month : 09/2018 302 results

HAPPENING NOW: 2 more days to help West Seattle Helpline

September 21, 2018 4:18 pm
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 |   How to help | West Seattle news

(WSB photo)

Bob from HomeStreet Bank (WSB sponsor) and Tracey from the West Seattle Helpline are at Junction True Value right now to say hi to shoppers and share a reminder: You have until Sunday (September 23rd) to vote for the Helpline to get a bigger grant from HomeStreet! We first told you nine days ago that Helpline – which among other things helps prevent homelessness by providing emergency help to people in need – would get a grant between $3,000 and $10,000 from HomeStreet, depending on results of online voting. If you haven’t voted yet, take a moment and go here to do it!

ROAD WORK ALERT: Concrete pouring ‘possible’ Saturday on 35th SW in Arbor Heights

Just in from SDOT – an update on the Arbor Heights sidewalk project with word that concrete pouring is “possible” tomorrow:

This week, our crews completed installation of storm drains along the east side of 35th Ave SW, between SW 100th St and SW 106th St and began street sign installation.

Our landscape crews also began digging tree pits and installing tree barriers in the planting strips along the east side of 35th Ave SW, between SW 100th St and SW 104th St. Our apologies for the starting this work before we had a chance to send out notifications, as our team is trying to complete as much as the project as quickly as possible.

Due to the challenges we have experienced in securing concrete, there’s a chance that we will be pouring concrete tomorrow, Saturday, 9/22, to complete all of the curbs on the east side of 35th Ave SW.

Please note 35th Ave SW will remain open with intermittent one-lane restriction for this work tomorrow. We will require intermittent closures of cross streets (SW 100th St – SW 106th St), allowing local access only. Flaggers will be onsite to help people navigate around our work.

ALERT: Harassing phone calls spoofing Southwest Precinct numbers

An alert from Southwest Precinct Operations Lt. Steve Strand: “We have gotten several complaints of “rude” and harassing phone calls coming from one of our Southwest Precinct phone numbers. These calls are not coming from our building.” In one example, a person received a call on their cell phone displaying a number that started with 206-233; the caller asked for the recipient by name, and when they asked who was calling, the caller uttered a profane death threat, and shortly thereafter hung up. Lt. Strand says they want to get the word out about this “to alert our community that we are attempting to address this concern and determine who is doing this and why.”

TRAFFIC ALERT: 35th SW crash

September 21, 2018 2:13 pm
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 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle traffic alerts

Avoid 35th SW between Trenton and Cloverdale for a while. Police are directing traffic in one lane, alternating north and south, because of that collision. SPD is investigating the cause; SFD is on scene checking for injuries.

Will three fewer hours make a difference? City considers Riverview Playfield change

yellowtape
(WSB photo of fire’s aftermath, June 2016)

Seattle Parks is considering changing the hours at Riverview Playfield (7226 12th SW) in hopes of enabling more police enforcement in response to problems there. Next Thursday, the city Board of Park Commissioners‘ meeting will include a public hearing on changing the hours from 4 am-11:30 pm to 6 am-10 pm. Here’s the rationale as listed in the city briefing paper for Thursday’s meeting:

At this site, there have been continuous complaints about illegal behavior occurring at the park. Drinking and vandalism occur in the evening hours and people congregate at all hours. Neighbors and Parks staff cite four specific reasons for requesting the change in hours:

1) Maintenance workers are burdened with cleaning beer cans, broken glass, and laden trash. The park benches were often found damaged.

2) Tagging is pervasive especially late at night and after the park has closed. At sites with similar issues, changing the closing time to 10:00 p.m. enabled SPD to do a sweep through the park and enforce the closure time.

3) Neighbors frequently call 911 because of the late night activities which often include loud and boisterous behavior, in addition to illegal activity.

4) Community members do not feel safe confronting those who loiter in the park after hours and the earlier closure time enables the police to enforce the rules.

Perhaps the biggest incident in recent years – the 2016 arson that left a new restroom/storage building at the park closed for a year (top photo). The Parks Board hearing is during its regular meeting at Parks HQ downtown next Thursday (September 27th), 6:30 pm, 100 Dexter Ave. N.

Here’s what’s up for the rest of your West Seattle Friday!

September 21, 2018 11:43 am
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 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

(Kirk Keppler outside Wyatt’s Jewelers in Westwood Village, where PARKing Day is a tradition – see below)

From the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar for the rest of your Friday:

LAST DAY FOR GREAT HARVEST BREAD CO: As reported here earlier this week, Great Harvest Bread in The Junction is closing after today, and Flying Apron will be moving in. Great Harvest’s posted Friday hours go until 7 pm. (4707 California SW)

PARKing DAY: The annual day in which the city encourages turning street parking spaces into mini-parks. Hours vary. On the SDOT map are Wyatt’s Jewelers (WSB sponsor; photo above) at Westwood Village (2600 SW Barton) and at Cottage Grove Park (5206 26th SW) in North Delridge; there’s one planned outside Cottage Grove Commons (5444 Delridge Way SW) featuring the Delridge Grocery Coop; and one on Delridge across from Louisa Boren STEM K-8 after school (5900 block Delridge Way SW).

COUNCILMEMBER LISA HERBOLD’S DISTRICT OFFICE HOURS: Our area’s city councilmember will be at the South Park Community Center today, 2-7 pm. Drop-in visitors welcome – last meeting will start at 6:30 pm. (8319 8th Ave. S.)

TAKE YOUR DOG TO THE POOL: Today, the second-to-last session of the Arbor Heights Swim and Tennis Club‘s annual Dog Days of Summer. The pool has closed for the season otherwise – no more human swimming until next year – but before its annual cleaning, it’s open as a fundraiser. 5-7 pm. (11003 31st SW)

ALKI SKATING! The Alki Community Center welcomes back Friday night skating, 5:45-7:45 pm. (5817 SW Stevens)

WORLD DANCE PARTY: West Seattle YMCA (WSB sponsor) is hosting a World Dance Party, all ages, as part of Welcoming Week, 6-8 pm. (3622 SW Snoqualmie)

WEST SEATTLE BIG BAND: Senior Center of West Seattle benefit show and dinner featuring West Seattle Big Band playing the music of Frank Sinatra, starting with 6 pm happy hour. Check to see if tickets remain! (4217 SW Oregon)

LOVE THY NEIGHBOR: As previewed here, tonight starting at 6:30 pm, this “ordinary revival” is being hosted by Tibbetts United Methodist Church (WSB sponsor). All welcome. Ticket/registration info is here. (3940 41st SW)

FOOTBALL: West Seattle HS is home at Southwest Athletic Complex (2801 SW Thistle), 7 pm, vs. Nathan Hale. Chief Sealth IHS is on the road vs. Cleveland at Memorial Stadium (401 5th Ave N) downtown, 7:45 pm. Seattle Lutheran HS is at Muckleshoot Tribal School (15209 SE 376th St, Auburn), 5 pm. And at West Seattle Stadium (4432 35th SW) tonight, O’Dea is home vs. Blanchet at 7 pm.

GOODTIME HUSTLE: Live music at C & P Coffee Company (WSB sponsor), 7-9 pm. (5612 California SW)

‘SKELETON CREW,’ NIGHT TWO: 7:30 pm, it’s the second performance of the new production at ArtsWest. Check ticket availability by going here. (4711 California SW)

PREVIEW YOUR WEEKEND – AND BEYOND! Our complete calendar is always available for you to browse.

YOU CAN HELP! Hurricane-fundraising cookies and cider Sunday

(September 2017)

Last September, Ysabel and friends had a roadside stand to raise money for hurricane survivors. This year again, sadly, storm survivors need help, so she’ll be out raising money this Sunday (September 23rd), 11 am-3 pm, at California/Portland in Gatewood (map). Stop by for cider and cookies. Ysabel’s family plans to match donations and then seek matches from their employers, so whatever you can donate will be stretched!

WEEKEND: Before you go out on the water, learn boating safety on land

September 21, 2018 9:58 am
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 |   Safety | West Seattle news

(Photo courtesy Debra Alderman, U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary)

In case you haven’t seen this in our calendar, last call for Sunday’s all-day boating-safety class presented by the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary in West Seattle, 8:30 am-5 pm at the Veterans’ Center (3618 SW Alaska): “This course qualifies all those who successfully complete it to get a Washington State Boater Education Card. Great for families, couples, and friends who boat together.” $35 per person – and there’s still room; go here to sign up. If Sunday doesn’t work, the next session after that is November 18th, and you can sign up for that via the same link.

TRAFFIC/TRANSIT TODAY: Friday watch; Highway 99 closure reminder

September 21, 2018 6:45 am
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 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle traffic alerts

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

6:45 AM: Good morning. A texter sent word of a crash on Fauntleroy Way SW near Fairmount Playfield. The log says one SFD was sent and closed out of it fairly quickly after it happened just before 6 am; otherwise, we don’t know the status, and there’s no SDOT alert. That’s the only incident reported in/from West Seattle so far this morning.

TRANSIT NOTE: Metro reported at 5:50 am that the 4:42 am Burien-departing Route 120 did not run.

PARKing DAY: Today’s the day that dozens of street spots around the city become temporary mini-parks. None are scheduled this early – that we know of – but watch for our “West Seattle Friday” highlights list later.

HIGHWAY 99 CLOSURE: Another reminder – here’s what’s scheduled to start tonight:

Closure begins 9 p.m. Friday, 9/21 from South Spokane Street to the south end of the Battery Street Tunnel. Saturday evening (9/22) the northbound SR 99 on-ramp at South Royal Brougham Way will reopen. Northbound SR 99 from South Spokane Street to South Royal Brougham Way will reopen Monday 9/24 at 5 a.m.

We’ll publish an update if it ends early (and as was the case last weekend, if you notice an early reopening before we do, we appreciate tips – 206-293-6302, text or voice, 24/7, thank you!)

West Seattle Crime Watch: Police search after Harbor Avenue 7-11 robbery

12:54 AM: Police are being sent right now to the Harbor Avenue 7-11 after a reported armed robbery. According to police dispatch, three people robbed the store at gunpoint. The clerk is reported to be injured, so SFD is being sent too. So far, only a partial description of the robbers – three men, one black, two white, in their late 20s, one in a white jacket, two in black jackets. We’ll add anything more we find out.

1:00 AM: Two of the robbers were reported to have been wearing masks; all three were last seen walking away, possibly carrying cases of beer. The Guardian One law-enforcement helicopter is now in the area helping with the search.

1:29 AM: No luck so far.

10:19 AM: We just checked with SPD media relations. The robbers are still at large. Description and circumstances info in the report is all the same as what we reported at the time, with two added details: This was reported by a customer who came into the store about five minutes after the holdup and found the clerk injured. One of the robbers had hit him on the back of the head with an object believed to have been a gun. SFD treated him at the scene.

DEVELOPMENT: 2nd Early Design Guidance review ordered for mixed-use 7617 35th SW

(Design concept from packet for 7617 35th SW)

“Name that street corner.” If you can’t without referring to the address in the headline – then you’ve underscored the point made before tonight’s second Southwest Design Review Board meeting wrapped up.

Board chair Don Caffrey and members Scott Rosenstock, Matt Hutchins, and John Cheng decided unanimously to send the mixed-use proposal for 7617 35th SW – the Complete Auto Repair site (whose future has been in play for 5+ years) – back to the drawing board for a second try at Early Design Guidance. Here’s what preceded that decision:

Read More

DEVELOPMENT: 150-apartment project for 3201 SW Avalon Way gets OK to move to 2nd stage of Design Review

(The three ‘massing’ options for 3201 Avalon; project team’s preference, #3, at right, won the SWDRB’s favor too)

The once-and-future Golden Tee Apartments site, above the northwest side of the West Seattle Golf Course, was the first of two projects getting their first Southwest Design Review Board look tonight. After the review before a full gallery, the board voted to allow the project to move on from the Early Design Guidance phase of the project, which mostly looks at big-picture issues such as building size, shape, and placement on site.

It wasn’t a slam-dunk vote, though – the board almost deadlocked, but talked through concerns. Biggest one: “I want to know that they’re doing the right thing between the buildings,” said board chair Don Caffrey. He was referring to this 7-story project and the 5-story condominiums next door, where most of those commenting during the meeting said they live (that building is partly visible in the photo below):

(King County Assessor’s Office photo)

We first reported last December that redevelopment was proposed for the site, at 3201-3211 SW Avalon Way.

Present tonight from the board along with chair Caffrey were members John Cheng, Matt Hutchins, and Scott Rosenstock, along with the project’s assigned city planner Abby Weber. Here’s how the review unfolded:

Read More

CONGRATULATIONS! West Seattleites’ TomboyX honored as King County Small Business of the Year

(WSB photo of TomboyX founders Dunaway and Gonzalez, at 2013 launch)

Five years after West Seattleites Fran Dunaway and Naomi Gonzalez launched apparel-and-more company TomboyX, they’ve just won a big honor – King County Small Business of the Year. From the announcement of the awards presented by County Executive Dow Constantine at a ceremony in Bellevue today:

Hundreds of nominations were narrowed down to 28 finalists in seven categories, representing 24 of the 39 cities in King County as well as unincorporated areas. Judges from several chambers of commerce around the region selected the winners using criteria like customer service, community involvement, and business model innovation.

The winners are:

Small Business of the Year: TomboyX, Seattle
Minority-Owned Small Business of the Year: Concord Engineering, Seattle
Woman-Owned Small Business of the Year: Triangle Associates, Seattle
Exporting Small Business of the Year: Pier2 Marketing, Seattle
Green/Sustainable Small Business of the Year: Green Cleaning Seattle – Otium-Maid Services, Seattle
Workforce Development Small Business of the Year: Cognission Corporation/Sponge School, Kirkland
Rural Small Business of the Year: Reber Ranch, Kent

To be eligible for the Executive’s Small Business Awards, nominees must be located in King County, have been in business for at least three years, and have 50 employees or less.

TomboyX is headquartered just across the Duwamish, between SODO and Georgetown.

Roller-skating reverend takes over Tibbetts UMC, muses on religion’s relevance on eve of hosting regional ‘revival’

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

Friday and Saturday, Tibbetts United Methodist Church (WSB sponsor) hosts a regional event that’s billed as a “revival.”

Not the old-school fire-and-brimstone preaching-style revival.

The “ordinary revival” Love Thy Neighbor is more about reinvention – and it’s right in line with what Tibbetts’s new pastor, Rev. Sarah Casey, believes.

Rev. Casey is certainly one of West Seattle’s youngest pastors, at 30. But this isn’t necessarily a generational thing. As the daughter of a pastor, she grew up steeped in tradition.

Oh, before we get too far down the road – we should mention she skates with Rat City Roller Derby.

Read More

WEEKEND: Bonus West Seattle Water Taxi trip for Orca Half

September 20, 2018 2:34 pm
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 |   King County Water Taxi | West Seattle news

Sunday, the West Seattle Water Taxi is adding a trip to accommodate runners who are in the Orca Half (which is sold out). The alert::

In support of the Orca Half(-marathon) this coming Sunday, Sept 23, the King County Water Taxi will offer an additional roundtrip to West Seattle departing Pier 52 in downtown Seattle at 7:30 AM. There will be an added return trip departing Seacrest Park at 8:00 AM.

The Orca Half – which will not involve road closures – starts at Lincoln Park, with shuttles from Don Armeni, where the run will finish.

West Seattle Halloween 2018: Admiral District trick-or-treat date set

September 20, 2018 12:38 pm
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 |   Holidays | West Seattle businesses | West Seattle news

Halloween is just under six weeks away, and businesses in The Admiral District have decided to offer trick-or-treating that afternoon again this year:

That’s the official poster, just sent by Brent Amacher on behalf of the Admiral merchants – look for it on Halloween (which is a Wednesday this year) to see who’s participating.

P.S. West Seattle Junction businesses’ trick-or-treating will happen as usual during the Harvest Festival, 10 am-2 pm on Sunday, October 28th.

You can help! Here’s a FUN* way to volunteer

(Photo courtesy Seattle Audubon)

You don’t have to leave the city to enjoy nature – or to teach kids about it, which is the goal of a Seattle Audubon looking right now for West Seattle volunteers. The announcement, from Wendy Walker:

Do you know how spiders navigate their own webs without getting stuck, or why tree leaves are different shapes? Explore these and other fun science topics with Seattle Audubon’s *FUN (Finding Urban Nature) program.

The FUN program introduces 3rd-grade students to the nature in their schoolyard habitat and examines how each organism depends on others to survive. Volunteers lead small groups of four to seven students through a series of outdoor investigations, which teach kids to use their senses and scientific practices to discover the importance of urban biodiversity firsthand.

Four lessons in the fall and four more in the spring give students the opportunity to build knowledge and observe seasonal changes in their schoolyard habitats. We are currently recruiting for volunteers for the fall lessons at Sanislo, Lafayette, and Genesee Hill Elementary Schools.

A volunteer training will be held in early October at Genesee Hill, and in-school lessons will be held at each school beginning in October.

Interested? E-mail Wendy at FUNvolunteer@seattleaudubon.org to receive an application and schedules.

West Seattle Thursday: Design Review x 2; Alki Community Council; pups in the pool; more!

(WSB photo: Southwesternmost West Seattle Junction flower basket, earlier this week)

Seven notes for the rest of your Thursday:

SUPPORT GROUP: 1 pm in the second-floor café at Senior Center of West Seattle, the monthly brain-injury-support group meets. More info here. (4217 SW Oregon)

YOUR DOG, THEIR POOL: Today’s the third session of the Arbor Heights Swim and Tennis Club‘s annual Dog Days of Summer. The pool has closed for the human-swimming season – so before its annual cleaning, the club opens it to dogs for swimming, as a fundraiser. 5-7 pm. (11003 31st SW)

MOVE? REMODEL? This free workshop could help you decide. 6 pm at Graystone Mortgage in Jefferson Square. (4726 42nd SW)

DESIGN REVIEW DOUBLEHEADER: As previewed here, the Southwest Design Review Board looks at two projects tonight – 3201 SW Avalon Way (6:30 pm; here’s the packet) and 7617 35th SW (8 pm; here’s the packet). Both are Early Design Guidance reviews, focused on the building’s size/shape/site placement, both include public-comment periods, and both are at the Senior Center/Sisson Building. (4217 SW Oregon)

ALKI COMMUNITY COUNCIL: 7 pm at Alki UCC, with an agenda including a noise-enforcement update and renewal of the Statue of Liberty Plaza maintenance agreement. (6115 SW Hinds)

BILL DAVIE: Singer/songwriter/poet at C & P Coffee Company (WSB sponsor), 7-9 pm. (5612 California SW)

‘SKELETON CREW’ OPENING NIGHT: 7:30 pm, the new production at ArtsWest opens. Tonight’s sold out but we’re mentioning it in case you want to get tickets for an upcoming performance. (4711 California SW)

WONDERING WHAT ELSE IS UP? Quick! Check our full calendar!

West Seattle Crime Watch: Car prowl; plus, ‘likely stolen and dumped’ sighting

Two quick West Seattle Crime Watch notes so far this morning:

CAR PROWL: From Marvin, “Car was broken into in the 3500 Fauntleroy Way area. Lock your car doors; be aware that while you are sleeping, there are people looking to steal from you.”

FROM THE ‘LIKELY STOLEN AND DUMPED’ FILE: Texted photo:

The passerby didn’t have time to stop to look inside but guessed that it’s a violin case, seen in The Triangle/East Junction. Possibly yours? Let us know.

THURSDAY NIGHT UPDATE: Haven’t heard from anyone yet – except for an update from the finder, who went back later in the day and took the case – and the instrument inside – for safekeeping.

WEEKEND: Get ready! Lantern Festival & Competition

September 20, 2018 9:00 am
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 |   West Seattle news | Westwood | WS culture/arts

(Click here for full-size PDF flyer)

In case you haven’t already seen it in our calendar – we’re spotlighting Sunday’s Lantern Festival and Competition because lantern-makers interested in competing need to make theirs in advance and bring them to the festival. It’s set for 4:30-8 pm Sunday (September 23rd) at Southwest Teen Life Center (2801 SW Thistle). The competition is optional; prizes will be awarded, as you can see on the flyer. The festival also will feature performances, a Lion Dance, and kids’ arts and crafts. It’s presented by Van Lang Vietnamese Cultural Language School and Seattle Parks, and everyone is invited.

TRAFFIC/TRANSIT TODAY: Thursday watch

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

7:06 AM: Good morning! No incidents reported in/from West Seattle so far.

TRANSIT NOTE: Just for the record … Metro says the 5:40 am 21X didn’t run today.

HIGHWAY 99 CLOSURE: Friday night until early Monday, this NB 99 closure is planned.

Almost fall! Tonight’s early equinox welcome with Alice @ West Seattle’s Solstice Park

September 19, 2018 9:41 pm
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 |   Skies Over West Seattle | West Seattle news

(WSB photos)

It’s a West Seattle tradition for the changing of seasons – an equinox or solstice sunset watch at Solstice Park with Alice Enevoldsen. Even if she’s going to be out of town on the actual equinox or solstice date, which is why she was there tonight to educate a small but hardy group. And yes, there was some sunset color!

Even though equinoxes/solstice moments seldom coincide with the sunset time (though Saturday’s 6:54 pm arrival of autumn will be close), the sunset is the star of Alice’s events because Solstice Park is set up with markers and paths aligning with the sunset on those distinctive dates. Tonight, by the way, she had two assistants – her daughters:

Explaining the relationship between earth and sun at the seasonal change is one of the things you learn at Alice’s events. So if you couldn’t be there tonight, stand by for the winter-solstice edition, just three months away!

West Seattle Crime Prevention Council: Myers Way, auto theft, noise, school officers…

Toplines from last night’s West Seattle Crime Prevention Council meeting, which turned out to have a featured guest after all:

CAPTAIN’S UPDATE: Precinct commander Capt. Pierre Davis spoke about Myers Way and says the city’s Navigation Team is “ready and willing” to remove the unsanctioned camp in the woods on the east side – outreach is under way now, posting is next, and “hopefully by the end of October that (area) will be cleaned and repurposed.” (Operations Lt. Steve Strand had said at another recent meeting – as we reported – that a big cleanup was coming up.) They have been trying for two years to get to this point, Davis said, adding that they have a small window of opportunity coming up before rainy weather and muddy conditions make it unsafe for heavy equipment. He said they’ve made the case by talking with SPD/city brass about the items found there and who’s been arrested there. Davis said, also, “the state is on board” with clearing and repurposing that area – much of which is state-owned.

Regarding area crime problems in general, Capt. Davis singled out auto theft, saying it continues to run high (you can check crime stats here). Since it’s a regional problem, not just within city limits, Davis said they’re partnering with other law-enforcement agencies to get detectives involved and tie cases together “and we go after either the ring or the individual” – and he repeated something he has said time and time again, once repeat offenders are behind bars, there’s a big dent in crime.

Capt. Davis was asked by WSCPC president Richard Miller about staffing status. He and Lt. Strand have been making their case about shorthandedness to top department leaders, and they say the reply is always that everyone is shorthanded. SPD recruiters are even working in other states to recruit officers for “lateral” – department to department – moves. They’re still working just to “catch up to attrition,” Davis said. The SW Precinct, whose jurisdiction includes West Seattle and South Park, is assigned 85 officers, he said, while wishing he could have 95. As always, he also credited watchful community members for helping solve crimes.

First community question – How has the summer gone, patroling Alki, noise enforcement?

Capt. Davis: This year “we spent a little bit of extra money and besides our walking officers …we put together a team focused specifically on traffic … I know we wrote a lot of tickets (and) a lot of parking tickets … a lot of people who came here to act up got their cars towed (and/or ticketed) … an arrest or two too. It was all good. Community members loved it. We’re going to try to do the same next year, and enhance it.” Regarding noise, he mentioned the new ordinance enhancement is “a tool” that they “haven’t used to its fullest yet” but “next summer” they hope to.

Next, a comment – a person said she was at Westwood Village about six months ago and encountered a person who was behaving erratically and aggressively, so she found police who were there on patrol, and they dealt with him, which she appreciated.

After that, another comment of gratitude, from a person said she came to thank the precinct for intervening in a drug/camping problem at the Delridge P-Patch. “We’d been picking up so much drug paraphernalia, I was just so happy” that something was done. Lt. Strand said Community Police Team Acting Sgt. John O’Neil had been marshaling that over the past week or so. The resident said there were up to 15 people camping there at one point; Lt. Strand said that there had been some connection with the camping on the slope behind Louisa Boren STEM K-8. The woman said she volunteers at Camp Second Chance and there’s a “real difference” between those living at that clean/sober sanctioned encampment and the camping they found at the P-Patch.

The police recommended Find It, Fix It as a good way to report problems/concerns from illegal camping to graffiti vandalism.

GUEST SPEAKER: School Emphasis Officer Tre Smith, who started in the Explorer program, talked about what he does at Washington Middle School – one of four middle schools in the city (including, in West Seattle, Denny International Middle School) that have these officers. The program has evolved with the Seattle Youth Violence Prevention Initiative – they are not there to enforce (unless a serious crime occurs) – school security will handle everything from drugs to fighting. His job is to pinpoint kids who are at risk, connect them with resources, get them into programs with rewards for success. Maybe 10 to 15 kids at higher risk are eligible for incentivizing like that.

When the bell rings, Officer Smith is in the hallway connecting with kids. He even does some teaching (“just got done teaching constitutional rights to 6th graders”). The SEOs are assigned to middle schools – focusing on the formative years when kids “are deciding who they are, who they want to be … becoming young adults.” He works with school counselors to be sure that the kids who need services get them. And he’s mostly there as a resource – “as a human being, to have a conversation.” He said many students refuse to believe he’s a full-fledged police officer (he is, and he’s 25 years old) but think he instead is a security guard. (The school has one of those, too, he said.)

They’re seeing less gang affiliation in middle school; he said his presence has helped cut through the fake-tough veneer that some kids put up – “hey, this guy kind of cares about me.” A lot of them have reduced adult involvement in their lives because their parent(s) are working two jobs just to keep food on the table and a roof over their heads.

Asked about school violence, Officer Smith said they are always watchful about students who might need help, might have shown warning signs.

So what’s the danger time at school? asked Miller. Varies kid by kid, said Officer Smith – depends on whether the child faced trouble as their day began at home, or if trouble built during the day at school. He keeps close tabs on “20 to 30” kids, knowing that “if we get them off to a good start in the morning, they can have a good day.” It’s important that kids “feel they can tell an adult anything, and they’re not going to face retribution for it.”

The West Seattle Crime Prevention Council meets at 7 pm third Tuesdays most months, at the Southwest Precinct (2300 SW Webster). Watch the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar for agenda info once it’s announced.