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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North District Council Meeting November 7th

The monthly meeting of the North District Council will be held at 7 PM at the Lake City Library, 12501 28th Ave NE, on Wednesday November 7th. See community leaders discuss issues affecting our neighborhoods, although anyone can attend.  Want to know more? Check out these helpful articles:
Part 1: Introduction to the North District Council
Part 2: How Representatives Are Chosen
Part 3: Is the District Council a squeaky wheel or just public relations?
Part 4: Representing Victory Heights
And don’t forget that Victory Heights own Community Council will be meeting on November 29th at the community center at the park. This is a real neighborhood meeting worth attending. More here.

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Victory Heights Crime Map For October 2012


The Seattle Police Department’s (SPD) crime statistics map for October 2012 showed relatively little activity in Victory Heights last month.  There was a home burglary on October 15th on the 10400 block of 20th Avenue NE, and three car prowls on October 25th, 27th and 28th respectively up near NE Northgate Way.

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Knickerbocker Floodplain Project Meeting November 15

The next in a series of community meetings (read about the first here) about the Knickerbocker (Thornton Creek) Floodplain Project will be held Thursday, November 15th at Sacajawea Elementary School beginning at 6:30 PM. Seattle Public Utilities (SPU) and Seattle Parks & Recreation are restoring several hundred feet of the south branch of Thornton Creek at the downstream end of the Kingfisher Natural Area, now dubbed the Knickerbocker site (where the 20th Ave NE footpath crosses Thornton Creek just south of NE 100th Street). This project also will create a 1.5 acre vegetated flood plain and replace the pedestrian bridge across the creek.
SPU and Parks will review the project designs and timeline at this meeting, and invite you to express your concerns, ask questions and make suggestions. Visit their official website for more details.
Sacajawea Elementary School is located at 9501 20th Avenue NE, the meeting will be held in the school’s lunchroom between 6:30 PM and 8 PM.

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Yo Ho! Halloween Ghost Ship "Crashes" on NE 103rd Street

Over the weekend an impressive nautical Halloween display was constructed in the front yard of Jon Bunnell’s house at 2024 NE 103rd Street. It is a large scale model of a sailing ship that appears to have crashed on the rocks in front of the house with a prow that extends out over the street. On Halloween night visitors will be welcomed to Jon’s house, dubbed for the night the “Admiral Benbow Inn” (“Treasure Island” fans take note) and view the ship which will be decked out with sails, a skeleton figurehead on the front, and working (potato) cannons.
Jon was assisted by friends and neighbors including Kerry Knestis, owner of New Classic Homes. He donated almost all of the scrap material, which pleased his wife Amy Lang (who runs Birds and Bees) and dedicated the weekend to working on it. Kerry is happy to recreate the ship if anyone wants one of their own, or anything “normal” built. Their son Milo had the idea of making the ship crash out of the rockery, and provided his cannon. The figurehead is being built by Dan Knauff, who lives just north of the park. When he isn’t working in a cabinet shop, or juggling, Dan dabbles in large scale puppets and figures. Also on the crew was John Adams. Although not legally a Victory Height resident, he lent a lot help of during the build, using his architects eye for some of the details. Other folks have donated misc ropes, anchors, sails, etc.
Jon says, “My daughter Norah loves it, and my wife Kristin has offered to let me keep it, as long I live aboard permanently….. Hope to see people on Halloween!”
 
 

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Victory Heights Community Council Meeting November 29th

Susan Causin, the Victory Heights representative to the North District Council, announced the second meeting of the Victory Heights Community Council will be held on Thursday, November 29th at the Community Center/pre-school building in Victory Heights Park (the intersection of 19th Ave NE, 20th Ave NE and NE 107th Street) beginning at 7 PM.
The first meeting was held October 10th in Lake City when the Community Center couldn’t be secured in time. Originally the November meeting was scheduled for the 28th but there was a conflict with the pre-school.
We’re hoping for a good turnout, most neighbors will be able to walk to the meeting, and it is a week after Thanksgiving.  Watch for road signs advertising the event.

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Abracadabra – Head Rush Espresso Vanishes

Now you see it, now you don’t.  Head Rush Espresso, the infamous “bikini espresso stand,” disappeared from the car park of the former Italian Spaghetti House (soon to be Bob’s Lake City Liquors) on Lake City Way today.  The stand which was constructed on the site in May and opened in June presumably lost its lease for the site which will be used as a parking lot for the new business still being remodeling.  Never popular with residents, with the bikini stand gone are we now just left with the lessor of two evils?

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Help Prevent Street Flooding


With the return of rains at the exact same time the leaves are falling, we need to keep storm drains clear to prevent flooding in the streets (the bottom of NE 100th St is particularly vulnerable).
If you see leaves beginning to block a drain, take a minute to clear them away.
Seattle Public Utilities even is sponsoring an “Adopt-A-Drain” program and will even give out free gloves, bags, brooms, rakes, and safety vests, as well as help with leaf disposal.
After you sign up online or by calling 206-233-7187, you can pick up supplies at SPU’s warehouse on East Marginal Way this Saturday the 20th or Saturday the 27th.

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The Revived Victory Heights Community Council Is Go


The first meeting in several years of the revived Victory Heights Community Council was held Wednesday night, not in Victory Heights itself but the Seattle Mennonite Church in Lake City (more on that in a bit).  A dozen people including speakers showed up and heard Susan Causin, our representative on the North District Council, gave an introductory speech in lieu of Shammara Estrada who was home with her new baby (congrats!).
Brad Cummings then gave a short presentation (see photo) about the history of the Victory Heights Community Council. In its heyday (over a decade ago), meetings at the Community Center in Victory Heights Park would attract a number of active dues-paying members as well as city councilmen and other VIP speakers. Community events included egg hunts in the park for kids. Eventually fewer and fewer people attended meetings as people’s lives got busier but also Victory Heights’ unique and rather stable situation as a single-family housing neighborhood without any businesses that doesn’t really see a lot of change or upheaval to motivate folks.  Brad has continued to oversee the bank account for the council even though he hasn’t written a check in over nine years. He also revealed the existence of three sandwich boards he had stored for alerting the community about upcoming activities (watch for these on display in coming months!).
I was then asked to say a few words about the blog and social media. One burning question was what was the blog’s purpose versus that of Next Door Neighbor. I explained that Next Door is a closed-loop social media where people post items or news about themselves that only get distributed to other members. While it is immediate (particularly when suspicious activity is occurring), I see the blog as more Big Picture since it’s not really about things happening directly to me but what’s going on in the neighborhood at large. Maybe folks see that as all the same thing, feel free to choose for yourself.
In lieu of Terrie Johnston, the Seattle Police Department’s Crime Prevention Coordinator who was home sick in bed, Phillip Duggan, the co-chair of the North District Council (and who runs the Pinehurst blog) stepped in to talk briefly about the work that Terrie does including free home and business security inspections.  If you are interested you can contact her at the North Precinct, 206-684-7711.
Janet Arkills from the Lake City Neighborhood Alliance distributed fliers with community group contact information as well as a brief summary of the Bill Pierre property situation in Lake City. She was very well-informed and a great resource (did you know putting in a new sidewalk in Seattle costs $1 million per mile?) Which is why we’ll never see any in Victory Heights in our lifetimes…
Eileen Canola then talked briefly about how the city awards grants for improvements such as traffic circles. There has been a movement to get one put in 23rd Ave NE, it just takes persistence to make it happen (Brad illustrated this point by talking about construction projects like at 5th Ave NE and Northgate Way which were being planned as far back as the 1990s but only now got funded and built).
Everyone seemed keen to have further meetings, and it was decided to hold the next Victory Heights Community Council meeting at 7 PM on Thursday, November 29th tentatively at the Community Center in Victory Heights Park.  Susan had worked tirelessly to secure that location for Wednesday’s meeting but neither the Parks Department nor North Seattle Community College was able to provide assistance beforehand. But earlier this week I was contacted by someone at the Cooperative Daycare at the community center who has the necessary authority to let us use the building in future. Thank you, Kara, for your help!
Watch for sandwich boards alongside the streets announcing future events (and plugging this blog).  If you have a “prime” location (for example, on NE 107th, 19th Ave NE, 23rd Ave NE or NE 100th) and would like to volunteer a few feet of your lawn by the side of the road for us to display a sign, please drop us a line. Thanks!

 [This article was edited on October 28th to change the date of the next meeting.]
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