West Seattle, Washington
31 Wednesday
Last year, The Mount (WSB sponsor) presented “Hallelujah Lights” for the first time. This year, an encore, but earlier in the season – tomorrow (Thursday) night. If you haven’t already seen it in our Event Calendar or Holiday Guide, here’s the invitation:
Providence Mount St. Vincent’s Hallelujah Lights is a heartfelt tribute to those we love and remember. It’s the perfect way to welcome the holiday season and celebrate the bonds that unite us.
Enjoy an evening filled with live music by Starry Crowns Trio, soothing melodies, and the sweet taste of cocoa. Whether you come for the music, the memories, or the sense of togetherness, Hallelujah Lights offers something for everyone.
Event Details
Free to attend
Date: November 20, 2025
Time: 4:30–5:30 p.m. Location: Providence Mount St. Vincent, by the Singing Tree, SE corner front lawn
We look forward to sharing this magical evening with you!
Ten years after Khalid Agour opened Itto’s Tapas at the corner of California/Genesee on the north edge of The Junction, he’s inviting you to help him celebrate. This Friday (November 21st) Itto’s Tapas will offer $10 sangria, $10 chicken brochette, free ice cream, and a $100 gift-card giveaway. He says, “We want to thank our tight-knit community for all the love they showed us, and we’re looking forward to many more years to come.” Hours will be 4 pm to 10 pm. (Last year Agour added a sibling for Itto’s Tapas next door, wine bar Itto’s Vino.)
(Photo courtesy SPU/WM: Tool Library’s Sean Isom and WM’s Anna Seweryniak)
Every Wednesday, as featured in our Event Calendar and daily highlight lists, the West Seattle Tool Library hosts a Fix-It event, to which you can bring a tool and get help fixing it so you don’t have to toss it. That’s why Seattle Public Utilities and Waste Management just gave the Tool Library a $1,000 “ReThink Waste” grant, one of five small grants just announced for Seattle organizations that have projects/programs “to reduce waste or create new pathways for sustainability.” That’s not all the Tool Library offers; it’s been open for 15 years, as a community resource, on the northeast side of Youngstown Cultural Arts Center (4408 Delridge Way SW). And if you want to check out the next Fix-It event, that starts tonight at 5:30 pm!
If you have food and/or coats/jackets to donate, but haven’t been able to haul the item(s) to a local donation site yet, the most convenient drive of the season is coming up Saturday (November 22):
The Caudle Family‘s annual drive-up/ride-up donation drive in the lot behind Hope Lutheran started with son Atticus organizing it as a middle-schooler in 2020 (with almost a ton of donations!); this year, it’s happening earlier than past years, as he’ll be home from college to be part of it. Just bring your donation(s) to the lot, entrance on the north side of SW Oregon just east of 42nd SW, 10 am-3 pm Saturday!
When Mayor-Elect Katie Wilson gave her first post-election speech last Thursday (WSB coverage here), she said transition details would be forthcoming this week. The announcement of her transition-team leadership just arrived, and two West Seattleites are in leadership roles. Here’s the announcement in its entirety:
Mayor-Elect Katie Wilson today announced the local leaders who will guide her transition.
Transition Director Andrés Mantilla and Transition Co-Chairs Karen Estevenin, Tiffani McCoy, Quynh Pham, and Brian Surratt will contribute their extensive knowledge of government, business, labor, housing, and community development to help ensure the new administration is set up for success immediately upon taking office. They will also convene a larger transition team to gather feedback, identify priorities, and help equip Mayor-Elect Wilson with the tools and relationships she needs to execute her vision as the next mayor of Seattle.
“I ran for mayor on the vision that we can tackle big challenges, address our affordability crisis, and make our city a great place to live, work, and raise a family. Now it’s time to get to work,” said Mayor-Elect Wilson. “I’m so grateful to the Transition Director and Co-Chairs who have stepped up to lend their deep expertise in government, business, labor, housing, and community development, and help me put that vision into action.”
The Transition Director and Co-Chairs will engage community members to identify short, medium, and long-term priorities to advance the Mayor-Elect’s vision. The full list of transition committee members will be announced in the coming weeks and available on the transition webpage.
Transition Director:
Andrés Mantilla
Uncommon Bridges
Andrés brings over 20 years of experience in facilitation, public policy, economic development, and engaging diverse stakeholders and communities. His extensive experience working closely with policymakers and elected officials includes work supporting the administrations of Seattle Mayors Greg Nickels and Jenny Durkan, as well as serving as Director of the Department of Neighborhoods, where he led community engagement initiatives for the City across transportation, housing, and homelessness initiatives. Andrés has directed projects focused on homelessness policy development, engagement, and grant distributions. He serves on the Board of Directors for Bellwether Housing.“Successful leadership is about building consensus and working across diverse groups to turn a bold vision into concrete outcomes. I look forward to helping shape a transition that supports the Mayor-Elect in achieving her vision of an affordable, accessible, and innovative city.”
Transition Co-Chair:
Karen Estevenin
Executive Director, PROTEC17
Karen has proudly served as the Executive Director of PROTEC17—a labor union representing more than 10,000 public-sector workers across Washington and Oregon—since May 2019. Together with talented staff, committed member-leaders, and community and labor partners, she advances collective action to ensure social and economic justice in workplaces and communities. Over the past two decades, she has dedicated her career to the labor movement, working with CWA/WashTech, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) 3000, and Teamsters 117. In her current role, Karen leads the union’s vision, strategic direction, and day-to-day operations. She serves on the Board of the Seattle Social Housing Developer as Labor liaison, and is a Trustee for MLK Labor.“Effective governance begins with a supported, equipped, and engaged workforce. I’m grateful for the opportunity to contribute to this important moment of change, and I deeply appreciate the trust placed in me throughout the process. Together, I’m confident we can lay the foundation for a stronger, more collaborative future.”
Transition Co-Chair:
Tiffani McCoy
Co-Executive Director, House Our Neighbors
Tiffani is the Co-Executive Director and Co-Founder of House Our Neighbors, which advocates for social housing, climate action and connected communities. She served as campaign manager for the Yes on I-135 campaign, which established the first social housing developer in the United States, and for the Yes on Prop 1A campaign, which secured funding for the Seattle Social Housing Developer. Before co-creating HON, she worked at Real Change as the organization’s Advocacy Director. She currently serves as the Board President of Washingtonians for Public Banking.“Seattle’s residents deserve access to stable, affordable homes. I’m grateful for the opportunity to help guide a transition that takes a more coordinated approach to addressing the city’s housing needs by prioritizing affordability, housing production, concrete progress on homelessness, and a commitment to social housing.”
Transition Co-Chair:
Quynh Pham
Executive Director, Friends of Little Saigon
Quynh is the Executive Director of Friends of Little Saigon (FLS), a community development organization dedicated to preserving and enhancing Little Saigon’s cultural, economic, and historical vitality. Coming from a small business family, Quynh is passionate about supporting small immigrant- and refugee-owned businesses and fostering community-driven solutions for health, safety, and well-being. Her 14 years of nonprofit development experience have shaped local policy, advanced opportunities for Southeast Asian artists and cultural practitioners, and increased investments in BIPOC initiatives around equitable development and small business resiliency. Quynh currently serves on the boards of Historic South Downtown, Crescent Collaborative, and the Race and Social Equity Taskforce. She is also the mother of two toddlers, who continue to fuel her drive to ensure they grow up in a culturally rich, accessible, and diverse community.“Our neighborhood business districts are the backbone of Seattle’s local economy and community identity. I’m excited to support a transition that uplifts small businesses, strengthens local communities, and ensures every part of the city benefits when our economy grows.”
Transition Co-Chair:
Brian Surratt
President and CEO, Greater Seattle Partners
Brian is a multi-sector executive with 25 years of experience driving economic development and cultivating partnerships across private and public sectors and diverse communities. Currently, Brian is the CEO of Greater Seattle Partners, a private/public partnership focused on attracting new business, promoting international trade, and growing our major industries for the region. Previously, Brian was the Director of the City of Seattle’s Office of Economic Development, where he oversaw small business, workforce, key industry, foreign-direct investment, and anti-displacement programs and strategies, and negotiated the city’s $1.2 billion development agreement to build Climate Pledge Arena. During his time in the Mayor’s Office of Policy and Innovation, Brian served as the policy lead in Seattle’s effort to raise the minimum wage to $15 per hour.“Seattle’s long-term stability relies on an economic strategy that lifts workers and supports small businesses and our leading industries. I’m honored to support a transition committed to transparent governance, economic justice and opportunity, and high-growth workforce pathways that anchor prosperity across the city.”
When transition director Andrés Mantilla led the Department of Neighborhoods during the Jenny Durkan administration, we identified him in coverage as a West Seattle resident, so we asked her spokesperson today if he still is, and they said yes, adding that Surratt is a West Seattleite too.
P.S. The transition website mentioned above includes this announcement as well as an email link if you’re interested in working for the new administration and a form link if you have a request for the mayor-elect.
The sun’s out, and orcas are out there. Kersti Muul tells us a “large group of orcas is heading northbound from north end of Vashon Island,” likely from at least three families of transient orcas. Let us know if you see them!
(Great Blue Heron, photographed by Manuel Valdes)
Many possibilities on our Wednesday list, mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar and Holiday Guide (and if we’re missing something – westseattleblog@gmail.com – thanks!):
THANKSGIVING ORDERING DEADLINE: Today is the last day to order The Skylark‘s prepared-for-you-to-take-home feast – see the top of our Holiday Guide for details and other deadlines.
WINTER CLOTHING DRIVE: Drop donations of warm clothing in the bin at Dave Newman State Farm Insurance Agency (3435 California SW; WSB sponsor), 9 am-5 pm weekdays.
WALKING FOR WELL-BEING: 10 am Wednesday walks leave from 47th/Fauntleroy (this is our weekly last-minute reminder, so would-be walkers can set their calendars for next Wednesday morning!).
SOUTH SEATTLE COLLEGE FOOD TRUCK: As previewed here, it’s open to the public, 10:30 am-12:30 pm at the campus clock tower, and today culinary students running the truck are serving Polynesian-inspired cuisine. (6000 16th SW)
TODDLER READING TIME AT PAPER BOAT: 10:30 am at the bookstore. (4522 California SW)
AMERICAN MAH JONGG: 2-4 pm, play at the newly reopened Missing Piece (4707 California SW).
FREE ALL-AGES MOVIE: Vote on three options, and enjoy free popcorn, 2:30 pm at Southwest Library (9010 35th SW).
FREE KIDS’ ART WORKSHOP: With Rec’N The Streets at Delridge Library (5423 Delridge Way SW), 3 pm.
DINE-OUT FUNDRAISER: Monthly fundraiser at The Neighborhood (6503 California SW), this month with part of the proceeds going to Our Lady of Guadalupe School, 4-9 pm.
DROP-IN HOMEWORK HELP: Volunteers are ready to help K-12 students 4-7:30 pm at High Point Library (3411 SW Raymond).
ROCK BAND GAMING AT MR. B’S MEAD CENTER: 5-10 pm, weekly event in South Delridge! (9444 Delridge Way SW)
MONOPOLY NIGHT: Play at Delridge Community Center! Dinner provided, prizes up for grabs. 5:30 pm. (4501 Delridge Way SW)
FIX-IT WORKSHOP: Fix your broken item instead of throwing it out! Weekly event, free (donations appreciated), 5:30-7:30 pm at West Seattle Tool Library (4408 Delridge Way SW, northeast side of Youngstown Cultural Arts Center).
POTTERINGS OPEN STUDIO: 6-8 pm, drop in and create! If you want some inspiration, this month’s spotlight project is a trio of personalized holiday-tree ornaments. (3400 Harbor SW)
WEST SEATTLE URBANISM: You’re invited to this 6 pm meetup at Great American Diner/Bar (4752 California SW).
WEDNESDAY NIGHT RUN, WITH BROOKS DEMOS: Get moving in the middle of the week – the weekly 6:15 pm group run with West Seattle Runner (2743 California SW; WSB sponsor) is tonight – all welcome, regardless what pace you run at! Bonus tonight, Brooks shoe demos – try them out for your run!
LIVE MUSIC AT THE LOCOL: 6:30 pm. 21+. Rotating performer lineup. (7902 35th SW)
MUSIC BINGO: Weekly music bingo at at The Good Society (California/Lander), 7 pm.
KUNDALINI YOGA: 7 pm at Inner Alchemy Studio/Sanctuary (3618 SW Alaska). $35.
TRIVIA x 6: We have SIX West Seattle trivia spots on our Wednesday list: 6:30 and 7:30 pm, two sessions of Music Quiz at Easy Street Records (4559 California SW), free, all ages … at Future Primitive Beach Bar (2536 Alki SW), 7 pm, free to play … 7 pm at Admiral Pub (2306 California SW), free to play … Larry’s Tavern (3405 California SW) has Wednesday trivia at 7:30 pm … Quiz Night also starts at 8 pm at Beveridge Place Pub (6413 California SW) … and at 8:30 pm, it’s trivia with Phil T at Talarico’s (4718 California SW), all ages until 10 pm.
WEST SEATTLE FOOD BANK BENEFIT @ TALARICO’S TRIVIA: This week and next, bring food and/or money to Talarico’s aforementioned 8:30 pm trivia, to support the West Seattle Food Bank!
SKYLARK OPEN MIC: West Seattle’s longest-running open mic! 7:30 pm signups for the weekly event at The Skylark. (3803 Delridge Way SW)
KARAOKE AT ADMIRAL PUB: Sing at the pub starting at 8:45 pm. (2306 California SW)
Planning something that’s open to community participation/observation? Please send us info so we can add it to West Seattle’s only comprehensive event calendar (and Holiday Guide too, if it’s seasonal)! westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!
Family and friends are remembering Kathleen Sweeney and sharing this remembrance with her community:
Our beloved ‘sister’ Kathleen Sabra Sweeney, age 72, of Seattle, passed away suddenly on November 13, 2025. She will be desperately and forever missed.
Kathleen “Kathy,” “Ratty,” Sweeney was born in September 1953 to Charles and DoraMary, longtime West Seattle residents. Raised in West Seattle, she attended Chief Sealth International High School and attended South Seattle College for classes in areas of interest.
A public servant, Kathleen held various positions throughout her career; a few for the State of Washington, the majority with the City of Seattle Transportation Department, Signs and Markings Division. She took her role with the City very seriously, forging an encyclopedic knowledge of the City’s sign codes, processes, and protocols, offering her expertise and guidance to aid her community as needed and ensure public safety. She retired in June 2013.
Kathleen loved a good yard sale, sending cards in the mail, other people’s cats and dogs, beautiful gardens, wool socks, and talking on her rotary phone with friends for hours, often by regular standing appointment. She enjoyed antiquing, thrift stores, checking out new restaurants, and visits to Eastern Washington. Deeply committed to her community and loved ones, she “never met a stranger” and believed in supporting local charities. She was quick to help others, a genuine caretaker, and a “true angel” among us. She valued time with friends and loved ones and will be dearly missed by all.
She is survived by her brother, Michael “Spud” Sweeney, and very close life-long friends: Debbie Jackson, Hope Lauterstein, Shelley Barouh, Hannah Greer, and a community of very close neighbors and friends. She was preceded in death by her parents and brother, Jonathan Sweeney.
A celebration of life will be held in January 2026 in West Seattle – day and location to be announced.
If you would like to share photos, memories, and receive updates for details related to her celebration of life, please email: inmemoryofk@gmail.com or sign the guestbook at: www.emmickfunerals.com/obituaries/kathleen-sweeney
(WSB publishes West Seattle obituaries and memorial announcements by request, free of charge. Please email the text, and a photo if available, to westseattleblog@gmail.com)
6:00 AM: Good morning! It’s Wednesday, November 19, 2025.
WEATHER + SUNRISE/SUNSET
The forecast for today: Patchy morning fog, partly sunny, high in the low 50s. Sunrise will be at 7:21 am; sunset will be at 4:28 pm.
(Tuesday sunset photo by Carol Ann Joyce)
TRANSIT TODAY
Washington State Ferries – The Triangle Route is on a three-boat schedule, with M/V Cathlamet, M/V Kittitas (back from maintenance), and M/V Sealth. Vessel Watch will show you which boat is where; ferry alerts will update with any changes.
Metro buses – On regular schedule and routes.
Water Taxi – regular West Seattle service, fall/winter schedule.
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!
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