12th Avenue Square project ready to dig in

by Sebastian Garrett-Singh

A conceptual image of 12th Avenue Square Park presented in 2011 (Image: Seattle Parks and Recreation)

A conceptual image of 12th Avenue Square Park presented in 2011 (Image: Seattle Parks and Recreation)

Back in June 2011, CHS posted design meeting plans for a 7,322 square-foot gravel lot on E James Court. It will soon be 12th Avenue Square Park. Now, with funding and a permit in-hand the Department of Parks and Recreations is looking to begin construction by late-spring/early summer and build upon the 564 12th Ave empty lot next to Ba Bar restaurant.

“The acquisition of the space was a community-initiated project from the 2000 Pro Parks Levy Opportunity Fund Project,” said Kerri Stoops of Seattle Parks. The Department of Neighborhoods passed the property to the parks department in 2008 who have acquired a steady flow of funds to get the project rolling that will include a woonerf to run “along James Ct spanning between the 12th Ave Park to the south and the new Seattle University and Seneca group development to the north.”

You may be wondering what a woonerf is. Here’s your answer:

A woonerf (Dutch plural: woonerven) in the Netherlands and Flanders is a street where pedestrians and cyclists have priority over motorists. The techniques of shared spaces, traffic calming, and low speed limits are intended to improve pedestrian, bicycle, and automobile safety.

Before construction can start on the 12th Avenue parcel the City has to find the right contractor.

“The project is now permitted and will go to bid.  If there is an acceptable bid, we will most likely, start construction late spring, early summer 2014,” Stoops tells CHS. Plans for the square were initially on-hold in 2008, but after bringing in $500,000 for the woonerf project from a 2008 parks levy and hurdling the public vetting process in 2011 the path is clear for construction.

The Seattle Parks Foundation is also chipping in $70,000 with an additional $490,000 coming from the 2000 Pro Parks Levy.

When it’s all done it will look more Westlake than Cal Anderson Park:

Designed by Hewitt Architects, the group will stay on as consultants for the woonerf project, according to a parks department description. “The park project and the woonerf project will go through design development, construction documents and construction simultaneously,” the parks website adds.

In addition to the pedestrian promenade the park will include artistic touches created by Ellen Sollod, who collaborated with Hewitt Architects on the project. “The artist has been selected by the community,” said Stoops. Sollod also serves on the Seattle Design Commission and Public Arts Advisory Committee.

Stoops said the construction schedule is slated to take 100 days.

BRING THE NOISE! SOUND THE RESILIENCE! March 8, International Women’s Day March in Seattle

 

Seattle’s International Women’s Day March is a Call for Gender Justice and Celebration of Women’s Resiliency

What: International Women’s Day March/Musical Brigade & Rally “Bring the Noise! Sound the Resilience!”

When: March 8th, 11AM to 2:30PM

11:00 AM –1 Gather at Pratt Park (1800 S Main St Seattle, WA 98122)

12:30PM – March/Musical Brigade westbound on S Jackson Street

Post Rally at Hing Hay Park (423 Maynard Ave S Seattle, WA 98104)

Visuals: Hundreds of women and families marching. Art pieces and performances at key intersections. Inspiring speeches by women leaders.

SEATTLE, March 8th, 2014 – Hundreds of women and allies in Seattle will march in solidarity with women around the world for International Women’s Day. Led by Pin@y sa Seattle and Green Bodies, this city-wide rally and march from Pratt to Hing Hay park will feature inspiring women speakers and performers. Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant, the Fandango Project, and local emcee Rogue Pinay will all be making appearances.

Although it began in the US as a campaign to promote equal rights for women in the early 20th century, International Women’s Day has gained little attention in recent years. Organizations involved with this year’s march and musical brigade are hoping to change that and need your help!

On March 8th, Seattle organizations active in struggles locally, nationally and globally will come to together to build solidarity and encourage others to raise consciousness about issues that women and their communities face, such as economic hardship, labor trafficking, forced migration, wage theft, sexual assault, and gender discrimination.

“The idea of the Women’s Musical Brigade is for a celebration and rejoicing in our survival, struggle, resistance, and continued resilience through song, dance, spoken word, speeches, theater, and much more.” says co-organizer, Luzviminda Uzuri Carpenter, of Green Bodies. ##

Under the Big Top – King Street Cooperative Preschool Community Event and Auction

KSCP_2014 (1)

You are invited to King Street’s Annual Auction:
“UNDER THE BIG TOP”

This family/child-centered event will have jugglers, a clown act, balloon animals, face painting and more!

March 22nd, 2:00 pm – 5:30pm
Washington Hall – 153 14th Ave, Seattle, WA 98122

There will be passed hors d’oeuvres and 2 drink tickets per adult ticket. Kids under 2 are free.
Wear your favorite circus attire, fancy clothes, or whatever you are most comfortable in.

EVENT TICKETS
Pre-Sale: $15 adults, $5 children (kids under 2 years old are free)
Buy tickets online at http://kingstreetcooppreschool.org/auction.php or from a KSCP family
At the Door: $18 adults, $5 children

$5 raffle tickets will put you in the drawing for 1 of 3 prizes:

  • Enjoy Orcas Island with a 2 nights stay at the Outlook Inn and a whale watching trip with Deer Harbor Charters
  • Music!  Music! Music! – Two – 3-day passes to Bumbershoot
  • A Night Out on Capitol Hill! – A 4-course dinner for two PLUS 2 hours of billiards    or bowling at the Garage and a 1-night stay at the Bacon Mansion on Capitol Hill.

Contact Andrea at [email protected]  to purchase raffle tickets or purchase them at the event.  You do not need to be at the auction to win a raffle item.

King Street Cooperative Preschool (KSCP) is an innovative school that has been located in the Central District for over twenty years, with an emphasis on empowering children to problem solve for themselves and their community through its anti-bias curriculum.  KSCP relies on funds raised through our annual auction and raffle to keep tuition low, to provide scholarships available to families in need, and for enrichment opportunities and new classroom materials.

For more information, visit http://kingstreetcooppreschool.org/auction.php,
e-mail [email protected] or call 206-324-1420

With your support, we help our children to be safe, strong, and free!

Piedmont & Lombardy Wine Tasting

The northwest of Italy is home to Nebbiolo, that amazing grape that is chameleon like:  light yet sturdy, tannic yet graceful.  This Saturday we’ll be sampling some incarnations of the grape along with some other varietals of the region.

2011 Conti Sertoli Salis, Terrazze Retiche di Sondrio IGT, Alpium  $14
Chiavennasca is the local name for a clone of Nebbiolo grown almost exclusively in Lombardia. This opulent white is made by vinifying the grapes without skin contact during maceration (the skins are the part of the berries that impart color to the wine). The resulting wine retains the nobility of the Nebbiolo grape but is fresh and clean on the palate.

Pelissero, Le Natura Rosso, Barlet  $13
80% Barbera, 10% Nebbiolo, 10% Dolcetto
The name “Barlet” indicates into the Langa dialect a small barrel with tap which the peasants used to bring with them as refreshment during the tiring hours spent in the country, the so-called “meals wine”. It is suitable for daily consumption and nice to enjoy at the “merende sinoire”, the Piedmont expression to indicate an evening snack.  The fruit for the Le Nature all comes from the Lange region, home to some great structured Nebbiolos but the wine has no such aspirations.  It aims to be merely delightful.

2011 Il Vino Dei Padre, Ruche di Castagnole Monferrato  $18
Evasio Sattanino established his wine estate “Il Vino dei Padri” at Monale, in Asti, with the aim of continuing the family tradition of wine-making, growing grapes in sunny old hillside vineyards, the name of the estate, literally translated, “The Wine of Fathers”.  Their Ruche is a rare Piedmontese wine, with a striking personality.  It has an intense bouquet, with floral and spicy notes, a dry flavor, and a harmonious and velvety finish.

2005 Dessilani, Fara Novarese, Carmino  $28
80% Nebbiolo, 20% Vespolina
Fara is a small wine growing region in the northeast of Piedmont far removed from Barolo and Barbaresco.  The whole region has only 54 acres of vineyards but produces some very distinct wines.  Like a Barolo, Dessilani’s Carmino is aged for two years in barrel and 1 in bottle before release. The wine has good fruit, along with tobacco and tea notes and supple but sturdy structure.

2012 Cantina Casteggio, Moscatto  $10
From Oltrepo Pavese in Lombardy, Cantina Casteggio makes this half sweet, half effervescent, but totally refreshing wine.  It is very aromatic with fruit white peach and apricot aromas and flavors and a nice medium sweet finish.

casteggio

Casteggio

Madrona Wine Merchants offers free wine tastings featuring 4-5 selections on a theme every Saturday from 2 until the bottles run out and on Sunday we offer a mini-tasting of two wines all day from 11-5. No matter what day you stop by we always have something open to sample.

Hip hop artist Draze releases music video about Central District gentrification

Seattle hip hop artist Draze released a music video for his single “The Hood Ain’t the Same” earlier this month. The video shows landmarks and community members throughout the Central District and other south end communities.

“We could have just shot a bunch of buildings but it is the people who give these structures life. We wanted to highlight some of the real people touching the real community at a grass roots level.” says Draze. “As artists I think we have a responsibility to tell our truth to the people, regardless to how uncomfortable it may be. My city is alive but my community is dying, maybe this is my effort or Eulogy to get someone to care.” says Draze.

Here’s the full video from YouTube:

Seattle Music Partners: Hitting a High Note!

Please join us for Seattle Music Partners’ fundraising event, Hitting A High Note!  We promise a great evening including performances by our students and some very exciting news! We can’t say much at this point – it’s a surprise! But, if all goes well,  our students will be able to enjoy even more music making opportunities in their own neighborhood, without cost.

Among our speakers will be Zart Dombourian-Eby, principal piccoloist with the Seattle Symphony; and Dr. Marion Smith, Jr., Principal of Lowell Elementary School.

Hors d’oeuvres, beverages and dessert provided. Bring a friend! (There’s no charge to attend.) Help us build a bigger community of believers in the importance of access to and equity in music education.

Register here: http://tinyurl.com/smpcelebration

Fighting Eviction

A Capitol Hill activist recently sent around this useful information:

Recently I attempted to help a neighbor fight an eviction. We are hopeful that we will be successful.

Given the rapid displacement of our neighbors, especially those with limited resources, perhaps you might soon find yourself with a neighbor who needs some help. If you know attorneys who might be willing to do pro bono work in this area, it would be nice to have some neighborhood referral resources for this.

I have compiled the below action steps and resources. This is not legal advice. I am not an attorney. And perhaps someone else knows a better process. But this is what I found to be most helpful and what I learned through my research and meetings with my neighbor and our meetings with advocates.

  1. Ask if the resident is willing to share their eviction papers, lease, and any other correspondence / notices. Make extra copies for the resident (and for yourself, with permission) so that as you both meet with folks, you can share / mark them up. Scan clean copies so that they are email-able to attorneys who want to review the documents in order to decide if they are willing to take the case.
  2. Read the relevant sections of the “tenant rights handbook” and the “eviction response packet” together (see below).The most important thing to do is meet any deadlines with the appropriate legal forms.
  3. Assess wether there are options for private legal representation (perhaps the resident’s friends or family might help)
  4. Explore public options. My first stop would be the Northwest Justice Project at the courthouse downtown: 3rd floor. Arrive at 7:45 and put your name on the clipboard for a consultation. The link below tells what paperwork to bring to this meeting. The person being evicted must be present and willing to sign paperwork about income level in order to receive legal advice on the case.
  5. Help the resident decide whether they will respond to the eviction with attorney representation (private or public) or “pro se” if neither are possible. If pro se, use the legal documents in the  “eviction response packet” as your guide. READ CAREFULLY AND MEET ALL DEADLINES WITH THE OPPOSING PARTY’S ATTORNEY AND WITH THE COURT CLERK’S OFFICE

That is as far as I got with this neighbor, since an attorney has now taken her case. Hooray! Resources…

Housing Justice Project — free attorney consultation / representation www.kcba.org/pbs/HJP.aspx

 

Tenant rights handbook eviction on pages 15-19

http://www.washingtonlawhelp.org/files/C9D2EA3F-0350-D9AF-ACAE-BF37E9BC9FFA/attachments/B6683A5E-C507-4E9B-8A22-02055EC445C5/6300en.pdf

Eviction response packet   http://www.washingtonlawhelp.org/files/C9D2EA3F-0350-D9AF-ACAE-BF37E9BC9FFA/attachments/819A0BA1-F856-49A6-8782-E316D85F834B/6310en.pdf

Attorney General resource list  for complaints about discrimination, low income housing, senior issues

http://www.atg.wa.gov/ResidentialLT/default.aspx#.UwO3tGRDu0w

Tenant rights  http://www.washingtonlawhelp.org/issues/housing/tenants-rights

Just Cause Eviction in Seattle–Tenant Information https://www.seattle.gov/dpd/cs/groups/pan/@pan/documents/web_informational/dpdd016420.pdf

Self-representation Pro Se  http://www.courts.wa.gov/programs_orgs/pos_bja/ptc/documents/SuperiorCourtProSeLitigantInformation.pdf

 Solid Ground (Fremont)  Homelessness prevention programs and tenant services

http://www.solid-ground.org/Programs/Housing/Counseling/Pages/default.aspx

The People of the Central Area: Lori Kane, Author & Community Fan, CollectiveSelf.com

This post is part of a series of profiles of Central District residents, part of “The People of the Central Area” project developed and written by Madeline Crowley.

Photo by Madeline Crowley

About Lori:

Lori regularly opens her Central Area home to anyone who wants to work in a free co-working space, Collective Self. She and her friend, Knox Gardner, also brought the neighborhood the event Hopscotch CD, by involving many other contributing individuals and groups.

Hopscotch started as a small event and it grew, could you talk about that?

The idea came from my friend Knox Gardner who lives just off Jackson Street. He heard about HopscotchDetroit, they attempted to set a record for the world’s longest Hopscotch path (four miles) and they did it. As I was doing interviews, I kept hearing about Knox from different people who didn’t know each other. Then he emailed to say he was thinking about this Hopscotch event… so that was a sign that I should do something with Knox, even though I hadn’t even met him yet.

So, we started thinking about Hopscotch CD in February, posted in the Central District News to ask if people wanted to help. We asked our neighbors. Then, five or six people got together. We wanted it to be about getting to know each other. This is a neighborhood with an extraordinary number of busy people: a lot of technology people who work 60-80 hours a week because that’s just part of the gig, or instead people working three jobs while taking care of kids and parents.

The event wasn’t going to be about making a 4-mile Hopscotch path, we wanted to do a semi-circle from Jackson to Union. I wanted to do from 18th-23rd Avenues along Union Street because that’s my stretch of the neighborhood. Knox wanted to do MLK and then down Jackson. Originally, he wanted it to work with the SeattleGreenways program.

The part of the Hopscotch path connecting Jackson to Union followed the Seattle Greenways’ proposed Central Seattle Greenway, with one minor deviation so that the path would cross Jefferson safely at an existing crosswalk. We started meeting and getting ideas of what we should do for an event. We just wanted it to be fun and playful, that’s enough. If you can get people to play together, to have fun together they can add to the event themselves.

Not everyone sees it like that, not everyone wants to have fun, and not everyone wants to get to know the neighbors, either. For us both the motivation was to meet other neighbors, to build community and all that comes with that.

We started by asking people if they wanted to participate by doing things along the route.  We applied for a Small and Simple Grant but didn’t get the grant until mere moments before the event, so expenses were all out of pocket. Now, we’re getting reimbursed for that, which is really nice.

We had a small group of people laying 2-miles of Hopscotch path so we took a Block Captain approach and asked people to take ownership of their own blocks. That worked well everywhere except Jackson because of the big businesses there. Union Street is small businesses and homes. The core organizers of Hopscotch knew those businesses, so the business owners totally embraced the event. They went way above and beyond to participate. Katy’s Coffee did a rummage sale on Union, they had balloon artists and buckets of sidewalk chalk and had neighbors who did face painting. Alex at 20/20 Cycle had a vintage clothing sale on the sidewalk. A chiropractor did free adjustments and gave out coupons. Meter Music School participated. Fisher and Shawn of Alley Cat Acres brought fresh eggs from their chickens and made breakfast all day for people. Jean Tinnea, who is a long long time resident who did the neighborhood garden tour for over a decade, and her friend Mary Pat organized a Flea Market. They’re raising money for a Central District Public Arts project. Magpie Clothing participated too. They all embraced it and loved it.

Still, what really made the event big was the Central District Association’s Derryl and Sharon Durden. They were long time Central District residents, wonderful human beings. They used to own a bunch of property in the area, like the Neighbor Lady building. The Durdens figured out what they could do for Hopscotch though they don’t even live in the neighborhood anymore.

The Central District Association decided to do something big on Union and their friend Angela Knight, a firecracker of a human being, pulled together in three weeks a carnival in the parking lot of Med Mix. It was amazing, the most fun carnival I’ve ever been to: they had fire trucks, they had a bouncy boxing ring with huge soft gloves, they had magicians, all this stuff for kids.

It was great fun. They really helped us make inroads into the African-American community and into the kid-community. Angela had friends at Garfield High School who got posters made, got students to come and help, and to show up the day of the event. That was really nice and it just sort of bloomed from there.

There were yard sales. The Lake Washington Girls School got involved. Centerstone had a pop-up adventure play and free hot dogs in their parking lot. The Block Captain, there, Kenton, did an attempt at a Guinness Book of World records for the most people hopscotching at the same time. They needed 380 people and they got 330. It was so much fun.

I knew it would be fun to hopscotch with kids, but hopscotching with other adults in a parking lot with 300 plus people, it was so much fun. We just showed up at there but the Guinness Records people require it to have a sign-in sheet, contact information with 300 people in this space. Kenton set up about a hundred courts for 4 person teams. By the time we finished signing people in and I went to join my team, I noticed that the whole parking lot had been decorated with sidewalk chalk. People had decorated their own courts and it was just awesome. One group had numbered their squares with animals that increased in size, so it started with a worm as Number 1 with number 10 was a dinosaur. It was just cool.

How did that shift you experience of living here in this neighborhood?

The biggest thing for me was making new friends from the process of organizing the event, not even the event itself. Far more important than the event itself is the sheer number of people we know. That has exploded. (Lori stops speaking for a moment to cry) It was really awesome.

I was really struck that day at how amazing this neighborhood is with the variety of people here. We are really lucky to have a ton of people here from East Africa. Even after the event it was fun to keep getting pictures of hopscotching. We used a flour and cornstarch for the hopscotch grid that was supposed to go away after 3 rains. As it turns out, Detroit rains are much heavier so that equals about 10 Seattle rains. It will go away eventually. Weeks after the event people were sending us pictures people on the hopscotch path. One Sunday there was a photo in front of Immaculate Conception Church. There was a First Communion of a little girl from the Filipino community wearing a dress that looked like a wedding dress. She’s hopscotching in this big dress with her little brother who’s a little formal suit with a tie and a vest.

A neighbor sent it to me as she was watching the family try to get the kids to take a formal event picture but the kids just kept hopscotching away in their fancy outfits. We were sent a lot of photos of people in front of Swedish Hospital, one in particular was of a girl with a broken leg. Her African-American was family hopscotching behind her in a wheelchair.

To read the full story, click here.