Nick Licata Electronic Correspondence
Scope and Contents Note
Email correspondence from City councilmember Nick Licata’s tenure as city councilmember. This series includes the councilmember's correspondence on many topics related to the committees Licata chaired covering parks, public safety, human services, and arts and culture. Constituent correspondence spans a wide range of subjects of concern to citizens, especially homeless encampments, sports arena proposals, the Woodland Park Zoo elephants, the minimum wage, public banking, and ride-share regulations.
Dates
- Creation: 1998-2015
Creator
- Licata, Nick (Person)
Conditions Governing Access
Records are open to the public.
Conditions Governing Use
Records are available for use onsite through ePADD software in the SMA reading room.
Historical Note
Nick Licata was elected to five terms on City Council, serving from 1998 to 2015. During his time in office, he chaired committees covering areas including parks, public safety, human services, and arts and culture. He served as Council President from 2006 to 2007. In his college years at Bowling Green State University, Licata was student body president and president of Students for a Democratic Society before earning a degree in political science in 1969. He then moved to Seattle to attend graduate school at the University of Washington, where he received a master’s degree in sociology in 1973. Licata was a longtime activist in the community, helping to found the Coalition Against Redlining; Citizens for More Important Things, which campaigned against excessive public funding for sports stadiums, and Give Peace a Dance, a nuclear disarmament group. He was a founder of The Civic Foundation and the Friends of Westlake Park, and he was a member of the first board of directors for the Capitol Hill Housing Improvement Program. He worked as an insurance broker for 17 years prior to his election to City Council. In 2003, Licata published the children’s book Princess Bianca and the Vandals, and in 2016 after leaving Council, he wrote Becoming a Citizen Activist. In 2012 The Nation named him the Progressive Municipal Official of the Year. He was the founding chair of the national municipal policy network Local Progress.
Full Extent
344,848 email messages
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Correspondence from councilmember Licata's email account.
Existence and Location of Copies
Separated Materials
Attorney-client priviliged materials have been separated.
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Repository Details
Part of the Seattle Municipal Archives Repository