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don't pet her behind the ears and a miniature statue of James Brown by the cash register, Acme Auto Electric has five employees three of them family members. Over the years, according to Gehrke, city government has kept its eye on downtown while ignoring the issues he confronts as a local business owner on a daily basis big issues like crime, public safety, and where to build a new police station, and smaller issues like parking and storm water drainage. Two years ago, he says, a purse snatcher busted into his waiting room and made off with an elderly woman's handbag. In the past he's shot video of the nefarious drug and prostitution activity at the bus stop across the street and shown the footage to city officials, to little avail."I think the city does what it wants to do," Gehrke says of the perceived neglect. "I feel like they don't care or listen to the small people."It's here, along the city's most infamous thoroughfare and largely from the pocketbook of one woman that Charter Amendment 19 and Seattle's new city council districts were born. The amendment, which in many ways flew under the radar this election season, will split the city into seven council districts, each of which will send a councilmember to City Hall, starting with the 2015 elections. Another two members will be elected at large, as all members now are.From the viewpoint of Faye Garneau, the longtime executive director of the Aurora Merchants Association who ponied up $265,000 of her own money for the district elections campaign, and business owners like Gehrke, the new districts are a chance to get the voice in council