Port Townsend City Attorney Heidi Greenwood, right, hands an EngagePT card to Bonnie Walters, a painter and jewelry-maker who recently moved from Sausalito, Calif., to Port Townsend with her husband. “I can’t wait to get engaged,” she said. “This town is just so vibrant.” (Nicholas Johnson/Peninsula Daily News)

Port Townsend City Attorney Heidi Greenwood, right, hands an EngagePT card to Bonnie Walters, a painter and jewelry-maker who recently moved from Sausalito, Calif., to Port Townsend with her husband. “I can’t wait to get engaged,” she said. “This town is just so vibrant.” (Nicholas Johnson/Peninsula Daily News)

EngagePT seeks public participation

Online platform explores 10 key issues

PORT TOWNSEND – Local governments struggle to engage the full spectrum of their communities in normal times – whether it’s because of residents’ time constraints or the challenges of parsing often mind-numbing bureaucratic jargon.

Now, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the resulting need to remain socially distant, is making that task even tougher. In-person meetings and public forums have fallen by the wayside, forcing local officials to rely more heavily than ever on digital, internet-based solutions.

Over the past week, the city of Port Townsend began rolling out its answer to that unprecedented challenge: It’s called EngagePT, and it aims to boost public participation while presenting otherwise complex issues in plain, easy-to-understand English.

“We’re in a very different situation in the time of COVID as far as how we can connect with and truly represent the interests of our community, and we’ve really been struggling with that,” City Manager John Mauro said.

“We’ve had to think hard about how can we innovate and allow the community to weigh-in on some of the city’s biggest issues.”

Port Townsend City Attorney Heidi Greenwood, right, hands an EngagePT card to Bonnie Walters, a painter and jewelry-maker who recently moved from Sausalito, Calif., to Port Townsend with her husband. “I can’t wait to get engaged,” she said. “This town is just so vibrant.” (Nicholas Johnson/Peninsula Daily News)

Port Townsend City Attorney Heidi Greenwood, right, hands an EngagePT card to Bonnie Walters, a painter and jewelry-maker who recently moved from Sausalito, Calif., to Port Townsend with her husband. “I can’t wait to get engaged,” she said. “This town is just so vibrant.” (Nicholas Johnson/Peninsula Daily News)

EngagePT consolidates 10 key policy issues facing the city — from budget priorities and transportation projects to sewer systems, water supply and public safety — into a single online platform designed to foster community-led decision-making.

“Instead of having 10 separate initiatives involving 10 separate departments, we decided it was important to bring it all together into a sort of one-stop shop,” Mauro said.

“Hopefully the result will be that more people in our community feel they can access and participate in addressing all of these issues.”

The city has begun promoting this all-in-one initiative via its Facebook page and its newsletter, as well as at the Port Townsend Farmers Market, where it has been encouraging residents to hop online and visit cityofpt.us/engagept to read up on the issues and take a survey.

“Talking with people at the market has been really rewarding for me,” Mauro said, noting that one question on the survey asks whether respondents would be interested in pitching in as an ambassador.

“It’s about fostering community conversations more than being subject-matter experts,” he said, adding that the ambassador idea was in part inspired by the use of informal conversations held over coffee in 1993 to solicit feedback on a proposed Comprehensive Plan.

City staff are currently developing a toolkit to help ambassadors reach out to and collect input from the community, which could begin as soon as early September.

Since each of the 10 issues is on its own timeline, the online engagement tool will remain in place for months, Mauro said. But one issue is particularly pressing: budget priorities and the potential levying and use of additional property tax dollars over the next few years.

On Monday night, the City Council will consider extending the deadline to Oct. 31 for Mauro to recommend whether to levy and how to use as much as $300,000 in property tax revenue in 2021.

In February, voters approved the city’s annexation into East Jefferson Fire and Protection District No. 1. That meant the fire district would be able to tax property owners directly rather than contracting with the city to provide services, which freed up the city’s capacity to tax its residents and use the revenue elsewhere.

Port Townsend City Attorney Heidi Greenwood, right, hands an EngagePT card to Justin Lake, center, of Discovery Bay, and Brandon Chappell, left, a former Port Townsend resident now living in Poulsbo, on Saturday morning at the Port Townsend Farmers Market. (Nicholas Johnson/Peninsula Daily News)

Port Townsend City Attorney Heidi Greenwood, right, hands an EngagePT card to Justin Lake, center, of Discovery Bay, and Brandon Chappell, left, a former Port Townsend resident now living in Poulsbo, on Saturday morning at the Port Townsend Farmers Market. (Nicholas Johnson/Peninsula Daily News)

However, an agreement between the two stipulates that if the city decides to use that new-found taxing capacity, it must do so in a phased approach over several years, returning in 2024 to full capacity, or $908,000 annually.

“The question now is do we want to levy that one-third next year,” Mauro said, “and if so, how much of it and for which of the eligible uses.”

The agreement between the city and fire district stipulates that any tax revenue collected must be used in certain areas, specifically transportation capital projects, the housing trust fund, utility tax relief, or parks and recreation capital projects.

Mauro said feedback on this specific issue received through the EngagePT initiative will inform how the city constructs its budget for the coming year, a process due to start in November and wrap up sometime in December.

“We are in a fiscally difficult situation,” he said. “We have increasing responsibilities as a local government and we have shrinking revenue. It’s our job to explain what all these things mean and how they play into how we levy taxes and use that funding, and so this new tool is critical to giving everyone in our community an opportunity to weigh in.”

______

Jefferson County reporter Nicholas Johnson can be reached by email at njohnson@peninsuladailynews.com or by phone at 360-328-1222.

More in News

Dave Swinford of Sequim, left, and Marlana Ashlie of Victoria take part in a workshop on Saturday about cropping bird photos for best presentation during Saturday’s Olympic Birdfest. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Bird spotting

Dave Swinford of Sequim, left, and Marlana Ashlie of Victoria take part… Continue reading

Annette Nesse, at the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe’s main campus in Blyn in December 2021, is serving as interim director at the Dungeness River Nature Center, the organization announced. (Emily Matthiessen/for Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Nesse to serve as interim director at River Center

New position to begin May 1; organization will continue its full-time search

Sequim Wheelers, seen on the historic Railroad Bridge near the Dungeness River Nature Center, prep for a ride on the Olympic Discovery Trail. The nonprofit's season begins in May, and it has an open house for potential new volunteers on April 20 at the River Center. It also has an orientation for new volunteers on April 25 at the River Center. (Sequim Wheelers)
Sequim Wheelers gearing up for 2024 rides, seek recruits

Nonprofit looking for help during for 20-week season

Ashlynn Emiliani of Port Angeles, center, tosses woody debris into a pile for collection as volunteers work to clean up a section of hillside above the parking lot of the Red Lion Hotel in Port Angeles on Saturday. More than a dozen members of Elevate PA spent the morning clearing up overgrown areas on the hillside from Haynes Viewpoint to the hotel’s Front Street driveway as part of a city beautification effort. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Hillside cleanup in Port Angeles

Ashlynn Emiliani of Port Angeles, center, tosses woody debris into a pile… Continue reading

Weekly flight operations scheduled

There will be field carrier landing practice operations for aircraft… Continue reading

Operations set at Bentinck range

The Royal Canadian Navy has announced that the land-based… Continue reading

Pictured, from left, are Wolfe, May, Reader and Emily Fry.
May recognized with BEE award from medical center

Reuben May has received a BEE award from Olympic Medical Center. The… Continue reading

Schools open following contract

PAPEA, district reach tentative agreement

Port Angeles School Superintendent Marty Brewer, second from right, speaks with members of the Port Angeles Parents for Education, on Friday about the Port Angeles Paraeducation Association strike. Assistant Superintendent Michele Olsen stands at right. (Paula Hunt/Peninsula Daily News)
District, PAPEA to pick up bargaining Sunday

Parent group presses officials for answers on strike

Instructor Josh Taylor, left, points out the workings of an electric vehicle on Wednesday at the Auto Technology Certification Program at Peninsula College. Nick Schommer, center, and Brian Selk get ready to do some testing on the electric auto’s parts from underneath the vehicle. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
College’s automotive technology program gets a reboot

Students can earn a certificate separate from two-year degree

Port Townsend transportation tax dollars to be put to work

Benefits district to raise $400,000 to $600,000 in first year