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Peter Steinbrueck Electronic Correspondence

 Series
Identifier: 4684-01

Scope and Contents Note

This series includes general correspondence from Councilmember Peter Steinbrueck and his Legislative Assistants Neil Powers, Stephanie Pure and Roger Valdez. It contains internal and external correspondence revolving around the business of the city council, including transitional housing, parks, neighborhood planning as well as other topics. A large proportion of the records is constituent correspondence, advocating for or against proposed legislation or addressing specific city issues or concerns.

Dates

  • Creation: 2001-2008

Creator

Restrictions on Access

Records are open to the public.

Conditions Governing Use note

This material is available for use onsite in the SMA reading room through the electronic records search.

Biographical Note

Peter Steinbrueck served just over ten years on the Seattle City Council (1997-2007), including one term as Council President (2002-2003). He was elected at the 1997 general election to fill the remainder of the term of a vacated position and took office nearly two months early. During his tenure on City Council, Steinbrueck chaired the Housing, Human Services, Education and Civil Rights Committee (1998-2001); the Parks, Education, and Library Committee (2002-2003), and the Urban Development and Planning Committee (2004-2007).

In his ten years on the council, Steinbrueck led numerous legislative efforts advancing sustainable practices in areas of public policy, planning, and regulation, including land use and development. He was particularly active in crafting and supporting legislation regarding housing and human services; eradication of homelessness; transportation and urban mobility; parks and open space; historic preservation; water resource management; municipal waste reduction and recycling; and education.

An architect by training, Steinbrueck brought these skills to bear on issues of community design and in the development of public buildings such as Seattle City Hall, the Justice Center, Seattle Central Library and branch libraries. He was instrumental in pushing Seattle’s leadership in green building promotion which helped stimulate Washington's 2005 passage of the nation's first law requiring LEED Silver rating for public buildings.

Steinbrueck was born in 1957 and raised in Seattle. His father was noted architect Victor Steinbrueck (1911-1985) who was a prime mover in the early 1970s initiative to preserve Pike Place Market. Peter Steinbrueck received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Government from Bowdoin College, and a Master of Architecture from the University of Washington College of Built Environments. Prior to his election to City Council, Steinbrueck had a successful architectural practice specializing in residential design.

Steinbrueck is a long-time civic activist. He was one of the leaders of the successful Citizens Alternative Plan initiative campaign to manage growth in downtown Seattle, and he is a co-founder of 1000 Friends of Washington, a group dedicated to reducing urban sprawl and preserving the region's natural resources.

Following his tenure on City Council, Steinbrueck established the firm Steinbrueck Urban Strategies, LLC, providing strategic planning advice to public, institutional, and private sector clients interested in advancing system-wide approaches to sustainability and master planning. He is visiting lecturer at the University of Washington’s College of the Built Environment.

In 2009 Steinbrueck was named a Loeb Fellow in the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University, where from 2009 to 2010 he completed an academic year of independent research focused on the environment, climate change and urban sustainability in the United States.

Extent

8528 email messages (700 MB)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

This series includes general correspondence from councilmember Peter Steinbrueck and his Legislative Assistants, Neil Powers, Stephanie Pure and Roger Valdez. It contains internal and external correspondence revolving around the business of the city council.

Arrangement

The folder structure of this subseries is that of the original mailbox as it was preserved by Groupwise exported through Nexic Personal Publisher. Original subfolder names and order have been maintained reflect divisions by both date and subject.

Related Materials

Councilmember Peter Steinbrueck, City of Seattle Website. 23 May 2007-. Internet Archive Wayback Machine. https://web.archive.org/web/20070523123548/http://www.seattle.gov/council/Steinbrueck/

Conservation note

Original header information was lost through export of Groupwise e-mail through Nexic Personal Publisher. Issues with exporting the e-mail account created a large number of duplicate files. Attachments from various were lost. Html files used to simulate a mailbox interface with listings of individual folders and emails did not export correctly.

Location of Records

SMA

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 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. Html files were converted to PDF format for sustainability. Attachments to emails are included when available in the email pdf. As part of the Groupwise export the body text was sometimes labeled as an attachment called TEXT.htm. Where the body text is shown, TEXT.htm is not an actual attachment, but an artifact of the migration process of export of Groupwise e-mail through Nexis Personal Publisher.

Title
Guide to the Peter Steinbrueck Electronic Correspondence 2001-2008
Author
Finding aid encoded by Sarah Shipley.
Date
©2015
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description note
Finding aid written in English.

Repository Details

Part of the Seattle Municipal Archives Repository

Contact:
PO Box 94728
600 Fourth Avenue, Floor 3
Seattle 98124-4728 USA US