September 3rd, 2009 at 8:19 pm Posted in Environment, North Highline UAC, White Center news | Comments Off on From North Highline Unincorporated Area Council meeting: Recycling event coming up
One note from the early going at the North Highline Unincorporated Area Council meeting (which is still under way as of this writing at 8:25 pm):
–There’s a county-sponsored recycling event at Evergreen High School Saturday, Sept. 13, 9 am-3 pm. See the details here.
September 3rd, 2009 at 12:56 pm Posted in Boulevard Park, Schools, White Center | Comments Off on School is starting; slow down at crosswalks if you don’t want to be cited
Although Seattle’s schools don’t start until next week, Holy Family on Roxbury Avenue at 20th SW has already started. There is a crosswalk, right in front of the school, on the very busy Roxbury Avenue. Problem is, that most days, drivers are whizzing along well above the speed limit, never mind the cross-walk limit. Be warned that this crosswalk is ALWAYS, and I mean always, manned by police. And the cross-walk is at the crest of a hill, making it less noticeable. Our advice, slow down at all crosswalks, since SPD and other law enforcement are going to be vigorously enforcing the speed limit at school crossings. Besides, kids are using these crosswalks and need I say more. Be safe and be smart.
September 3rd, 2009 at 11:13 am Posted in North Highline UAC, White Center news | Comments Off on Evergreen Pool, annexation, more on North Highline Unincorporated Area Council agenda tonight
Reminder that the North Highline Unincorporated Area Council meets tonight — first meeting since North Highline South annexation to Burien passed, first meeting since Evergreen Pool closed, and other hot topics on the agenda too – see it here. (Also follow the link on the NHUAC name in this story to see updates on their website – lots of topically updated news including items by president Greg Duff and WhiteWater Aquatics’ Ed Marrs following up on the Evergreen Pool rally earlier this week.) Tonight’s meeting is at 7 pm, North Highline Fire District HQ.
FOR ANNEXATION 1380 55.56%
AGAINST ANNEXATION 1104 44.44%
39.5% of voters in the area turned in their ballots. The election, Evergreen Pool, and more are bound to be part of the discussion tomorrow night at the next meeting of the North Highline Unincorporated Area Council, 7 pm, North Highline Fire District HQ. And the next meeting of the Burien City Council – for those who will soon be Burien residents without even moving – is Monday, Sept. 14.
Young swimmers like those two were among the Evergreen Pool supporters who spoke eloquently and energetically Monday night at the rally on the eve of the pool’s closure, aimed at gaining attention and momentum to make sure the closure — which starts today — is not permanent. (Here’s our first report on the rally.) Young swimmers also were on the mind of Ed Marrs, a North Highline Fire District firefighter and board president for WhiteWater Aquatics, which hopes to take over pool operation if it can strike a deal with King County Parks and Highline Public Schools, who own the site and building respectively:
The pool is lifesaving in another way, declared one of its dedicated senior swimmers, Lucy:
As noted in our earlier report, NHUAC has its regular monthly meeting this Thursday night, 7 pm at North Highline FD HQ (1243 SW 112th), and you can bet the pool’s future will be a hot topic.
Foregoing the usual banquet, the White Center Community Development Association held its annual fundraiser as a luau in the recently renovated White Center Heights Park. Over $12,000 was raised; 320 attended. The entertainment was all derived from the Pacific Islander theme, right down to the pig — roasted underground and here seen, well cooked.
Alongside Evergreen Pool, dozens of swimmers and supporters gathered this evening to show their support for getting it reopened as soon as possible following the shutdown that starts tomorrow. They heard from WhiteWater Aquatics, the group trying to work out a deal to take over the pool that the county’s shuttering – WhiteWater says it’s hoping to have a deal by January, sooner if at all possible — but that means the pool is facing a closure of at least four months:
James Bush from King County Council Chair Dow Constantine‘s office says there’s not much they can do since the budget crisis is threatening park/pool facilities all over the county, though he reminded the group that the pool started the year with only six months of funding and managed to get two more. After the rally, some concerned swimmers gathered outside:
Rally organizers advised several courses of action: Contact King County Executive Kurt Triplett and Council Chair Constantine (who represents most of this area); also work with the North Highline Unincorporated Area Council, which will talk about the pool situation at its next meeting this Thursday, 7 pm, North Highline Fire District headquarters. We’ve got more from the rally, including video of swimmers young and old who had something to say – will be adding that as the evening goes on. EARLY TUESDAY NOTE: We decided to put up four video clips in a separate report; see that report here.
Thanks to Stefanie, half the duo that’s about to open Proletariat Pizza in the heart of the northernmost block of the 16th SW business district, for sharing that photo – the sign’s going up today, and as she told us last week, the new pizza place is set to open on September 11th.
Got word tonight from North Highline Unincorporated Area Council president Greg Duff that a rally is planned Monday night atEvergreen Pool, to “save the pool.” You’ll recall that King County Council chair Dow Constantineannounced Thursday that the pool would have to close September 1st, TFN, because a deal isn’t yet worked out for someone else – potentially WhiteWater Aquatics (as discussed at the last NHUAC meeting) – to take over its operations. The rally is set for 5-7 pm; the pool is at 606 SW 116th (map).
August 29th, 2009 at 4:30 pm Posted in Fun, Holy Family, White Center news | Comments Off on Holy Family’s “El Carnaval,” day 1
We dropped by within the past hour – didn’t take into account the fact that things would be slow because of 5 pm Mass! Booths, food, bouncy toys, scheduled to be in action till 10 pm tonight, resuming 10 am tomorrow, along 20th SW south of Roxbury. Music too – Paulina Alvarado was singing during our visit:
Went to the Holy Family website to doublecheck on this weekend’s El Carnaval street fair – and discovered this announcement:
It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of Fr. Ramon Velasco, who many will remember was our parish’s parochial vicar until last year. Fr. Ramon passed away earlier this week, and leaves behind many friends and family members one of whom is a member of the parish, Rosa Velasco. His funeral Mass is scheduled for this Friday at Holy Family before his body is returned to the Philippines.
Unfortunately, we discovered this just as all of the events concluded – a reception has just ended, following a Funeral Mass earlier today that was to be led by Archbishop Alex Brunett.
Sorry for the “outage” here – not related to the City Light power outage – our server-management company detected a problem that required emergency maintenance, taking White Center Now (and many other sites) down for a while. Looks like it’s done now. We posted some news on partner site West Seattle Blog in the meantime – we use separate server managers for the two sites to dramatically reduce the chances both will be down at the same time, so if ever you notice this site down, please check there or check our Twitter page at http://twitter.com/whitecenternow.
Here are the updates, linking to the full stories on WSB:
-Power outage: All but a few hundred homes/businesses are back on. More here.
-Evergreen Pool: It WILL close September 1st, according to King County Council Chair Dow Constantine, who hopes that will be temporary while the agreement for WhiteWater Aquatics to take over the pool is negotiated. More here.
-Hicks Lake: Warning signs are posted because of an algae bloom. More here. Also, here’s the entirety of the note we received from King County’s Doug Williams:
We just got results back from the state Department of Ecology that confirms a blue-green algae bloom at Hicks has surpassed the safety threshold. While there aren’t likely too many people swimming there right now, it’s possible that people could let their dogs swim and/or drink from the lake. Not a good idea!
We’ve posted signs that ask people to stay out of the water, and don’t let their pets swim in or drink from the lake.
Toxic algae can have some nasty effects on people and pets. In minor cases, it can cause a rash, eye and throat irritation, etc. It’s a neurotoxin that, in serious cases, can cripple your liver, mess with your nervous system, etc. Those are pretty rare situations; you’d have to ingest a lot of the stuff to get that sick. But it’s still important for everyone to heed the warnings and keep out of the water – pets, too.
When will the algae bloom go away? That’s a good question. We’ve seen blooms last for weeks; sometimes they don’t go away until the weather cools down and the sunlight becomes elusive.
We will collect water samples weekly for analysis by DOE. Once we have two weeks where the samples come back below the established acceptable threshold for human contact, we’ll take down the signs.
Thanks to Laura for the tip. Seattle City Light’s hotline lists two outages, one in the general White Center area and one in Burien – the boundaries listed on hotlines are always a bit broad so we hesitate to include them here, but the Burien outage is blamed on a fire, the cause of the one in White Center listed as unknown. 4,000 homes/businesses affected in the White Center-vicinity outage, 3,000 in Burien. More to come.
4:27 PM UPDATE: Here’s the full news release from City Light’s media-relations team:
A fire associated with a power outage in Burien and unincorporated King County has increased the number of customers affected by the outage to about 7,100 homes and businesses.
The fire is burning in a wooded utility right of way south of S 96th Street and west of Des Moines Memorial Drive. Power lines were reported on the ground in the area and at least one utility pole was burning.
Seattle City Light deenergized the power lines to allow firefighters to put out the blaze. City Light crews were dispatched to restore service once the fire was extinguished.
The cause of the outage was not immediately known. City Light expects to restore service to most of the affected customers by 5:30 p.m. by routing power around the damaged area. An estimate for full restoration of service will not be available until crews are able to inspect the damaged equipment.
The general boundaries of the outage are SW Barton Street on the North, SW 167th Street on the South, Glendale Way S on the East and Puget Sound on the West.
August 27th, 2009 at 12:37 pm Posted in Annexation, White Center news | Comments Off on Today’s KUOW annexation discussion now archived online
Just follow the audio links from this page. We’ll add some more notes later; before the discussion ended, talk turned to the fate of still-unannexed White Center — Burien City Manager Mike Martin said he and the City Council are still discussing next steps, and he also noted that the Seattle mayoral race would have quite an impact, given that ousted Mayor Greg Nickels was an annexation supporter. We’ll be checking with both candidates, Joe Mallahan and Mike McGinn, to see where they stand.
If you’re near a radio – or near a computer with speakers! – in the 9 am hour tomorrow, check out KUOW, which will take a closer look at the North Highline South Annexation. I’m scheduled to be among the guests on behalf of WCN; according to KUOW’s website, Burien City Manager Mike Martin and former NHUAC president Gerald Robinson will be on the panel too. Any points you think should be made? Anybody else you know will be on the show? Please post a comment (or e-mail us at whitecenternow@gmail.com) – thanks!
7 am-7 pm Saturday, the South Park Bridge is closing for repairs, so if you use that route to get between northern White Center and South Park/other areas, you’ll need to plan an alternative. Here are full details on the county’s website.