Governor sends 60th anniversary congratulations to New Hope

It’s not every day that a group in the Central District gets a letter from the Governor. But New Hope Baptist Church did, in honor of their 60th Anniversary that is being celebrated this weekend.

The governor writes:

I applaud New Hope Baptist for its many years of service and fellowship. Your congregation is a shining example of what it means to love one another and give cheerfully to those in need, and I am confident that your legacy of ministry and compassion will long grace the Seattle community and the state of Washington as a whole.

New Hope has persevered through a number of challenges over the years, including a 1994 fire that destroyed their building. The new sanctuary that stands at 21st & Fir today was built through donations of time and money from church members and other people in the community.

The church is inviting all current and former members and others in the community to join in the celebration at a set of special services this Sunday at 10:45am and 3:00pm, and continuing Monday through Thursday at 7pm. New Hope is located at 124 21st Avenue.

 

Police searching for accused killer Jymaika Hutson

Just in from the SPD Blotter:

Seattle Police seeking murder suspect from April 2007 homicide

Seattle Police are seeking the public’s assistance in locating Jymaika S. Hutson, 31. He is described as 6′ and 180 pounds with a deformed left eye. He may also go by the moniker “Tiger 6″ or “Tiger.” He has been charged with first degree murder in an April 2007 homicide in the Central District. He may still be in the Seattle area.


Anyone with information regarding Hutson’s location is urged to call either 911 or the Seattle Police Homicide Unit at 206 684-5550. Those wishing to remain anonymous are encouraged to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or send a text to CRIMES (274637). Your text message should include “TIP486″ to ensure proper routing. If a tip leads to an arrest and the filing of charges, callers may qualify for a cash reward of up to $1000. Calls are taken 24 hours a day.

Plants needed

Hey neighbors, please remember to pot up/divide/start plants for the upcoming

Free Plant Exchange Saturday April 24th and the

“CD Public Art Fundraiser Plant Sale” at the CD Garden Tour Saturday May 22nd.

The May 22nd Garden Tour is shaping up nicely and we’ll post details closer to the event. The CD Public Art Project will mostly happen in 2011. Stay tuned.

Problem solved? Umpqua bank responds to 12th Ave story

It looks like we may have some responsible new property owners in the form of Oregon-based Umpqua Bank for the bankrupt 12th Avenue property we reported on Tuesday. They left a comment on the story saying that they’re assessing the cleanup needs for the property and “will be acting swiftly to clear debris and restore a safe and pleasant looking environment. Additionally we are actively working with community organizations, like CHH [Capitol Hill Housing], to engage with the neighborhood around ongoing clean up efforts.”

Kate of CHH sent this photo of Umpqua crews out on the lot this morning:

Definitely a good thing to see!

Information on a burglary?

Yesterday, 3/10, I came home to find a gold colored  sheet of paper on my porch from SPD notifying me that there was a recent burglary in the area. Does anyone who also received the hand-out have any information? I sure do miss the scanner report when it’s not around.

Possible Prowler around 16th and Jefferson

Just wanted to give a heads up about a possible prowler casing homes on 16th between Alder and Jefferson.  He knocked on the door after 11pm claiming to be a neighbor but when asked where he lives, he ran off.  (Plus, we know pretty much all of our neighbors on the street and didn’t recognize him.)  He is an African American male with cornrows, average height and build. 

PI: Assault last week was gang-related

With the temporary outage of the scanner, it’s been a week since we had any crime news. Here’s some cd-relevant info about an assault last week, as reported by the PI:

About 6:30 p.m., a man was sitting in the parking lot of the Midtown Center in the 1100 block of 23rd Avenue. Two others were in the vehicle, and one tried to back it out of a parking space. Another car blocked their path and began yelling after a request to move.

An argument ensued and one of the men in the car trying to exit was punched in the face, according to police. A woman there tried to call 911, but had the phone slapped from her hand.

“During the argument, the three suspects made statements with words to the effect of, ‘This is union St’ and ‘do you know where you are, this is union,'” officer Steven Bale wrote in his report.

The police report says the incident may have been related to the “Union Street BGD” gang, which is a new one for us.

Stay tuned for the return of the scanner this coming Monday…

Rowhouse & Townhouse Forum – Support Affordable Housing

Come to the Rowhouse/Townhouse Forum to Support Affordable Housing in Seattle

There are a number of features in the current version of the multi-family update that will improve our multi-family housing.  They will produce housing with better street frontage, more useful open space, improved public process, and of overall higher design quality.  It is a good start & I support it wholeheartedly.  But today’s version of the legislation doesn’t go far enough.

The Problem

The biggest “missing piece” is that our current code is structured in a manner that has a decidedly adverse impact on housing affordability.  There are a couple of simple changes that are up for discussion that would significantly improve affordability if they are implemented.  But they are also considered “third-rail” issues, & I am concerned that the council will not take them on unless they hear strong support for them in the community (not just the architects and urban planners).

Density Limits:

Currently, Seattle has strict density limits in place in all of the L-zones.  These limits essentially dictate the minimum size of housing unit in a given zone.  As a result the average Townhouse in Central Seattle is about 1500sf in size and sells for around $450,000.  Density limits were created in an era when a single family home was affordable for people with median income & the most pressing concern of the body politic was fighting density.  Today, density is no longer a dirty word, but we live in a city where ownership housing is increasingly out of reach for Seattle’s workforce.

The city council is considering removing density limits in the L-zones.  The result of this will not be little cracker-box units sprouting up all over Seattle.  There are still a number of factors: Parking requirements, design review thresholds, platting requirements for fee-simple ownership, condominium liability – that have a tendency to push L-zone development towards fewer numbers of larger units.  The most likely outcome is that unit size and prices would be reduced around 25-35% from what we see today.  It’s a minor uptick in density but a huge change in affordability – pushing down townhouse prices where they are within reach for a family with median income.

Parking Requirements:

Parking requirements also act as a form of density limit.  Current code requires one off-street parking space for each unit.  While this might be a sensible requirement for some neighborhoods and some kinds of development, for many of our denser urban neighborhoods, this prevents us from doing the kinds of development that best serves our housing needs.  The council is currently studying the idea of reducing or eliminating parking requirements in Urban Centers and Urban Villages – our densest and best transit served neighborhoods (see map)  Doing so won’t unleash a flood of reduced parking development.  Developers will continue to build as much parking as they think they need to serve their building and for a bank to finance it. 

What reduced the parking requirements will allow is for small innovations to take place:  An old home might be split into three flats without turning the yard into a parking lot, or a conventional townhouse project might include a unit or two with small apartments instead of three story townhomes.  There is lots of friction is the system that will tend to hold us to our old way of doing things, but easing up on these requirements will allow innovation to begin & allow new development that produces smaller, more affordable, and less auto-centric housing.

Conclusion:

Our current code hails from 1989.  It was written from the point-of-view that no good could come of density and development.  It was an attempt to pull up the gangplank & prevent growth pressure from changing the character of our neighborhoods.  Ironically, the code did nothing to stop growth, but it did help to make manifest the dystopian vision of what growth would bring.  It consigned Seattle to third-rate housing solutions and flooded our neighborhoods with a drove of poorly designed, unaffordable, ill-conceived housing stock.

A generation later we have very different concerns.  As a city we have finally invested in mass-transit infrastructure, and committed ourselves to the goal of making density work.  We live in one of the most desirable cities in the world, one that will continue to be a magnet for in-migration for the foreseeable future  We want to preserve the character of our single family neighborhoods, but not at the expense of the other half of our city’s residents.  We want to build quality, affordable, green multi-family neighborhoods as well.  

Please come to the meeting, lend your support & help make this happen. 

Rowhouses, Apartments & Townhomes – A Special Community Meeting – Saturday 3/20, 10 am – Taproot Theatre in Greenwood (204 N 85th St)

I am perfect like you

I will be perfect, judgmental, condescending, short sighted, uninterested, from now on.

 Where I live will determine my degree of observation.  I will only observe within my neighborhood, even if I do venture out into greater Seattle, I vow never to share my perspective.  I see nothing.

Great ones, I love squallier and injustice, desire conflict and gangs running the streets.

I will waste the time of those in charge of protecting me, and keep them from murder cases.

I will incite criticism from the great sages of our time, here in this arena. 

My comments will be useless, baseless, out of context, from the view house  I live in and from my moving car in the strip mall.

Where I live, determines my opinions value if any, despite being a person. 

My only desire is to be as self important and omniscient as my fellow citizens here.

Stereotyped and stripped of any value to society I submit to those vacant souls that share the miniscule perspective their brain cells can muster.

Please do not empathize or feel, I am just a cry baby with nothing important to the self appointed pompous scribes here within.

Kiss my grits and I will smile as I drive by and you are in a tank of piranhas.

CD Real Estate Update: Prices down, but closings up

We’ve got the latest numbers from the Northwest Multiple Listing Service on current home sales activity in the neighborhood, and they show that while price declines are continuing around the neighborhood, there’s more sales activity than at this time last year (note that these numbers are for a large area that includes the tony parts of Leschi and Madrona):

Single Family Homes:

  • Median sales price is down 0.87% to $482,250
  • The number of closed sales is up 53% to 46
  • The number of pending sales are up 66% to 58
  • Total listings are up 1% at 306

Condos:

  • Median sales price is down 13% to $305,000
  • Closed sales are down 8% at 33
  • Pending sales are up 18% at 59
  • Total listings are up 3% at 270

Although prices are still declining, it’s a good sign that more deals are closing and that inventory isn’t increasing dramatically. That could be a sign that things are stabilizing in the market.