day : 22/02/2023 9 results

UPDATE: Delridge crash involving suspected stolen car; (update) 15-year-old arrested

9:14 PM: Avoid Delridge between Myrtle and Graham – police are blocking it off after a crash involving a suspected stolen car. According to police-radio communication we’d been monitoring, the car matched the description of one taken in an armed carjacking elsewhere in the city, It came to police attention in West Seattle tonight when someone reported suspicious behavior involving its occupants outside a convenience store on 35th SW. (Officers told dispatch the store clerk locked the doors so the people who seemed suspicious couldn’t get inside.)

9:31 PM: Commenter Kathryn confirms the car crashed into a building – the dispatch address indicates it’s an apartment building near Delridge/Willow.

9:50 PM: Kathryn sent that photo taken by neighbor Aimee, who she says reports that “the car is wedged between the apartments and the rock ledge.” Police have detained the three people who were inside the car when it crashed. They’re all “juvenile males,” according to what officers just told dispatch.

9:56 PM: Delridge is reopening.

11:47 PM: Thanks to the texter who sent that photo of the wrecked car being pulled out. Radio communication suggests at least one of the teenagers was arrested; we’ll update this story with whatever followup info we get from police later.

ADDED 3:21 PM THURSDAY: SPD has finally provided that followup info, and posted to SPD Blotter. First, confirmation that the crash followed a pursuit:

… SPD officers later located the vehicle, which had previously been stolen at gunpoint during a carjacking and attempted to detain it but the suspect drove away. After receiving authorization to pursue, police followed the suspect vehicle briefly until it collided with a fence, which caused it to fall down an embankment, and strike an exterior wall of an apartment building.

Here’s the SPD photo of how it got wedged:

Meantime, police also say the registered owner of the car told them he was carjacked by an “armed man” Tuesday night on Beacon Hill, They don’t know if the three people involved in that – the carjacker and two people who joined him in driving away the 2010 Toyota Corolla – were the same three found after the Delridge crash. But police say they recovered a “realistic-looking BB gun in the car” after the crash. Here’s their photo:

The 15-year-old driver was arrested and booked into the Youth Services Center; the other two found in the car last night, 13- and 14-year-old boys, were released to their families.

FOLLOWUP: Rebellyous Foods’ fake chicken/real tech business is booming

(WSB photos)

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

When Rebellyous Foods moved to West Seattle four years ago, they were producing three tons of plant-based “chicken” every month. And they told us they were looking for “roommates” to help fill the huge space they’d leased in The Triangle.

Now they’re manufacturing 20 times that volume, and they’ve outgrown the space – their production happens in another facility, and their HQ will likely move when their lease runs out next year, though founder/CEO Christie Lagally says they have hopes of staying in West Seattle. We visited Rebellyous Foods HQ recently to see how they’ve grown.

Their biggest customer, buying the lion’s share – or perhaps we should say the rooster’s share – of their product: Schools. They sell “Kickin'” plant-based “chicken,” specially formulated to meet nutrition requirements, to more than 100 districts around the country (though not Seattle Public Schools, Lagally notes). That’s 90 percent of their sales, with the rest to retailers, mostly around the Northwest

Despite that production boom (5 days a week at Orca Bay Seafoods in SODO), ready-to-cook plant-based “chicken” nuggets, patties, and tenders aren’t what Rebellyous Foods is really all about. As Lagally had told us in 2019, her company is a technology company – inventing more efficient ways to produce the “chicken.” Much of what they’re doing inside the SK Food Group building is so super-secret, we weren’t allowed to photograph it.

Lagally says it’s all about the dough. (In two respects, in fact – Rebellyous Foods recently announced it has “raised a $9.5 million equity round” to build what it’s inventing.) Their technology enables the dough at the heart of their plant-based “chicken” to be made without backbreaking work. Most of what they’re doing at the West Seattle HQ is research and development – in one room they have production equipment both secret and (below) not-so-secret:

The whole point is to bring plant-based “chicken” into “price parity” with its flesh-and-blood counterpart. And Lagally says Rebellyouse Foods is not looking to own the market – not the market in their consumable product, anyway, but rather, in the technology – “production solutions” – so the revolution can spread further. “Our mandate is to be a production company, not a brand company.”

What they’re creating will “dramatically lower the cost of making plant-based meat,” Lagally – a former aerospace engineer – is confident. It will require 90% less labor, but she’s adamant that is not just a money-saving feature, but also a matter of “human safety.”

Banners on the wall celebrate the names of what they’ve been working on – the Mock 1S was a “small-scale version” of their dough-making system, Lagally explains, followed by the Mock 2, which is what she expects will achieve the goal of “price parity.” (You can read more about it on their website, where it’s touted as having a variety of advantages including energy efficiency.)

Since they’re prototyping technology, they’re 3-D-printing some of the parts they need – we wandered through one room where mechanical-design engineers were busy at workstations with a few of the printers nearby. They’re among Rebellyous Foods’ 19 current employees. Most of them are in R&D or production, Lagally says. Her company won’t be manufacturing the production equipment, but she expects it’ll have quite the market: “People do want meat replacement” – 20 percent of the meat sold now could be replaced by plant-based products, according to “think-tank research” she cites.

So the next time you pass by that big building in The Triangle, just south of the Y – remember there’s a revolution going on in there. (Rebelly-ion, they’d say.) And if you haven’t tried their products yet, you can go here to find a store that carries it (including nine in West Seattle).

CONGRATULATIONS! West Seattle Rotarians celebrate Students of the Month

February 22, 2023 5:51 pm
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 |   Rotary Club of West Seattle | West Seattle news

The Rotary Club of West Seattle has honored its February “Students of the Month,” who are now eligible for scholarships presented annually. Here’s the announcement sent by the club’s Alan Mitchell:

At four of West Seattle Rotary’s weekly meetings during 2022-23 (in November, December, February and March), SoM Awards are being presented for each of the three high schools in West Seattle: Chief Sealth International High, Summit Atlas High, and West Seattle High. For each school, a counselor introduces the awardee, the awardee presents a personalized bio-sketch, and Rotarians have a brief Q&A opportunity.

Each Awardee receives $100, a SoM Award Certificate, and the opportunity to be their school’s SoY awardee, chosen in early April by their school from among their SoMs. By early May, from among the three school’s SoYs, the Youth Services Committee of West Seattle Rotary will choose one overall West Seattle Rotary SoY. That overall SoY winner will receive a $6,000 scholarship. Each of the two runners-up will receive a $1,000 scholarship.

The 3rd SoM presentation event was held on February 14th at the West Seattle Golf Club during West Seattle Rotary’s luncheon meeting. Rotarians, parents, and guests were impressed and inspired by these wonderful awardees and their counselors.

Chief Sealth International High

Counselor – Krista Rillo
Student – Franklin Jimenez-Ortega
Dad – Marco

Summit Atlas High

Counselor – Keenan Grayson
Student – Jonathan Maldonado Amaya

West Seattle High

Counselor – Kinsey Hedeen
Student – William Fralia
Mom – Tomoko

WATER TAXI ALERT: West Seattle route canceled for rest of today/tonight

February 22, 2023 3:48 pm
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 |   King County Water Taxi | West Seattle news

After West Seattle Water Taxi cancellations because of weather this morning, as noted in our traffic/transit roundup, Metro resumed service late this morning and tried continuing it this pm, but just announced that today’s remaining runs are canceled. “Sustained high winds have created unsafe conditions at Seacrest dock,” Metro says. The email version of the alert adds:

The current marine weather forecast does not indicate any improvements by tomorrow morning. We will continue to monitor the weather and will send additional updates as more information becomes available.

During this time, Water Taxi shuttle routes 773 and 775 will continue to operate as usual in West Seattle.

BIZNOTE: New operator, name for Park West

February 22, 2023 1:55 pm
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 |   West Seattle businesses | West Seattle news

(Photo courtesy Clay Eals)

Vans like those carrying the name Avamere were the first sign for some of a big change at Park West Care Center in North Admiral. We confirmed that the facility is now Avamere Rehabilitation at Park West. Avamere is a regional chain of skilled nursing and rehabilitation facilities, with more than 32 locations in Washington and Oregon, including this one. The takeover was one of four that Avamere announced this month, the company says:

Avamere Living acquired four new facilities on Feb. 1, 2023, in Washington state. All four were formerly operated by North American Health Care, as part of a previously announced deal with Sabra Health Care REIT. These properties currently serve the cities of Seattle, Shoreline, Issaquah, and Burien, and will continue to offer post-acute care, short-term rehabilitation, and long-term care. … The four properties will be transitioned over the month of February, with existing teams remaining in place while Avamere leadership spends the month on-site doing training and onboarding. This increases the Avamere footprint in the greater Seattle-Tacoma area to nine facilities and allows for increased collaboration and support for the entire region.

Avamere vice president Maggie Hilty tells WSB the signage for the center at 1703 California SW will change, but they’re not sure how soon, as the company has just “gathered the specs.” The company is based in Wilsonville, Oregon, where it started with one facility in 1995.

THINK SPRING: Signup time for second-ever West Seattle Art Hop & Shop

February 22, 2023 11:56 am
|    Comments Off on THINK SPRING: Signup time for second-ever West Seattle Art Hop & Shop
 |   West Seattle news | WS culture/arts

A reason to think spring on a day that started with snow – the West Seattle Art Hop & Shop is returning for a second year, and inviting interested artists and prospective host sites to register right now! Here’s the announcement:

Saturday, May 6, 2023, 10 am to 5 pm all across West Seattle
One Day, Many Artists, All Kinds of Art!

The West Seattle Art Hop & Shop, West Seattle’s community arts tour, is back and has moved to the spring! This year’s tour will be Saturday, May 6th, 10 am-5 pm. Art will be on display and available for purchase at studios, yards and outdoor spaces throughout the West Seattle peninsula. The tour features art of all kinds, at a wide variety of price points from emerging to established artists. Art lovers are sure to enjoy the day as they hop their way across West Seattle.

Unlike traditional art tours, the West Seattle Art Hop & Shop is open to all artists who complete the registration process. Artist registration this year is $25 and the registration deadline is April 9th. Artists are encouraged to start planning early to ensure they have a location to show their work.

While artist participation is unlimited, this year’s event will have a limit of 30 sites, with a minimum of three artists per site. Site hosts will complete an easy, free registration to secure their spot on the tour and then coordinate with artists to fill their location. Site registration will close when 30 sites have registered.

The West Seattle Art Hop & Shop offers an artist and host matching tool to help those offering space with those looking for a location to show their work. Artists and sites will find all the information they’ll need to connect and complete registration on the Art Hop’s registration page. The West Seattle Art Hop & Shop is organized by an all-volunteer committee of artists and art lovers with support from West Seattle Art Walk and West Seattle Junction Association. If you’re interested in getting involved behind the scenes to support the West Seattle Art Hop & Shop, email WSArtHop@gmail.com.

HPAC, bonus ‘Endless Shift’ performance, kindergarten talk, more for your West Seattle Wednesday

Thanks to Jerry Simmons for the photo of an Anna’s Hummingbird in this morning’s dusting of snow. Here’s what’s happening in the non-snowy hours ahead, mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar:

AMERICAN MAHJONG: 1-3 pm at the Senior Center of West Seattle (4217 SW Oregon): “Stimulate your brain by playing this ancient Chinese tile game that is similar to the card game Rummy. Meet new people and have fun. All levels of players are welcome.”

GETTING READY FOR KINDERGARTEN: If you have a 3-to-5-year-old, don’t miss this online discussion co-presented by the Greater Seattle YMCA (parent of WSB sponsor West Seattle YMCA), 2 pm, free. Registration/participation link is in our calendar listing.

FREE INDOOR PLAYSPACE: Toddler Gym weekday afternoons at the Salvation Army Center (9050 16th SW), ages 2-6, 3:30-5 pm.

TRIVIA x 6: At 6 pm, Locust Cider (2820 Alki SW) now offers trivia … at 7 pm, you can play trivia at the West Seattle Brewing Mothership (4415 Fauntleroy Way SW); Larry’s Tavern (3405 California SW) hosts Wednesday-night trivia starting at 7:30 pm; there’s 7:30 and 8:30 pm Sporcle Pub Quiz at The Lodge (4209 SW Alaska); trivia starts at 8 pm at Beveridge Place Pub (6413 California SW); at 8:30 pm, trivia at Talarico’s (4718 California SW) with Phil T.

LIVE AT EPHESUS: Kimball & The Fugitive Trio now plays Ephesus Greek Restaurant (5245 California SW), 6:30 pm Wednesdays.

GET TOGETHER WITH HPAC: If you live, work, play, study, shop, etc. in Highland Park, Riverview, and/or South Delridge, HPAC is your community coalition, and tonight’s their monthly meeting, 7 pm. As previewed here, the South Delridge Action Plan is a spotlight topic. Go here for the link/number to be part of tonight’s meeting.

MUSIC BINGO: Play weekly at The Good Society (California/Lander), 7 pm.

‘AN ENDLESS SHIFT’: First of three added performances following last weekend’s cancellations – 7:30 pm at ArtsWest (4711 California SW; WSB sponsor). Get tickets here.

SKYLARK OPEN MIC: Time for you to shine! 7:30 pm signups @ West Seattle’s longest-running open mic – no cover to watch. (3803 Delridge Way SW)

Planning an event – meeting, performance, reading, tour, fundraiser, or … – that could be featured on West Seattle’s only comprehensive event calendar? Tell us about it! Please email info to westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!

YOU CAN HELP: Lincoln Park student volunteer has questions for you

Maybe you can help a student who’s been spending time improving one of our area’s most-cherished parks. The request arrived via Lisa McGinty, forest steward with Friends of Lincoln Park:

We are once again hosting a couple of wonderful UW students who are working on their capstone internship at Lincoln Park. They’ve been hard at work, restoring a 2000-sq-ft natural area while also working on their research projects.

(Sylas, surveying)

One of the interns, Sylas Kasten, has created a survey as part of their research on using Geocaching as a tool for education and accessibility in natural areas, including our parks.

WSB readers have helped with FLiP interns’ surveys before, and, Lisa says, that’s really helped – so if you can spare a few minutes now, here’s a flyer about Sylas’s survey, which you can answer by going here.

P.S. Lisa says volunteer opportunities at the park have been limited for a while because their toolbox was stolen in November, but they’re expecting a replacement soon so will be opening signups for more restoration events – watch here, “or contact me directly with larger group requests: flip98136@gmail.com.”

TRAFFIC, TRANSIT, WEATHER: Wednesday, with (short-lived) snow, without Water Taxi

6:02 AM: Good morning! It’s Wednesday, February 22nd.

WEATHER

Light snow possible, high in the mid-to-upper 30s. (7:31 AM UPDATE: We are seeing some snow. 9:31 AM UPDATE: Not much, though; the sun’s now out.)

SCHOOL’S OUT

But not for all – for example, our area’s three Catholic schools are all back in session today after 4-day Presidents Day weekends.

TRANSIT TODAY

7:15 AM UPDATE: No Water Taxi until 10:30 am because of weather.

Metro is on its regular schedule, but still canceling some trips, so check notification channels such as @kcmetroalerts. (Here’s our report on Tuesday’s briefing, including the acknowledgment that they’re still short-staffed.)

Washington State Ferries‘ Triangle Route continues on a 2-boat schedule; check here for alerts/updates and use Vessel Watch for boats’ locations.

SPOTLIGHT CAMERAS

Delridge cameras: Besides the one below (Delridge/Oregon), cameras are also up at Delridge/Genesee, Delridge/Juneau, Delridge/Orchard, and Delridge/Henderson.

High Bridge – the camera at the top:

High Bridge – the view from its southwest end (when SDOT points the 35th/Avalon/Fauntleroy camera that way):

Low Bridge – looking east to west:

1st Ave. S. Bridge – another route across the river:

Highway 99: – the northbound side at Lander.

MORE TRAFFIC CAMS: See all working traffic cams citywide here, most with video options; West Seattle and vicinity-relevant cameras are on this WSB page.

BRIDGE INFO: Are movable city bridges opening for vessels? Check the @SDOTBridges Twitter feed.

If you see a problem on the bridges/streets/paths/water, please text or call us (when you can do it safely, and after you’ve reported to authorities if needed) – 206-293-6302.