West Seattle, Washington
09 Thursday
The Morgan Community Association just got word from project manager Virginia Hassinger: Construction of Myrtle Reservoir Park starts Monday, and should be done by mid-September.
(Photo by, and used with permission of, Paul Gordon)
Speaking on KUOW Radio half an hour ago, South Park Neighborhood Association president Dagmar Cronn revealed she’d just gotten word of a 3 pm Wednesday event at the South Park Bridge with news of funding for a new one and high-ranking elected officials in attendance. That day will mark exactly one week prior to its permanent shutdown. Cronn told KUOW she’d gotten word from the county, so we checked with King County Executive Dow Constantine‘s office, which confirms they’re working on a “progress report” event tentatively planned for Wednesday – though not confirming any details of what’ll be said, or who will be there. (As noted in our report on Seattle City Councilmember Sally Clark‘s appearance at the Delridge Neighborhoods District Council this past Wednesday, she said she expected news of a “double digit” state contribution soon; she was questioned about the council’s announcement this week that they would pledge $15 million. The total cost of a new bridge is estimated at more than $120 million.) 2:01 PM P.S.: County Councilmember Jan Drago‘s office points out that the proposal to raise $31 million for the bridge through bond sales is up for a full King County Council vote on Monday.
P.S. Not only is Feedback Lounge (WSB sponsor) planning a “South Park Bridge Memorial” on shutdown day, June 30th – now they’re selling T-shirts to benefit South Park’s Providence Regina House Clothing/Food Bank; the image is a little too raw to show here but click to see it on the Feedback’s home page.
Ever since our first report 3 weeks ago about Jones Barbeque planning a West Seattle location, we’ve been chasing down more details. Finally just got them, in a phone chat with Andreque Jones, as more signage continues going up at the storefront. He tells WSB they’re hoping to open as soon as next week in their new location at 4417 Fauntleroy (between Aikido of West Seattle and Tervo’s Mini-Mart, and previously, briefly home to OK Corral), if “the rest of the permits come through.” At the very least, he says, “we’re looking to have a grand opening on the 1st week of July.” We asked him about hours – and learned about plans for “curbside service” – read on:Read More
Story and photos by Christopher Boffoli
Reporting for West Seattle Blog
We’re riding on the back of a 200-ton blue whale, skimming the surface of the Pacific Ocean somewhere off the coast of California. There is a faint collective gasp as the whale dives below the surface of the water and everyone reflexively holds their breath.
Facing forward from around the dorsal area, we can see the mottled skin of the whale as it undulates below us, gaining speed as its negative buoyancy takes over below 20 feet, pulling the huge mammal into deep, cold water. It is suddenly too dark to see, but gradually it grows lighter as the whale swims straight up into a cloud of krill. The crowd emits a delighted “ahhh” as the whale opens its mouth incredibly wide, seeming to disarticulate its jaw to engulf a huge amount of prey before coming to a stop near the surface to force out the water and strain the krill with its baleen. Everyone in the room is rapt.
“We’ve got hours of this footage,” said John Calambokidis, chuckling at the reaction of the dazzled audience. Few in the room seem as though they’d mind if he showed every minute of it.
The stunning clip — video footage from a remote camera mounted to the back of a whale — was just one of the fascinating bits of research shared last night with a packed house at the Duwamish Longhouse by Calambokidis, a research biologist with the Cascadia Research Collective.
Hosted by West Seattleite Donna Sandstrom of The Whale Trail, with opening remarks by Kathy Fletcher of People for Puget Sound, the lecture by Calambokidis touched on his ongoing research of blue, humpback and gray whales in Puget Sound and in the broader waters of the Pacific Coast.
In her brief welcoming remarks, Sandstrom reiterated the goal of The Whale Trail — to someday see orcas come off the endangered list, and for the Sound to be restored. She said she also thought that seeing orcas in the wild is a life-changing experience that provides an understanding that something else lives here that has been here a lot longer than we have.
By Karen Berge
Reporting for West Seattle Blog
The King County Water Taxi‘s West Seattle service was the heart of the agenda as an engaged group of 20-25 people gathered Thursday evening at Alki UCC for the Alki Community Council‘s monthly meeting.
The main speaker was Scott Davis, director of the Marine Division of the King County Department of Transportation was the main guest speaker. Michael Heavey attended on behalf of County Councilmember Jan Drago, who chairs the King County Ferry District Board.
Davis began with some personal background. (That, plus Q/A, and more ACC notes, after the jump)Read More
(Photo taken this week by Cheryl – shared via the West Seattle Blog Flickr group)
Even if you’re not walking in it – between 6 tonight and noon tomorrow, stop by West Seattle Stadium to cheer the participants in Relay for Life of West Seattle. It’s an all-night fundraiser for the fight against cancer, and its memorable moments include the survivors’ lap at the start, and the memorial with luminarias later this evening. Whether or not you can be there, you can pledge by going here … Speaking of health, men’s-health issues will be discussed in a special, free presentation at 6 tonight at Pharmaca Integrative Pharmacy (WSB sponsor) in The Junction … That’s also the start time for “Race to Nowhere,” a documentary screening at West Seattle High School, 6 pm, followed by 7:30 pm discussion with director, full details here … Another 6 pm event: All-Access Showcase at Youngstown Cultural Arts Center – drop by any time up till 9 and sample amazing performances/art creations and more – here’s our preview … If you got a collection bag for the Windermere Real Estate door-to-door food drive, please remember to fill it and leave it for them to pick up – donations go to the West Seattle Food Bank & White Center Food Bank. … Even more ahead – check the West Seattle Events calendar!
(Photos and video by Randall G. Hauk)
The ceremony last night at South Seattle Community College (WSB sponsor) honored what was by far the largest graduating class in West Seattle – 721 students earning degrees and certificates! SSCC’s breakdown says that included 318 in academic transfer, 272 in professional/technical studies, 26 students in the college’s 4-year bachelor of applied science Hospitality Management degree program, 105 students earning high-school diplomas or GEDs. The school is of course well-known for its culinary programs, among others – listen to the list of degrees being read for this group of graduates:
Once the diplomas were presented, with so many graduates, it was quite the sight – and south – as they turned their tassels:
A few more scenes from a night of smiles:
And more smiles:
Other highlights of this year’s graduating class: the Hospitality bachelor’s degree recipients were the second graduating class; and SSCC also graduated the first recipient of its new associate of arts in Elementary Education (AEE) degree, “which prepares students to enter a four-year university to pursue bachelor’s degrees in elementary education,” according to the school’s graduation-preview news release. Dianne Dizon is that degree’s recipient. Congratulations to all! ADDED 8:20 AM: One more graduation photo – West Seattleite Stacey Fuda and sister Jamie Malek are “extra super proud” of their mom Kathy Malek, who graduated last night with a certificate in accounting. From left, Jamie, Kathy and Stacey:
(Stacey had mentioned on the WSB Facebook page that her mom would be among the grads, so we asked if she’d share a photo!)
(Photo by Jeff Siamas)
We’ve been covering the high-school and college (next story up!) graduations in West Seattle this past week – but hundreds of other students have been celebrating too – with ceremonies to mark transitions out of milestone years, such as kindergarten, fifth grade, and eighth grade. Katie shared the above photo taken Thursday at Tilden School; she reports, “Each graduate read their own original poem about their first day at Tilden School. Also, joined by the 4th graders, they sang ‘a farewell in song’ to the audience, singing ‘Where’er You Walk’ by Handel.” Tilden is a K-5 school just north of The Junction. Meantime, it’s the last few days for Seattle Public Schools students, and as Arbor Heights Elementary third-grade teacher Mark Ahlness writes, “the wheels on the bus are a little loose right now” – so it’s time to bring in some attention-getters:
One of Ahlness’s focuses, as a tech pioneer in the education world, has been to get his students writing and publishing online – and so he was thrilled to bring in Jeff Utecht, of whom he writes: “World class ed/tech blogger Jeff Utecht visited my classroom (Thursday) … He has just released a wonderful book on web 2.0 for educators. Jeff teaches in Bangkok, and spends summers in Seattle. He and his wife have Washington roots.”
(More end-of-year school news? Share it! And have a great summer!)
Last month, a spokesperson for the company that holds the note for “The Hole” – the stalled site that we now can describe as “across 39th SW from the future West Seattle Trader Joe’s” – met with local leaders and listened to their concerns (WSB story here); it was a response to the letter sent by the Southwest District Council, which then, two weeks later, received an official written reply (WSB story here). Today, crews were back at the site making good on some of the promises in that reply – as you can see in the “aerial” view shared by an area resident who wants to be anonymous, they’re putting a concrete barricade around the site. We got this view on the ground:
Our anonymous tipster adds, “We got a letter from Chinn yesterday stating that they would be doing this until next Tuesday and that the alley that skirts the west side of The Hole would be periodically closed until then.” Meantime, as for the status of the site itself, the consolidated lawsuits involving a variety of parties continue proceeding toward an October trial date if there’s no settlement before then; the number of actions in the case in the past 14 months, as recorded online, has almost hit 300.
With the USA team playing its second match at 7 tomorrow morning (vs. Slovenia), it’s time to bring back our “where to watch FIFA World Cup 2010 soccer in West Seattle” list. It’s had a few tweaks since its debut a week ago, and please note the comments as well. The newest addition – Freshy’s Coffee in Admiral says you’re welcome to come watch the game in “Freshy-Vision” on their bigscreen tomorrow morning (the one they use for Fine Films at Freshy’s on Wednesday nights) – proprietor Amber says there’ll be “mimosas and breakfast.” Here’s the list again, with recent amendments (please let us know if you’ve got word of any more!).
It’s been in our calendar a while, but local Seattle Parks and Recreation Community Centers staffers are working hard to get the word out too, because their centers are all co-sponsors – so in case you haven’t heard about it, June 23 – next Wednesday, the first day of summer vacation for all the local kids who aren’t out till next Tuesday – is Olympic Day at West Seattle Stadium:
Ages 3-12 – Fun, friendly competition for the whole family, where everyone is a winner! Join us for old-fashioned field games and Olympic-themed activities for all abilities. Try your skills at three-legged races, sack hop, egg on a spoon and much more. The Opening Ceremonies will feature Olympic athlete Emily DeRiel and Paralympic athlete Mike Peters. Then celebrate the evening with a performance by the Recess Monkeys! This event is sponsored by South Park, Hiawatha, Delridge, Alki, High Point and Southwest community centers!
It all happens 5-8 pm Wednesday 6/23 – which is the anniversary of the founding of the modern Olympic movement.
A week ago, we mentioned the start of the trial for 36-year-old DeVaughn Dorsey, charged with federal crimes including witness tampering for shooting a mother and her 10-year-old son in their Delridge residence two years ago. The verdict’s in – guilty. Here’s the story from our partners at the Seattle Times; here’s the official federal news release, which mentions Dorsey faces 23 years in prison, 10 years for this, and 13 years for charges to which he pleaded guilty before the trial. The Times story quotes a lead investigator as saying that Dorsey is a career criminal with almost 100 arrests on his record.
Westbound Roxbury is closed right now at 26th because of a crash involving a pedestrian and a vehicle. No other details yet, but we wanted to alert you to avoid the area. 4:24 PM UPDATE: It’s reopened. Police say the pedestrian was hit by a pickup truck; the injuries were not life-threatening, and the private ambulance you see in the photo took the victim to the hospital.
Our final report from last night’s Delridge Neighborhoods District Council meeting: The chance to hear more budget-crunch thoughts from a city councilmember, days after the announcement of how the city’s going to save $12 million the rest of this year – and going to have to cut about 5 times that for the next budget cycle. Councilmember Sally Clark was the guest – read on for what she had to say:Read More
If you hadn’t already seen this via Facebook, Twitter or e-mail, wanted to mention it before the commute home: The 1st Avenue South water-main repairs first mentioned yesterday are now scheduled to take until “late evening,” so the detour on Southbound 1st, between King and Railroad, is still in place – you’ll be detoured over to Alaskan Way. 4:18 PM: The city has sent another update:
Today crews have been able to keep one lane open for each direction of traffic on First Avenue South at South King Street. The estimated time to reopen the entire street is now approximately 11 a.m. tomorrow, June 18.
So you’ve just received your high-school diploma. College is likely a few months away. What are you doing up at 6 am, and back at your alma mater? Actually – the West Seattle High School Class of 2010 grads who streamed somewhat sleepily off buses in the dawn’s early light today were finishing up another successful Grad Night. All year long (here’s our story from the kickoff last July), there were car washes, bake sales, book sales, all manner of fundraisers, and tons of volunteer work put in to make it happen. Here’s organizer Carol Viger, who explains some of what the grads were up to – and the special significance of this year:
All that fun, by the way, happened at locations kept secret ahead of time – to add to the excitement. But Grad Night’s overarching goal is to provide a good time without grads getting into life-risking trouble while celebrating on their own – and so far, Carol says, it’s achieved that goal for about 1,000 teens!
Another note from last night’s Delridge Neighborhoods District Council meeting – Youngstown Cultural Arts Center‘s Randy Engstrom extended a West Seattle-wide invitation (and beyond!) to the All-Access Showcase event tomorrow night – and we have additional information today from Youngstown program director Alberto Mejia. From 6-8:30 pm, you can go check out everything from music to breakdancing to spoken-word art to visual art to “do-it-yourself organic gardening” in the historic building at 4408 Delridge Way SW (map). All-Access is the free after-school program that engages hundreds of young people in a wide range of activities, and this showcase is the result of the work they’ve been doing since the first of the year. It’s free, and you’re encouraged to drop by and sample the students’ amazing achievements. (Wander the Youngstown halls, too, if you haven’t been there before – they’re laden with history, art, and information.)
Though (as reported Tuesday) the county didn’t publicly announce the first meeting of the Citizens Advisory Group it has assembled for the review of how/where to control Combined Sewer Overflows from the Murray Pump Station at Lowman Beach Park – they promised to get out more advance info in the future, and we just received the first installment from King County Wastewater Treatment Division’s Annie Kolb-Nelson, regarding the next CAG meeting, a reminder of this Saturday’s all-day “technical information session” (with optional tours), and more:Read More
New information this morning on West Seattle’s now-confirmed future Trader Joe’s (here’s our Wednesday story): We’ve just spoken with Associates West Real Estate‘s John Wunder, to whom property owner Steve Huling referred us for additional information following our conversation yesterday. One big question we asked him: While the preliminary city filing first noted here in April mentioned only “minor exterior improvements,” some seeing the project rendering above thought it looked like much more than that. No, he says, it really is “minor exterior (work)” – once you see what part of the building is involved:
We just went over to take that photo after Wunder explained that the rendering depicts what’s planned for the east/northeast corner of the building, where there’s currently a service entry to the garage, next to the showroom. “If you look closely at the rendering, you’ll see the same lines, so the entry is going to go right at the point of the building,” Wunder explained. (A wider shot would show Fauntleroy off the left side. Note that this also is kitty-corner to the under-construction Link.) He also said that while, as DPD‘s Bryan Stevens confirmed to WSB yesterday morning, the formal permit application for the 14,000+-square-foot store has not been filed yet, that should happen shortly. Wunder said, “We don’t anticipate problems; the preliminary meeting went well.”
(Photo taken by Eric along the Beach Drive shore)
Tonight, find out more about the biggest whales in Northwest waters during the Whale Trail-presented talk with Cascadia Research and People for Puget Sound, 7 pm at the Duwamish Longhouse (here’s our recent preview) … Last night, city councilmember Sally Clark visited the Delridge Neighborhoods District Council (story in the works) – tonight, councilmembers Bruce Harrell, Mike O’Brien and Richard Conlin are here – for a three-part event at Chief Sealth/Boren: At 5 pm, an information fair with city staffers sharing details about programs to help people with utility, housing, food and child care; at 6 pm, the Public Utilities/Neighborhoods and Energy/Technology/Civil Rights committees discuss trends in those areas; at 7 pm, public comment. … Also tonight at 7, the Alki Community Council meets at Alki UCC Church, with the agenda including a King County Water Taxi rep (here’s our report on last week’s Water Taxi Town Hall) … The South Seattle Community College (WSB sponsor) commencement is at 7:30 tonight at Brockey Center … Italian winemakers, and South African wines, are in the plan for a Thursday night tasting at Bin 41 (WSB sponsor) in The Junction, 5:30-8 pm … There’s even more on the WSB West Seattle Events calendar!
Father’s Day is coming up this weekend – and the night before, a new event will raise money for local families! Nancy Woodland of WestSide Baby explains:
Two great guys are holding a fantastic fundraiser for WestSide Baby this weekend and you should be there! Early this year two of our favorite supporters approached us with the idea to hold a Guys Night fundraiser. WestSide Baby provides essential items to local children in need and we think men care about this need too! Because our biggest event of the year is an afternoon Tea, we jumped on the idea to share WestSide Baby’s mission and impact with men in our community who care about kids. Providing adequate diapers and safe carseats and portable cribs should matter to everyone.
Guys’ Night Out will be at the White Center Eagles‘ HQ, 10452 15th SW (map), Saturday 5 pm-10 pm. Click ahead for full details:Read More
The new Seattle Police some-reports-available-online system currently has reports that are as new as just two nights ago. So in this roundup, we have seven burglaries, one attempted robbery, and we also have the report from last week’s incident in which shots were fired in Westwood just before officers found a beaten-up victim – read on for all of the above:Read More
The official vote isn’t until July 7th, but after their meeting tonight, the Seattle School Board has before it a recommendation to extend Superintendent Dr. Maria Goodloe-Johnson‘s contract to 2013, after a mostly positive performance review. That’s according to reports from tonight’s board meeting – here’s what our partners at the Seattle Times wrote, and here’s a more detailed (and opinionated) take from saveseattleschools.blogspot.com. Read the full performance evaluation here, and the extension recommendation here. The board is recommending, however, no raise and no bonus.
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