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UPDATE 8:28 PM: I-1033: Failing 56% to 44% statewide, 34% to 66% in King County R-71: Winning 52% to 48% statewide, approved 66% to 34% in King County King County Executive: Constantine is winning 57% to 43% Mayor: McGinn ahead of Mallahan 50% to 49% City Attorney: Pete Homes ahead of Tom Carr 62% to 38% City Council Position 2: Conlin over Ginsburg 75% to 24% City Council Position 4: Bagshaw winning vs. Bloom 69% to 32% City Council Position 6: Licata beating Isreal 58% to 42% City Council Position 8: O'Brien ahead of Rosencrantz 58% to 42% Housing Levy: Winning 63% to 37% School District Position 5: Kay Smith-Blum over Mary Bass 64% to 25% School District Position 7: Patu beating Chin 68% to 31% Port of Seattle Position 3: Holland over Doud by 55% to 45% Port of Seattle Position 4: Albro over Vekich by 57% to 43% And the statewide totals for 1033 and R-71. Check for latest totals. UPDATE 6:00 PM: At 8:15 the first totals from mail ballots will be posted on this King County Election site. Here is the schedule for results from King County Elections:
We'll also be part of the scene at the election night parties on Capitol Hill. Here is a list and map of the political fun. See you out there. As of early Tuesday morning, the county had received ballots from about a quarter of Capitol Hill area registered voters. Here's the tally for the two county districts that include parts of Capitol Hill:
Full King County totals can be found here. To add to those decimal points, your mail-in ballot needs to be postmarked Tuesday the 3rd or you can drop it off at either of these drop box locations closest to Capitol Hill:
The drop boxes can be accessed up until 8 PM on Election Day. Once you've sent in your ballot, check King County's ballot tracker to make sure it has been properly received. Need some guidance? Check out the 2009 CHS Endorsements.
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Election Day 2009 Capitol Hill
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Sign wavers show their support for R-71 on the Madison overpass as I5
traffic steams by.
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Election Day 2009 Capitol Hill
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More from the overpass
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Election Day 2009 Capitol Hill
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From earlier in the morning on Pine, this group of housing levy supporters
showed their enthusiasm for Prop. 1 Vote Now!, originally uploaded by prima seadiva. We reported last week that mayoral candidate Mike McGinn's election night party will be held at the War Room but that's not the only political party celebrating, commiserating and/or blowing off steam happening on Capitol Hill Tuesday night. Here is the rundown of election night events on the Hill courtesy of this map provided by Brian Allen:
Bailey/Coy Books, Broadway, Seattle, WA, originally uploaded by djwudi. UPDATE 12:10 PM: Wells said his decision to close for good after years of financial struggle came down to the fundamental question: What does an independent bookstore need to be in this era to survive? Wells said he's been thinking of how to change for a long time. "I've considered so many permutations. Downsizing. Changing my stock. Events. The realities of book selling at this moment are such that I'm not even sure a change of retail model would even work," Wells said. So Wells said he has decided to do the prudent thing. Quit. "Even if there was a huge groundswell of support from the community, the business model itself is so precarious," Wells said. "I wanted to end this with grace." Not that the community hasn't tried to keep the story going. Wells confirmed that a prominent Capitol Hill business owner who is a longtime customer had been working with him to find a solution to keep Bailey Coy in business. "A loan doesn't really help any more. The credit debt is too scary. We've gone through a couple of attempts to find financing and we end up in the same place. No," Wells said. "One of the pieces of this story is how hard it is for small businesses to get credit. At some point I stopped and said, 'I wouldn't even give us credit!'" Wells said the financial condition of his shop wasn't dire -- in fact, he said he has never taken out a bank loan to keep the store afloat -- but that it had become clear that the struggle to survive was no longer worth the effort. "This isn't the bookstore I want to be running. I only want to run a good bookstore. I cannot finance -- and the Cap Hill community -- cannot finance this store," Wells said. Now, Wells said the best way for you to help him close Bailey Coy with 'grace' is to support the store as it sells off its remaining stock over the next four weeks. The prices will keep dropping, of course, but buying a book today will help Wells pay off remaining bills. He also said there will be a new 'Bailey Coy rummage' section of the store to sell off some of the memorabilia and etc. that has collected in the store over the years including a framed package wrapper from Feminist Press addressed to founder Barbara Bailey and some of the shop's classic window displays. The best memorabilia will be part of an auction at a party Wells is planning to celebrate the store's history. Wells calls the party Bailey Coy's wake. "Barbara will be there," Wells said. "We'll auction off great memorabilia like a pair of underwear signed by David Sedaris." The happy part of the whole thing, Wells said, is hearing from people about their love for the store. "I'm hearing so many stories. Stories about people coming here as a kid. We're connected to a variety of communities. A lot of people have different experiences. That's been great." As for what comes next for Wells, he says he hasn't had time to think about it despite friends telling him for years that he should think about life after Bailey Coy. "It's been a great 30 years," Wells said. "For 25 of those years, it was a profitable business. And then I bought it," he deadpans. Now that the struggle has ended, Wells can laugh. UPDATE 9:25 AM:
Original Post:
Went to Olive on Friday night this time, just after interviewing the artist at the Sound Transit installation. This is the fourth of a weekly series of ambient shots around Capitol Hill. Every week I'll pick a different spot and stay for about 10 minutes to create a 'snapshot' of that location at that moment. PAST EPISODES Episode #1 - Cal Anderson Park Central District News is reporting on a shooting incident tonight at 29th and Yesler that has left a female Seattle Police Department officer down and in unknown condition. UPDATE: A officer has died but it is not clear at this time if it was the female officer heard on the police radio during the incident. The hunt for the shooting suspect is underway. Follow CDN for updates. Meanwhile, in other 911 activity from Halloween night, a pedestrian was struck by a vehicle while crossing Broadway near Pike around 10:45 PM. There was no further information regarding the victim's injuries. Just after midnight, a car fire on E. Olive Way brought out the Seattle Fire Department. Neighbor Kevin reports: A car just exploded on Olive St just south of Harvard in front of Online Coffee and Cafe Metropolitain. No ambulances but the flames were high. Update 8:50 a.m. 11/1/09 From the SPD Blotter regarding police offer shooting:
Seattle-King County Health Department just released a Situation Report on the H1N1 Influenza Response for October:
As Justin reported, the art at the Sound Transit site was up and running tonight for a "dress rehearsal" for Saturday night's opening. I went down and interviewed Dan Corson and got some footage of the installation. In the video Dan describes the current installation as an "improvisation" to get something up for the planned Halloween opening. Dan also talks about his personal connection with Capitol Hill, and the ST light rail site in particular.
There's a Friday night dress rehearsal for the Sound-Transit sponsored art installation in the empty lot cleared for light rail construction at the corner of Broadway and Denny. Word from the artist Dan Corson and Sound Transit art program manager Barbara Luecke is the 'rehearsal' will start at 7 PM and run 'until the generator gas tank is empty' around midnight. Same plan Halloween night. There's been some scrambling to complete the installation as weather and some mis-sized fiberglass rods have slowed progress. The installation isn't yet in final form but most of it is in place and there are lasers. What else could you ask for? Joining the election night celebration on Capitol Hill, the Approve R-71 campaign announced they will be holding their party at Pravda Studios on 10th Ave in Pike/Pine. Mike McGinn's campaign, meanwhile, will be watching the results come in down the street at the War Room.
"He paid us. We made the products. Then he reversed the charges three months later. We didn't know which way to turn with it," Wright said. Friend, it turns out, is not a stranger to financial controversy. He and his wife are involved with a group of charities that has been investigated for its questionable practices. Here is a Seattle PI article about the couple from 2007. Most recently, the activities of the American Veterans Coalition, which lists Friend as its 'registered agent,' were under scrutiny as the Gig Harbor-based charity settled claims in Arkansas and Kentucky. The office of the Washington State Attorney General would not comment on whether it is -- or is not -- investigating any of the charities Friend is involved with. Those include the AVC, the Cancer Assistance Network, the Disabled Firefighters Foundation, and the National Association for Disabled Police Officers. We have also requested information from the AG on any complaints against Friend, his organizations and his company, Emperor's Essentials. None of the organizations were included in the state's recent busts of so-called 'badge charities. CHS also talked to Rebecca Sherrell, charities program manager for the Washington Secretary of State's office. Sherrell said her office had no documentation of any state actions against the Friend charities. Back at Bliss, Wright said he didn't know what to do. So he gave Friend -- somebody he says he's known from the business world for seven years -- a call. "He tries to intimidate," Wright said of Friend." "'I'm so right,' 'you don't have a chance.' I think a lot of people back down from the intimidation." CHS got a small taste of this when we contacted Friend at his Gig Harbor home through a number provided on one of his organizations' Web sites. Friend answered the phone with a cheery "Emperor's Essentials!" Then he learned he was talking to a reporter. "Do not call me," Friend said. "This is a private residence and I do not want this to happen again." Later that night, Friend forwarded us this e-mail without additional comment:
Wright said Bliss won't back down. "Yesterday, the intimidation almost worked until we saw the support of people coming out to support us," Wright said. Bliss sent out an e-mail to customers telling them about the situation and announcing a sale to help the shop recoup some of their losses. "We've made most of it back," Wright said of the response. "We were getting an order an average of every two minutes online." But Bliss isn't finished. Wright said he expects to report the deal gone bad to the State Attorney General's office and will pursue the matter in court. "I don't know anything about the process," Wright said. "When you run a super honest business you usually don't care about these kinds of things." Details here: http://www.seattleymca.org/page.cfm?ID=fall07 Mayoral candidate Mike McGinn is including a Capitol Hill stop in his last weekend of city barnstorming, according to this announcement from his campaign team. We already gave him the CHS endorsement but you can check in with McGinn on Halloween afternoon at 19th Ave's Miller Community Center. The McGinn campaign announced today it is holding its election night celebration at the War Room.
If you try to bring up the Metro trip planner, you are greeted with this table of new domains. Also, the trip planner now has it's own sub-domain. Here is the link: http://tripplanner.kingcounty.gov/cgi-bin/itin_page.pl?resptype=U
They really are in charge--they're visiting the Creative Academy at SCCC to play the role of creative directors on a team including a graphic designer and photographer. Each of the fifth-graders is in the catbird seat, directing the creation of a poster or ad or whatever. All feature a different Pez dispenser. They had one hour to brainstorm, and have three more to produce.
Last year they were talking about careers. Each of the students got a letter of the alphabet corresponding to a profession, and Salverda got the idea to show them what a graphic designer and photographer actually do. Only a few had even heard of the terms, he explains, but even they didn't know what design involves.
Down the hall, the college students and fifth-graders are taking snack breaks, painting ideas in the air before they return to the computer lab. The design proposal for the 11th and Pine development was posted to the Design Review website today, in anticipation of the second Early Design Guidance Meeting scheduled for next Wednesday, Nov 4th (details below). You can download the entire proposal here[3.5mb]. But for those too busy (or lazy) to go through it, here is a brief overview of what's new (see our earlier coverage here and a recap of the first EDG meeting here): First, according to DPD and the Design Review Board, this meeting is scheduled as a second Early Design Guidance meeting, but the proposal seems to suggest otherwise. While EDG's are required to have three alternatives for height and bulk within the allowable zoning, the current 11th and Pine porposal looks at only a single option and has many more details than the EDG is suppose to consider. I spoke with Bob O'Malley of Kohler Architects, and he did not seem to think that three alternatives were necessary at a second EDG. The project planner, Lisa Rutzick could not be reached at this time. Unlike any of the options in the first EDG, the new design calls for a fully enclosed residential courtyard that would start on the second level. The unit breakdown has gone from 54 studio, 30 1-bdrm, and 12 2-bdrm (total 96), to 6 studio, 76 1-bdrm, and 10 2-bdrm (total 92). Similar to the first proposal the original facade will be maintained on 11th and Pine and will wrap around a bit into the alley. One of the main concerns at the last EDG meeting was the splitting of the original two-story ceiling of the interior by bringing the residential units down into that space. The new proposal is a bit of a compromise in that about half of the street level retail, the side facing Pine St, will have two-story ceilings, while the rest will not. The upper floors are designed to "pay respect" to the existing building by using similar window patterns, column spandrels, and glazing divisions. While most of the upper floors will have very little setbacks, half of the 11th Ave facade will be recessed above, to accentuate the original entrance and garage door, which is being restored for commercial use (not parking). The original masonry is intended to be restored while the upper levels will have metal panels with minimal treatment and trim. They have also opted to name the building the "Sunset Electric" building, apparently ignoring Dennis Saxman's request that they maintain the character of the "Winton Motor Co." a company that, according to Saxman's research, owned the property prior to Sunset Electric. The new proposal has also increased the parking stalls from 4 to 36, therefore removing the 14,000sqft of basement commercial space that was designed for arts and cultural uses. This is interesting because, according to the first EDG report, neither the community nor the Design Review Board suggested additional parking. A few personal opinions:
Come voice your thoughts on this development at the next EDG meeting Wednesday:
A brief post here on the Lincoln Park reservoir work we reported on yesterday that will require a portion of Cal Anderson park to be closed for more than a month beginning on Monday. Seattle Public Utilities spokesperson Andy Ryan said the work is not related to the leaks that occurred in other similar city reservoirs this summer. He's looking into how much of the park will be shut down for the work which is scheduled to last through December 11. Northwest Film Forum (CHS partner) invites you to a party tonight:
He won our endorsement. On election night, he'll be partying in our 'hood. Mike McGinn's campaign is holding its election night party at the War Room with chow from Skillet Food, no cover and, sweet for the 'hood bloggers in the crowd, all the wi-fi you can eat. You might recall McGinn held his primary election night party at Havana. Whether this Tuesday ends as happily for the candidate will be up to you. The other 15 might want to come and gloat?? The lovely BLISS Soaps up on Broadway says it has recently fallen victim to a con artist. Here's the scoop from the latest BLISS e-mail newsletter sent out today:
However, there is good news:
Having heard of a few H1N1 cases on the hill, we contacted the Seattle-King County Health Department for statistics on Capitol Hill. James Apa, a Public Information Officer from the Health Department, responded:
Your ballot's around the house somewhere. Remember that it has to be postmarked by next TUESDAY (good luck finding a pickup after 6 PM). A stamp (remember stamps?) is 44 cents. Safeway has 'em. Voters' pamphlets, locations of 24 hour drop boxes, etc is all right here. Nearest drop box: Central Area Neighborhood Service Center, 2301 S. Jackson For the November 3 general, ballot drop boxes will open on Friday, October 16 and close at 8 p.m. on Election Day, November 3. You all did so well last November. Please get out those ballots and make us all proud. Thank you. Sunrise from iLike, originally uploaded by firewallender. Back in August, CHS reported on Capitol Hill startup iLike getting gobbled up by social media giant MySpace for $13.5 million plus $6 million in 'talent retention.' We wondered at the time how long iLike would remain in their Boylston Ave office space after the deal. The answer? Not long. We heard that iLike was on the move and we have been asking their PR person for information but never got confirmation. No bother. We saw an iLike employee's tweet about the in-progress move Wednesday morning. The iLike folks are heading downtown to join other MySpace development teams on Western Ave. Adios, iLike. We'll see if we can get some more info from the iLike folks about the move but given MySpace's investment in their downtown offices, probably not much Capitol Hill could have done to keep them. Part of the north end of Cal Anderson Park will be closed for more than a month starting Monday while city employees work on the underground Lincoln Reservoir, according to Seattle Public Utilities. We'll try to find out exactly how much of the park will be shut down while crews run what is being called a regular inspection and cleaning of the 109-year-old reservoir. Still hunting down a map that shows the exact dimensions of Lincoln but Google Maps graphics indicate a very large pool and this image from Wikipedia's entry on Cal Anderson also gives a glimpse of the size of the reservoir.
The work could also coincide with the start of construction activity on the nearby Capitol Hill light Rail station site.... Neighbor Phil sends us a link to his flickr stream of a chemical clean-up process underway on E. Pike. It appears to be a planned work effort -- not some kind of emergency contamination -- judging by the signs and the workman-like effort from the hazmat-suited employees. We've tried getting in touch with the company working at the site but Pacific Crest Environmental hasn't returned our three calls left over the past two days. We'll update as soon as we hear back from them about what's up. The site is located between Old School Frozen Yogurt and the new home of Doghouse Leathers. You can see in the old images captures by Google Streetview the old unpaved lot and a bunch of barrels lined up next to an old motor repair shop that used to be at the location. |





















