Judy Nicastro Subject Files
Scope and Contents note
Correspondence, memoranda, reports, and notes relating to issues before the City Council during Nicastro's four-year tenure on the Seattle City Council and reflecting her interests and activities while on the Council. Subjects include civil rights, economic development, education, City finance and budget, housing, land use, urban development, interdepartmental affairs, neighborhoods, parks and recreation, public safety, health and social services, technology, transportation, and public utilities. Of particular interest are records concerning renter's rights and rental controls, and the 1999 World Trade Organization meeting and demonstrations.
Dates
- Creation: 1999-2003
Creator
- Nicastro, Judy (Person)
- Seattle (Wash.). City Clerk (Organization)
Conditions Governing Access note
Records are open to the public.
Conditions Governing Use note
This material is available for use onsite through the electronic records search interface in the SMA reading room.
Biographical Note
Born into a working-class New Jersey home in 1966, Judy Nicastro learned the importance of political power first-hand when she and her mother suffered from funding cuts to widows' benefits in President Reagan's 1981 budget, an experience that helped shape her populist agenda as a Seattle Council Member in later years. Nicastro earned a law degree from the University of Washington in the 1990s, where she also served as Student Body President, before settling in Fremont and working for the Boeing Company as a buyer of 767 airplane parts.
In 1999, at a time of skyrocketing rent increases due to Seattle's booming economy, Nicastro won a Seattle City Council position on a renters' rights platform. This was an important issue to many Seattle residents at the time, fifty-two percent of whom were renters themselves. Nicastro served one term on City Council (1999-2003) and earned a reputation as a fiery character--outspoken, unpredictable, and brash--known for her off-the-cuff comments, verbal assaults on opponents, and continual sparring with Mayor Greg Nickels and labor union leaders. Criticized for her seemingly erratic voting record, she retorted: "I'm not a rubber stamp for anyone. I don't work for the mayor. I don't work for labor. I don't work for the affordable housing community. I work for the people." After initial doubts concerning her effectiveness, Council President Margaret Pageler praised Nicastro for her pragmatic rather than knee-jerk approach to politics, pointing out that she was "more interested in finding solutions than in being politically correct." While many cheered her actions as those of a working-class advocate for the rights of the underdog, others denounced her as a game player lacking seriousness of purpose.
During her time on the City Council, Nicastro chaired the Landlord/Tenant & Land Use Committee and served as vice-chair of the Committee of Culture, Arts & Parks as well as the Housing, Human Services & Community Development Committee. Through her committee work Nicastro helped to make changes which significantly increased Seattle renters' leverage in dealing with landlords. She sponsored a bill which strengthened landlord retaliation provisions in the Municipal Code--changing penalties from criminal to civil--and gave tenants the right to organize for the first time in Seattle history. She also pushed for Emergency Order Tenant Relocation Assistance and led the effort for an expanded rental assistance program, and she lowered parking requirements for affordable housing, making it cheaper for developers to build low-income housing. In 2002, Nicastro was the only Councilmember to oppose placing an $86 million Housing Levy on the ballot, explaining that it would provide too much money for home ownership programs rather than the people the "low income" levy was intended to help.
In addition to advocating for renters' protections and low income assistance, Nicastro became involved with small business incentives and local environmental and humanitarian affairs as well, supporting human services and homelessness funding and sponsoring and defending many issues involving civil rights, communities of color, women and domestic violence, fair labor practices, gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgendered interests, animal rights and off-leash areas, and public safety. As chair of the Land Use Committee, Nicastro was a consistent proponent of more compact urban development, especially in areas where rapid transit had been proposed.
In 2003 Nicastro was one of three council members investigated by the City Ethics and Elections Commission in the "Strippergate" scandal, accused of rezoning a Lake City strip club to allow for additional parking in exchange for campaign contributions from the Colacurcio family, who have alleged ties to Seattle's history of political corruption. The Commission investigation determined that Nicastro had accepted over $22,000 of campaign funding from Frank Colacurcio Jr. and other family members, which at least partially explains her defeat in an attempt at a second term in office.
Partial Extent
13 Cubic Feet (33 boxes)
Partial Extent
1996 digital files (195 MB)
Language of Materials
English
Arrangement
The folder structure of the electronic files consist of separate directories for Judy Nicastroâs office and designated network storage drive (H drive) and her staffâs network storage drives (H drive). Original subfolder names and order have been maintained and mainly reflect divisions by subject.
Arrangement note
Arranged chronologically
Location of Records
SMA
Additional extent statement
1,996 digital files (195 MB)
Conservation note
Several file extensions were restored after being identified by DROID.
Processing Information note
According to legacy practice, 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
- Colacurcio Family (Family)
- Nicastro, Judy (Person)
- Seattle Aquarium (Organization)
- Seattle (Wash.). City Council (Organization)
Geographic
Occupation
Topical
- Admiral Parking Garage
- City planning -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Civil rights -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Discrimination in housing -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Exotic Animals
- Land use -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Low-Income Housing
- Monorail System
- Monorail railroads -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Neighborhood planning -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Parks
- Parks -- Lighting -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Playfield Lighting
- Political ethics -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Public safety -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Rental housing -- Law and legislation -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Transportation
- World Trade Organization
- Zoning -- Washington (State) -- Seattle
- Title
- Guide to the Judy Nicastro Records 1999-2003
- Author
- Revised by Sarah Shipley.
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English.
- EAD Location
- http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv91664
Repository Details
Part of the Seattle Municipal Archives Repository