day : 30/03/2026 9 results

Mixing math and mentoring: ‘Math with the Pack’ at Westside School

(WSB photos)

Speaking of bowling – that factored into one of the math games and puzzles that were part of the first-ever “Math with the Pack” at Westside School (WSB sponsor) in Arbor Heights.

The Pack is a reference to the “Wolfpacks” program at Westside School involving students in all its grades, Pre-K through 8th, getting together at least monthly in 20 multi-age “packs,” for what the school describes as “fun activities and conversations to build community and belonging.” For “Math with the Pack” afternoon, younger and older buddies – many separated by three grades – paired up for math challenges set up in rooms around the school.

Each student got a passport that was stamped as they completed challenges – many of which incorporated familiar objects like playing cards and dice.

Along with solving the challenge, the students had to be quick studies in learning each one’s rules and goal, so they could complete it in time to get to the next one.

This all didn’t come together on the spur of the moment – Westside tells us “Math with the Pack” had been in the works for a year!

The reward at the end was a slice of pie – originally meant to be in honor of Pi Day on March 14, because the event’s original date was Friday, March 13, but snow truncated that day so “Math with the Pack” – and pie – was delayed to the following week. (One of the challenges, by the way, was Pi Memorization.) The event itself was memorable enough, Westside hopes to make it a community-wide event eventually.

P.S. While visiting Westside, we learned they have some openings for next school year; if potentially interested, go here to find out about the school and see how to visit for a tour.

ON A ROLL: Bowling benefit up next for new West Seattle Special Olympics

Though it’s two months away, a fun(draiser) for the new West Seattle Special Olympics organization is looking for early involvement – here’s the announcement explaining how you can jump in!

Special Olympics Washington is making its return to West Seattle — and the community is invited to be part of the launch.

A Community Bowling Fundraiser will take place on Saturday, May 30th from 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM at West Seattle Bowl, bringing together neighbors, families, and local businesses for a fun and meaningful morning. This event marks the start of a new, year-round program supporting athletes with intellectual and developmental disabilities right here in West Seattle. Participants can sign up as individuals, form teams, or sponsor a lane to help build something lasting in the community. All proceeds directly support local athletes. Learn more and register at westseattleso.com.

SIGNAGE ALERT: ‘No Turn on Red’ added at 35th/Trenton

Hard to see in the evening sun’s glare (sorry, got there at a bad time), but the sign in the middle – looking west on SW Trenton from just east of 35th SW – says NO TURN ON RED. SDOT has added that sign in many places but this is notable because it’s for the stretch of Trenton affected by the just-started rerouting of buses from Barton to Trenton. Nearby resident Juanita sent the tip:

FYI, a No Right Turn On Red sign has been added to the intersection of SW Trenton at 35th. Hopefully we can get a left turn signal installed on 35th making the turn onto SW Trenton. It wasn’t so bad over the weekend, but this morning was really touch and go when there was a 21 trying to make the right onto SW Trenton and back-to-back Cs trying to make the right.

Also, drivers need to be especially careful approaching the intersection of SW Trenton and 32nd. Yesterday we were getting ready to make the left turn onto 32nd and saw the C approaching at the last minute and were fortunately able to stop.

As we’ve reported, the traffic switch from Barton to Trenton is because of the repaving work that is scheduled to start soon in the bus-layover zone along the north edge of Roxhill Park. The rerouting started early so that it would coincide with Metro‘s spring “service change.”

FOLLOWUP: 93-year-old man out of jail after allegedly taking wife from care center at gunpoint

Another followup on an incident we covered over the weekend: A 93-year-old man arrested after allegedly threatening a local care center’s staff at gunpoint before leaving with his wife, described as a dementia patient who lived there. He was booked into jail late Friday night and released Sunday night. He had a court hearing in the meantime where a judge found probable cause to investigate him for assault. The King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office asked that he be referred for involuntary treatment; the judge released him on personal recognizance with no-contact orders for three people and for Quail Park of West Seattle in The Junction, where it happened. Prosecutors will decide whether to file charges. Here’s the narrative from police as included in the probable-cause documents.

I spoke with an employee at the care facility (who) stated that there has been an ongoing issue between (arrestee, his wife, staff).

(Employee) provided the following information. (The couple) both began residing at Quail Park in approximately January. (Husband) was deemed to be competent to care for himself and moved out shortly after. It was determined that (wife) was not able to care for herself due to a Dementia diagnosis. (Employee) described her as “pleasantly confused” and stated that she needed assistance with remembering to eat and other daily life tasks. He stated that (husband) was unable to assist her in these efforts. He stated that (wife)’s daughter had Power of Attorney for (wife) and decided to have (wife) remain at the facility.

According to (staff), (husband) has come to the facility on multiple prior occasions to visit with (wife) (at least two incidents were documented under SPD 2026-050250 and 2026-017194). They stated that during those visits (husband) was “verbally aggressive” and expressed his intent to remove (wife) from the facility. Staff enforced their rules for retaining (wife) and limiting (husband)’s contact with her. During one of those incidents, (husband) stated that he was going to come back with weapons and kill (employee).

Today, at approximately 1325 hours, (husband) was at the facility visiting with (wife). (husband), again, attempted to remove (wife) from the facility.

One staff member attempted to stop (husband). (husband) responded by pulling out a firearm and making multiple statements expressing his intent to leave with (wife). One of the statements was, “I’m going to get her out of here one way or another”. (Employee) stated that (husband) did not point the gun at her, but he waved it around and held it by his side. She said that she felt threatened by his actions and that she believed “he was going to shoot me.” (Staff) then ran outside and hid behind a car.

(Another staffer) stated that observed(husband) in an agitated state and observed him holding the firearm. She expressed significant fear and stated that she ducked down behind her desk and hid during the majority of the incident.

(Employee) stated that he observed (husband) remove a small black handgun from his right front pocket. He stated that (husband) expressed his intent to leave the facility with his wife and pointed the firearm directly at (employee)’s chest. He was within approximately fifteen feet of (employee) at that time, with no barriers in-between them. (husband) had made threats to harm (employee) in the past. (employee) stated that he believed (husband) was going to shoot him.

(husband) then left the facility with his wife. (wife) did not appear to be forcefully removed by (husband). She seemed to be in a confused state and made statements about wanting to go home.

(husband) was located and taken into custody by King County Sheriff’s Deputies while enroute to his residence. He was taken into custody without resistance. A small black Ruger handgun was located on his person. The firearm was loaded and two additional loaded magazines were recovered from him…

The husband has no criminal record; conditions of release also include that he not have deadly weapons – his lawyer says he has none besides the one allegedly used in this incident – and that he not drive.

FOLLOWUP: What Councilmember Saka says about Sunday’s encampment violence

(Sunday traffic-camera image of response at 35th/Alaska)

The three men attacked in what police describe as a “violent robbery” at an encampment near the east side of 35th/Alaska remain hospitalized today. We covered the incident for hours on Sunday, and, noting that it happened on city-owned parkland, sought comment today from District 1 City Councilmember Rob Saka. Here’s the statement we received, which also touches on the other city-land-encampment incident we covered a short time earlier:

I was horrified to hear about the robbery and assault in an encampment at Rotary Viewpoint Park yesterday, and I want to thank the Seattle Police Department for their quick response. Violence is never acceptable, especially in public spaces like our city parks where people should feel safe. Unfortunately, that has not been the reality at this park for some time.

Over the last two years, my office has consistently escalated community concerns in the Triangle neighborhood to the Unified Care Team, the agency responsible for remediating unsanctioned encampments, while also pushing for stronger responses when services are repeatedly declined by these individuals.

Recent incidents, including the fire near The Home Depot along Sylvan Way, show that our city clearly needs to do more, and I look forward to working with the Mayor, my Council colleagues, the Unified Care Team, and regional partners to expand shelter options and address these issues.

We have also inquired with Mayor Katie Wilson‘s office regarding when we’ll get an announcement regarding the hundreds of new shelter spaces expected to open around Seattle within the next two months or so.

On eve of new Seattle Public Schools superintendent’s West Seattle visit, WSHS PTSA sounds alarm about possible staff cuts

Tomorrow night (Tuesday, March 31), new Seattle Public Schools Superintendent Ben Shuldiner is scheduled to make the West Seattle stop on his districtwide community-engagement tour. One of the issues he is likely hear about: Prospective staffing cuts at West Seattle High School. Though enrollment at WSHS continues to grow – as we’ve reported, portable classrooms have been added to hold everyone – there is concern the district is basing its decisions on faulty data. The West Seattle High School PTSA is leading a campaign to help get this message to district leadership. The following is from a letter they’re sending to the superintendent:

We are members of the West Seattle High School PTSA and our broader community. Together, we ask you to meet with the West Seattle High School’s SEA (Seattle Education Association) representatives regarding their request to discuss the projected enrollment calculations that will cause cuts in our school staffing and make it unfeasible for our school to implement a functioning Master Schedule for the 2026-2027 school year.

SPS’s current enrollment calculations indicate that WSHS will lose teachers, classes and education supports in the 2026-2027 school year that are essential to the academic success, access to equity and emotional well-being of our kids. For many students, these educators and opportunities are the reason they come to school.

The prospect that WSHS may lose art and CTE classes, our care coordinator and social worker, and that all subjects may be overenrolled due to SPS’s enrollment projects is very frustrating. The enrollment estimates on which SPS is considering these steps seem to ignore the following.

– Madison Middle School (our main feeder) currently has 40 more students in their 8th grade class compared to the previous year.
– There are 65 students on the WSHS waitlist, currently.
– SPS is projecting that WSHS will have 10 fewer students in 2026-2027.
– The projected 1 teacher to 180 students class size ratio is well above the 1 to 150 figure in the SEA Collective Bargaining Agreement and would not permit the creation of a functioning master schedule.

West Seattle High School has been over-enrolled and SPS has not adjusted our FTEs appropriately many times over the past decade. The West Seattle High School community appreciates the challenges of determining how to fund schools before knowing final enrollments. However, we are discouraged by the consistent inability of SPS’s budget development and re-allocation processes to provide adequate staffing and resources to our school. As [a letter from teachers] notes, we believe a root cause of this issue is the opaque data and projections used to make these estimates.

Recently, when WSHS enrollment has been miscalculated or our school’s schedules have been changed without consultation, our students, parents and teachers have attended SPS Board meetings and taken other means to share our experiences. We would all much rather be focused on educating our children and continuing to nurture our community, but we will make
ourselves heard again if necessary. We are aware that other schools may experience greater underfunding due to this situation than WSHS. However, we believe that continuing to share our perspective about the flaws in the budget allocation process should benefit the whole SPS community.

Respectfully, we urge you to grant the WSHS SEA representatives’ request for a meeting to discuss and mitigate our school’s enrollment projections and budget allocations. Further, we hope this situation is an opportunity for SPS to provide greater transparency regarding the data and assumptions that drive a budgeting process that has undermined student success at WSHS and other schools across the district for many years. We would welcome the opportunity to discuss these matters further.

WSHS is not alone in facing potential cuts, as the district is continuing to work toward a balanced budget; WSHS PTSA president Paul Bugala tells WSB, “The WSHS PTSA is very aware that other schools will be worse off if the SPS budget process follows its course. As the letter notes, we hope giving our perspective about the enrollment projection process and amplifying the voices of our teachers will be helpful for the whole SPS community.”

SUPERINTENDENT’S TUESDAY EVENT: Regardless of your interest in/issue with SPS, all are welcome at the superintendent’s Tuesday night event, 6:30 pm at West Seattle Elementary (6760 34th SW).

Here’s what’s up for your West Seattle Monday, featuring fog views!

(Photo sent by Vaughan)

Thanks to everyone who sent photos of this morning’s fog! We’ve interspersed a few with today’s list of highlights, most (but not all!) from our West Seattle Event Calendar:

FREE TAX HELP: 11 am-4 pm drop-in help at Alki Masonic Center. (4736 40th SW)

BABY STORY TIME: Noon at Southwest Library (9010 35th SW). Free.

‘SOLUTIONS, NOT RESOLUTIONS’: Weekly speaker series continues with 1 pm presentation on “Hospice 101” at Brookdale West Seattle (4611 35th SW). Our calendar listing explains how to RSVP.

CITY COUNCIL BRIEFING MEETING: During today’s 2 pm City Council briefing meeting, you’ll hear councilmembers’ regular weekly individual updates. The agenda explains how to watch.

(Sent by WSB contributor Anne Higuera, West Seattle view from a ferry)

HIGH-SCHOOL SPORTS: Home game for West Seattle HS softball vs. Seattle Academy, 4 pm at Nino Cantu SW Athletic Complex (2801 SW Thistle); also at 4 pm, WSHS boys’ tennis team plays Ballard at Lincoln Park (8011 California SW).

ART SALON AT C & P: 4-6 pm, “a safe space for creative people to gather” at C & P Coffee (5612 California SW; WSB sponsor), bring your project!

FREE HOMEWORK HELP: Drop-in assistance for K-12 students at High Point Library (3411 SW Raymond), 4-5:45 pm.

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

‘LISTENING TO GRIEF’ SUPPORT GROUP: 6:30 pm, ongoing weekly group gathering for people experiencing grief – you can participate once, weekly, or occasionally. Fee; before you go, RSVP/register here. (4034 California SW)

MEDITATE IN ALKI: Monday night meditation at Alki UCC, doors open at 6:45, meditation at 7. (6115 SW Hinds)

MONDAY NIGHT TRIVIA X 2: Two venues for trivia/quiz tonight! 7 pm at The Good Society (California/Lander) … 7:30 pm with QuizFix at The Skylark (3803 Delridge Way SW).

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

MEDITATION IN FAUNTLEROY: Free weekly Zen sitting/meditation in the chapel at Fauntleroy UCC (9140 California SW), 7 pm-8:30 pm.

(Sent by SD in North Admiral)

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

KARAOKE AT TALARICO’S: 9 pm Mondays, karaoke at Talarico’s Pizzeria (4718 California SW).

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

WHALES: Orcas in view again to start the week

Lots of opportunities to see whales lately – and you have another one this morning: Kersti Muul tells WSB orcas are northbound right now, seen passing Southworth about 15 minutes ago. Thanks to everyone who’s sent photos and video of recent sightings; please let us know if you see whales today too!

TRAFFIC, WEATHER, TRANSIT: Monday info

6:01 AM: Good morning! Welcome to Monday, March 30, 2026.

WEATHER + SUNRISE/SUNSET

Sunny, high near 50. Sunrise at 6:51 am; sunset at 7:36 pm.

TRAFFIC REMINDER

SW Trenton east of 35th SW – where parking-lane lines were moved over the weekend (photo above) – is now the bus route to Westwood Village rather than Barton, because of upcoming repaving for the latter. The project page explains the changes. Otherwise, in transit …..

TRANSIT TODAY

Metro buses – Remember that Saturday also brought Metro‘s twice-yearly service change.

West Seattle Water TaxiRegular West Seattle service, winter schedule through April 10.

Washington State Ferries – Check WSF’s alert page for last-minute changes. Note these changes already planned for late tonight:

Reminder – Late Monday night and into Tuesday morning, we need to adjust the Fauntleroy/Vashon/Southworth schedule to make repairs on the Southworth terminal.

12:15 a.m. Vashon to Southworth sailing – delayed until 12:30 a.m. and will go directly to Fauntleroy
1:30 a.m. Vashon to Southworth sailing – cancelled

STADIUM ZONE

The Mariners‘ season-opening homestand continues, with a 6:40 pm game vs. the Yankees.

SPOTLIGHT TRAFFIC CAMERAS

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

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

1st Avenue South Bridge (fully open but 25 mph speed limit):

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 trouble 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!