Skip to main content
  • VOTE YES

    Vote YES to build a shared community space

  • This election, the residents of Enumclaw have an opportunity to create a multigenerational space for all. If passed, Proposition No. 1 would fund a new community center, containing a new senior center, an Arts Alive space, a gym, a vegetable garden, and offices for the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce and the city’s Parks and Recreation Department. 

    The current senior center is a structure nearing its centennial with limitations that cannot meet the demands of our growing senior population. By replacing it with a shared space for everyone, the city can provide a valuable resource while investing in truly becoming a community. 

    The bond requires a 60 percent supermajority to pass. With a cost of only $0.30 per $1,000 of assessed property value, or $150 annually for a homeowner with a $500,000 property, this investment would provide cultural and social value to the city with new programs and resources for all. City Hall also plans to leverage state grants and private donations, including a significant $1 million state grant, to make the project more affordable for residents.

    Communities that work and play together are stronger and more resilient – vote Yes on Proposition 1.
     

    Last updated: 2024-04-05

    This election, the residents of Enumclaw have an opportunity to create a multigenerational space for all. If passed, Proposition No. 1 would fund a new community center, containing a new senior center, an Arts Alive space, a gym, a vegetable garden, and offices for the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce and the city’s Parks and Recreation Department. 

    The current senior center is a structure nearing its centennial with limitations that cannot meet the demands of our growing senior population. By replacing it with a shared space for everyone, the city can provide a valuable resource while investing in truly becoming a community. 

    The bond requires a 60 percent supermajority to pass. With a cost of only $0.30 per $1,000 of assessed property value, or $150 annually for a homeowner with a $500,000 property, this investment would provide cultural and social value to the city with new programs and resources for all. City Hall also plans to leverage state grants and private donations, including a significant $1 million state grant, to make the project more affordable for residents.

    Communities that work and play together are stronger and more resilient – vote Yes on Proposition 1.
     

    This election, the residents of Enumclaw have an opportunity to create a multigenerational space for all. If passed, Proposition No. 1 would fund a new community center, containing a new senior center, an Arts Alive space, a gym, a vegetable garden, and offices for the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce and the city’s Parks and Recreation Department. 

    The current senior center is a structure nearing its centennial with limitations that cannot meet the demands of our growing senior population. By replacing it with a shared space for everyone, the city can provide a valuable resource while investing in truly becoming a community. 

    The bond requires a 60 percent supermajority to pass. With a cost of only $0.30 per $1,000 of assessed property value, or $150 annually for a homeowner with a $500,000 property, this investment would provide cultural and social value to the city with new programs and resources for all. City Hall also plans to leverage state grants and private donations, including a significant $1 million state grant, to make the project more affordable for residents.

    Communities that work and play together are stronger and more resilient – vote Yes on Proposition 1.
     

    City of Enumclaw Proposition 1

    This election, the residents of Enumclaw have an opportunity to create a multigenerational space for all. If passed, Proposition No. 1 would fund a new community center, containing a new senior center, an Arts Alive space, a gym, a vegetable garden, and offices for the Enumclaw Chamber of Commerce and the city’s Parks and Recreation Department.