Planning the 'hood: you missed the meeting but can still read reports, take survey

By Andrew Taylor
(2 votes) (report abuse)
Councilmember Clark
  • Tuesday 11/17/09, 6PM at Miller Community Center: Join former Mayor Norm Rice for the kick-off of a major update to Seattle's Comprehensive Plan "Seattle 2030 and Beyond". 6 - 8 PM, presentation at 6:30. Mayor Rice introduced the "urban village" idea to Seattle, back in the 90's.
  • Most of you sensibly avoided going out last Tuesday to the "Neighborhood Plan Status Check" presentation. After an introduction by Sally Clark, the 30 or so of us Queen Anne/Belltown/Pike-Pine/First Hill/Eastlake/Cap-Hill/Centralites were treated to a brief Powerpoint presentation, and then broke into our separate areas (I attended the Central Area one). We discussed minutae, voted on priorities via sticky dots, then decided we couldn't even read the accursed neighborhood planning matrix in the time available, let alone comment sensibly on it.
  • YOU can achieve much more, from the comfort of your couch, by reading the summaries of discussions and answers to questionnaires for the Central Area (attached here, more at Planning Commission site) and then answering yet another questionnaire (see overview here). Note that the summary is from the original Central Area meeting (4 attendees, clashed with election forum) and NOT for the make-up meeting that 20+ of us attended.
  • Capitol Hill info at CHS blog. Contact me for Pike-Pine, First Hill or Eastlake info or look on Planning Commission report (page 7)
  • Sorry, Neighborhood Planning is NOT going away. Today's City Council press release on the budget ("City Council rolls out major budget highlights") notes the following: 

Planning for a strong future included not losing focus on the importance of strong neighborhoods and restoring needed funds benefiting neighborhoods.

“Preserving neighborhood planning and historic preservation programs are two of the ways that this budget sets the table for economic recovery,” said Councilmember Sally J. Clark. As the recession ends we’ll be better poised to make stronger communities in our built environment.”

tags: overregulation
posted on Mon, Nov 16, 2009 11:41 PM
last updated on Wed, Nov 18, 2009 04:31 PM
Is this today, 11/17 byjoanna2 months ago (0 votes) (report abuse) (reply)
I just want to confirm. It was too bad that other meetings were held on the same night last time.
RE: Is this today, 11/17 byAndrew Taylor2 months ago (0 votes) (report abuse)
YEP! Adrienne noticed the issue a while ago.
150 words or less? bykt2 months ago (0 votes) (report abuse) (reply)
sounds like a ton of generic stuff that can be taken any way people want for whatever their agenda is. Unless it is stated in real concrete terms, I hope it's just an exercise to get people thinking.
Sorry, can't make it byJean2 months ago (0 votes) (report abuse) (reply)
I'm doing grandchild care tonight. No way I'm subjecting you to an energetic three-year-old. Can you say short attention span? I knew you could. :)

I completed another online survey at the City of Seattle.
Take the questionnaire here
http://www.seattle.gov/dpd/Planning/Neighborhood_Planning/Ov
(Find the link for the questionnaire just below the meeting notice)
Add Your Comment
Name:
Email:
(will not be displayed)
Subject:
Comment: