day : 14/10/2016 11 results

HULING BOWL 2016: West Seattle over Chief Sealth

October 14, 2016 10:00 pm
|    Comments Off on HULING BOWL 2016: West Seattle over Chief Sealth
 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle schools

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10 PM: For the second year in a row, West Seattle High School has won the annual Huling Bowl crosstown-rivalry football game with Chief Sealth International HS, and the trophy that goes with it.

Final score at Southwest Athletic Complex: WSHS Wildcats 29, CSIHS Seahawks 13.

ADDED EARLY SATURDAY: Highlights from the night at SWAC:

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The first quarter was more than halfway over when WSHS #18 Gabe Gangon (above) scored the first TD. The second one was by Andrew Burggraff about midway through the second quarter, and WSHS led 15-0 at halftime.

Another Wildcat TD toward the start of the second half ran the lead to 22-0, and then midway through the third, Sealth #11 Bishop Jackson scored the first TD for the Seahawks.

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The rest of the scoring was complete by midway through the fourth quarter. At the end of a winless season, the Seahawks had some bright spots, including multiple quarterback sacks. Meantime, not only was it also Sealth’s homecoming night, it was Breast Cancer Awareness Night, so lots of pink:

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That’s the Sealth cheer squad, in pink after their halftime performance, which preceded the joint performance of the two schools’ bands:

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Sealth has one regular-season game left, next Friday (October 21st), 7 pm at SWAC, vs. Franklin. This was the last regular-season game for WSHS but it’s expecting to play its first postseason game Thursday, opponent TBA.

COMMUNITY GIVING: What VIEWS gave to Delridge Community Center, West Seattle Emergency Communication Hubs

October 14, 2016 9:32 pm
|    Comments Off on COMMUNITY GIVING: What VIEWS gave to Delridge Community Center, West Seattle Emergency Communication Hubs
 |   Delridge | West Seattle news

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(Photo courtesy VIEWS, whose Chas Redmond is at left and Pete Spalding at right, with Delridge CC’s Angie Ramirez)

Along with organizing two major community events each year, the local group VIEWS (Visualizing Increased Engagement in West Seattle) is giving two other local organizations a financial boost. The report and photo are from Pete Spalding of VIEWS:

VIEWS is a non-partisan community organization comprised of local citizens creating programming to educate, engage, and mobilize West Seattle citizens to sustain and improve the quality of life and services available across the peninsula.

VIEWS hosts two events annually, the Gathering of Neighbors and the Delridge Day Festival. As part of the mission of VIEWS we believe in giving back to our Delridge community.

As part of the VIEWS mission, we recently made two donations to our Delridge community. The first was a $1,000 donation to the Associated Recreation Council at the Delridge Community Center. This donation will be used to underwrite scholarships for programming for youth in our neighborhood that in most cases would not be able to participate.

The second donation was $350 to the Emergency Hub network to purchase some upgraded equipment to make communication easier in the case of a local disaster. VIEWS has had a long partnership with the Hub network and realizes the importance of their work to our Delridge community.

If you are interested in learning more about VIEWS and the work that we do, or would like to become involved in the work that we do, please reach out to us.

VIEWS is online at views.community.

WEST SEATTLE STORM WATCH: More trees down; Saturday’s wind warning; power-outage updates

5:55 PM: Continuing our ongoing storm coverage into the evening (see our afternoon coverage here) – first, thanks for the tips about this tree-caused blockage:

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That’s Nick‘s photo of tree(s) down on 48th SW between Seaview and Lowman Beach. (If you are in the area, please let us know if/when you see it reopen – we might not be able to get down that way for a while.)

More tree trouble – from Charlie, at 33rd SW and SW Spokane in East Admiral:

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Charlie says, “A large tree snapped at about 4pm at the corner of 33rd Ave SW and SW Spokane St, right at the corner of the new development going on. Likely because they’ve cut down all the other trees which protected it in prior storms. The tree is now hanging on the power lines (which is the only thing keeping it up). I’ve already called both SCL and SDOT (since when it falls it will block the roadway). A lot of people tend to shortcut through this neighborhood – please don’t – the tree could fall at any moment and land on a car or pedestrian.” (This is the same site shown in our morning traffic/weather coverage because of muddy runoff.)

And near 46th SW and SW Charlestown, MT reports this:

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“Homeowner stated he was home at around 2 pm. When branch broke, bounced off his roof. Big fear is tomorrow more of the tree will come down on his home.”

No photo, but while traveling northbound on Delridge a couple hours ago, we noticed a tree down outside a house just north of Pearls.

POWER OUTAGES: Seattle City Light’s map still shows almost 3,000 homes/businesses without power, down a third from the original number who lost it. As reported in our afternoon coverage, the west side of California SW is out in The Junction, so some businesses are closed; the east side remained on. And we’re told the signal at California/Alaska is now functioning.If you want to check the current status of outages around West Seattle and the rest of the city “live,” City Light shared this version of their map with us – zoom in to get close, and grab the map with your cursor to move around:

6:09 PM UPDATE: Multiple tweets say power’s back in The Junction. Waiting for the SCL map to reflect it. Some businesses might just stay closed for the night on the west side, though (Junction TrueValue, for example, told us that was their plan), so if you’re heading out, be ready to improvise.

6:19 PM UPDATE – THE FORECAST: Before we get to more photos (thank you to everyone sharing photos and video!), here’s where the forecast stands. A High Wind Warning remains in effect for 3 pm Saturday to 2 am Sunday. Excerpt:

* TIMING…GUSTY SOUTH WINDS THIS AFTERNOON WILL EASE THIS EVENING. A PERIOD OF STRONGER WINDS IS EXPECTED LATE SATURDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH THE EARLY MORNING HOURS SUNDAY. THE STRONGEST WINDS WILL LIKELY BE DURING THE EVENING.

* WINDS…SOUTH WINDS 20 TO 35 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 45 MPH WILL EASE THIS EVENING. SOUTH WINDS 20 TO 40 MPH WITH GUSTS TO 65 MPH ARE LIKELY LATE SATURDAY AFTERNOON THROUGH EARLY SUNDAY MORNING.

7:23 PM UPDATE: Looks like West Seattle is down to a few scattered outages affecting ~120 customers. We are now at SW Athletic Complex in Westwood for the Chief Sealth-WSHS football game and the weather has calmed – a little showery, a little breezy, nothing at all like this afternoon. The almost-full moon is even starting to peek from behind clouds in the eastern sky.

7:37 PM: Adding some contributed imagery from a bit earlier. First, Jamie Kinney tweeted this video of pre-dusk storminess:

7:43 PM: 48th SW is reported to be open again. Meantime, thanks to Jen Lee for the photo from Constellation Park during this afternoon’s confluence of big wind and high tide:

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One more time – if you’re on the shore or preparing to be, be aware of the full-moon high tides ahead as more high wind heads this way – the times and numbers are here.

ADDED EARLY SATURDAY: One more toppled tree we almost missed in the mailbox – thanks to Rod Moody for this pic from 47th/Brandon:

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With saturated ground and potentially higher gusts, we could see more of this later today. Forested parks are a good place to avoid until the weather calms.

UPDATE: Rescue response after report of person possibly in trouble offshore

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(SFD aid unit at Lincoln Park just in case)

4:56 PM: A two-location rescue response is being launched right now – a paddleboarder is reported to be in trouble off Lincoln Park; some SFD units will be staging at Seacrest/Don Armeni.

5:01 PM: Patrick Gerding sent the video of SFD units arriving at Seacrest:

Meantime, unit(s) at Lincoln Park are trying to get the potential rescuee in view.

5:16 PM: The situation is changing significantly. This might be a sailboarder, not a paddleboarder, and responders weren’t able to find anyone in trouble at all – they’ve talked to a sailboarder who apparently was already safely back on shore on Alki Point and didn’t see anyone else out there. Someone called in thinking the person were in trouble, but was not. Police our crew talked to at Lincoln Park said they’d heard the same thing. Searchers are still looking just in case.

5:34 PM: Nobody found, so this is winding down.

WEST SEATTLE STORM WATCH: 2 hurt by tree branch; power outages; other afternoon updates

(SCROLL DOWN for newest updates and photos)

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(Screengrab from City Light outage map’s West Seattle section, 1:59 pm)

1:43 PM: Just getting word of the first significant power outages in West Seattle so far this blustery day – west of The Junction, North Admiral, and the City Light map also shows two other outages – 117 customers near Lincoln Park and 72 customers in Highland Park. (If your outage is NOT on the map, please call SCL at 206-684-3000!)

UPDATED, 1:53 PM: Now the SCL map has updated. We’re adding a screengrab. “Tree” is the listed cause. More than 4,000 customers are out in West Seattle. Also, Seattle Fire is at 44th and Rose in Gatewood, where a tree fell into a transformer/power line – thanks for the texted photo:

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(back to original report) All this follows hours of off-and-on gusty winds – we caught some on video a little while ago:

Other notes:

FORECAST: We’re still under a Wind Advisory until 6 tonight, and a High Wind Watch is up for noon Saturday through 3 am Sunday. Next forecast update is expected within a few hours.

TIDE REMINDER, IF YOU MISSED IT: Busy news day so you might not have seen this, but high tides are coinciding with the strong wind because of tomorrow’s full moon.

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(Texted photo added above – Beach Drive this afternoon. Thanks to Craig Joseph for sharing it!) Speaking of which …

NEED SANDBAGS? The Delridge Community Center is out of them but expecting more later today. If you need them urgently, try the South Park Community Center.

2:22 PM: A commenter says Delridge has sandbags now. Meantime, a father and 4-year-old son are being taken to the hospital after being hit by a falling tree branch near Fauntleroy Church (which abuts forested Fauntleroy Park). We got to the scene just as the child was about to be transported to Harborview; his father is still being evaluated.

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Too soon for information on the circumstances – we will update when we find out more.

3:13 PM: SFD describes the child’s injuries as serious, the father’s injuries as minor.

(added Friday evening) Fauntleroy Church minister Rev. Leah Atkinson Bilinski sent this statement:

I was very sad today to learn about the father and son struck by a tree near Fauntleroy Church. As concerned community members, we will be working with the Seattle Parks and Recreation Department to better understand the incident, but our primary concern right now is for the family involved in this accident. They are YMCA patrons and neighbors, and our hearts go out to them.

As I was away from the church today, I also wish to say a big “thank you” to the church and Y staff and community members who quickly responded to offer help and care until emergency personnel could arrive.

(back to previous coverage) Meantime, regarding the power outage – we’re getting multiple reports that traffic signals are out in The Junction, though the outage is only affecting the west side of the street. We’re headed that way for an update.

3:46 PM: Thanks for the updates. About a third of those who were out now have their power back, Admiral/North according to the map. We’re still working our way to The Junction. Meantime, a falling branch seems to have played a role in a crash on eastbound Olson, blocking the turn to southbound Myers.

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No injuries as far as we can tell – SFD was not called for medical assistance.

4:11 PM: We just stopped by The Junction. California/Alaska signal is indeed out. And businesses on the west side of the street are still without power, many with handwritten “closed/power out” signs.

Further north, a big problem hasn’t been fixed yet at Hinds/47th – this power-pole problem:

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Thanks to everyone who sent photos earlier. This is near Madison Middle School, which has a fire-alarm call right now – don’t know if it’s related. We can hear the alarm from where we’re checking out the power pole situation.

ADDED 4:47 PM: If you’re just getting ready to leave for home .. it’s partly sunny over here, still breezy.

5:07 PM: Regarding the sirens and emergency vehicles – it’s for a possible rescue which we’re covering separately.

Also, tomorrow’s weather alert is now up to High Wind Warning status, 3 pm Saturday-2 am Sunday. We’ll get a separate evening weather story going after our coverage of the potential rescue.

YOU CAN HELP: Donations to Lam-Bow Apartments fire victims will be matched

October 14, 2016 1:26 pm
|    Comments Off on YOU CAN HELP: Donations to Lam-Bow Apartments fire victims will be matched
 |   How to help | West Seattle news

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(WSB photo, morning after Lam-Bow Apartments fire)

Two and a half weeks after the fire that gutted one of the two buildings at the Lam-Bow Apartments in Delridge, the Seattle Housing Authority tells us all of its 40+ residents have new homes “but fled the fire with nothing,” and there’s a new way for you to help and see your $ go further:

The Biella Foundation, a small local family foundation, made a $10,000 donation to the Lam Bow Fire Relief Fund. In addition to their initial donation, the Biella Foundation has pledged up to $10,000 more in matching funds to help inspire others to give to this effort.

Approximately $3,000 has been donated to the Fund at this time, leaving $7,000 un-matched. We would be very grateful if you could help share news about this matching funds opportunity so that people know their gifts are still very much needed and will be doubled.

Financial contributions to the Fund will help (the displaced residents) replace furniture, household items, clothing and shoes, strollers and cribs, personal documents, school supplies, food and other necessities.

Donations are tax deductible and will go directly to the fire victims through SHA’s Campus of Learners Foundation, a 501 (c) 3 organization.

You can donate online via the button on seattlehousing.org, or send a check to:

Lam-Bow Fire Relief Fund
c/o Campus of Learners Foundation
PO Box 19028
Seattle, WA 98109-1028

What’s ahead for your West Seattle Friday night

Before we go into afternoon storm-watch mode – a quick look ahead to 5 things happening tonight (by which time the weather might calm – the wind advisory currently is set to expire at 6 pm):

FREE FAMILY FUN AT THE Y: 6-8 pm, pumpkin-decorating, games, face-painting, and more, at the West Seattle YMCA (WSB sponsor), free for everyone. (36th SW/SW Snoqualmie)

WSHS VS. CSIHS ‘HULING BOWL’: We just checked and the game’s still on – 7 pm at Southwest Athletic Complex, the annual crosstown football rivalry match between West Seattle High School and Chief Sealth International High School (this year’s home team, and it’s their Homecoming Night too). Pre-game barbecue too. (2801 SW Thistle)

FILM FESTIVAL: 6:30 pm cocktails & concessions, 7 pm screening, as the international short-film festival Shnit makes a stop at Highland Park Improvement Club. This is a 21+ event; $7 admission for HPIC members, $10 for nonmembers. (12th SW/SW Holden)

GARY BENSON: Solo musician live at C & P Coffee Company (WSB sponsor), 7-9 pm. (5612 California SW)

FOUR BANDS @ PARLIAMENT: 9 pm at Parliament TavernStuporhero, Blanco Bronco, Botherations, Pops Spoiler & His Deadbeats. (4210 SW Admiral Way)

VIDEO: Encampment proposals @ City Council committee

(UPDATED 6:40 PM – Video in box below is now the archived recording of today’s meeting)

9:31 AM: Click the “play” button and you’ll see the Seattle Channel‘s live feed from City Council chambers, where the encampment proposals that have drawn so much attention and discussion this past week are about to be discussed by the Human Services and Public Health Committee.

9:38 AM: Committee chair Councilmember Sally Bagshaw is setting the stage for the discussion, recapping some of what the mayor announced last night (WSB coverage here) and the alternatives she and Councilmember Mike O’Brien proposed earlier in the week (WSB coverage here). You can find all the related documents, including the alternative proposals, in this portion of the agenda for today’s meeting.

“This has been an extraordinarily stressful time for all of us,” Bagshaw then declared. She says the proposal brought in about 5,000 e-mails to council offices. Most were focused on opposition to camping in parks and on sidewalks, and Bagshaw reiterated that the mayor declared last night that he wanted those areas to remain officially off-limits. She also has reiterated that the committee is NOT voting today, but will be discussing the “principles” of what they’re trying to do.

First guest speaker at the meeting is the newly hired city Director of Homelessness George Scarola. (Also note, councilmembers present at the hearing include those who are not members of the committee, including our area’s Councilmember Lisa Herbold.) Scarola recapped what the mayor said last night (again, covered here, with full details promised next week). He’s followed by the mayor’s counsel, Ian Warner, who has reiterated, once more, that the mayor will not support camping in parks, on sidewalks, or on school properties (which aren’t city-owned anyway).

9:53 AM: Now speaking, the mayor’s public-safety director Scott Lindsay. He says that the mayor’s promise of expanding outreach personnel means the city will have the capacity to reach out to every unsheltered person “to bring them indoors,” while the city works “to have a place for them to go.” He says the mayor’s budget proposal includes $2 million for additional trash (and needles) cleanup related to unsheltered living.

Talk turns to those cleanup plans. Herbold asks about the scope and concern about the expansion of what had been a pilot program at four sites. Bagshaw points out that for many of the people from whom the council have heard, the trash is the problem much more than the tents.

10:20 AM: Pressed by Councilmember O’Brien, a mayoral rep says there is “no capability or plan to sweep people off all park property” though the mayor does not support a plan that would not “preserve that capability.”

10:36 AM: Scarola warns that communities might be “nervous” about some of the forthcoming solutions, including the four new authorized encampments, but “we have to work together.”

10:40 AM: Committee vice chair Councilmember Bruce Harrell suggests they get on to details of the various proposals. Councilmember Tim Burgess speaks first, saying of unsheltered people, “They are our neighbors and we want to help them.” He draws applause by reiterating, “I just want to say we should not proactively authorize camping in our parks and on our sidewalks … that violates public trust.” He says he supports what the mayor announced last night, including four new authorized encampments similar to the ones currently open in Ballard, Interbay, and Othello. Burgess also says, “There’s a lot of … trash (in locations) where campers are no longer there” and urges that mayor use “emergency powers” to get that cleaned up. Then he says it’s “not helpful” to use this controversy to “denigrate those who are homeless” in Seattle. A few minutes later, Councilmember Kshama Sawant notes that “homelessness is an absolutely brutalizing experience … nobody chooses that.”

11:09 AM: Bagshaw says 90 people are signed up to speak in the public-comment period they’re trying to get to, and at 2 minutes each, “you do the math.” Harrell asks about O’Brien’s revised proposal for the city to pay a $50 fine if it doesn’t follow through on whatever rules it implements. The latter says he’ll work with Harrell on that offline – and audience members howl. Bagshaw says, “I oppose the idea of having penalties on this kind of legislation.”

11:17 AM: Public comment begins. Bagshaw says she’ll stay until everyone has spoken, even if other councilmembers have to leave.

11:49 AM: So far, a variety of viewpoints have been voiced.

12:10 PM: There’s been opposition, support, alternatives. One person suggested spending tens of millions more on housing. (For context on the investment required, the DESC Cottage Grove Commons building in Delridge, which houses 66 formerly homeless people, cost $14 million to build earlier this decade.)

12:31 PM: There have been emotional speeches from people on multiple sides of the issue, including, just now, a woman who asked “what do you want us to do? Just die? … You want me to be you. I was you. Then, something happened” – mental illness, drugs, job loss, and a variety of things. She was shortly after a man in football gear flanked by kids holding up signs saying “Needle-Free End Zones,” saying they had to chase loiterers off their field (not in WS) every week, and that they had found three needles on the field so far this season.

12:40 PM: Public comment continues – now at #49 of what was announced as a list of 90 who signed up. We’re moving on to other stories but the live feed will continue as long as the meeting does, and when the full recorded video is available later in the day, we’ll then substitute that.

1:03 PM: One more note if you’re not watching … councilmembers still at the hearing right now are Herbold, González (citywide rep and a West Seattleite), Burgess (citywide rep), Harrell, Bagshaw.

1:34 PM: The meeting has just wrapped up. We’ll switch to the archived video when it’s available. Latest info is that a vote wouldn’t be likely before December, because the council has to immerse itself in the budget from hereon out, but we’ll keep watch.

WEST SEATTLE STORM WATCH: High tides, too

We’ve been talking about wind and rain, but there’s one more complicating factor, as Maya Sears e-mailed us to point out (thank you!) – high tides. With the full moon tomorrow, they are at the high end of the high-tide spectrum, and as she points out, they “could not be any worse for the weather that is forecast!” She provides the next five peaks, from the NOAA website:

Friday 4:11 pm 11.64
Saturday 4:44 am 10.77
Saturday 4:45 pm 11.9
Sunday 5:36 am 11.35
Sunday 5:22 pm 12.02

We also have a tide chart on the WSB West Seattle Weather page.

TRAFFIC & WEATHER: Wet, windy Friday updates

(SDOT MAP with travel times/video links; is the ‘low bridge’ closed? LOOK HERE)

(Click any view for a close-up; more cameras on the WSB Traffic page)

6:43 AM: The weather didn’t cause much trouble overnight (here are our notes). But the rain has resumed and it’s going to be a messy commute. First evidence, Meg just tweeted: “The onramp to the bridge from Avalon (EB) is FULL of water. Bus had to slow way down. Yikes!”

As we’ve been mentioning all week, no classes today for Seattle Public Schools – a long-planned staff-development day – so that will lessen traffic somewhat.

7:43 AM: The only problems we keep hearing about: Water, water, water. We’ll be heading out shortly now that there’s some daylight.

8:30 AM: So far, we’ve been down Fauntleroy, Avalon, Harbor, Alki. Not much traffic, and a break in the rain seems to have helped with the drainage. It just started up again, though, and there’s no shortage of storminess to the west:

9:06 AM: While out, we also looked into the muddy runoff coming downhill on Manning toward the Admiral/Avalon/etc. intersection. It’s from the site recently cleared for the 14-house 3601 Fauntleroy Avenue subdivision:

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Seattle Public Utilities was on site when we went by. Drainage was one of the concerns neighbors of this site raised in an appeal that was settled before going to a hearing.

STORM WATCH: What’s happening overnight

2 AM: So far, breezy but not catastrophically windy in West Seattle. Checking City Light’s map, we notice about 3,700 customers (homes/businesses) lost power about 15 minutes ago in parts of Burien and North Highline southeast of White Center, but nothing up here.

4:15 AM: That outage is over, according to the SCL map. Meantime, a traffic note: A crash is blocking the right lane of the eastbound bridge near the curve past the Fauntleroy entrance, according to SDOT. (Thanks to the texter who pointed it out.)

As for the weather, archived observations show some gusts in the 20s around here but nothing huge. The NWS’s newest forecast discussion says it’ll be a windy, rainy day overall, and that Saturday night still could bring “a major windstorm.”

5:31 AM The bridge crash has cleared.