the health department estimates that schools could end up paying $495 per school kitchen, a hefty increase from the current permit cost, which ranges from $252 to $348.
Not all off the Seattle school districtโs 92 schools have kitchensโand the district is shifting towards a more centralized meal preparation system for elementary and middle schoolsโbut if even 40 of Seattleโs schools still maintained permitted kitchens, it could cost the district an additional $10,000 a year. According to health department documents, school districts have apparently voiced concern that the fee increase could raise the cost of lunches and effect how many kids end up eating meals at school.
Under the plan, mobile vendors, like hot dog and coffee carts, could be forced to pay a $218 feeโall of which is currently subsidizedโwhile food vendors at farmers markets, like Rolling Fire Pizza, would see slight increases around $30-$40.
Vendors are concerned that the county’s plan could end up eating away at their sometimes thin profit margins, but the countyโs plan could potentially be even more devastating to homeless feeding programs.
Under the health departmentโs proposal, shelters like the Union Gospel Mission and ROOTS could see 300 percent increases in their permit costs, depending on their programโs size.
โIf weโre paying $395 a year [for our permit], it jumps to $825 in 2010,โ says Ron Metcalf, operations director for the Bread of Life meal program. โIf you want to continue to feed the homeless, you have to pay the fee, but we donโt charge, so itโs not like we can charge two dollars instead of one to make up the difference.”
In the midst of a recession, non-profits have seen a decrease in donations but at the same time have also seen a growing need for feeding programs โWe already have a hardship,โ Metcalf says, โand now weโre going to have a bigger one.โ
Metcalfโs concern is, naturally, also being voiced by other shelter programs around the city. โI donโt think [the fee increase] is a particularly wise thing,โ says ROOTS operations director Matt Fox. โItโs going to discourage new startups and need is up all over the place.โ
ROOTS serves breakfast and dinner to 25 people at its University District shelter every night and as many as 150 people on Friday nights. Because of their high-volume meal program, ROOTS is bracing for a possible 300 percent increase in its permit costs. โItโs triple what the fee is now,โ Fox says. โItโs money weโll find, but it is kind of a burden. I think feeding people in Seattle is something worth subsidizing.โ
According to King County Department of Health spokeswoman Hilary Karasz, the policy change is still being analyzed and the health department hasnโt figured out how much impact the subsidy reduction would have on the countyโs $92 budget deficit.
โWeโre trying to find legitimate and reasonable ways to bridge the [budget] gap,โ Karasz says. โThereโs been quite a lot of work to work with stakeholders. We know itโs going to make an impact on people and nobody wants that.โ But, Karasz says, โThe bottom line is, we have been directed to do full cost recovery.โ
Karasz would not comment on whether the permit cost increase might create a greater number of unregulated “outlaw” feeding programs like Food Not Bombs, an unlicensed meal service for the homeless in Occidental Park, which has faced harassment from Parks Department employees and police.
The King County Board of Health is expected to vote on the fee change proposal in July.

I wonder if the health department would inspect me if they saw me give my leftovers box to a homeless person. And then, you know, charge me for a food handlers class and permit or some shit.
Well the school district spent $20K on sending those illegal letters by certified mail when they could have just handed them out. five bucks a pop.
And we’re spending $20K for an “art project” in which an artist gets to live in the fremont bridge for 3 months, and come up with an unspecified art project. She’s said it will be a montage of sounds one can perceive at the bridge, you know, boat and car horns and such — so that cars waiting for the bridge to open can ALSO call in a phone number and hear her artist montage of the same sounds.
And then the permits themselves. Why would we just blindly accept that they cost so much? What’s up with that? Are they jsut shuffling paperwork or are they actually insepcting anything?
It’s all a black hole until you look into it isn’t it.
go to lbloom.net and look at the salaries of the city and county workers making well over $100K a year. Maybe the top non-civil service earners could take/be given a 10-20% decrease in pay to keep basic services funded.
Just Mr. Snow Removal could save us $107,000 plus benefits.
I know this a King County deal but I’m sure they have excess salaries as well – for one King County Department of Health spokeswoman Hilary Karasz – do they really need a spokesperson?
Hell SDOT could reduce salaries by a million and probably improve their department. Crunican costs us over $220K and she’s worthless. $500K for a study to find out how SDOT people like working there – then give a raise to the guy the most people complain about….
Another source of income are handicapped people. They get to get to park free of charge on Seattle streets, with no time limit. At $2.50 an hour, why not?
Full cost recovery sort of defeats the purpose of those programs, no?
Want to end homelessness? Buy them a home:
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-ch…
Median home prices drop below 1989 levels in some parts of Southland
“John A. Beatrice, 55, bought his spacious two-story Spanish-style house there brand-new for $120,000 in 1989….In April, a slightly larger home two doors away sold for $66,500.“
“schools … could soon see costs raised by as much as 300 percent”
wow
that sounds bad.
costs TRIPLING?!
costs of what?
actually reading the article reveals that schools face a $150-250 increase.
not quite as scary.
Perhaps the Mayor been more serious about ending homelessness in Seattle (remember that 10 year magical plan?) this would not have been as ugly as it’s turning out to be.
Instead of cutting food to schoolchildren and homeless people, or making county workers unemployed, or raising fees on handicapped people — how about raising property taxes on people with $2 million McMansions? They’re not filthy enough rich yet?
Where are the county exec candidates on this?
We should serve the meals for the homeless in Bellevue Square.