Proposed By-Laws For Victory Heights Community Council

As part of Thursday’s meeting of the Victory Heights Community Council (7 PM at the day care building at Victory Heights Park), attendees will be voting on a new set of By-Laws for the organization.
Eileen Canola has put together a proposed draft of by-laws, based on the past Victory Heights Bylaws (the previous organization that was active 10 years ago) and a template of the North District Council with the intent for the community to review, discuss, edit per consensus and adopt.
You can read the draft here in this five-page pdf document.
See you there on Thursday night!

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What To Expect At Thursday's Community Meeting

On Thursday, November 29th at 7 PM at the community center/day care at Victory Heights Park, residents can attend the next meeting of the Victory Heights Community Council. “Community” is the watchword here, the council is YOU. Folks like Susan Causin, our representative to the North District Council, are merely organizing this, but it’s really about neighbors getting together and working to put forward ideas and concerns to the community.
The purpose of the Community Council is to empower the people in this community to identify problems and seek equitable solutions, based on a sense of community trust, for the betterment of life, both in our community and city wide. Issues of concern can be reported to the District Council and in turn to the Department of Neighborhoods.

The preliminary agenda for the meeting is as follows:
7:00-7:05   Welcome and recap (Susan Causin)
7:05-7:15   Victory Heights Community Council By-Laws (Eileen Canola)
7:15-7:25   Fill Council officer positions (Susan Causin)
                     President
                     Vice President
                     Secretary
                     Treasurer
7:25-7:30   Communication methods (Ryan K. Johnson)
7:30-7:40   Greenways (Janine Blaeloch)
7:40-7:50   Neighborhood police (Officer Kip Strong)
7:50-8:00   Next steps (Susan Causin)
We hope you will all attend. See you on Thursday!
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Sign Of The Times

Signs have gone up in the neighborhood to advertise the Victory Height Community Council meeting on Thursday, November 29th at 7 PM at the recreation center/day care building at Victory Heights Park. Everyone is welcome.
Stay tuned, we’ll be printing a full agenda on Monday here on the blog.
 

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Trash Pickup In Victory Heights On Friday This Week

Seattle Public Utilities (SPU) reminds residents who usually have their trash picked up on Thursday (like most of Victory Heights) that due to the Thanksgiving Day holiday, the pickup will be on Friday this week. Recycling and disposal stations will also be closed on Thanksgiving.
Here are some fun facts:
What’s Seattle’s least liked Thanksgiving dish? Last year, giblets edged out green bean casserole and aspic as the dish Seattle residents would most likely put in their food and yard waste cart after the holidays.
Seattle residents can place all of their unwanted Thanksgiving leftovers, such as turkey bones, celery, yams, potatoes, fruitcake and paper napkins in their food and yard waste carts. The food scraps will be made into compost for local gardens and parks.
Don’t be a turkey- keep sewers fat-free! Property owners are responsible for their side sewer connections to the city’s sewer system. Sewer clogs often happen during the holiday season when disposing of leftovers.  You can prevent this by pouring used dairy products, fats, oil, grease or greasy foods into a lidded container and placing it in the trash – NOT down the sink drain.
Keep storm drains clear: To help prevent street flooding, the city is asking Seattle residents to remove leaves from storm drains in their neighborhoods with a rake or broom (if it can be done safely), collect fallen leaves in their yards, and compost or properly dispose of them in yard waste containers.
Follow SPU on Twitter: www.twitter.com/SeattleSPU.

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Bob's Liquor & Wine Opens on Lake City Way

After months of remodeling, but with more cladding still to be put on the outside, Bob’s Liquor & Wine opened for business today on Lake City Way.  The building, which formerly housed the defunct Italian Spaghetti House, had a new addition put on the north side, along with stairs and a wheelchair ramp.
If someone who knows about liquor goes shopping there, feel free to write a review of the place here.

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The River Wild

After a weekend of solid rain, Thornton Creek swelled to nearly overflow its banks at the Knickerbocker site (20th Avenue NE) as seen here at 9 AM on Monday, November 19th. The Floodplain project (see previous article here) to be done next summer will lessen the effects of torrential rain by storing the water and slowing the creek.
 
 
 
Watch a YouTube video:

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Knickerbocker Restoration Would be "First In The Nation"

Mike “Rocky” Mrachovec of SPU outlined the Knickerbocker Floodplain project Thursday.


The Knickerbocker Floodplain Project on Thornton Creek will include innovative subsurface restoration techniques that would be the first of its kind in the nation and part of a studied, living laboratory, according to Mike Hrachovec of Seattle Public Utilities (SPU).  Mike, known to everyone as “Rocky,” is a SPU engineer who has been designing the floodplain restoration on and off for seven years as funding came in leaps and starts. He gave an enthusiastic talk Thursday night at Sacawajea Elementary School as part of SPU presentation for local residents about the project which is planned to begin construction next summer.
Nearly two dozen members of the public attended including the original Knickerbocker family the site is named after (they sold the first parcel to SPU and the Parks Department including their house just south of NE 100th which has since been demolished). Cheryl Eastberg with the Parks Department began the meeting by describing the history of the project and acquisitions of property around Thornton Creek including the Rossi property on the south side of Thornton Creek that was accessed via the wooden bridge at the end of NE 100th Street (which will be replaced by a rock ford once the project is done).
Katherine Lynch then talked about the funding that made the project happen. Although the city has been interested in creating the floodplain for the past seven years, funding had all but dried up two years ago just as plans had finally been developed. A grant from the King County Conservation District helped move the project forward, while the Thornton Creek Watershed Oversight Committee sought out further funding which finally came from the Washington State Department of Ecology, the EPA, and most importantly Sound Transit which kicked in for floodplain mitigation as part of its Northgate Light Rail station project.
The main goals of the Knickerbocker project are 1) improve instream and riparian habitat, 2) optimize floodplain storage and slow peak flows, and 3) serve as a demonstration project. “Rocky” then began describing the process of engineering which he called, “an incredibly complex design.” Using the area of the creek just west of NE 102nd as a model for what the Knickerbocker site should look like (though with more large wood), he said the city needed to correct what been engineering dogma throughout the 50s and 60s, namely taking out any large trees and installing retaining walls.  “We shattered the habitat in the process,” he said. The Knickerbocker project will rip out the rockeries and retaining walls, remove 9,000 yards of dirt and replace it with logs (mainly under the surface) and create a floodplain.  Restoration will not only occur on the surface (with indigenous plants and rerouting and widening the creek), but under the surface as well by rebuilding the entire subsurface, a first-in-the-nation effort.  He admitted it would be “a radical experiment in stream ecology,” and “we’re just making educated guesses,” but as part of an ongoing plan the area would be monitored and studied extensively with adjustments made where needed. If you would like to see an extensive 30-page technical drawing of the project, check out this pdf from the city.
Project manager Arnel Valmonte talked about scheduling. Right now the project is at “90% design.” If any changes are to be made, now is the time. They hope to finish the design work by May 2013 and have all the permitting done. The earliest they could begin is June 2013 and wrapped up by the end of October.  They need to work around the fish window giving them between July 1st and August 30th as the creek is diverted into pipes while the construction goes on. An 80 foot bridge will replace the current one over Thornton Creek (part of the 20th Ave NE walkway), and they are timing it not to interfere with the school year as many students use it to access Sacawajea from Victory Heights.
Contractors in theory work from 8 AM to 5 PM Monday through Friday but have the discretion to work past those hours and on weekends. Neighbors will be kept informed of activity if it impacts them. There will be noise and vibrations associated with the work, and the city will attempt to deal with problems with nearby residents.
Finally, Deb Hayden talked about the future of the site after construction is completed. “Our intention is to let the site grow naturally,” she said, but other than noxious weeds and invasive species being managed they want to remain hands-off. Sound Transit would assume responsibility for managing and maintaining the site (i.e. be paying the bills) for the first five years, after which it would be the domain of the Parks Department. “We’re open to feedback,” was the message.
Visit the City’s official Knickerbocker Floodplain website.

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Meet The Mayor November 27th

Seattle’s mayor Mike McGinn has been visiting neighborhoods around the city in a series of town hall meetings.  On Tuesday, November 27th, residents of Victory Heights and Northgate will have their chance when the mayor appears at the Northgate Community Center, 10510 5th Ave NE, at 6:40 PM.  He and other city staff will take questions (and presumably give answers) from the public until 8 PM.
Prior to the mayor’s appearance at the event, from 5:30 PM to 6:30 there will be a community information fair, following by a 10 minute youth performance at 6:40.
This will come just two days before the Victory Heights Community Council meeting which will be held at the community center in Victory Heights Park on the 29th.

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Thornton Creek Work Party and Meetings Schedule

This Thursday, November 15th is the meeting at Sacajawea Elementary at 6:30 PM to hear the update about the Kingfisher Floodplain Project.
Rick has announced another Kingfisher work party for Sunday, November 18th:

Come join us this Sunday for a planting party starting at 10am. We will meet at the creek where it intersects with the 17th Ave. trail. We have received 200 plants from Seattle Parks and need to get them into the ground this fall/winter starting this weekend! … As usual we will also be removing invasive species- so if you’d rather get your pull on then we can certainly point you in the right direction. Please bring the usual; shovels, rain gear, water, gloves, eye protection, and a smile. 
 

You can sign up at the Green City Partnerships site. Note, this work party will run longer than the usual ones, until 2 PM.  Bring a sack lunch, beverages and snacks will be provided.
And finally, the Thornton Creek Watershed Council will meet on Wednesday, November 28th, at 7:00pm – 9:00pm at St. Matthew’s Parish (Conference Room),1230 NE 127thStreet.  Virginia Hassinger who manages the Beaver Pond NA Opportunity Fund project for Parks will speak about the changes to the project.  Also on the agenda:  Results of Bacteria Study – Jonathan Frodge, SPU;  Shoreline Urban Forest Management & Tree Policies;  Tree Advocates – Cass Turnbull, Michael Oxman, and Steve Zemke.


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City Budget Vote Could Affect Lake City

The proposed City budget includes two important items that directly affect
Lake City.

  • $20,000 for the Department of Parks and Recreation to conduct a needs
    assessment for teens and seniors
  • $500,000 for the Lake City Community Center ($75K in 2013 for and
    architectural and engineering study; and $475K in 2014 for capital
    improvements).

The vote for this is coming up in the city council on Friday, November 9th. If you support this budget there are two public hearings to be held, Wednesday and Friday November 7th and 9th at 9:30 am. We should write to all Council Members. Council members Bagshaw, Clark, and Godden were the sponsors. That Lake City is in the budget is likely due to the Lake City Walking Tours for Council Members hosted by the Lake City Neighborhood
Alliance.
All you need to do is cut and paste this simplistic endorsement to the links below. Or embellish or create your own statement.
“I support the proposed City budget that includes $20,000 for the Department
of Parks and Recreation to conduct a needs assessment for Lake City teens
and seniors and $500,000 for the Lake City Community Center.”
Sally Bagshaw: email | 206-684-8801 | web site
Tim Burgess: email | 206-684-8806 | web site
Sally Clark: email | 206-684-8802 |  web site
Richard Conlin: email | 206-684-8805 | web site
Jean Godden: email | 206-684-8807 | web site
Bruce Harrell: email | 206-684-8804 | web site
Nick Licata: email | 206-684-8803 | web site
Mike O’Brien: email | 206-684-8800 | web site
Tom Rasmussen: email | 206-684-8808 | web site

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