Compton, Jim

Hide Profile

Jim Compton served on the Seattle City Council for one and a half terms. He resigned mid-way through his second term to take a teaching position in Cairo, Egypt, and to conduct research in emerging democratic movement in Romania. Compton was elected for the term beginning in January 2000, to the seat being vacated by Martha Choe. He took office a month and a half early when Choe stepped down to take a position with Washington State government.

During his first term, Compton chaired the Council's Public Safety & Technology Committee. At his resignation in December of 2005, he was chair of the Utilities & Technology Committee. For the six years he served on the Council, he was also vice chair of the Energy & Environmental Policy Committee. In addition, Compton chaired the World Trade Organization Accountability Review Committee whose primary function was to create a factual record, composed of documents and interview data, that would serve as a baseline for community understanding of the events of the WTO meeting in Seattle in 1999.

As chair of the Public Safety Committee, Compton presided over debates on police discipline, racial profiling and treatment of protesters. And as chair of the Energy and Environmental Policy Committee, he clashed with Mayor Greg Nickels and some other Council members, leading the charge to block the reconfirmation of Gary Zarker, the City Light superintendent.

Compton faced scrutiny from the Seattle Ethics and Elections Commission (SEEC) on two separate occasions. He was one of three Council members who received campaign donations tied to strip-club owner Frank Colacurcio Jr. before a vote on a rezone beneficial to the club. All three returned the money. He also agreed to a $3,000 settlement with the SEEC after admitted that he had accepted a plane ride on a jet owned by Paul Allen and tickets to a Portland Trail Blazers game. At the time, Allen's South Lake Union development was before the Council for consideration.

Prior to his Council election, Compton was best known for his 35-year career in journalism. His career involved, among other posts, working as NBC News correspondent out of Cairo and London (1977-1984), reporter and editor at Seattle's NBC affiliate KING-TV (1985-1999), and as a correspondent for The News Hour with Jim Lehrer. He was best known locally for his ten years producing The Compton Report, a top-rated weekly news program at KING-TV. The Compton Report won most of the broadcast industry's major awards, including the Columbia-Dupont Prize, the Gabriel Award, The Janus Award, and the Golden Globe of the San Francisco Film Festival.

Compton received his bachelor's degree in history at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, in 1964 and his master's degree at the Columbia University School of Journalism in 1969. He was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship in 1969-1970 for consulting with and studying the television system of Romania.

From the guide to the Subject Files, 1995-2006, (City of Seattle Seattle Municipal Archives)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Subject Files, 1995-2006 City of Seattle SeattleMunicipal Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Seattle City Light corporateBody
associatedWith Seattle Monorail Project corporateBody
associatedWith Seattle (Wash.). City Council corporateBody
associatedWith Seattle (Wash.). Fire Dept. corporateBody
associatedWith Seattle (Wash.). Police Dept. corporateBody
associatedWith World Trade Organization Accountability Review Committee corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Seattle (Wash.)
Subject
Public utilities
Occupation
Activity

Person

Information

Permalink: http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67497xs

Ark ID: w67497xs

SNAC ID: 30973094