day : 19/02/2012 7 results

Continuing coverage: Diver’s body found, brought ashore

(Photos by Christopher Boffoli for WSB)
7:47 PM: Continuing coverage from this earlier WSB story: A recovery effort is now under way off Seacrest Pier, after a body was found this evening, believed to be that of the diver who vanished this morning after something went wrong during an advanced class in deep water. Seattle Police tell WSB that the body was spotted by civilian divers who kept looking even after the official effort ended late in the day; police, fire, and Coast Guard crews searched for hours before moving from rescue attempt to recovery effort.

A buoy is in the water, about 100 yards offshore, marking the spot where it was seen; police and fire are coordinating the operation to retrieve the body.

The King County Medical Examiner is there too, since it’s their job to investigate deaths like this.

7:57 PM UPDATE: Our crews at the scene says the body has been brought out of the water and is on board the Seattle Fire Department boat Leschi. The KCME is waiting onshore. They will be the ones to officially announce identification, once it’s made, and once they’re sure next-of-kin know, though that may not be until tomorrow. As mentioned in our first story, our archives indicate this is the first diver death in our area in three years.

8:15 PM UPDATE: The scene is starting to clear; the diver’s body is in the Medical Examiner’s truck, and police/fire crews are wrapping up, more than nine hours after this all began with a call that the diver was in trouble, as detailed in our morning/afternoon coverage.

8:41 PM UPDATE: There’s more information on the SFD “Fire Line” website, including more information on a related incident we’d heard about: A diver in her 50s, one of the civilian/volunteer divers who continued the search, had to be taken to Virginia Mason, where there’s a hyperbaric chamber, because of a medical problem following a quick ascent.

10:47 PM UPDATE: We’ve added video from WSB contributor Christopher Boffoli, who also took the photos in this story. And we’ve found some context on how part of the recovery effort unfolded, in a post by Laura James – whose underwater video has been featured here before – on the Northwest Dive Club message board. She was one of the divers who went down (after another volunteer team spotted the body) and marked the spot so the official recovery team could get there fast.

POSTSCRIPT: Bill Morgan from North Admiral sent three striking images of rescuers at work on Sunday afternoon, and we wanted to share them. First, the Coast Guard in the air:

The Seattle Fire Department, also “in the air,” before there was helicopter support:

And a Seattle Police boat, with divers:

Door-to-door alert: Non-electronic ‘phishing’?

Sounds like common spam e-mail, but it turned up on Brittany’s door:

Just wanna give you guys heads up that this afternoon between 4 & 4:30 my boyfriend working outside came in to find a note around our door knob giving us IMPORTANT notice that our “Chase” account needed attention. The notice was in both Spanish and English. The person walking door to door made not effort to speak with him as he was in the yard working thus leaving us to believe this is not a true important notice along with the fact that this was a at home printed note with no chase logo anywhere.

DESC Delridge project: 2 hearings this week – 1 here, 1 downtown

Turns out there are two public hearings this week related to the 66-unit DESC homeless-housing project planned for 5444 Delridge Way SW (the site at right). The first one has already been announced – Tuesday night (February 21), 6:30 pm at Youngstown Cultural Arts Center, everyone with something to say about the project is invited to come say it to the Delridge Supportive Housing Advisory Committee, which is tasked for starters with identifying community concerns regarding the project. What they hear at this first hearing will shape their focus in the months ahead. The second one is a Thursday public hearing before the Washington State Housing Finance Commission; one of the remaining pieces of funding for the project comes from Low-Income Housing Tax Credits, and it’s up to the commission to decide who gets them. The DESC Delridge project is part of a sizable list of projects up for tax credits this year – the credits actually go to investors in exchange for their help in financing a project like this. The hearing is at 1 pm Thursday (February 23rd) in the commission’s board room at their downtown offices, on the 28th floor at 1000 Second Avenue. The official notice also includes information on how you can send written comments, if you can’t be at the hearing, as well as these words of warning: “The Commission will not consider testimony and written comments regarding land use, zoning, and environmental regulation.”

Update: Body located in area where diver vanished

(EVENING COVERAGE can be found here)
11:18 AM: There’s a big response at Seacrest – a diver’s reported to be in trouble. Rescue crews are working from land and in the water. Lots of police as well as fire, so avoid the area TFN. We’re on the way; more to come.

(Photos by WSB co-publisher Patrick Sand)
11:27 AM UPDATE: According to the scanner, the diver was at one point coming up with “a buddy” but then went back down again. There’s an extensive search effort under way.

11:39 AM UPDATE: Still searching for the diver who’s reported to be in trouble. Police are expanding the stretch of Harbor that’s being blocked off because of the big rescue response. An SFD public-information officer is on the way to deal with the increasing media presence.

11:51 AM UPDATE: The search continues. Per scanner traffic, the diver is part of an advanced class that was in deep water. Meantime, we checked the archives; last emergency response in the area involving a diver was in September; a diver felt ill after emerging from the water. The last water rescue involving a diver, according to our archives, was this one last May, in which the West Seattle Water Taxi and crew turned into rescuers.

12:04 PM UPDATE: The Coast Guard is also assisting in the search; it has a chopper flying over the area. Rescuers have been on scene for an hour now, but the diver remains – as described in radio traffic – “unaccounted for.”

12:33 PM UPDATE: Still awaiting word from our crew of an official SFD briefing. A diver who spoke with media crews a little while ago said this happened in 96 feet of water, clear conditions. Radio traffic indicates rescue vehicles will be thinning soon, with an announcement that Harbor Avenue likely will reopen within half a hour.

12:39 PM UPDATE: SFD spokesperson Kyle Moore confirms this is shifting from search to recovery – divers have made three passes and have not found any sign of the missing diver, described as a man in his late 20s, experienced, with more than 50 dives in the past. He was out as part of an advanced class and then seemed to be in some kind of distress and started going up “too fast”; another tried to follow him but upon reaching the surface didn’t see the one who was in trouble. The group then signaled to people on shore that there was a problem, and that’s when fire/police were called. Moore says diver teams have made three trips down to 75 feet looking for the missing diver but haven’t found any sign of him; four divers (two police, two fire) are going to take one more look shortly. (Added above, video of Moore’s briefing, unedited, in its entirety)

1:26 PM NOTE: According to our archives, the last diver death in this area was three years ago.

4:28 PM UPDATE: We went back to Seacrest at about 3 pm; Coast Guard and SPD boats were still there, with the former heading out to look again.

6:32 PM: We are working to confirm a report the diver’s body may have been located.

7:03 PM: Police confirm that a body has been located. Civilian divers continued looking into the evening and told authorities around 6 pm they believed they had found him.

7:49 PM: We have started a new story with continuing coverage of the recovery operation.

Launch party for The West: ‘West Seattle people supporting West Seattle arts’

Story, photos, and video by Stephanie Chacharon
Reporting for West Seattle Blog

Disclaimer: The contents of this evening included profanity, alcohol, and ear-ringing chords.

It was a party with prologues: WSB first covered the kickoff for the new arts-advocacy organization The West in November, and on Thursday previewed the posse’s society debut, which happened last night, as The West galloped in to the West Seattle Eagles Aerie, partially removing its veil of mystery.

I followed a fresh trail of cigarette smoke, black leather, cowboy hats, and flyers directing attendees to the Aerie’s back door. Welcome to The West.

Walk through the door to be welcomed by an instant treat: West Seattle’s own DJ Cherry Canoe.

She set the stage for the evening, both with her turntables and with her hoots of delight as neighbors and friends passed her booth.

Hang your coat by the door, and enter a controlled chaos of light, fog, chatter, and a steady hum of expectation. Open bar in the back, free drinks in exchange for the hope of a donation.

The room was a mix of ages, styles, and reasons for being there. This was The West — for now, at least.

Everyone present echoed a common theme: “We didn’t know what to expect … but this party rocks!”

The live music kicked off with Jordan Cook of Reignwolf:

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West Seattle restaurants: Burger truck going bricks-mortar on Delridge

The burger truck Charlie’s Buns ‘n’ Stuff has announced via Facebook that they’re opening a bricks-and-mortar location in West Seattle. While we await a reply to our request for comment, details are already in this link they shared from Seattle Metropolitan‘s website – which reports that Charlie’s has leased space at 5214 Delridge Way SW (right) and plans to open a burger/cheesesteak sitdown restaurant with room for 25 by early summer. The Charlie’s Buns truck first started visiting West Seattle last spring. It’s the third food truck working on a West Seattle bricks-and-mortar location right now (along with Athena’s and Marination).

Side note: If the Delridge address sounds familiar, that’s because it has made news in the past for previous and potential tenants, but it’s undergone a lot of remodeling and renovation work in the past year-plus.

West Seattle Sunday: Greenways meeting; cats; music…

February 19, 2012 8:50 am
|    Comments Off on West Seattle Sunday: Greenways meeting; cats; music…
 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

From the WSB West Seattle Events calendar:

BRIDGE OPEN AFTER WORK ENDED EARLY: As noted in our previous story, what SDOT had warned would be an all-day, all-night closure of the Fauntleroy Expressway end of the West Seattle Bridge is already over; SDOT says the contractor finished before 7 am.

LINCOLN PARK CLEANUP: Had enough of Winter? Spring is happening in Lincoln Park. The Indian plum is starting to bloom and lots of other green events. Lift your spirits by coming to work in the woods with the Friends of Lincoln Park from 9am to noon. We will be removing invasive plants, so dress in layers to be warm and dry and bring gardening gloves and hand clippers (we’ll have extras). Meet at the kiosk in the north parking lot (Fauntleroy Way SW and SW Rose.

FARMERS’ MARKET: West Seattle Farmers’ Market in The Junction, 44th/Alaska, 10 am-2 pm

CAT ADOPT-A-THON! Second day of an adopt-a-thon at Kitty Harbor, with about 20 cats still looking for homes (including Jared the fire rescuee!) noon-6 pm. (Harbor Avenue just north of the West Seattle Bridge)

COFFEEHOUSE MUSIC: Jamtime plays at C & P Coffee (WSB sponsor), 1-4 pm.

GREENWAYS MEETING: Come join a conversation about West Seattle Greenways, Pearl’s Coffee and Tea on Delridge, 3 pm (invitation and explanation here)

ARTIST RECEPTION AT MIND UNWIND: Mind Unwind in The Admiral District is featuring the paintings of Cathy Woo. The new Gallery space is located at 2206A California Ave. SW in West Seattle. A reception is planned 3-5 pm today.

ORGAN MUSIC: Again tonight at Kenyon Hall at 7:30 – Legendary theater organist Dennis James, with hall favorites Connie Corrick and Hugh Hastings. To make a reservation, please e-mail kenyonhall@earthlink.net.