day : 29/09/2025 11 results

Ridge 2 River questions (for you!), Reconnect South Park ideas, police stats @ HPAC’s September gathering

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

From trails through the greenbelt to connections across the blacktop, HPAC‘s first fall meeting covered a lot of ground. The community coalition for Highland Park, Riverview, and South Delridge gathered at Delridge Library this past Wednesday night.

POLICE UPDATES: These updates usually start community-coalition meetings, with rotating representatives from the department, this time Community Service Officers. The year-to-date stats they brought for all of the Southwest Precinct were the same ones we’ve reported in coverage of other recent West Seattle community meetings; for Highland Park specifically, shootings, burglaries, motor-vehicle thefts, and thefts in general are down, robberies, aggravated assaults, rapes, and arsons are up, and there’ve been no homicides so far this year (same as at this point last year).

There was some discussion of the new SPD directive to report parking violations by phone rather than via the Find It Fix It app. The point seems to be that SPD wants these reports to come in in real time, rather than in a system where they might not be seen for a day or two. That led to a discussion of encampment concerns and potential new parking restrictions, including a growing encampment at the bottom of Highland Park Way hill. Perhaps the greenbelt gate could be closed at night? was the question. (Nobody from Seattle Parks was there, so that’ll have to be brought up in another way.) There were also concerns about fires in the area; one response from last Monday was mentioned, in the 6700 block of West Marginal Way (categorized as “rubbish fire” but no other info available).

RIDGE 2 RIVER: Speaking of the greenbelt, this organization currently has a survey open to help determine where trails should go in the West Duwamish Greenbelt, the city’s longest contiguous stretch of forest, mostly running through eastern West Seattle. Paul spoke; he explained that his group has a “broader definition of the WDG than the city does.” Yes, the WDG already has some trails; Paul noted that sibling organization West Duwamish Greenbelt Trails has mapped current trails but they’re mostly unplanned, uncoordinated, given that it “over time developed this network of trails which is fun to explore but it’s an adhoc process and not … the best system that could be there in terms of serving the community’s needs, environmental impact, etc. … If we were thinking about the greenbelt holistically,” something different would be created. They’re in the midst of a two-year process to determine that.

Where do people want to go? How do they want to get there? How can they avoid geologically unstable areas? In addition to community input, they’re also launching an expert analysis of the greenbelt. And they’re mapping destinations like həʔapus Village Park and Shoreline Habitat, Westcrest Park, Riverview Playfield, although “we don’t know if people would really use trails to get to those places.” Could there be a spine trail that would get you to almost anywhere in the greenbelt? Current phase, bottom line, information gathering, “and then out of that we’re going to develop some alternatives for different levels of greenbelt improvements” and they’ll have some community meetings for input, then a city process, and probably around early 2027 they’ll have a “preferred alterntive.”

They really want people to take the survey – only 200 have so far – it’s a long survey but Paul said they’re “fun questions.” If you can, go walk in the greenbelt and then take the survey! WDGT has monthly hikes if you want to go with a group – they have two more, in October 18 (from Pathfinder K-8) and November 15 (from the north end of the South Seattle College campus), before winter. The survey will be open until they get enough responses, so probably at least a couple more months. They’re doing in-person outreach too, including tabling at last Saturday’s West Seattle Ecology Fair.

RECONNECT SOUTH PARK: Maria and Jorge were there from the organization exploring the idea of reconnecting the community torn apart by Highway 99; she gave the backstory. They’re currently looking at the “reroute and reclaim” option. She noted she’s never been able to look at the highway the same way since learning it covers what was once a fertile valley where abundant food was grown. People who live by it now live 11 years less on average than others – not just because of the highway, but that’s a large contributor. She explained the state provided funding for them to do a community study and technical analysis. “The highway created 22 dead-end streets in South Park,” Maria said. And of course there’d be a question of where the truck traffic goes. The project has been under way for three years. Before turning it over to Jorge, Maria stressed, “We’re not anywhere near design – this round is about identifying an option and taking a look at whether it’s possible. This is about what we’re leaving for our kids. We all have to look ahead and not just think about us right now.”

Of the possibilities suggested so far, Jorge said the Reroute and Reclaim option would eliminate the freeway. “That could create 2700 new jobs, would reduce South Park traffic by 64 percent.” Second and third options are similar – the highway would turn into a boulevard, like Delridge. 25 percent less traffic or 47 percent less traffic. All the reclaimed land would be available for new housing and parks. The last option is “bridges and trails,” with the highway staying the same but adding community connections “on both sides.” Maria pointed out that the big clover-leaf intersection would be removed.

To some, this may all sound like an impossible dream or foolish venture, but: “We can be bold,” Maria exhorted. Supporters are certain it would increase safety, business, communication. She said they’ve gotten youth involved with this too, including the Duwamish Valley Youth Corps. If you’re interested in finding out more or even pitching in to help, volunteers@reconnectsouthpark.org is the email address.

NEXT MEETING: HPAC is planning to meet at the Southwest Library next month; October 22, since the fourth Wednesday is their usual meeting night. Watch hpaction.org for updates.

BIZNOTE: Congratulations to West Seattle Autoworks for 15 years!

West Seattle Autoworks (WSB sponsor) is celebrating 15 years in business!

Back in 2010, we opened our doors just as the recession was making its dramatic exit. From that very first day on October 1st, you’ve showered us with your trust and support, and we are so grateful! Through a pandemic and, oh yeah, a 2 ½-YEAR BRIDGE SHUTDOWN, your loyalty kept our shop busy and our team going. While half of small businesses don’t make it to 5 years, we’ve made it to 15! A massive thank you, West Seattle!

Chris, Kacie, Pedro, Michael, Elliott, Alex, Joe, and Nate

West Seattle Autoworks is on the southwest corner of 35th and Webster.

Madison Middle School’s longtime principal out on health leave

Madison Middle School has an acting principal as of today, according to a district memo sent to families (thanks for the forwards) and posted on the school website, signed by Superintendent Fred Podesta:

Dear Madison families and staff,

We are writing to inform you of a leadership update at Madison Middle School. Beginning Monday, Sept. 29, Dr. Gary will be on health leave.

During Dr. Gary’s absence, we are pleased to welcome Dr. Scott Pierce as the acting principal. Dr. Pierce has most recently been serving the past three years as an Assistant Principal at Rainier Beach High School. Dr. Pierce brings 15 years of leadership experience with a strong commitment to equity focused, inclusive, and rigorous learning environments.

Principal Pierce will begin his transition with staff and the school community during the week of Sept. 29 – Oct. 3 and is looking forward to supporting and working with the Madison community officially beginning Monday, Oct. 6.

To support a smooth transition, Regional Executive Directors Chris Carter and Katrina Hunt will provide oversight and guidance. Furthermore, assistant principals Dr. Elizabeth Allen and Ms. Trisha Pilapil will be instrumental in ensuring consistency and stability during this time.

As always, our top priority remains the academic success, safety, and well-being of every Madison student.

Thank you for your continued support.

Dr. Gary has been Madison’s principal for 12 years.

Westside Neighbors Shelter plans open house Saturday

(File photo)

If you have questions about the Westside Neighbors Shelter in The Triangle, West Seattle’s only shelter, it’s opening its doors for an open house this Saturday. Here’s the announcement:

As cold weather approaches, the open house is a chance for leaders, community members, press, and potential volunteers to tour the space, ask questions, and learn how the Shelter operates and who it serves. The Shelter is run by volunteers and private donations.

Where: American Legion Post 160 (Westside Neighbors Shelter), 3620 SW Alaska Street, West Seattle

When: Saturday, October 4, 2-4 pm

Refreshments will be served in the Hall starting at 2 pm. At 2:30, Keith Hughes will present the Shelter’s history and its current impact on the unhoused community. One or more former shelter clients who now have housing will speak about how their experience at the Shelter helped them get on their feet.

After the presentation, guests will be able to tour the Shelter and learn how the Shelter’s all-volunteer workforce serves unhoused people in West Seattle with meals, hygiene, clothing, and a place to get warm.

VIDEO: After other West Coast troop deployments, Seattle mayor, Washington attorney general tell feds, ‘Stay out of Seattle’

Mayor Bruce Harrell, state Attorney General Nick Brown, the city’s public-safety and others stood shoulder-to-shoulder at City Hall this morning to send the president a message: “Stay out of Seattle.” This follows the federal orders sending troops to other major West Coast cities. Above is Seattle Channel video of what they all had to say at City Hall this morning. “There are no insurrections here,” Harrell said. “I believe in a better country … I just wish our president understood this and believed in it as well.” Harrell said he’ll be issuing an executive order laying out “how we’ll protect our rights” if any deployment is ordered. Brown said that sending troops to Los Angeles, Portland, and D.C. are clearly part of a presidential strategy “to push our Constitution to the brink.” He said they’re staying in contact with the other cities and states and will be “ready to respond” if there’s a threat of the same thing here.

WEST SEATTLE CRIME WATCH: Twice-stolen white Silverado (update: found); stolen green Velotric ebike

Two transportation thefts in West Seattle Crime Watch:

STOLEN SILVERADO: Sent by Les:

Last night someone stole my 2005 Silverado truck from Canada Dr. in the Seaview neighborhood. I don’t have a photo but the truck is white, regular cab with an 8′ bed. License plate #C30524C

This is the second time this truck has been stolen. The truck was locked and had a club on the steering wheel this time. Police report #25-284683; if anyone sees it please report it to SPD or WSB. I would really appreciate if everyone could keep an eye out for this truck in your neighborhood.

Update: Found, thanks to a reader!

STOLEN VELOTRIC EBIKE: Sent by Kevin:

My wife’s bicycle was stolen between 12:30-2:30 pm yesterday at the Alaska Junction. The theft occurred by the intersection of Alaska and California. The bike was locked to a bike rack and another bike on the south side of Alaska Street by the bus stop. We returned to find the cable lock cut and 1 bike missing. The bicycle is a dark green Velotric e-bike, serial #——2254-f, with a step-through frame. It has a cargo rack on the back with a black cargo bag attached to the rack. Attached is a picture of the same model and color of bike. This has been reported to the Seattle Police Department.

We’ll add the incident number when we get it.

FERRY ALERT: Fauntleroy-Vashon-Southworth on two-boat schedule this afternoon

Because of system shuffling forced by the breakdown of a ferry serving Mukilteo-Clinton, the Fauntleroy-Vashon-Southworth route is down to two boats and will officially use the two-boat schedule this afternoon. The alert from Washington State Ferries says, “The first sailings today on the two-boat schedule will be the 12:35 p.m. Vashon to Southworth on the #2 Issaquah and the 12:40 p.m. Vashon to Fauntleroy on the #1 Kittitas. ” The two-boat schedule is linked from the WSF alerts page.

FOLLOWUP: Seattle Public Schools superintendent search down to list of 8

September 29, 2025 11:40 am
|    Comments Off on FOLLOWUP: Seattle Public Schools superintendent search down to list of 8
 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle schools

We don’t know who they are, but we do know eight candidates are moving to the “next stage of the process” in the search for a new Seattle Public Schools superintendent. We first reported last Tuesday night that School Board president Gina Topp, speaking to the Admiral Neighborhood Association, had revealed they had “41 qualified applicants” and would get a closer look at them on Friday. That afternoon/evening meeting to review applications was an executive (non-public) session, and resulted in the weekend announcement that they’d winnowed the field to eight. According to that announcement, “The applicant pool is diverse and includes leaders from across the country.” Here’s the timeline they’re working with:

Thursday, October 9, Finalist Interviews
Friday, October 10, Finalist Interviews
Wednesday, October 15, Board Discussion (tentative)
Wednesday, October 15 or 22, Selection of Candidate (tentative)

The district developed a “leadership profile” to guide the search; you can see it here.

From ‘Aging in Place’ resource fair to Baby Story Time, our list for your West Seattle Monday spans all ages!

(We likely won’t see the sun today, so here’s a recent photo by Jerry Simmons!)

Here’s our list of what’s happening and NOT happening, mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar (got something to add? please let us know!):

CITY COUNCIL BUDGET MEETING: Budget presentations continue, so today’s meeting started at 9:30 am, with a focus on public-safety and human-services departments – see their slides via the agenda here, which also explains how to watch. It’s likely to continue into the afternoon.

BABY STORY TIME: Southwest Library‘s noon story time is happening again today! (9010 35th SW)

AGING IN PLACE RESOURCE FAIR: Are you – or is someone in your family – “aging in place”? This afternoon at the Center for Active Living (4217 SW Oregon), 2-6 pm, find out about services and people designed to help make it possible.

SHOW & SIGNING AT EASY STREET: Return To Dust visits Easy Street Records (4559 California SW) for a show, signing, and photo op … album purchase required to participate in the latter two, otherwise, free and all-ages.

ART SALON AT C & P COFFEE: 6 pm, “a safe space for creative people to gather” at C & P Coffee (5612 California SW; WSB sponsor). Free. Bring your own supplies; “water-based mediums only, please.”

CRAFTING & CREATIVITY NIGHT HIATUS: Still on hold until The Missing Piece finishes moving to new Junction location.

D&D: Long-running weekly D&D at 6:30 pm at Meeples Games (3727 California SW). All welcome, first-time players included!

LISTENING TO GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP: 6:30 pm, ongoing weekly group for people experiencing grief – participate once, occasionally, or every week. Fee; book a spot here. (4034 California SW)

HIGH-SCHOOL SPORTS: Here’s who’s playing at home: At 7 pm, West Seattle HS‘s volleyball team hosts Bishop Blanchet (3000 California SW).

MONDAY NIGHT TRIVIA X 3: Three places to play tonight! 7 pm at The Good Society (California/Lander) … 7 and 8 pm Sporcle Pub Quiz at Three 9 Lounge (4505 39th SW), 21+ … 7:30 pm with QuizFix at The Skylark (3803 Delridge Way SW)

ALKI MEDITATION: Doors open at 6:45 for 7 pm meditation at Alki UCC (6115 SW Hinds).

POOL TOURNAMENT: Play in The Corner Pocket‘s weekly pool tournament starting at 7 pm. $10 buy-in. (4302 SW Alaska)

FAUNTLEROY MEDITATION: South-end Monday night meditating – free weekly Zen sitting/meditation in the chapel at Fauntleroy UCC (9140 California SW), 7 pm-8:30 pm.

JAZZ AT THE ALLEY: Live music with The Westside Jazz Trio, 8 pm at The Alley (behind 4509 California SW), 21+, no cover.

MONDAY KARAOKE 9 pm Mondays, sing karaoke at Talarico’s Pizzeria (4718 California SW).

Thanks to EVERYONE who sends info for our calendar; if you have something to add or cancel (or otherwise update), please send the info to westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!

CAN YOU HELP? After-school educator seeking snack donations

If kids are hungry, it’s harder for them to learn. A local educator hopes you can help prevent that problem among the students with whom she works. Sent by Cheyanne Chadwick:

I run an after-school program at West Seattle Elementary that focuses on STEM skills through project-based learning. It’s been an incredible experience! As part of the program, I serve my students a snack to fuel the young scholars between lunch and dinner. However, I’ve encountered a challenge I need help with.

Last year, a 5th-grade student left the after-school program because she was hungry. A single bag of popcorn, crackers, or veggie sticks wasn’t enough to satisfy her growing body until dinner. And she wasn’t the only one. I hear from students daily about wanting more and have observed the distracted, lethargic behavior that comes from hunger. It makes sense because 80% of students at WSE are eligible for free lunch.

It’s unacceptable to me that a student misses out on free STEM education because of hunger. This year, I am working to provide more snacks for my students. This is a significant expense, made more challenging by expanding my program into TWO after-school classes (one for 2nd/3rd graders and one for 4th/5th graders), which means I’ll be serving twice as many students.

I hope West Seattle residents might have the means and ability to donate some individually packaged snacks (ideas and suggestions below). I’m happy to pick up in the West Seattle area if folks email me at cheyanne.chadwick@stempaths.org, or they can drop off items at the front office of West Seattle Elementary (just tell the office assistants it’s for Cheyanne).

Regarding dietary restrictions, most of my students can’t have pork, so items with gelatin should be avoided.

Donations at any time:
Veggie straws
Goldfish crackers
Pirate’s Booty
Fruit leathers (check for gelatin)
Animal crackers
Fruit snacks (check for gelatin)
Z-bars
Nutri-Grain bars
Pretzel crisps
Baked chips
Donations at specific times (to prevent spoilage due to surplus):
Apples or apple slices
Baby carrots
Bananas
String cheese
Yogurt cups

WSB readers have helped Cheyanne’s students before – most recently, with a request for a local baker to help with a science project: “I was blown away by the number of folks who reached out! West Seattle is such a fantastic place to live, and I’m very, very grateful.”

TRAFFIC CAMS, WEATHER, TRANSIT, ROAD WORK: Monday begins

September 29, 2025 6:00 am
|    Comments Off on TRAFFIC CAMS, WEATHER, TRANSIT, ROAD WORK: Monday begins
 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle traffic alerts

6:00 AM: Good morning! It’s Monday, September 29, 2025.

WEATHER + SUNRISE/SUNSET

The forecast for today has rain, haze, fog as possibilities, high in the low 60s. Sunrise will be at 7:06 am; sunset, at 6:52 pm.

SCHOOL-TRAFFIC ALERT

-As we’ve been reporting, South Seattle College (WSB sponsor) starts its fall quarter today, so 16th SW on Puget Ridge will be a lot busier than it’s been.

ROAD WORK & NEW ALL-WAY STOP

-Last reminder that Oregon/44th is now an all-way stop.

59th SW in Alki is closed for the school-construction zone; we’ll check on progress this wee.

-“Natural drainage” construction closing the east end of Sylvan Way is under way.

-Regionally, the first expressway mile of Highway 509 – explained here – is tolled starting today.

TRANSIT TODAY

Metro buses – On regular schedule and routes today.

Washington State Ferries – WSF has three-boat service on the Triangle Route, with M/V Kittitas, M/V Issaquah, and M/V Sealth. Vessel Watch will show you which boat is where.

Water TaxiRegular West Seattle service; summer/early fall schedule, with later runs on Friday and Saturday nights through October 10.

SPOTLIGHT TRAFFIC CAMERAS

High Bridge – Here’s the main camera, followed by the Fauntleroy-end camera:

Low Bridge – Here’s the view looking west. Also note, maritime-opening info is again available via X (ex-Twitter):

1st Avenue South Bridge:

Delridge cameras: In addition to the one below (Delridge/Genesee), cameras are also at Delridge/Juneau, Delridge/Henderson, Delridge/Oregon, and video-only (so you have to go to the map), Delridge/Holden and Delridge/Thistle.

MORE TRAFFIC CAMS: All functioning traffic cams citywide are here (including links to live video for most); for a quick scan of West Seattle and vicinity-relevant cameras, see this WSB page.

See a problem on the bridges/streets/paths/water? Please text or call our hotline (when you can do it safely, and after you’ve reported to authorities if they’re not already on scene) – 206-293-6302. Thank you!