Jim Compton Subject Files
Scope and Contents note
The Jim Compton Subject Files include correspondence, memoranda, reports, notes, Council Briefings, and press clippings relating to issues before the City Council during his tenure and especially to subjects discussed in committees Compton chaired. Major subjects include public safety, including police accountability; governmental use of technology; management of energy and municipal utilities; environmental protection; and transportation. Also of interest are records related to the World Trade Organization events of 1999.
Compton's public safety related records document his work in improving fire department facilities, including support for the Fire Facilities Levy in 2003 and the City's decision to station a fire boat in fresh water, inside the Ballard Locks at Fisherman's Terminal. There is a large body of records related to his concern for police accountability, combating racial profiling, and equity for minorities and the poor who were disproportionately affected by legislation pertaining to driving with a suspended license. The records also illustrate his work in creating the Office of Professional Accountability, an independent agency that reviews certain police matters in an effort to maintain as much transparency as possible and improve the relationship between the community and the SPD.
Additionally, the records document the searches for a new fire chief and a new police chief. The latter was particularly significant because the initial post-WTO search was controversial and poorly managed. Compton helped create a process that provided greater community input and maintained a higher level of transparency in the ultimate selection of Chief Gil Kerlikowske.
The technology-related records demonstrate Compton's efforts to extend access to government through technology and his desire to create a municipally-owned wireless system that would be free to all citizens. He developed the concept of the Democracy Portal which included improvements to and expansion of the Seattle Channel, City website information, and web commerce for bill paying and obtaining City forms and documents.
Compton's energy records document the financial problems at City Light in the wake of the national energy scandals of the late 1990s and early 2000s, including subsequent audits, reports, and hearings that played a significant part in the Council's decision not to reconfirm Gary Zarker as City Light superintendent. The records also document the hiring of a new superintendent and some of the management and administrative changes at City Light.
Other records document environmental projects and programs such as the matching grant program to help protect streams and improve fish habitat; the revamping of comprehensive drainage and water quality policies; and transportation issues such as finishing the missing link on the Burke-Gilman Trail, and the auditing of the Monorail project that ultimately led to its dissolution.
Of special interest are the records related to the investigation of the WTO meeting riots in Seattle. Compton chaired the special panel that carried out the investigation and issued a report that identified specific measures aimed to prevent similar episodes in the future. The records accumulated during the investigation are a separate collections in the Archives (1802-K1).
Dates
- Creation: 1995-2006
Creator
- Compton, Jim (Person)
Conditions Governing Access note
Records are open to the public.
Conditions Governing Use
Records are available for use onsite in the SMA reading room, including electronic records through the electronic records search.
Biographical Note
Jim Compton was elected to the City Council in 1999 to fill the seat of outgoing Councilwoman Martha Choe. She resigned October 1, 1999 and Compton took office early on November 12, 1999. He resigned mid-way through his second term to take a teaching position in Cairo, Egypt, and to conduct research in emerging democratic movement in Romania. During his first term, Compton chaired the Council's Public Safety and Technology Committee. At his resignation in December of 2005, he was chair of the Utilities and Technology Committee. In addition, Compton chaired the World Trade Organization Accountability Review Committee, whose primary function was to create a factual record, composed of documents and interview data, that would serve as a baseline for community understanding of the events of the WTO meeting in Seattle in 1999.
As chair of the Public Safety Committee, Compton presided over debates on police discipline, racial profiling and treatment of protesters. And as chair of the Energy and Environmental Policy Committee, he clashed with Mayor Greg Nickels and some other Council members, leading the charge to block the reconfirmation of Gary Zarker, the City Light superintendent.
Compton faced scrutiny from the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission (SEEC) on two separate occasions. He was one of three Council members who received campaign donations tied to strip-club owner Frank Colacurcio Jr. before a vote on a rezone beneficial to the club. All three returned the money. He also agreed to a $3,000 settlement with the SEEC after admitted that he had accepted a plane ride on a jet owned by Paul Allen and tickets to a Portland Trail Blazers game. At the time, Allen's South Lake Union development was before the Council for consideration.
Prior to his Council election, Compton was best known for his 35-year career in journalism. His career involved, among other posts, working as NBC News correspondent out of Cairo and London (1977-1984), reporter and editor at Seattle's NBC affiliate KING-TV (1985-1999), and as a correspondent for The News Hour with Jim Lehrer. He was best known locally for his ten years producing The Compton Report, a top-rated weekly news program at KING-TV. The Compton Report won most of the broadcast industry's major awards, including the Columbia-Dupont Prize, the Gabriel Award, The Janus Award, and the Golden Globe of the San Francisco Film Festival.
Compton received his bachelor's degree in history at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, in 1964 and his master's degree at the Columbia University School of Journalism in 1969. He was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship in 1969-1970 for consulting with and studying the television system of Romania.
Extent
13.2 Cubic Feet (33 boxes)
1118 digital files (287 MB)
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Correspondence, memoranda, reports, notes, City Council briefings, and press clippings relating to issues before the Seattle City Council during Compton's tenure. Major topics of interest to Compton were technology and public safety.
Arrangement note
The Jim Compton Subject Files are arranged in sixteen functional or topical categories related to the principal activities of City government. These include:
1. Arts, Heritage and Sports
2. Energy
3. Environment
4. Finance and Economic Development
5. General Government
6. Human Services
7. Housing
8. Neighborhoods
9. Parks and Recreation
10. Public Safety
11. Technology
12. Transportation
13. Urban Development
14. Utilities
15. World Trade Organization Accountability Review Committee
16. Office Files
The folder structure of the electronic files consist of separate directories for Jim Comptons’s designated network storage drive (H drive) and his staff’s network storage drives (H drive). Original subfolder names and order have been maintained and mainly reflect divisions by subject.
Conservation Note
Several electronic file extensions were restored after being identified by DROID.
Processing Information note
According to legacy practice, electronic files were burned on a compact disc from network storage for transfer to archives. Disc images were then captured and files moved to network storage with regular fixity checks. CloneSpy was used to filter and log duplicate files. Duplicate files and non-record material were deleted. Spider2008 PII Scan and DtSearch were used to screen for personal and sensitive information. DROID was used to identify file formats, extract metadata, and facilitate processing decisions. ReNamer was used to remove and log problematic characters from file names. Files were then logged and transferred using Robocopy to preservation storage.
Subject
- Compton, Jim (Person)
- Seattle (Wash.). City Council (Organization)
- Seattle (Wash.). Fire Dept. (Organization)
- Seattle (Wash.). Police Dept. (Organization)
- Seattle City Light (Organization)
- Seattle Monorail Project (Organization)
- World Trade Organization Accountability Review Committee (Organization)
Geographic
Topical
- City planning
- City planning -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Energy -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Land use, Urban -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Monorail railroads -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Political ethics -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Public Utilities
- Public Utilities -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Public works
- Technology
- Technology -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Transportation -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Title
- Guide to the Jim Compton Subject Files 1995-2006
- Author
- Finding aid prepared by Scott Cline. Revised by Sarah Shipley.
- Date
- © 2007
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English.
- EAD Location
- http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv50630
Repository Details
Part of the Seattle Municipal Archives Repository