For Everett residents who follow local government closely: 2026 is the year to engage with both charter reviews. The City of Everett and Snohomish County are running concurrent review processes that will produce ballot items shaping local government structure for the next decade. Here’s the civic watcher’s guide to participating.
The Stakes: Why Charter Reviews Matter More Than Typical Ballot Items
Charter reviews operate at a different level than typical ballot measures. A standard ballot measure asks voters to approve or reject a specific policy — a levy, a bond, a zoning change. A charter amendment changes the rules under which all future policy decisions get made. That leverage is why civic organizations, advocacy groups, and political parties tend to invest heavily in charter review outcomes. A single charter amendment on council district boundaries can change which council members get elected for decades. A single amendment on citizen initiative rights can change what kinds of policy questions ever reach a ballot in the first place.
Tracking Both Commissions Simultaneously
The practical challenge for civic watchers in 2026 is that both reviews are running in parallel, which means twice the meetings, twice the public comment windows, and twice the ballot items. The standard approach among experienced civic participants is to track both commission websites, subscribe to both meeting agenda notifications, and build a calendar of public hearing dates that covers the full year. Most commission meetings are held in the evenings to accommodate working residents. Recordings are generally made available within a week of each meeting — a practical option for watchers who can’t attend live.
The Coalition Landscape
Several local civic organizations are actively engaged with one or both reviews. The League of Women Voters of Snohomish County typically publishes educational materials on charter amendments and hosts candidate and issue forums. Local neighborhood associations — including associations in Northwest Everett, Bayside, and the Port Gardner neighborhood — have in past charter cycles submitted joint comments on issues affecting their areas. Watchers who want to amplify their individual voice should consider joining or coordinating with one of these organizations. Coordinated comments from multiple residents on the same issue carry materially more weight than isolated individual submissions.
Specific Items Worth Watching in 2026
At the city level, watchers should track any recommendation on council district boundaries, the mayor-council relationship, citizen initiative thresholds, and open meetings and public records language. At the county level, watch for recommendations on council districts, the county executive’s role, civil rights and non-discrimination language in the charter preamble, and any procedural changes to county contracting. Each of these is live in 2026 to varying degrees, and the specific language of whatever amendments emerge will determine how the reforms actually function in practice.
Writing Effective Public Comment
Public comment on charter review items is most effective when it is specific, references particular charter sections, and ties the recommendation to a concrete outcome. Comments that say “I support reform” are less useful to commissioners than comments that say “I support amending Section X to require Y, because it would produce Z outcome in my neighborhood.” Comments can be submitted in writing before meetings and delivered orally at public hearings. Both channels are part of the record. For civic watchers planning to submit comments on multiple items, a clean spreadsheet tracking which commission, which section, which hearing, and which outcome you support is a practical organizing tool.
After the Ballot: The Implementation Phase
Charter amendments that pass don’t take effect instantly. Each amendment has an implementation timeline specified in the ballot language or derived from state law — some take effect at the next election cycle, some require enabling ordinances from the council, and some require procedural changes at the Snohomish County Elections office. Watchers who engaged with the amendment campaign should plan to engage with implementation — that’s typically where the hardest details get settled, and where civic attention often drops just when it matters most.
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