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2 neighborhood meetings, 2 book groups: West Seattle Monday highlights

October 8, 2012 11:34 am
|    Comments Off on 2 neighborhood meetings, 2 book groups: West Seattle Monday highlights
 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

(Leaves starting to turn! Thanks to Greg for sharing the photo)
Quick notes for what’s ahead tonight:

NORTH DELRIDGE NEIGHBORHOOD COUNCIL: Regular monthly meeting at 6:30 pm, Delridge Library (Brandon/Delridge). Agenda’s here – topics include the 26th Avenue SW Greenway.

EVENING BOOK GROUPS: The West Seattle Library book group meets at 6:45 tonight; this month’s book is “Half the Sky” by Nicholas Kristof. The Southwest Library book group also meets at 6:45, with this month’s book announced as “Year of the Flood” by Margaret Atwood.

PIGEON POINT NEIGHBORHOOD COUNCIL: Meeting tonight at 7 pm, Pathfinder K-8 school cafeteria.

NIGHTLIFE: Pub quiz night at Shadowland, 8 pm … Flat Earth Society at West 5 features Eric Eagle and Bill Herzog, 9 pm … which is also showtime for Karaoke Kelli at the Benbow Room.

As always, there’s even more on the calendar

Ready to vote on I-1185? Kiwanis forum this Wednesday

October 8, 2012 10:40 am
|    Comments Off on Ready to vote on I-1185? Kiwanis forum this Wednesday
 |   Kiwanis Club of West Seattle | West Seattle news | West Seattle politics

Much of this fall’s ballot-measure discussion has focused on the marriage-equality (Referendum 74) and marijuana (I-502) measures – but there’s another statewide initiative of note, I-1185 (read the text here). The Kiwanis Club of West Seattle plans a forum at its lunch meeting this week, and you’re invited:

In an effort to air both positions, Kiwanis of West Seattle will hear arguments on both sides at its noon meeting, Wednesday, Oct. 10, at Be’s Restaurant, 4509 California Ave SW.

Initiative Measure 1185 concerns tax and fee increases imposed by state government. It would require sixty-six percent legislative approval or voter approval to raise taxes; require “fee increases,” as defined, be set by the Legislature; and dedicate collected fees to their identified statutory purposes.

This measure would require that any action by the Legislature that “raises taxes,” as defined, be approved either by at least sixty-six percent of both houses of the Legislature or by the voters. It would require “fee increases,” defined as including new fees and increases in existing fees, to be set by the legislature. It would limit use of fee revenues to the statutory purposes for which the fees were collected under the fee-authorizing statutes.

Amber Carter, Association of Washington Business director of government affairs for tax and fiscal policy will speak as a proponent of the measure. Speaking against Initiative 485 will be Representative Reuven Carlyle (D) of the 36th Legislative District, a member of the House Ways and means Committee.

Members of the public are invited to attend. Please RSVP. Luncheon is $8 including tax and tip; beverages only, $3. Call 206-938-8032 or e-mail warrenlawless@comcast.net. Parking is available behind the marked alley entrance to Be’s.

P.S. You can read about all the November statewide ballot measures via this page of the Secretary of State’s website.

Metro changes, week #2, with added buses on RapidRide C Line

After a week of complaints about crowded buses – among other things – Metro announced Friday that it would add 2 buses to peak periods on the new RapidRide C Line, starting this morning. Will that be enough to ease the crowding? Every day last week, riders reported on their experiences, and with those changes today, we’re launching this story as a place to collect reports and updates one more time. Thanks in advance!

At The Admiral next Sunday: ‘Anthems of Activism’ double bill celebrates Pete Seeger, Steve Goodman

Music for the ages – and for the present – will fill West Seattle’s historic-landmark Admiral Theater next Sunday, with a live double bill under the title “Tribute Times Two – Anthems of Activism” — expected to be a moving and unforgettable experience, both musically and in the context of the national election three weeks later.

It’s also going to be a benefit for Northwest Folklife (whose website previews the event here) – launching a new series of benefit events to keep the annual festival going strong.

The opening tribute at 4 pm Sunday features Peter McKee, a singer and banjo/guitar player who performed with his folk group Clallam County as part of Seattle’s celebration of Seeger’s 90th birthday three years ago at the Admiral. It’s the premiere of his one-man, multimedia show, weaving together recordings, images, and live performances that reveal the breadth and depth of the legendary humanitarian who at age 93 continues to inspire with his commitment to peace, justice, and environmental sustainability, via ever-relevant songs:

Says McKee, “For more than 70 years, the songs he has sung and written are songs of consequence, they are songs of import. He has been on the forefront of virtually every major social issue that has confronted our nation since 1940.”

Also continuing to inspire – though he’s been gone for 28 years – is Steve Goodman, who proudly considered himself one of Seeger’s disciples. At 7 pm Sunday, historian, Admiral Theater patron, and Goodman biographer Clay Eals will take the stage to focus on the story and music of Goodman, who wrote and performed hundreds of songs throughout the United States and Europe during his 15-year career, before leukemia ended his life here in Seattle in 1984 at age 36.

Anchoring the Goodman show next Sunday will be the stalwart of Eals’ events, Tom Colwell, whose track record as a singer/songwriter and interpreter of others’ music spans more than 50 years. Colwell was the featured performer in the Seeger 90th-birthday bash held at the Admiral 3 years ago. He actually shared a stage with Goodman – and told the story at a Sunday rehearsal for the upcoming show:

“City of New Orleans” – the signature Goodman song mentioned by Colwell – was also part of his rehearsal with bassist/harmonica player Bruce Hanson,dobro/steel guitar/harmonica player Mark Myers and Eals:

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This week’s traffic alerts, 10/8 & beyond: No closures scheduled

October 7, 2012 11:47 pm
|    Comments Off on This week’s traffic alerts, 10/8 & beyond: No closures scheduled
 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle traffic alerts

While you might bump into ongoing West Seattle projects this week – including the start of the Arbor Heights water-main work – there are NO freeway/bridge closures scheduled:

*Spokane Street Viaduct Widening Project – the only traffic effects this week will be from some lane closures on 1st Avenue S. near Spokane to install sensors (explained here). P.S. No date set yet – as of our last check, anyway – for reopening westbound surface Spokane St.

*Alaskan Way Viaduct/99 – **No** closures scheduled this week (scroll down this page).

Blessing of the Animals 2012: When faith meets fur

(Photos by Nick Adams for WSB)
It’s an autumn tradition – Blessing of the Animals events/services around the feast day of the patron saint of animals, Saint Francis of Assisi. For the past several years, the lone outdoor public event in West Seattle has been offered by St. John the Baptist Episcopal Church, in the adjacent West Seattle High School parking lot, WSB contributing photojournalist Nick Adams was there as St. John’s Rev. Greg Peters carried on the tradition:

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West Seattle Crime Watch: Car stolen; motorcycle & pickup found

In West Seattle Crime Watch tonight – one new car-theft report, and word that a stolen truck and stolen motorcycle reported here recently have both been recovered. First, the stolen car – it’s the one in the photo above, and the one in this tweet from the Seattle Police Department‘s @getyourcarback feed:

What that doesn’t say is that the 2009 gray Audi Q7, bought just three months ago by someone who moved to West Seattle just three months before that, was stolen from Highland Park, 5th and Cloverdale. Call police if you see it.

Meantime, the last two stolen vehicles reported in Crime Watch coverage have both been recovered. One week ago tonight, we published Sean‘s report about his stolen truck; he says it was found “in a public parking lot off 42nd.” And Ryan‘s motorcycle, mentioned here on Thursday, has turned up too: He says, “It was reported by a neighbor a few blocks from where I am who reads the WSB; the police came, checked it out, asked around, and then called me; the guy who stole it just left it there.”

Election 2012: Deadline tomorrow for online voter registration

October 7, 2012 7:45 pm
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 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle politics

checkbox.jpgDon’t let the chance to vote for president, governor, and big ballot measures – marriage equality, taxation, charter schools, marijuana among them – pass you by. TOMORROW is the deadline for registering online to vote – or going online to update your information; the mail-in deadline is already past. Here’s where to start; here’s the King County voter-registration-info page.

West Seattle medical marijuana: Greenlight open in S. Delridge

For those tracking the medical-marijuana business in West Seattle – another dispensary opened this weekend, weeks before a statewide vote might change the way marijuana is bought and sold: We’ve lost count of the dispensaries in West Seattle but got a tip about Greenlight Care Center, in the former Dollarwise building at 9211 Delridge Way SW. We photographed its signage on Friday and noticed an added “open” sign late today. It’s one of four within a few blocks of each other on Delridge and on 16th, both sides of the city/county line. And it opens as city leaders start a push for new rules regulating medical-marijuana businesses, even as state Initiative 502 goes before voters in four weeks. (Our news partners at The Seattle Times took a look at the medical-marijuana business citywide in this story published today.)

Fauntleroy Fall Festival 2012 just one week away

October 7, 2012 6:47 pm
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 |   West Seattle news

This time next Sunday – the sun will be setting, literally and figuratively, on the 10th annual Fauntleroy Fall Festival, after the heart of Fauntleroy spends four hours as the epicenter of fun in West Seattle. The festival sprawls across and through the Fauntleroy YMCA (WSB sponsor) and Fauntleroy Church, their shared parking lot, and the grounds of/interior of Fauntleroy Schoolhouse across the street, 2-6 pm next Sunday (October 14th), 9100 block of California SW (map). The full schedule isn’t out yet but we know some popular features (2011 WSB coverage here) will be back – like the cake walk (you’re invited to make and donate one!) and performances (Dance! West Seattle tells us they’ll be on at 4). See you there!

Developing West Seattle-wide Seattle Public Schools priorities: Collaboration @ school-board member McLaren’s meeting

By Tracy Record
West Seattle Blog editor

“I cannot describe to you how much we want you to be our advocate.”

West Seattle’s elected representative on the Seattle School Board, Marty McLaren, heard that plea and a whole lot more during her two-hour community-conversation meeting on Saturday.

Before the meeting was over, she in turn asked community members to help her advocate for them – and that resulted in this whiteboard list of priorities suggested by the 20 or so who came to her meeting:


(Click image to see larger view)
The urgency of a priority list comes from the fact that within days, McLaren and other board members are expected to see the next draft of the Seattle Public Schools BEX IV levy. It doesn’t go to voters till February, but the board is supposed to finalize the levy proposal by early November.

While the group in attendance on Saturday was dominated by parents of students at K5 STEM at Boren – who are suddenly in turmoil over district administrators’ repeated refusal to say where they eventually will be housed, or even whether they are a “school” or instead a “program” to potentially be dispersed among campuses – the priorities were for the entire peninsula.

“This is so exciting,” McLaren enthused by meeting’s end.

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West Seattle Cardboard Challenge: A day to play

(Video and photos by Nick Adams for WSB)
In that quick clip by WSB contributing photojournalist Nick Adams, you hear Marie LeBaron explain the West Seattle Cardboard Challenge – which became reality just about a week after she put out the call for venue ideas.

The Kenney (WSB sponsor) was the place, as Marie (above) announced, and local kids were the stars:

From left, that’s Patrick O’Leary, 8; Matt LeBaron, 9; and Ruben Smith, 7, checking out the puzzle game “Skittle Riddle.” See more, ahead!

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The WSBeat – including reminders that police handle more than crime

October 7, 2012 12:53 pm
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 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle police | WSBeat

By Megan Sheppard
On the WSBeat, for West Seattle Blog

As always, the WSBeat summaries are from reports on cases handled recently by Southwest Precinct officers, incidents of note that (usually) have not already appeared here in breaking-news coverage or West Seattle Crime Watch reports, but that might at least answer the question “what WERE all those police doing on my block?” :

*Officers visited a residence in the 1200 block of Alki Ave. SW late last Sunday after several citizens reported that a woman was being assaulted. The boyfriend was booked into King County Jail for investigation of domestic-violence assault. The intoxicated victim denied that anything had become physical, explaining that the pair had simply been squabbling over NFL games and “The Real Housewives of New Jersey.”

Four more summaries ahead:Read More

How should the city spend your $? West Seattle Chamber of Commerce to hear from budget chair

October 7, 2012 11:32 am
|    Comments Off on How should the city spend your $? West Seattle Chamber of Commerce to hear from budget chair
 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle politics

Fall is when the City Council goes through the city budget, taking a look at what the mayor has proposed, taking citizen comment, and coming up with final proposals. For an inside look at how the decisions are made and how best to let councilmembers know what you think, join the West Seattle Chamber of Commerce for lunch this Wednesday at The Kenney (WSB sponsor), 7125 Fauntleroy Way SW, 11:30 am, to hear from – and talk with – this year’s Budget Committee chair, Councilmember Tim Burgess. You don’t need to be a Chamber member to go; you do need to RSVP, here.

West Seattle Sunday: Transportation reminders; animal blessings; hunger-fighting walk…

October 7, 2012 9:47 am
|    Comments Off on West Seattle Sunday: Transportation reminders; animal blessings; hunger-fighting walk…
 |   West Seattle news | WS miscellaneous

Thanks to Greg for sharing that Saturday night sunset photo of an unidentified artist on the beach at Lincoln Park. If you haven’t gone out to watch one of these spectacular late-summer sunsets in person, tonight might be the night. Things are fairly quiet on the WSB West Seattle Events Calendar but before the day is too much further long, here are a few notes:

VIADUCT TO REOPEN BY 4 PM: The Highway 99 closure continues but WSDOT says it’ll be open again by 4 – we’ll publish a separate update if it happens sooner. There are currently no other closures listed for this week.

EXTRA WATER TAXI RUNS FOR SOUNDERS GAME: If you’re going, you can go by water – see the aqua-shaded extra runs added to tonight’s schedule.

WEST SEATTLE FARMERS’ MARKET: 10 am-2 pm as always at 44th/Alaska. New this weekend – raw-goat-milk cheeses from Mountain Lodge Farm.

BLESSING OF THE ANIMALS: Along with services at Alki UCC and St. John the Baptist Episcopal Church (as previewed here last week), St. John’s is offering its traditional public event in the West Seattle High School parking lot at noon.

CROP WALK TO FIGHT HUNGER: The annual fundraising walk along Alki leaves Alki UCC at 1:30 pm – details here.

LIVE MUSIC – IN THE AFTERNOON! Two events – Sunny McGhee and Steve Norris perform at C & P Coffee Company (WSB sponsor), 3-5 pm, and at Skylark Café and Club, there’s a pancake-party fundraiser at 3 pm (and continuing into the night) for KSUB Radio.

SUNDAY RIBS RETURN! A popular Sunday-dinner item at Feedback Lounge (WSB sponsor) is back on the menu as of tonight, 5 pm.

Update: West Seattle house burns; fireplace blamed

(Added 4:18 am – photo courtesy Gabe)
3:38 AM: If you’ve heard the sirens – big response to a house fire reported in the 5200 block of 45th SW (near Erskine, southwest of The Junction). First firefighters to respond have described the house over the radio as “well-involved” in flames, and also say everyone got out OK. More to come.

3:56 AM UPDATE: Firefighters have radioed that the fire is under control on the main floor of the house.

(Photos/video from here down: By WSB co-publisher Patrick Sand)
4:02 AM UPDATE: Our crew is there and says it’s still an intensive firefighting scene – the cameraphone photo above shows firefighters working with their air supply. The house itself is hard to see from the street because of trees/shrubs. Still no injuries reported.

4:19 AM UPDATE: Fire now reported “tapped,” which means, basically, out – firefighters had been working to ventilate (cut roof and/or siding holes) the house to make sure they’d gotten to all possible spots. Just added the photo at the top of the story – Gabe took that from a balcony overlooking the house, explaining, “We woke up to the neighbor across the street screaming ‘Help!’ and seeing his house on fire!”

4:52 AM UPDATE: SFD spokesperson Kyle Moore is at the scene and just briefed us (will add video of his briefing when our crew’s back, along with a few more photos). He says one man was inside the home when this started.

He told investigators that he had a fire going in the fireplace; spark/fire jumped from it, ignited something, and he tried to put it out but it spread too fast.

5:30 AM UPDATE: Added the aforementioned briefing video. Investigators are working to confirm the fireplace suspicion.

9:38 AM UPDATE: $150,000 damage, according to SFD, whose official online update is here.

Video: Daughters of the Dead Sea @ Easy Street Records

If you’re going to have an EP-release party – what better place than a music store? And if you’re a West Seattle band – it had better be THE West Seattle music store. Add all that up, and that’s why Daughters of the Dead Sea rocked Easy Street Records in The Junction on Saturday night. Brad Yaeger and The Night Terrors opened; Hobosexual closed. Before the show, we caught up with DOTDS’s Mia in the Easy Street aisle:

Mia’s bandmates are Jen and Iris. Didn’t catch them tonight? They’re performing at the Funhouse downtown in about two weeks – here’s the Facebook event page.

Vietnamese Cultural Center honors a centuries-gone hero

October 7, 2012 12:28 am
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 |   West Seattle news | WS culture/arts

Every Saturday afternoon, West Seattle’s Vietnamese Cultural Center invites you to visit. This weekend, Saturday brought something extra: A commemoration of the 712th anniversary of the passing of 13th-century Vietnamese hero Gen. Tran Hung Dao – who is honored with the statue outside the center.

Gen. Tran Hung Dao was considered to be a brilliant tactician and is revered for having turned back three invasions. He was in his early 70s when he died of natural causes in 1300. You can visit the statue, as well as other memorials – including one for fallen soldiers – at the center, 2236 SW Orchard, 12-3 pm on Saturdays.

Stitch & Sew Studio: West Seattle Fabric Company expansion almost ready to officially open

(Photos by WSB co-publisher Patrick Sand)
Though Stitch & Sew Studio – the new southern sibling of West Seattle Fabric Company – doesn’t formally open until an open house next weekend (more on that shortly), proprietor Monica Skov opened the doors today for its first group event, a general meeting of the Seattle Modern Quilt Guild, followed by their sew-in.

While the quilters brought their own machines, Monica says the studio’s own machines are arriving within days. We first told you two months ago about her plan for the former Emerald Spiral space – not a retail outlet to duplicate WSFC headquarters at 2210 California SW in The Admiral District, but instead a comfortable space for classes, sew-ins, and other events. (“Not fussy,” as Monica puts it.)

The back section of the studio space north of Morgan Junction has a cozy living-room feel. And it’s where you’ll find the entrance to a restroom that is, as Monica promised it would be, fabulous – plum walls, art, and a chandelier!

Also in the back, there’s a lighting fixture that looks custom, though Monica reveals it’s from IKEA:

Out front, the studio’s facade is topped by a color scheme you will recognize from the front of the WSFC store:

But – aside from looking at the faces of the quilters who were there today – you can’t see the most important features: The fact that Stitch & Sew Studio is intended as a “happy, positive” place for activities, events, and education. Not just for sewing/quilting experts, Monica stresses – they’ll have something for everyone, beginners through experts (the quilters there today included many of the latter, such as West Seattle-based Emily Cier – check out her books on the right sidebar of her site).

The open house next weekend is set for 11 am-4 pm Saturday, October 13th, and noon-3 pm Sunday, October 14th. Monica has set up a new Facebook page just for Stitch & Sew Studio (which is at 5910 California SW) – you can “like” it here (as well as checking out Monica’s own photos of the S&S Studio transformation).

Update: No serious injuries in crash with 2 trucks, 1 motorcycle

4:37 PM: Police and fire are responding to a “heavy rescue” call at 8th and Roxbury (map) – reporting two vehicles and one motorcycle involved. One of the vehicles is described via scanner as “on its side.” The motorcyclist is described as “walking around” but we haven’t heard the condition of people in the two vehicles. On our way.

4:44 PM: Two private ambulances were called for people involved in the crash – but medic crews report via the scanner that the people are “refusing transport,” so the ambulances have been canceled. A tow truck is being called for the vehicle that’s on its side. Also hearing via scanner that 8th north of Roxbury is closed, so buses are being rerouted.

4:59 PM: Our crew at the scene says that while 8th is blocked by one of the vehicles – which are both pickup trucks – traffic is getting through both ways on Roxbury.

Will homeless-camp site become donated-food warehouse site? Food Lifeline eyes ‘Nickelsville’ location

A year and a half after the homeless encampment that calls itself “Nickelsville” returned to its original site in southeasternmost West Seattle, there’s a new twist: The government-owned land is being eyed by Food Lifeline, which works to get food to people in need and the agencies that serve them. This was first reported last night by our news partners at The Seattle Times; we confirmed it today with Food Lifeline development director Amy Lee Derenthal.

She told WSB via e-mail that the site would be a perfect location for them to expand warehouse and other operations: “Centrally located near major thoroughfares, it will serve as an administrative headquarters, volunteer center and collection, repacking and distribution site for the 300-plus food banks, emergency shelters and meal programs that Food Lifeline serves.” Derenthal says they’ve been looking at the site off and on since 2008, and, “We’ve spent several years looking at land and buildings all over King County. Our board of directors, architects, land developers and staff all agree that the West Marginal Way site is ideally suited for Food Lifeline – from easy access for the dozens of trucks that will move in and out of the site every day to a footprint that allows us to build a comprehensive hunger relief center.”

You probably recall the site was once under consideration as the potential site of a new city jail, a proposal vigorously fought by the Highland Park Action Committee, whose research contended a new jail wasn’t needed – a conclusion eventually also reached by the city and county. Lately, coincidentally, HPAC has been working with the city to see about a new home for “Nickelsville.” So what would happen to the encampment residents if Food Lifeline took over the site and they still hadn’t moved? Derenthal says FL is “committed to working with the city to help craft a solution … It will be 12 to 18 months before we will be ready to build. We’re confident that this will give the Nickelsville residents, homeless advocates and city officials plenty of time to reach a solution.”

What next? Followups to come.

Photos: Mascot, music, football at Chief Sealth Homecoming 2012

October 6, 2012 3:22 pm
|    Comments Off on Photos: Mascot, music, football at Chief Sealth Homecoming 2012
 |   West Seattle news | West Seattle schools | WS & Sports

PHOTOS BY NICK ADAMS FOR WEST SEATTLE BLOG

At the Chief Sealth International High School homecoming game Friday night, there were entrances …

… and there were ENTRANCES:

The all-new Sammy the Seahawk debuted. Even posed for a photo with principal Chris Kinsey:

Sammy’s appearance was planned. Not so sure about this one:

Back to the entrances:

And even the choir:

The final score from Friday night’s Sealth vs. Nathan Hale game at Southwest Athletic Complex was Hale 43, Sealth 23, as we noted here in a quick roundup last night.

But since it was homecoming, the football was just part of the spectacle. More photos – including field action – ahead:

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Happening now: Free Range Mercantile’s open house bus

If you drive along the central stretch of Fauntleroy Way SW, between The Triangle and Morgan Junction, you probably have seen the big green “Free Range Mercantile” bus that’s been parked outside an old commercial building. We published a story about it three months ago, shortly after it turned up. Today – your chance to get a look inside:

That’s Mary Summers, FRM proprietor, who’s presiding over an open house till 5 this afternoon. Stop by, take a look inside to see the mobile store she’s put together and what kind of merchandise Mary (formerly of CAPERS) is stocking – 5908 Fauntleroy Way SW.