911 Call Center staff at 8/22 EastPAC Meeting!

Please come to next Thursday’s (August 22nd) East Precinct Advisory Council Community meeting!  We are meeting at 6:30 PM at Seattle University’s Chardin Hall, at 1020 East Jefferson.

Several of you have had questions and concerns about if, when and what to say when calling 911.To address your concerns, we have invited Rob Montague, a 911 call center trainer, who will be able to address any issues and questions you may have. 

In other news, we’d like to thank and bid farewell to our operations Lt. Matt Allen, who’ll be leaving us to join the SWAT Unit.  Lt. Allen has been a dedicated presence, always taking the time to understand and care about the needs of our community!  Thank you, Lt Allen and best to you in your new assignment!

Our new Operations person is Lt. Bryan Grenon. Also just assigned to the East Precinct is Lt. Ron Rasmussen, the new 2nd watch commander.  Welcome to the East Precinct Lt. Grenon and Lt Rasmussen! Both Lt. Grenon and Lt. Rasmussen will be at next Thursday’s meeting, so here’s your chance to welcome them in person! 

EastPAC meetings are the perfect opportunity to meet face to face with police, city attorney precinct liaison and your fellow community members. Mark your calendar for next Thursday!

EastPAC Community Meeting

Thursday, August 22nd, 6:30 to 8:00 PM

Chardin Hall, Room 142, Seattle University

1020 East Jefferson

(Enter campus at 11th and East Jefferson, park free in the lot, enter the building and head to the right down the hall)

Thank you, Seattle University, for your partnership!

Upcoming 23rd Avenue Action Plan Open House & Community Workshop

The city is hosting another 23rd Avenue Action Plan Open House and Community Workshop to allow interested parties to review and comment on the Draft 23rd Avenue Action Plan. The event will also include a Community Resource Fair, where participants can connect with organizations working in the neighborhood.

Event details:

Saturday, September 21, 2013
9 AM to 12 PM
Garfield Community Center
2323 E. Cherry Street

From 9 to 10 a.m., you’ll have an opportunity to review and comment on the Draft 23rd Avenue Action Plan, where you can let us know if it reflects your vision for the area. There will also be a Community Resource Fair happening during this time, where you’ll be able to connect with organizations already doing great work in the neighborhood.

During the workshop from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., you’ll learn about City departments, programs, and funds that can serve as resources for Action Teams. Actions Teams will then get to work discussing how to join forces with City staff and community partners.

 

A Neighbor’s Open Letter of Support for the More4Mann Coalition

As neighbors we’ve noticed with curiosity the increased activity at the Horace Mann School over the past year. When we attended the August 8 public meeting at the school we were thrilled to learn that it has been transformed by community members to create a vibrant hub and resource with many types of programs for people calling it a community home. We feel deeply honored to bear witness and involve ourselves in a community connected to the powerful history of black organizing in the Central Area. We wholeheartedly back the More4Mann’s vision and actions that look forward to a future where children of African heritage are thriving and have equity in all realms. We urge you to support this too.

As white homeowners in the Central Area we know we are implicated in a racist system that devalues, dehumanizes and displaces children of African heritage and their communities.  We also know that we have a responsibility to stand up against deepening of racial disparities that result in so many youth denied their enormous potential and funneled into the criminal justice system. It is the alleviation of these disparities around which the strong community space has formed at 24th and Cherry. The Seattle Public Schools have failed communities of color and specifically young people of African heritage, as the people at the community meeting at Horace Mann on August 8 so clearly and eloquently stated. We need no more proof that a different tack must be taken.

As white people and as newcomers to the Central Area, we’re aware of our role in gentrification. On top of the history of redlining, the painful last few decades of working class black families being pushed out and priced out of this neighborhood has had untold impact. Henry W. McGee, Jr., a Seattle University Professor of Law and Central District resident writes that “In 1990, there were nearly three times as many black as white residents in the area, but by 2000, the number of white residents surpassed the number of blacks for the first time in 30 years.” It is difficult to imagine what it would feel like to witness our neighborhood change in this fashion because we never have had to. We feel strongly the work being done at Horace Mann is a vital step towards a stronger, healthier and safer neighborhood for all people, including us.

We support the right of self-determination for communities, to foster healthy families and spaces that are relevant to all children of any race, culture or religion.  We have seen these values born out in the afro-centric community programming in the Horace Mann building. Seattle has surplus creativity and resources to contribute to the success of all the participating students and families at Horace Mann and we expect Seattle Public Schools to join this effort and encourage our neighbors to as well.

Sincerely,

Caitlin and Aaron

Garfield High alumni, now NBA players, to give away school supplies

Three NBA stars, each Garfield High School alumni, are returning to the Central District to distribute school supplies to neighborhood students. The project is run by humanitarian organization World Vision.

“The cost of school supplies can be a real burden to families as the start of the school year nears,” said Reed Slattery, manager of World Vision’s Pacific Northwest Teacher Resource Center in Fife, Wash.  “These events are a way that World Vision can help students in our own community start the year off well.”

The participating players are Will Conroy, currently with the Minnesota Timberwolves; Tony Wroten, currently with the Memphis Grizzlies; and Brandon Roy, who played most of his career with the Portland Trailblazers and retired with the Minnesota Timberwolves after the 2012-13 season. Each player graduated from Garfield High School before going on to play for the University of Washington.

The giveaway will take place at the Third Annual Back to School Backpack Giveaway & Community BBQ. Here, the players will distribute 600 backpacks of school supplies and 500 family food kits. Kids can get free hair cuts before school starts and snag an autograph with the players. The event will be held on Saturday, August 24, from noon to 3 p.m. in the Red Apple parking lot at 2301 Jackson Street.

Found: Young Australian Cattle Dog at 17th & Columbia

1186267_10100122472960134_2088734323_nHi, my name is Carlos. I’m a dog owner living at 17th & Columbia in the Central District.

I came home from work yesterday to find a shaking, cowering young dog at the top of my steps. He growled when I tried to approach and engage with him. He had a rough collar and leash but no apparent tags.

I was able to block him in on my porch, get my own dog out the back door, and contact Seattle Animal Control. The officer was able to engage with the dog to get him to calm down and grab hold of the leash to bring him out. He seemed to think, based on its behavior, that the dog had been struck by a car and ran off scared and injured. My porch is sheltered completely by bushes and probably seemed like a safe place to stay.

Cheers to Officer Jackson for responding so quickly and acting so capably and kindly.

Animal Control will be holding the dog until Friday hoping to find an owner and then assessing him for adoption. The incident number, if you have or want information, is #8617.

We posted on Craigslist as well.

Thank you for any help in getting this dog to a safe, happy, forever home!

Sustainable townhomes going up on 25th Ave E

Sustainable builder Cascade Built is in the process of building a five-unit townhome project at 208 25th Avenue E, between John and Madison. The townhome will be sustainably built with reclaimed materials and will be energy efficient, with the goal of achieving a minimum 4-Star Built Green Certification. Two of the townhomes will target Passive House principles, a rigorous set of guidelines for reducing the ecological impact of a home, according to builder Cascade Built.

The townhomes will be three stories tall with three to four parking spaces off the alley. The building will wrap around a central courtyard.

Cascade Built's rendering of 25th Ave E development.

Cascade Built’s rendering of 25th Ave E development.

This project will be Cascade Built’s second Passive House project following their Park Passive development, Seattle’s first certified Passive House. Cascade Built is no stranger to the neighborhood: the builder has constructed multiple projects in the area, which was the neighborhood of owner Sloan Ritchie for 15 years. Recent projects here include the Alley House, Seattle’s first LEED Platinum single family residence and Alley House 2, Seattle’s first LEED Platinum Modularly constructed home.

As part of the permitting process, the city opened a public commenting period. Several residents wrote letters raising concerns about the number of parking spaces, hoping Cascade Built will add more so that street parking competition doesn’t increase. Owner Ritchie says he has no plans to add more parking spaces and is instead hoping to encourage walking and public transit use.

“We are building five units on this in-fill multifamily lot, as we are strong proponents of increasing density in the inner city transit-oriented walkable neighborhoods such as this.  As for parking, we are in compliance with city requirements for minimum parking provisions, as a result of a parking requirement reduction because of the lot’s proximity to public transit, including a major bus lines and a Zipcar located nearby,” Ritchie says.

Cascade Built says it’s difficult to estimate a completion date at this point but that they’re aiming for a summer 2014 finish date.

Woman stabbed by friend, suspect arrested outside hospital

Seattle Police are reporting they’ve apprehended a suspect in an early morning stabbing:

A 42-year-old woman is in custody following a stabbing early this morning in the Central District.  The 24-year-old female victim was taken to Swedish First Hill by a male friend.

At about 5:30 this morning, East Precinct officers responded to the Swedish First Hill campus after receiving a call that a stabbing victim had just shown up.  Officers arrived and determined the following information:

The victim, suspect and a friend (all acquaintances) were in the 700 Block of 18th Avenue.  The suspect and victim were in an argument when the suspect stabbed the victim with an unknown object.  The male friend placed the victim in his truck intending to drive her to the hospital.  The suspect also jumped into the truck with the man and the victim.

All three arrived at Swedish First Hill.  Staff at Swedish called 911 to report the stabbing.  Officers arrived, and contacted the suspect and witness outside the hospital.  The suspect was taken into custody.  The victim was later transported to Harborview Medical Center from Swedish for further treatment.  The victim remains hospitalized.

The suspect is being interviewed by detectives and will be booked into the King County Jail later this morning.

Firefighters doused small fire under Madrona library just before elementary arson

About thirty minutes before firefighters rushed to the scene of the Madrona Elementary arson fire on Sunday morning, they doused a small fire under the Madrona library.

According to the Seattle Fire Department, the fire was small and the damage was minimal, but it’s under investigation due to its proximity to the Madrona Elementary fire:

On August 17, 2013 at 11:52 p.m. we were called to 1134 33rd avenue for reports of a fire underneath the Madrona library. Firefighters arrived and found beauty bark that was burned along with other combustibles. The damage estimate is $10.00

Fire investigators are looking to see if this fire is related to the Madrona School fire due to the proximity of the fires and the time of their ignition.

Seattle Fire says there is currently no evidence to link these fires to the string of other arsons in the area, including the recent Med Mix fire.

Seattle Fire has passed along these flyers to educate homeowners and business owners on reporting and preventing arsons:

arson alert cavasing flyer homeowners-page-001

arson alert cavasing flyer for commercial-page-001

The future is still uncertain for Horace Mann school building

The slew of community activities currently taking place at the Horace Mann school building on East Cherry has the school district rethinking its plans to renovate and reopen for high school classes.

The Seattle Times reported yesterday that the future of the building is still uncertain:

The district shuttered the 110-year-old structure four years ago amid school closings tied to reduced enrollment. With enrollment now rising, the district planned to renovate Mann beginning Sept. 3 so it could return Nova Alternative High School there next fall.

Now, all that is uncertain. After telling the community groups in a letter this month that they needed to vacate by Aug. 15 — and then adjusting that date to Aug. 30 — the district has now formed a task force to study options not just for itself but for the organizations, whose programs it says align with the district’s five-year strategic plan.

The school district is currently housing Nova at the old Meany building near Miller Park, but had plans to return Nova to Horace Mann and reopen Meany as a middle school. But these plans are on hold while the district’s task force mulls its options.

Meanwhile, a diverse group of community organizations, operating under the coalition More 4 Mann, are holding outdoor movie events, mentoring programs, vocational training, and a slew of other community development programs.

We’re working to find out more on the school district’s plans as they develop. Stay tuned.

Fire scorches Madrona Elementary ‘toolshed’ — UPDATE: Arson

(Image: CDNews via reader contribution)

(Image: CDNews via reader contributed video)

Fire units responded to a fully engulfed structure on the Madrona Elementary School campus early Sunday morning.

We are awaiting updates from Seattle Fire regarding the extent of the damage and any word on the cause. UPDATE: A SFD spokesperson tells us the fire was determined to have been intentionally set and the investigation has been handed over to police. Damage was limited to $2,500 — $1,000 to the structure, $1,000 to the school building and another $500 to the contents of the shed.

The department marshal was dispatched to the scene for investigation of the blaze early in the response just after 12:30 AM Sunday.

The building was described as a “fully involved toolshed” by SFD radio dispatches and was brought under control about 10 minutes later. Inspections of adjacent facilities revealed smoke but no apparent fire damage.

The fire comes in the wake of a string of suspicious fires in the area. Madrona Elementary at 33rd and Union stands just 10 blocks from the arson fire that damaged the Med Mix restaurant last week. Authorities are offering a $10,000 reward for any information pertaining to the case. Anyone with information is instructed to call 1-800-55-ARSON.