day : 18/01/2026 8 results

Survey, stats, safety, holiday-event recap, and other topics @ Alki Community Council’s first 2026 meeting

January 18, 2026 9:59 pm
|    Comments Off on Survey, stats, safety, holiday-event recap, and other topics @ Alki Community Council’s first 2026 meeting
 |   Neighborhoods | West Seattle news

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

The Alki Community Council heard the same Seattle Police stats on Thursday night as two other neighborhood groups earlier in the week – but unlike the other two groups, they got a delegation of five SPD employees. But crime/safety was only one of the meeting’s many topics.

ACC SURVEY: As noted here, the group circulated an online survey for Alki residents earlier in the week “to find out what’s important to neighbors,” said ACC president Charlotte Starck, who reported 173 responses had come in over three days. The “high-level snapshot” of those replies (see it here) included love for Alki’s natural beauty and concern about encampments/RVs (particularly residents in the east Alki area) as well as the lack of a community center. Starck talked about frequently fielding questions about why city-owned Alki Bathhouse is “so often empty.” (Alki Community Center, meantime, was converted to a child-care-only facility years ago and is currently closed even for that purpose because of the school construction next door.)

Regarding the open-ended final question on the survey, requesting a message for the mayor, the #1 theme “consistent, visible public-safety enforcement “so Alki feels safe day and night.” Also, “traffic speed, reckless driving, vehicle noise” comprise a problem for which survey respondents said they would like to see enforcement. (A question came up, does the Traffic Unit even exist? Brown confirmed – “yes, it does.” We’d add that you can hear them radioing in from enforcement spots including Admiral Way, West Marginal, 35th SW, and other places. Listen for call signs that start with “T,” though regular-duty officers can sometimes be heard too.)

Summed up, the ACC hopes to “work collaboratively to keep Alki safe, welcoming, and vibrant.” Now, on to those stats:

POLICE: Seattle Police had four uniformed officers at the meeting (three of whom said they hadn’t been to meetings before, including one who said he’d been on the force a year and at the Southwest Precinct just a few wweeks) plus interim Crime Prevention Coordinator Matt Brown (his position is a civilian job). Brown brought the same precinct-wide data presented at Tuesday’s Admiral Neighborhood Association meeting (WSB coverage here) and Fauntleroy Community Association meeting (WSB coverage here), saying total reported crime in West Seattle/South Park last year was down 19 percent. For Alki specifically, reported crime in 2025 was down 10 percent, 177 reported crimes, down from 200 – mostly property crime – both reports taken in person or filed online/by phone. Brown explained, “Any way that you report allows us to (include it in the data) and that enables us to ask for resources … your reports show us what you need.” One attendee said people are tired of reporting if they feel they’re not going to get a response; Brown said he regrets that, but begs people, please report it so they can get the resources. Even if you’re not sure – like maybe, maybe not shots fired – call in and report it. As we’ve reported before, Brown confirmed the non-emergency line does get answered part of the time now.

Why can’t you just set up an email account for minor reports? one attendee asked. That would be something to request from the city, Brown said. ‘

Then he went back to another crime category, noting 91 shots-fired calls confirmed in the precinct jurisdiction last year, and that’s down. But – this was information we hadn’t heard previously – the number of casings per incident is going up – 4 to 5 in 2023, last year about double that. Alki had 10 shots-fired incidents last year, no injuries, no deaths. Twice as much as a year earlier, though, with the highest amount in August. Working with Park Rangers to close off areas (like Don Armeni Boat Ramp) seemed to help, and they plan to do it again this year, Brown said.

Brown also talked about encampments and Mayor Wilson’s recent decision to put a Ballard cleanup on hold. The Unified Care Team will continue to work, evaluating and responding to encampments, though (as the mayor’s office told us earlier in the day). He also briefly addressed the drug-use policy misinterpretation that erupted recently (“nothing changed with the policy” is the true bottom line, he said). Has ICE been seen in the Alki area? one attendee asked. Short answer: No confirmed sightings.

TRANSITION TEAM MEMBER: South Seattle College student Russell McQuarrie-Means, a member of Mayor Katie Wilson‘s 60-person transition team (and featured here a year ago), said he wasn’t present to be a spokesperson for the mayor but to be an advocate “for all of you.” Starck asked McQuarrie-Means what youth are concerned about, since his official role on the team is as a student/youth adviser. He said they’re worried about ICE and about affordability, to mention two, declaring that this city is unaffordable for his generation,.

EMERGENCY HUBS: Another guest appearance was by Cindi Barker, a longtime volunteer with the Seattle Emergency Communication Hubs. The what? you ask. That was her point: “Did you know you have a disaster gathering place here on Alki?” In case of catastrophe, neighborhoods need to fend for themselves, at least for a while – as Barker pointed out, “there are 800,000 of us (residents), but only 204 firefighters on duty at any given time” – so it’ll be neighbors helping neighbors if disaster strikes. Know where your hub is and how you’d help. West Seattle and South Park have 15 hubs right now. “Why do I not know this?” asked one woman. “Because we’re not part of the city, don’t have a budget, etc.,” Barker replied. She explained simply how the hubs will help collect info post-disaster, so people can come to them and find out what’s going on if regular communication channels are disrupted – information circulation will be done with the help of amateur=radio operators in some cases. They’ll be able to communicate hub to hub, neighborhood to neighborhood, with white boards of info available. Find out more, including hub locations, by going here.

GIVEAWAYS AT POLAR BEAR SWIM: Vice president Zak Nyberg talked about the emergency blankets ACC gave away at the beach on New Year’s Day (see one in our coverage). Starck said next year they want to budget to give out even more.

ALKI HOLIDAY LIGHTS: Nyberg also recapped the biggest-yet holiday event held the weekend before Christmas – carolers, Santa, a DJ, drinks, food, and the Christmas Ship. “It was a really great event!” As shown in our coverage, there was a “wish wall,” and that was brought to this meeting so the wishes could be shared with attendees. The wishes were heartfelt “wonderful messages,” Starck daid.

NEW BANNERS: As first shown here Wednesday, new flags (banners) are up along Alki – “to bring back vitality and neighborhood identity, to celebrate the beauty of the place,” Starck said.

40 YEARS OF ACC: 2025 marked the 40th anniversary of the ACC. Starck said that pages on the ACC website celebrate and detail their history – look at the accomplishments page, for one.

STATUE OF LIBERTY PLAZA MAINTENANCE: For more than a decade and a half, the ACC has overseen the plaza’s basic maintenance contract with Seattle Parks, based on excess funds from the plaza’s publicly funded creation. Starck said there’s maybe eight years worth of funding left and it’s time to start talking about how to keep that going.

COMMUNITY GARDEN: Attendee Gretchen talked about the Beyers Bulldog Community Garden P-Patch in South Alki, featured here last year, saying volunteers want more people to get involved. They’ve received a Small Sparks city grant for some improvements – they’re having a meeting at 11 am January 24. (The P-Patch is at 54th/Edmunds.)

NEXT MEETING: The ACC usually meets on third Thursdays, 7 pm at Alki UCC (6115 SW Hinds), so February 19th is up next.

WEEK AHEAD: Sun’s not done. King tides almost are.

One more “week ahead” preview – this time, what’s in two types of forecasts:

SUN’S NOT DONE: Jen sent that photo of tonight’s sunset reflected off the downtown skyline. It’s a reminder that precipitation doesn’t return to the forecast until Thursday. Sunshine is expected tomorrow; then clouds are expected tp start their comeback, but “a chance of rain or snow” doesn’t appear until Thursday night. Temperatures are likely to remain in the normal range – upper 40s highs, upper 30s lows.

KING TIDES’ FINAL APPEARANCES: The morning high tides will be above 12 feet all week, peaking at 12.6 feet on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday mornings (January 22-24), then again on February 2nd, 3rd, and 4th, with the highest high tides dropping below 12 feet entirely by late March.

WEST SEATTLE CRIME WATCH: Package thief; drive-up car prowlers

Two reader reports in West Seattle Crime Watch:

PACKAGE THIEF: Christina says her porch on SW Orchard in Gatewood has been hit by package theft twice in the past week. They don’t have visuals of the first theft, but this is from the second one, at 4:38 am Saturday:

Christina says this car was used by the thief:

Christina adds, “Seems like there’s been an uptick in package theft in our area so sharing for awareness.” The initial placeholder number for the police report is T00049379.

DRIVE-UP CAR PROWLERS: Janna sent this video from Alki:

We had a well-coordinated attempted theft and car break-in, 59th Ave SW. Two cars:No plates. White Toyota Corolla. White Prius.

Two males, one white and one black, drove directly to our house (wrong way, SouthBound up the one way 59th ave sw). Parked, checked phone, pulled up to our SUV,

White male in Corolla walked down street to ping/alert other car (white Prius – unknown driver) to come assist. Walked our car specifically and then proceeded to beak window to gain access to car. Alarm spooked them and both cars fled up to Spokane Street.

Placeholder police report in this case is T00049226.

UPDATE: Fire response in North Admiral, but nothing found

4:51 PM: Seattle Fire has a “full response” headed for a possible house fire in the 1700 block of Sunset [vicinity map]. Updates to come.

4:53 PM: First crews on scene aren’t seeing signs of a fire so far, so they’re reducing the response to four units.

4:56 PM: The crews remaining at the scene are still looking for any evidence of a fire – still no flames, no smoke, no “heat signature.”

5:07 PM: They’ve finished investigating; still nothing found, so they’re demobilizing.

WEEK AHEAD: New venue for Morgan Community Association’s quarterly gathering

January 18, 2026 3:12 pm
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 |   Neighborhoods | West Seattle news

Among this week’s main events, the Morgan Community Association‘s quarterly gathering on Wednesday night, this time at a new venue – Alki Arts, the event venue/gallery at 6030 California SW. The full agenda (which includes a link if you’d rather attend online) is here. It includes updates related to Morgan Junction’s two big city projects-in-waiting – the park expansion’s future “skate dot”/all-wheels area, and the EV-charging lot – plus leadership election and a business spotlight. All welcome, 7 pm Wednesday (January 21); here’s our coverage of last quarter’s meeting, held in October.

CAN YOU HELP? Request for towel donations

January 18, 2026 1:48 pm
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 |   How to help | West Seattle news | West Seattle police

The Seattle Police Community Service Officers – who help people in a variety of circumstances – are coordinating this donation request that we were asked to share:

We are looking for:

Full-size shower towels for a local community shower.

Lightly used ok, but please ensure they are CLEAN.

Please email Jen for pickup: jennifer.tenorio@seattle.gov

Any questions, that’s also who to ask.

WEEK AHEAD: Two Washington State Ferries notes

The Triangle Route has had some scheduling changes in recent weeks because of boat trouble around the Washington State Ferries system, and one more is ahead. Tomorrow (Monday, January 19), WSF says that “Due to the timing of boat moves, the route will be on the two-boat schedule with the Kittitas and Cathlamet.” But it’s expecting the Fauntleroy-Vashon-Southworth route to return to regular three-boat service as of Tuesday (January 20).

(Photo by Theresa Arbow-O’Connor – WSF and Kitsap Transit vessels on Elliott Bay)

Wednesday is the day for WSF’s next two systemwide community meetings, both to be held online, one at noon and one at 6 pm; we’ve published the announcement before, but here’s WSF’s reminder:

This is your chance to share feedback and ask us questions. Each meeting will start with a short presentation that looks back at 2025 and previews our 2026 service. We’ll cover topics including new vessel construction, terminal upgrades needed for charging vessels, our Service Contingency Plan, workforce development efforts, our budget, and what to expect in the 2026 Washington legislative session.

Both meetings will cover the same topics, and most of the time will be dedicated to answering questions. Registration is required. To learn more and register, visit our Community Participation webpage.

WEST SEATTLE SUNDAY: 14 notes!

January 18, 2026 6:12 am
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 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

(Saturday sunset at Emma Schmitz Memorial Overlook – photo by Bob Burns)

On the third Sunday of the new year, here’s what’s happening today/tonight, mostly from the WSB West Seattle Event Calendar (where you’ll find more listings!):

SUNDAY FUNDAY RUNDAY: The Westies Run Club starts its 9 am run at Highland Park Corner Store today. (7789 Highland Park Way SW)

AMERICAN MAH JONGG: Weekly Sunday morning games at the new location of The Missing Piece (4707 California SW), 9:30 am.

SUNDAY MORNING MEDITATION: 9:30 am at Mama Be Well Healing Studio (4034 California SW).

WEST SEATTLE FARMERS’ MARKET: Open as usual on California SW between Oregon and Alaska, 10 am-2 pm, now in winter produce-and-products season – roots, greens, peppers, mushrooms, beans, garlic, apples, more – plus lots of baked goods, cheeses, meats, fish, prepared foods, condiments, pasta, more.

FREE NIA CLASS: Begins at 10:15 am; first class free if you pre-register. At Inner Alchemy Studio/Sanctuary. (3618 SW Alaska)

WEST SEATTLE TOOL LIBRARY: Need a tool but don’t need to, or can’t, buy it? You’ll probably be able to borrow it from the Tool Library, open 11 am-4 pm on the northeast side of Youngstown Cultural Arts Center. (4408 Delridge Way SW)

WEST SEATTLE RESIST: Back to the regular weekly West Seattle Resist Sunday sign-holding event, 11:30 am-1:30 pm. South of Farmers’ Market. (California SW and SW Alaska)

WELCOME ROAD WINERY: Spend part of your Sunday afternoon relaxing at this West Seattle tasting room (with a patio!) open 2-5 pm, kids and dogs welcome. (3804 California SW; WSB sponsor)

LIVE AT TIM’S: 2 pm, Korner Blues at Tim’s Tavern (9655 16th SW, White Center), all ages.

WINTER ART MARKET: First of two events today at Mr. B’s Mead Center – Winter Art Market with vendors, musicians, art, performances, food! 1-5 pm. (9444 Delridge Way SW)

WORKSHOP AT MR. B’S MEAD CENTER: 5:30 pm, Inner Canvas: A Journey in Vision Crafting, all ages, tickets here. (9444 Delridge Way SW)

ASTRA LUMINA: Celestially inspired light show on the grounds of the Seattle Chinese Garden at the north end of the South Seattle College (WSB sponsor) campus, 5:15 pm and onward tonight. Tickets and info here.

UNDERGROUND TRIVIA AT CORNER POCKET: 7:30 pm, free to play, win prizes! (4302 SW Alaska)

LIVE MUSIC AT THE ALLEY: 8-10 pm, wrap up your weekend with live music with the Triangular Jazztet at The Alley (behind 4509 California SW).

Are you planning, organizing, and/or publicizing something that we could add to the WSB community event calendar – one-time or recurring? Please email us the basic details – westseattleblog@gmail.com – thank you!