This week in CHS history | Hollingsworth enters D3 race, first COVID-19 vaccination clinic at Seattle U, Broadway biz owners oppose $15 minimum wage

Here are the top stories from this week in CHS history:

2023

With ‘cannabis justice,’ hunger advocacy, and three generations in the Central District, Hollingsworth enters race for District 3 — UPDATE

Three injured in drive-by shooting at 10th and Pike in second weekend of Capitol Hill nightlife gun violence


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This week in CHS history | E Olive Way/Denny property deal, Caffe Vita sale, Northwest School’s new gymnasium +theater +cafeteria +sports field above E Pike

(Image: CHS)

Here are the top stories from this week in CHS history:

2023

 

Development firm has deal for boarded-up E Olive Way/Denny property once home to In the Bowl, Bus Stop, and Coffee Messiah — UPDATE


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Your post 2023/2024 holidays CHS briefing: Black Lives Memorial Garden clearance, light rail service disruption, Blotto shutdown

Thanks to a CHS reader for the New Year’s image

We made it. Welcome to 2024. If you tuned out during the past few weeks of holiday and New Year’s festivities, here’s a CHS primer on the news and information from around Capitol Hill and the nearby you might have missed.

CHS Year in Review 2023 | Capitol Hill’s most important stories

2023 should have been a year of recovery. Squeezed between the city and the country regaining their footing out of the pandemic and the coming dumpster fire of the 2024 presidential election, 2023 probably should have given us more time to rest. But life in the big city never really slows down. The year brought massive public safety issues and an important political race of our own to the neighborhoods around Capitol Hill and the Central District. There were also tragic losses. It wasn’t all grey. There were also big new starts and a few nostalgic goodbyes. Here are CHS’s most important stories of 2023.


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  • PRIDE PLACE OPENS: Pride Place, a 118-unit, affordable, LGBTQIA+ focused senior housing and services development, opened on Broadway… neighboring Neighbours.
  • NEW GLO’S: After three decades on E Olive Way, Glo’s arrived in its new home above Capitol Hill Station — a space three and a half times bigger and much improved over the original. Even in the big expansion and fancy new digs, owners Julie Reisman and Steve Frias continue to proudly work the line. Meanwhile, the diner became a symbol of Capitol Hill’s changing labor environment as its workers agreed in a neck and neck vote to reverse efforts to organize as a union.
  • HOLLINGSWORTH WINS AS SAWANT STEPS ASIDE: She began the year with a MLK Day announcement. Joy Hollingsworth — a Black, queer, Central District cannabis entrepreneur and community leader — was running for the District 3 seat on the Seattle City Council. Weeks later, incumbent Kshama Sawant announced she would not seek reelection ending her decade-long run at City Hall. In 2013, the Seattle Central and Seattle University economics professor included a promise of a fight for a $15 minimum wage in announcing she would take on incumbent Richard Conlin for his seat on the Seattle City Council. A decade later, she is leaving office after that successful upset and a string of political victories that included overcoming an attempted recall in 2021. The $15 now victory came first in 2014 — though it would take years for the city’s required wage to reach that level. A push for rent control followed but fell by the wayside in 2020 when the city’s shifting political tides put the effort to tax large employers on the frontburner. The pandemic sealed the deal. By that summer, Seattle had a new payroll tax and Sawant, another victory like $15 an hour — a far left movement translated into a version palatable at Seattle City Hall. Her run of success on those largest initiatives came to an end at City Hall this year as she was preparing to step down from office. In July, Sawant’s final bid for rent control in Seattle fell short at the council. She will now focus on Workers Strike Back, her nascent campaign to form a new leftist national party. Hollingsworth, meanwhile, flipped Seattle’s most progressive district and cruised to victory with a moderate platform focused on public safety, equity, and economic opportunity shaped by her life and family history in the Central District. Continue reading

This week in CHS history | COVID-19 vaccine, Daniel Streissguth remembered, the Gemini Room

Here are the top stories from this week in CHS history:

2022

 

Trio of nightlife vets twin up with Capitol Hill’s fastest growing business family to create the Gemini Room day and night cafe and bar

After a decade of Capitol Hill drink, Bait Shop sails forward on Broadway while Speckled and Drake ducks out on E Olive Way


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This week in CHS history | Time Warp arcade bar is born, No on Sawant recall takes lead, La Quinta landmark, Mia’s off Broadway says goodbye


Here are the top stories from this week in CHS history:

2022

 

INSERT COINS — Capitol Hill’s Time Warp arcade bar is ready to play

Seattle City Council ready to set new rules for street cafes and food trucks


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