Seattle Public Schools rejects plan supported by mayor and police chief that would have stationed cop at Garfield High School

SPD increased its presence outside Garfield following the June 2024 murder (Image: CHS)

The Seattle School Board has rejected a plan supported by Mayor Bruce Harrell and his police chief to return a uniformed Seattle Police Department officer to the Garfield High School campus citing concerns over disproportionate policing and the district’s failure to implement community recommendations in its proposal.

“I cannot vote yes on this package. The trust has been ruined,” board member Michelle Sarju said during the Wednesday night session. “You all have broken my trust over and over and over again.”

Wednesday night’s decision on a “a School Engagement Officer” at Garfield follows more than a year of debate over the proposal following the 2024 campus parking lot murder of student Amarr Murphy-Paine.

The return of an assigned campus police officer would roll back a Black Lives Matter-era reform. Previously known as community resource officers, the program was dropped by the district in the summer of 2020 during the height of Black Lives Matter protests against police killings when the school board suspended a partnership with SPD that provided five armed officers with rotations and placements across Seattle’s public schools. Continue reading

Questions over OPA track record of SPD’s new East Precinct commander — UPDATE: Removed

Chief Barnes, left, looks on at a ceremony marking the promotion of Tietjen at the East Precinct (Image: SPD)

Chief Shon Barnes has named an officer with a questionable record on Capitol HIll to lead the East Precinct.

The Seattle Police Department announced the promotions of Michael Tietjen to East Precinct Commander last month.

UPDATE 11:20 AM: Publicola reports that Chief Barnes is removing Tietjen and will assign a new commander following criticism of the promotion and “a crisis of confidence among our LGBTQIA+ community members.”

Continue reading

911 | Probably not the only arrest for smoking fentanyl outside a Capitol Hill QFC this month

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  • World School threat arrest: A 60-year-old are resident was arrested Tuesday after a set of bizarre interactions around the World School campus on E Union. SPD says the suspect assaulted a school security guard and pointed a gun at a teen during the strange series of events. According to SPD’s report on the incident, police were called to the 17th and Union school just before 1 PM as the neighbor tried to enter the campus “The suspect was walking his two dogs when he approached the school and forcefully pushed past the security guard to speak with the principal,” SPD reports. Police say the apparently intoxicated suspect then walked to 16th and Pike and approached two teens sitting in a car. “The suspect, armed with a knife in one hand and a gun in the other, began yelling at the teens, telling them they can’t park on the street,” SPD says. “During the interaction, the suspect reached into the car, grabbed a 15-year-old by the neck while wielding the knife. He also pointed a gun at the teen.” SPD says officers recovered video evidence showing the suspect pushing his way into the school, and a photo of him holding the knife in his hand. Officers tracked the suspect to his nearby home where he claimed to have no firearms. After securing a search warrant, police say they found two guns inside the home. The man was arrested and booked into jail for investigation of burglary and felony harassment. Animal control was called to secure the dogs and take them to a shelter.

    (Image: SPD)

  • Harvard Market QFC fentanyl arrest: It won’t be the only arrest for smoking fentanyl in front of a Capitol Hill QFC this month but it hopefully will be only case involving a wanted felon found to be illegally carrying a handgun. SPD says it made the bust of the 27-year-old early Tuesday morning outside the QFC at Broadway and Pike. According to police, patrol officers saw a man smoking “narcotics with a pipe” in front of the grocery store and arrested the suspect without incident:
    While interviewing him, police recovered a loaded gun. When they asked him where he got the gun, he told them he “found it.” The suspect, recently released from prison, has previous convictions for multiple felonies including unlawful possession of firearms, theft of a motor vehicle, eluding, and unlawful possession of a motor vehicle. He is prohibited from carrying firearms.
    Police say the suspect was wanted on a $4,000 arrest warrant for fighting in public, issued by the Centralia Municipal Court. Officers booked the suspect into the King County Jail for narcotics possession and unlawful possession of a firearm. There were no reported injuries.
 

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New ‘Persian daytime cafe’ Open Form now open on Capitol Hill

(Image: Open Form)

(Image: Open Form)

“A gathering space inspired by the art of Persian hospitality. Persian tea, coffee, and natural wine — by reservation” is now open on E Pike.

CHS reported here on the plans for Open Form, a new cafe, event and work space from first-time venue entrepreneur Tara Almassi.

While the new cafe has a busy roster of uses it hopes will help it grow in its new 2,000-square-foot space above E Pike, it is centered around some ancient traditions.

“At the heart of Open Form’s daytime cafe is the Persian tea service, a ritual that is commonly served during gatherings in Iranian culture,” its opening announcement reads. Continue reading

Happy birthday, RapidRide G

(Image: King County Metro)

By Matt Dowell

Happy first birthday to Madison’s RapidRide G, a.k.a. the G bus, the G line, or just The G.

While the one-year anniversary or the line’s start was overshadowed by the city’s whipsawing on its transit planning around a single-block near the G, the reshaping of the Madison corridor deserves a look back and a look forward as the line begins its second year of service between the waterfront, First Hill, Capitol Hill, and Madison Valley.

“In the last year, Metro provided more than 49,000 service hours on the RapidRide G Line, helping spur tremendous growth in ridership,” a Metro blog post celebrating the bus rapid transit line’s first year reads.

Metro says the G Line is now “the 12th busiest route in our system,” averaging around 6,300 riders every weekday — about half the totals projected as the line was first being designed before the pandemic reset traffic and transportation habits across the city.

Metro says that early surveys indicate riders enjoy the G more than regular Metro routes and that it’s boosted bus usage across the Madison Avenue region: “Three routes, the 10, 11 and 12 — those most closely aligned with the G Line corridor — when combined with the new G Line, have seen weekday ridership grow by over 80 percent!”

Transit riders are enjoying the fruits of a project that, by the time buses started running, was three years of construction plus nine years of planning in the making. The line cost $134 million including $60 million in federal funding and was Metro and SDOT’s most ambitious bus rapid transit project to date. It required an overhaul of Madison Avenue traffic patterns and the addition of dedicated bus lanes along most of the 2.5 mile route in order for buses to arrive every six minutes, as promised.

The duration and impact of the construction along the diagonal arterial brought some infamy to RapidRide G long before it turned one, made worse by a number of visible snafus: streets paved, torn up, repaved; orange metal plates at some stations that linger to this day (SDOT says they’ll be removed soon).

Lewis

Jordan Lewis, a Capitol Hill resident hoping to cash in on the buzz and the frustration, dressed up as an under construction RapidRide G line station for Halloween last year.

“The long, protracted construction process was the only thing that people along Madison talked about,” said Lewis. “It was such a topical thing.”

Lewis now rides the G downtown to work each day and considers the project worthwhile. But not everyone in the neighborhood does. After traffic alterations on Madison that streamline bus flow, many drivers find themselves in a Derek Zoolander-like predicament: they can’t turn left.

Some Capitol Hill businesses feel this has cut them off from their customers, hurting revenue. Continue reading

Seattle mayor’s executive order seeks to maintain ‘control over law enforcement resources’ should troops be deployed to the city

Seattle’s mayor is set to sign an executive order Wednesday intended to protect the city against the Trump administration’s threats to deploy troops here.

Mayor Bruce Harrell says his Executive Order protects “control over law enforcement resources in the event that National Guard troops are deployed to Seattle.”

A second order is hoped to strengthen “protections for immigrant and refugee communities, including strategies to address the use of unmarked, masked federal agents conducting immigration enforcement raids. ” Continue reading

City planning $627K upgrade to Roanoke Park play area

Seattle Parks is hosting an “open house” and conducting an online survey to shape the planned $627,173 parks-levy powered renovation of the play area in Capitol HIll’s Roanoke Park.

The upgrades will “replace the existing play equipment with new structures compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) for ages 2 to 5 and 5 to 12, improve safety surfacing, repair drainage, restore surrounding lawn and mulch areas and upgrade site furnishings and accessible paving,” the city says.

The parks department says it is looking forward to “working closely with the community to develop a design that enhances the park experience for neighborhood families and visitors.”

An open house on the upgrade project is scheduled for Saturday, October 25, from 2:30 – 4:30 PM at the park at 950 E Roanoke.

You can also share your feedback via this online survey.

Parks says the project is slated to complete design this winter with construction taking place in early 2027.

The Roanoke Park neighborhood is currently busy with work with what will be years of construction to build the new 520 Portage Bay Bridge and Roanoke Lid. Work on the entirety of that $1.4 billion project is hoped to be wrapped up by 2031.

 

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Subscribe to CHS to help us hire writers and photographers to cover the neighborhood. CHS is a pay what you can community news site with no required sign-in or paywall. To stay that way, we need you. Become a subscriber to help us cover the neighborhood for $5 a month -- or choose your level of support 🖤 

 
 

On the Block crew bringing Eleven : Eleven all-ages art and ‘cultural small business incubator’ space to 11th Ave

(Images: Eleven : Eleven)

(Image: On the Block)

There will soon be a new space for everyone on 11th Ave.

All-ages venue Eleven : Eleven is now under construction in a former nightclub space.

Eleven : Eleven is backed by the group of artists and business owners who have fostered the On the Block series of 11th Ave street fairs led by Carolyn Hitt of Blue Cone Studios, artist and organizer Julie Chang Schulman, Rialto “Rio” Estolas of Throwbacks Northwest, and Diana Adams whose Vermillion art bar will have a new neighbor in the all-ages venue.

The group calls the new project “A Place for Impossible Things” and says it will be shaped as “a creative & cultural small business incubator, sober-curious gathering space.”

The new venue at 1512 11th Ave will open for an early preview Thursday night as part of this month’s Capitol Hill Art Walk. Continue reading

King County Council ready for vote on funding plan for $56M Broadway Crisis Care Center — UPDATE: Approved

From the real estate listing for the property

The King County Council is expected to vote Tuesday on a funding package for the planned $56 million Broadway Crisis Care Center that would keep the process on track for a 2027 opening of the facility.

UPDATE 6:00 PM: The council approved the package Tuesday afternoon clearing the way for a $41 million purchase of the property including a financing plan that would include millions in projected revenue from leasing portions of the building, potentially to Harborview. The plan includes another $15 million for the costs of upgrading the facility and funding a contract operator. Officials said Tuesday the funding includes resources to address public safety concerns including environmental design spending and funding security resources for the contract operator. The spending plan also will include transportation funding for patients after their stay at the center. An ordinance authorizing the issuance of bonds for Harborview to lease a portion of the property passed 6-3. The core financial ordinance to fund the builidng’s purchased was approved unanimously.

UPDATE 10/8/2025 9 AM: “Today, we’re responding to voters’ mandate to expand care and delivering on our commitment to ensuring anyone in crisis can receive timely, appropriate mental health care and treatment for substance use disorder when and where they need it,” King County Executive Shannon Braddock said in a statement sent to CHS. “This marks a critical step forward in expanding access to urgent behavioral health care across our region.”

“As we move ahead, our commitment remains firm: we will continue working closely with community members, the King County Council, and the City of Seattle to shape a center that reflects our shared needs and values — one that provides essential care today and builds a foundation for long-term impact for years to come.”

In its statement, the county also emphasized it has analyzed the property “as part of our standard due diligence process and is aware that repairs and maintenance have been needed.”

“These repairs and maintenance have consistently been a part of our financial planning,” the statement reads. “We are confident we can make the proper modifications to bring a Crisis Care Center online in this building.”

Original report: Legislation enabling the purchase of the former Polyclinic property at Broadway and Union was passed out of the council’s finance committee in September but not without debate over concerns surrounding the planned 24-7 walk-in and emergency care mental health clinic that would be the second location in a planned network of five centers across the county.

In September, the King County Council’s budget committee approved a set of ordinances to set up the fund that will pay for the acquisition and operation of the new levy-powered mental health crisis center at Broadway and Union as part of a planned $1.25 billion network of five facilities across the county. Continue reading

Victim with service dog targeted in 11th and Fir street robbery

Police are investigating an overnight gunpoint street robbery that targeted a victim walking with her service dog near 11th and Fir early Tuesday.

The Seattle Police Department reports the victim was walking with her dog just before 2 AM when the suspect rushed from behind and pulled the victim to the ground by the neck. “The suspect put a gun to her head and told her she could keep the dog but to empty her pockets,” SPD reports. “The victim complied with the demands and removed the contents from her pockets.” Continue reading