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Spokane City Council confirms trustee, approves budget and shelter contracts in unanimous session

January 27, 2026 | Spokane, Spokane County, Washington


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Spokane City Council confirms trustee, approves budget and shelter contracts in unanimous session
The Spokane City Council on Jan. 26 voted to confirm Chris Dennison to the Spokane Public Library Board of Trustees and approved a slate of budget and code changes, including emergency pay-range adjustments, fees and development schedule updates, and agreements to fund inclement-weather surge shelter capacity.

Council President Betsy Wilkerson called for the appointment of Chris Dennison to the library board; the measure passed by voice vote, 6–1. The council then approved five reappointments to the Historic Landmark Commission — Chris Knoll, Elizabeth Wood, Mac McCandles, Nicholas Reynolds and Tom Sawyer — by unanimous voice vote.

The council adopted Special Budget Ordinance C 36 8 27, enacted as an emergency modification to the city’s mid‑biennial budget to align pay ranges with a recent salary analysis. The ordinance passed 6–1. An emergency ordinance, C 36 8 24, amending fees, charges and the development fee schedule was approved 7–0.

On homelessness response funding, the council authorized Resolution 20 20 6-1 to enter subrecipient contracts for inclement-weather surge beds (the RFP closed Nov. 18, 2025). After public comment in favor of the contracts, the resolution passed 7–0.

The Transportation Commission 2026 work plan was adopted 7–0. The Climate Resilience & Sustainability Board 2026 work plan passed 6–1 after Councilmember McKeitcard registered a dissent and urged a metrics-based approach to evaluate greenhouse gas reductions.

Code updates and board changes carried unanimously or nearly so: ordinances restoring inadvertent fire-code removals and amending the Community Housing & Human Services Board chapter passed 7–0; updates related to the Bicycle Advisory Board passed 6–1. A first reading update to arterial street code (Ordinance C 36 8 23) was introduced and deferred; a related kratom item was deferred to first reading on Feb. 23 with final action the following week.

Motion to adjourn was moved and seconded and carried at the close of the meeting.

Votes recorded during the meeting match the tallies announced at the time and are reflected above.

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