In WA, you can get a COVID-19 shot — no matter what RFK Jr. says

In a bid to overcome confusion, misinformation, and disinformation from federal leaders, state health officials Thursday issued a Standing Order making all Washington residents 6 months and older eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine.

“COVID-19 vaccines are well-researched, well-tested, and have saved millions of lives around the world,” State Health Officer Dr. Tao Sheng Kwan-Gett said in a statement. “The barriers to COVID-19 vaccination are complex, and the Standing Order is just one part of the solution. We want to ensure all Washington residents have access to the protection these vaccines provide based on the best available science.” Continue reading

New Cal Anderson Emergency Hub launches teaching ‘Urban Survival Skills’ including water sterilization and Narcan administration to help Capitol Hill’s core neighborhoods

(Image: Seattle Parks Foundation)

A group is coming together to make sure Capitol Hill’s neighborhoods of densely packed apartment dwellers can build resources they need to be resilient during emergencies and natural disasters.

Already having an interest in personal emergency preparedness, Heather Currey attended an emergency hub drill after she learned of the event through Central Seattle Greenways. And while North Capitol Hill has its own emergency hub, Currey felt the need for stronger support in the central part of the neighborhood. Now, Currey is the captain of the Cal Anderson Emergency Hub, which is preparing for its September 7th Urban Survival Skills Fair in the park’s shelterhouse and sunbowl.

“Seattle has a fairly wide hub network, so these are places where under disaster conditions, when we’ve lost electricity and it’s harder for people to communicate with each other, hubs stand up to connect neighbors with neighbors, and neighbors with information,” Currey told CHS.

Currey said these emergency hubs are always needed.

The Cal Anderson Emergency Hub already has over a dozen volunteers who have been meeting for about six months and have worked to obtain grants and jump through bureaucratic hoops with the city, including Parks and Rec and the Department of Neighborhoods.

Those volunteer numbers are only expected to grow, Currey said. Continue reading

Police: ‘Victim/suspect’ shot in chest at 10th and Pike — UPDATE: Accidentally shot himself

One man described as a “victim/suspect” by police was shot in the chest in a fight amid last call crowds early Thursday at 10th and Pike.

UPDATE 9:42 AM: SPD reports the man accidentally shot himself — “Witnesses told police the suspect got into an altercation with a group of people, then began waving a gun threatening people. During the confrontation, he fired the gun and shot himself in the chest.”

Police were called to the area outside Big Mario’s just before 2 AM to a fight involving three males and a reportedly armed man on the ground being beaten. Moments later, the shooting was reported. Continue reading

‘Full control of police practices’ — 15 years after an officer killed John T. Williams, feds lift oversight of the Seattle Police Department

A mural dedicated to Williams was created on 11th Ave (Image: Wooster Collective)

SPD in the summer of 2020

Future Seattle generations may be surprised that 13 years of federal oversight of their city’s police force stemmed from the death of an Indigenous wood carver and not the department’s heavy handed response to the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests.

This week, the United States Department of Justice announced it has returned “full control of police practices to the City of Seattle” — Continue reading

No, the new E Pike pedestrian islands aren’t being (completely) removed

From the CHS Facebook Group

They are being improved, the Seattle Department of Transportation says, to help ease emergency vehicle traffic through Pike/Pine.

CHS reported last month on the installation of the street safety feature at 10th and Pike in a project that utilized federal funding as part of 80 planned safety upgrades across Seattle.

SDOT said the new islands were hoped to help protect people using the crosswalk at the busy intersection in the heart of the Pike/Pine nightlife district. But the new islands created challenges for Seattle Fire and Seattle Police vehicles trying to pass through the busy intersection. Continue reading

More letters join mayor’s conditional support for Broadway Crisis Care Center plan

Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell has given his conditional support to siting a new county mental health crisis center inside a former medical building at Broadway and Union. Capitol Hill community groups are also formally weighing on the proposal as the King County Council begins debate on the plan.

“The primary concerns from our community members are about the public safety effects of the Crisis Care Center. Many residents expressed a belief that the Crisis Care Center would improve the public safety of the area,” a letter from the Capitol Hill Community Council also conditionally supporting the plan reads. “Other community members question that belief, and we support the careful consideration of their concerns and a public safety plan that addresses concerns of community members.”

In their letter, the volunteer community group agreed the King County Department of Community and Human Services is so far showing “good faith effort” in answering the council’s questions and responding to concerns.

“While not all the forwarded questions were addressed, and while not all answers are as forthcoming as we may have hoped, we believe that this represents a good faith effort by King County to engage with the concerns of members of the community in a fair way,” the council’s letter continues. “Based on this action, and others including neighborhood walks with community members, we anticipate that King County will strive to be good neighbors and run the Crisis Care Center in a positive way that reflects and responds to the community in which it is housed.”

The full Capitol Hill Community Council letter is below.

CHS reported here in August on Harrell’s conditional support for the planned $56 million Broadway Crisis Care Center that would transform a former Polyclinic facility at Broadway and Union.

In his letter, Harrell said the county and a yet to be announced operator of the center must partner with the Seattle Police Department to assess the former Polyclinic building and its surroundings for safety, execute a “safe operations plan for the building and the surrounding exterior spaces, including public sidewalks and other publicly accessible spaces,” and enter into a Good Neighbor Agreement with the city that “obligates the provider to meet certain safety and disorder standards to be negotiated with the provider.” Requirements would include forming a citizen advisory committee to guide the emergency and walk-in clinic that is planned to be part of a voter-approved, $1.25 billion network of five facilities across the county.

The mayor’s letter of support is a key milestone in the so far limited public process around the proposal.

Other groups are voicing support. Continue reading

No arrests in reported 11th/Union anti-trans assault

Police are investigating a Tuesday night assault on Capitol Hill as a hate crime.

According to police and East Precinct radio updates on the just before 11:30 PM incident at 11th and Union, witnesses reported five to six young males assaulting a group and yelling anti-trans slurs. Continue reading

Amid handwringing over the latest depressingly awful economic forecasts, officials jockeying to keep West Seattle (2032) and Ballard (2039) light rail expansions on schedule

Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell and city officials say key expansions of light rail to West Seattle and Ballard must be prioritized as Sound Transit wrestles with what is quickly becoming the bane of progressive government in 2025 — depressingly awful economic forecasts.

It is not clear how much difference easier permitting and streamlined construction guidelines can make. Options could include further-delayed openings, cut stations, and shortened routes.

Sound Transit officials said last week that the estimated costs to deliver the latest voter-approved package including transit projects across the three counties that pay for it have increased up to 25% over the current long-range financial plan. That forecast could mean Sound Transit would be billions short on the “Sound Transit 3” package including the Seattle light rail expansions.

With a diverse set of ST3 plans across King, Pierce, and Snohomish counties, Harrell, who sits on the Sound Transit board in his role as mayor, is calling on the regional public transit agency to prioritize Seattle as the city streamlines its permitting and construction policies to help ease the key projects. Continue reading

911 | Man stabbed near Broadway and John

See something others should know about? Email CHS or call/txt/Signal (206) 399-5959. You can view recent CHS 911 coverage here. Hear sirens and wondering what’s going on? Check out reports from @jseattle or join and check in with neighbors in the CHS Facebook Group.

  • Broadway stabbing: A man was stabbed and police were looking for a suspect reportedly carrying a six-inch kitchen knife in an assault near Broadway and John just after midnight Monday morning. According to emergency radio updates, the victim was stabbed in the altercation by a suspect described as a white male in his 50s with grey curly hair. Seattle Fire says the 31-year-old victim was transported to Harborview in stable condition.
  • Attempted carjacking: Police investigated a reported attempted carjacking on Broadway near Seattle Central Sunday night. According to police, the victim reported he was unloading a black Mercedes around 6:30 PM when two male teen suspects wearing ski masks and carrying “AR style firearms” drove up in a red SUV and demanded his keys. The suspect said he told the thieves the keys for the car were in another vehicle and the two suspects decided to flee the scene. Police were looking for the red SUV that matched the details of a recently stolen KIA but were unable to track down the suspects. Continue reading

An end of summer rush of 12th Ave closures includes Rachel’s Ginger Beer, Mighty-O, and tiny Outer Planet Brewing

The 12th Ave RGB

Summer is ending with a flurry of food and drink closure announcements on Capitol Hill’s 12th Ave. The burst of shutdowns is sure to set off a wave of “Capitol Hill is dying” worries but there are already signs of new additions coming to the street.

The most surprising may be the exit of Rachel’s Ginger Beer from its space on the street level of the 12th Ave Arts building. The 12th Ave RGB closed suddenly heading into Labor Day Weekend and already has its windows papered over with no opportunity for regulars to say goodbye. The company said in its announcement only that its lease had expired. Continue reading