James D. Braman, Jr. Subject Files
Scope and Contents note
Correspondence, memoranda, reports, studies, and reference materials relating to DCD's activities, project, and mission. These are the Director's personal office files and include some materials of an administrative nature. Arranged alphabetically.
Dates
- Creation: 1969-1974
Creator
- Seattle (Wash.). Dept. of Community Development (Organization)
Conditions Governing Access note
Records are open to the public.
Historical Note
The Department of Community Development (DCD) was established in 1969, assuming the responsibilities of the City Planning Commission staff and the Urban Renewal Program, previously a division of the Executive Department. Throughout its existence, DCD administered the City's comprehensive planning and provided direction and support for the City's physical and economic development through community planning. The Department was the City agency responsible for coordinating public and private efforts toward physical redevelopment and renewal in both residential and business districts. This work was based on the social, economic, and physical needs of the target community or district.
A very large portion of the DCD budget was realized from federal funds. This reliance on federal grants significantly impacted DCD's operational focus as certain types of federal funding dried up and other funding programs emerged. The administration of the Seattle Model City Program was moved to DCD in 1970, but funding ended in 1974. All but one of the City's Urban Renewal projects were closed out in 1977. And at about the same time, the Community Development Block Grant program, a federal pass-through program, was established. Other federal funding programs included the Neighborhood Improvement Program, Targeted Neighborhood Assistance Program, Neighborhood Development Program, and Urban Development Action Grants.
These changes in funding impacted the DCD's priorities and also led to several departmental reorganizations in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1972, the Department added economic development to its responsibilities in response to an economic decline in Seattle that had begun in the late 1960s. The focus was to provide information to businesses that were expanding or relocating in Seattle. At this point, DCD was managing planning and implementation of complex projects that had interdepartmental implications, such as development of the Central Waterfront, Freeway Park, Westlake Mall, Pike Place Market renewal, and the huge renewal projects in the Yesler/Atlantic, Northlake, and South Seattle neighborhoods.
In 1974, a Mayor's task force report recommended separating policy planning from development planning and implementation. While policy work went to the newly created Office of Policy Planning, DCD's focus turned to development and operational planning with added renewal projects in the Denny Regrade and International District, among others. With the addition of Community Development Block Grant funding, as well as other federal programs, DCD grew considerably in the late 1970s.
However, with the advent of President Ronald Reagan's administration, federal funding for Seattle was curtailed. In 1982, DCD's budget was cut by twenty percent and remained flat for the next three years. In 1986, following passage of the City's Housing Levy, the Department added a new function, administering the construction of new moderate to low income housing units. In addition, DCD was the lead agency working with the University of Washington in the late 1980s to promote Seattle, nationally and internationally, as a technology center.
Mayor Norm Rice, whose first term began in 1990, reorganized the City's housing, human services, economic development, and planning functions. DCD was abolished in 1992. Its programs were relocated in several City agencies, including the newly organized Department of Neighborhoods, Department of Housing and Human Services, and Planning Department. DCD records include material from the City Planning Commission, Zoning Commission, Metropolitan Arts Commission, Board of Adjustment, and Urban Renewal Program.
Extent
11 Cubic Feet
Language of Materials
English
BRS AFA Note
Container list available at UW
Location of Records
UW
Subject
- Seattle Model City Program (Organization)
- Braman, Jr., James D. (Person)
- Burlington Northern Railroad Company (Organization)
- Seattle (Wash.). Dept. of Community Development (Organization)
- Washington (State). Governor's Housing Task Force (Organization)
- Lake Union Advisory Committee (Organization)
- Metropolitan Development Association (Organization)
- Seattle Arts Commission (1971-2002) (Organization)
- Seattle Area Industrial Council (Organization)
- Seattle (Wash.). Urban Renewal Advisory Board (Organization)
- University District Development Council (Organization)
- Seattle Beautiful, Inc. (Organization)
- Seattle Aquarium (Organization)
- Puget Sound Council of Governments (Organization)
- Port of Seattle (Organization)
Geographic
- Central Business District
- Leschi
- Northgate
- Pioneer Square
- Seattle
- Seattle (Wash.)
- Yesler-Atlantic Neighborhood
Topical
- Bay Freeway
- Duwamish Waterway
- Earth Week
- East Seattle Transportation Study
- Environmental policy -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Fire stations
- Floating Homes
- Forward Thrust
- Freeway Park
- Greenbelts
- Housing
- Interstate 90
- Kingdome (Seattle, Wash.)
- Land Use Planning
- Mann-Minor Neighborhood Development Project
- Neighborhood Development Program (Seattle, Wash.)
- Neighborhood Plans
- North Greenwood Neighborhood Development Project (Seattle, Wash.)
- Parks
- Pike Plaza Redevelopment Project
- Public Transit
- R.H. Thomson Freeway (Seattle, Wash.)
- Schools
- Seattle Development Program
- Skybridges
- South Seattle Redevelopment Project
- Transportation
- Underground Wiring
- Westlake Mall
- Zoning
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English.
Repository Details
Part of the Seattle Municipal Archives Repository