A contentious debate over how the Everett City Council manages member expenses dominated the May 20 committee meeting.
Councilor Stephanie Smith and Councilor Robert Van Campen brought forward an order to clarify how the council s "actual and necessary" expense allotment is divided so each member has access to up to $3,000 per year. Smith said her review of past claims showed inconsistent uses and occasional reimbursement claims without clear attribution; she said the proposal adds guardrails and requires monthly reconciliation so new councilors receive equitable access in election years.
Opposing views focused on whether leftover allotments should be pooled for other members to use and whether the council president should be able to authorize additional spending beyond a member s $3,000 allotment. Councilor Martins argued the rule enables members who choose to use funds for professional development to access resources; Councilor Smith and others warned discretionary transfers could be abused and proposed clearer, black-and-white rules.
The committee considered multiple procedural motions (favorable action, report with/without recommendation and to hold in committee); several motions failed or tied. Councilor Rogers moved to postpone the item so members could review more information and work with administration staff; that motion carried and the committee postponed the matter to a later meeting for more drafting and monthly-reporting mechanics to be developed.
Councilors also discussed logistical solutions, including requiring monthly expense submissions so the council can forecast unused balances and consider limited discretionary reallocations if transparently tracked.