day : 03/02/2015 9 results

VIDEO: 1st West Seattle ‘community conversation’ with Police Chief O’Toole cut short after shoutdown

(From left, Pete Spalding of the SW Precinct Advisory Council; Chief Kathleen O’Toole; Capt. Steve Wilske; Deb Greer of the WS Block Watch Captains’ Network)

7:44 PM: Seattle Police Chief Kathleen O’Toole‘s first “community conversation” in West Seattle was cut short after a woman concerned about police-brutality shouted down the chief and others before the meeting was an hour old.

Those who had come to hear Chief O’Toole talk about West Seattle community crime issues tried in turn to get the protester to stop so they could ask their questions, but after a few minutes of semi-chaos, host Pete Spalding announced the meeting was over. Some community members moved ahead to the front of the room to try to get the chief to answer their questions in a one-on-one type of situation, which continued for at least 15 minutes after the meeting’s official end, and is continuing even as we publish the first version of this.

We’ll add video of the truncated meeting a bit later. (9:54 PM: Here’s the link; 10:12 PM, it’s embedded below – note that our camera was fixed/pointed to the front of the room, so the shouting is off-camera:)

Below, our notes as it unfolded.

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West Seattle development: The almost-all-about-Fauntleroy (Way) edition

DEMOLITION OF THE DAY: The 99-year-old house at 6540 Fauntleroy Way SW is being torn down, three months after the demolition permit was issued. A new house will replace it – with a different address, 6501 44th SW.

ALSO ON FAUNTLEROY WAY: New in the city files, a 64-year-old house at 5628 Fauntleroy Way SW is set for demolition, to be replaced by three houses, with three parking spaces on the alley to the east.

SPEAKING OF FAUNTLEROY: Tomorrow is your last chance to comment with “early guidance” for the streamlined design review process under way regarding four townhouses proposed to replace a house at 5917 Fauntleroy Way SW. Here’s the “packet.” (Updated: A nearby resident points out a rowhouse planned to replace the house next door, 5915 Fauntleroy Way, is separate.)

AND SPEAKING OF DESIGN REVIEW: Reminder that the Southwest Design Review Board has a doubleheader public meeting on Thursday night at the Senior Center of West Seattle, for two mixed-use projects – 6:30 pm, the fourth review of 4505 42nd SW, see the “packet” here; 8 pm, the second review of 4106 Delridge Way SW (with a 6-year gap between reviews), see the “packet” here.

Followup: Encampment proposal gets first City Council airing

(Screengrab from Seattle Channel webcast of committee meeting; we’ll substitute SC video when available)
Just wrapped up at the City Council’s Planning, Land Use, and Sustainability Committee meeting: The first discussion of the new encampment proposal that emerged from Mayor Murray‘s office.

As mentioned here last Friday, the proposal specifies commercial and industrial areas of the city as possible locations for encampments; there would be a limit of three (not counting any hosted by religious institutions) in the city at any one time, no closer to each other than a mile, no closer to a residentially zoned site than 25 feet, with each encampment having gone through an official permitting process and occupied by no more than 100 people. (See the full list of toplines in the slide-deck PDF.)

The team that briefed councilmembers today was led by Deputy Mayor Hyeok Kim and Department of Planning and Development director Diane Sugimura. Deputy Mayor Kim reiterated multiple times that the intent was not to “aggressively recruit” new encampments/sites, but to find a temporary way to get at least a few hundred more people off the streets. She mentioned the “alarming increase … in unsheltered homeless people on (Seattle’s) streets,” as most recently documented in the One-Night Count.

The briefing team said that within a month of the ordinance’s passage, they expect to have a list of city-owned sites that could be considered by groups interested in managing encampments. While, as shown on the zoning map, private sites could be proposed, the city briefers said there was no intent to “recruit” them. Sugimura said DPD would have a “streamlined” permit process so that encampment proposals did not get hung up in endless reviews.

In the public comment period that preceded the committee discussion, many of those commenting identified themselves as affiliated with current encampments and unhappy that the proposal excludes residential-zoned areas from consideration.

The committee didn’t vote; chair Mike O’Brien decided the measure would be discussed again when they next meet on February 20th, which will be less than a week before the 5:30 pm February 26th public hearing devoted exclusively to the proposal. That is expected to be followed by a March 3rd committee vote, with full Council consideration after that.

Hoping not to become the sport without a court, West Seattle Racquetball Club looking for place to play

The West Seattle Racquetball Association is looking for a place to play. Commissioner Ben Weagraff explains, “We are a group that started with a handful of racquetball players and now have nearly 60 members. We play two tournaments a year at the YMCA (one for singles and one for doubles) plus many times a week and every weekend. We represent all levels of play and a cross-section of the diverse community that is West Seattle.” They’ve known for a while that the Y (WSB sponsor) is dropping racquetball (as mentioned here) as part of its renovation. Weagraff says they had planned to move to the under-construction LA Fitness but have been told it won’t have racquetball courts after all. So, he says, “While this is not a crisis of epic proportions, our group is wondering if there are other options on the Peninsula for us to play racquetball — it truly is a great and empowering, albeit under-appreciated, sport.” Suggestions, anyone?

Election 2015: City Council District 1 still 3-person race, plus 1 ‘deciding’, with ‘First Look’ candidates forum Thursday

Since City Councilmember Tom Rasmussen announced a week and a half ago that he wouldn’t run for the new District 1 (West Seattle/South Park) seat, speculation has abounded about who, if anyone, would join Chas Redmond, Amanda Kay Helmick, and George Capestany in the race. The name most discussed in citywide politics coverage has been Highland Park resident Lisa Herbold, longtime assistant to City Councilmember Nick Licata, who, like Rasmussen, has decided this is his last year on the council. Herbold has taken a step toward running, as noted by PubliCola earlier today and as now shown on the city Elections website:

But she has NOT formally declared candidacy, Herbold clarified in an e-mail exchange with WSB today, characterizing what she has filed as “… a preliminary step to declaring candidacy, which I have not yet done. … It’s just smart (I think) to get an infrastructure – to the extent possible – in place while I’m still deciding.”

Three months remain before the May 15th filing deadline, but who’s in/out is of special interest this week because our long-scheduled get-the-conversation-going-early “District 1: First Look” candidates’ forum is coming up this Thursday (February 5). We’ve said all along that anybody who declared their candidacy by forum time would be welcome to participate (with a committee created, our offer remains open to Herbold). Meantime, candidates (L-R below) Helmick, Capestany, and Redmond have been confirmed since we set the date in December, and we hope you’ll be on hand.

Though it’s not the traditional way to do things, we wanted to schedule an early forum because there’s SO MUCH to talk about, so much facing the first-ever District 1 councilmember – transportation, housing, growth, public safety, education, more … We’ll be asking questions for about an hour (including some already suggested by readers – send yours ASAP! editor@westseattleblog.com) and then we’ll open the microphone to attendee questions. Doors open 6:30 pm Thursday at Highland Park Improvement Club, 12th/Holden (overflow parking at Riverview Playfield just a block north; nearest bus is Route 131 on 9th SW), forum at 7, see you there!

Update: Lowman Beach Park culvert repairs start tomorrow

February 3, 2015 12:40 pm
|    Comments Off on Update: Lowman Beach Park culvert repairs start tomorrow
 |   West Seattle beaches | West Seattle news

Seattle Public Utilities has a new start date for culvert repairs at Lowman Beach Park: Tomorrow (February 4th). As noted here last week, the work originally was expected to start before the end of January. The basics:

Seattle Public Utilities (SPU) will be making repairs to a culvert located at Lowman Beach Park. The culvert conveys Pelly Creek and storm drainage to the outfall west of the tennis court at the park. The culvert at this location is damaged and requires repair to stop erosion of the surrounding soil. The repair work consists of excavating a portion of the damaged pipeline, repairing the broken pipe, and backfilling to surrounding grade.

The project will take about two weeks – 10 working days – with work expected to run 7 am-6 pm, Monday-Friday. Crews will access via the service road on the south side of the park. Meantime, the weekly seawall surveys promised by SPU as part of this already have begun and will continue for about three months.

West Seattle Tuesday: SPD chief conversation; WWRHAH; WS Bike Connections; 2 Duwamish River discussions; more…

(January 30th photo by Long Bach Nguyen)
Looking ahead to the rest of today/tonight, via highlights from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar:

COUNCIL COMMITTEE DISCUSSES ENCAMPMENTS & DUWAMISH CLEANUP: 2 pm at City Hall and live on Seattle Channel, the City Council’s Planning, Land Use & Sustainability Committee has a busy agenda including the encampment proposal noted here last week and the Duwamish River cleanup. (4th/5th/Cherry/James)

NEW ‘DRINKING LIBERALLY’ LAUNCHES: 6 pm at Pizzeria 22 in The Admiral District, a brand-new “Drinking Liberally” group launches – details in our calendar listing. (4213 SW College)

WESTWOOD-ROXHILL-ARBOR HEIGHTS COMMUNITY COUNCIL: 6:15-7:45 pm at Southwest Library – here’s the announced agenda:

6:15-6:20: Introductions & Community News; New Business:

6:20-6:30: Community Policing Update: with SPD’s CPT Officer Jon Flores

6:30-6:40: Committee & Neighborhood Council Updates

6:40 – 7:40: Westwood / Highland Park Urban Village & Annexation of White Center:

*Susan McLain, Deputy Director of Department of Planning and Development
*Chris Arkills, Transportation Policy Advisor to Dow Constantine
*Cindi Barker, City Neighborhood Council Land Use and Planning Committee Co-Chair, West Seattle Land Use Committee
*Sara Zora, Seattle Department of Transportation – Multi-Modal Corridor Plan for Delridge

(35th/Henderson)

CONVERSATION WITH THE CHIEF: 6:30 pm at the Southwest Precinct, tonight’s the first-ever West Seattle/South Park “community conversation” with Seattle Police Chief Kathleen O’Toole. No presentation, just your Q/A. (Webster/Delridge)

WEST SEATTLE BIKE CONNECTIONS: Tonight’s agenda includes the infamous 5-way intersection and strategies to work toward the proposed long-term “flyover” fix. HomeStreet Bank (WSB sponsor) in The Junction, 6:30 pm. (41st/Alaska)

PUBLIC HEALTH CAFE: 7 pm at Chaco Canyon Café in The Triangle, the Duwamish River cleanup “record of decision” is this month’s hot topic, with expert guests – details here. (38th/Alaska)

FREE SNOWSHOEING CLINIC: 7 pm at Mountain to Sound Outfitters in The Triangle – details in our listing. (3602 SW Alaska)

LIVE MUSIC – ‘BLUES TO DO’: 8 pm at Feedback Lounge (WSB sponsor), check out the weekly blues showcase, this time starring the Two Scoops Combo “with very special guests.” No cover. (6451 California SW)

WHAT ELSE? The answers are here.

Here’s one way Seattle DID beat New England, thanks to you

If you haven’t entirely cheered up postgame yet – here’s some consolation, from Betsy at Tibbetts United Methodist Church (WSB sponsor):

Here’s the outcome from Tibbetts UMC in the United in Blue food drive challenge – Seattle versus New England. The Tibbetts grand total was 1215 food items (money donated counts as 1 food item per dollar). Deliveries were made Monday to the West Seattle and White Center food banks.

The counts from other churches in Seattle – and really all across Washington – are continuing to come in but total over 43,000 food items right now and we’re so far ahead of the New England counts that Seattle has been declared the winner this year.

Big thanks to the WS Blog for publishing info about the United in Blue food drive Challenge and to those who were able to donate in person or on line. We may not have won the game Sunday but we’ll be making a difference in the lives of the people of our communities. Way to go, United in Blue!

TRAFFIC/TRANSIT TODAY: Tuesday updates, alerts

(WS high/low bridges and Highway 99 views; more cams on the WSB Traffic page)
Several of the traffic cams showing conditions through/from West Seattle are down this morning, but no trouble spots are reported right now anyway.

ORCA LIFT: Next month is when Metro fares go up and the new low-income fare kicks in. You can check eligibility now – this announcement from the county explains how.

8:05 AM NOTE: This morning SDOT has announced it’s planning a “hackathon” for community help with commute-tackling tools – details here.

TONIGHT: West Seattle Bike Connections meets, 6:30 pm at HomeStreet Bank (WSB sponsor) in The Junction, with the notorious 5-way intersection on the agenda.

3:08 PM NOTE: Desiree sends word that Harbor Island is hard to get to/navigate because of truck backups that apparently are starting along East Marginal. We haven’t found any additional information about this yet.