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Entries from April 2008

Council Bill 116010 Passes 8-0, Despite Opposition from Citizens

April 21, 2008 · Leave a Comment

 Looks like it’s all over for the SEPA bill but the day-after news analyses and the explainations and repurposing from councilmembers.

The Six Urban Centers - from CB fiscal note

Despite opposition to all or part of the SEPA legialtion from citizens all over Seattle, they did it anyway.  Today City Councilmembers passed Council Bill 116010 8-0.  Hours later Councilmember Tim Burgess’ newsletter arrived in my inbox to explain…

“The Council passed legislation this afternoon that raises [emphasis mine] the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) thresholds for certain projects in the city, but only after amendments I proposed in an earlier committee meeting significantly reduced the scope of the changes originally proposed by the Mayor by limiting them to the city’s six Urban Centers and Station Area Overlay Districts.  Single-family residential neighborhoods outside of the six Urban Centers are not affected by today’s changes. {Emphasis not mine.]”

Read the legislation that passed today here.  The six Urban Centers – Downtown, South Lake Union, Uptown/Lower Queen Anne, First Hill/Capitol Hill, University Community, and Northgate – are shown on this map.”   [Ed Note: Same as the map above, but much more legible.]

In other words, the areas where all the development is concentrated and most of it controlled by large developers, some from cities and countries far from Seattle.  So sure, it makes lots of sense to remove an environmental check on those developers, in those six areas.  Doesn’t it? 

The map above was included in the CB fiscal note, as an attachment (that is, an attachment to an attachment).   It shows the six urban centers where SEPA reviews are now being replaced by the Design Review Board process.  That would be the process that doesn’t include things like parking because who needs parking in dense urban cores?

Interesting.  So is the name “University Community.”  Does anyone know who split the University District and created a  ”University Community”?   Looks like the shaded area on the map is what old surveys call University Heights, not to be confused with the University Heights Community Center that’s in it.

Some people must have special powers. 

Categories: Design Review Board · Government · Land Use
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Where’s the map? A Citizen Ponders Neighborhood Planning

April 20, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Greg’s Smarter Neighbors blog is hands down the best for neighborhoods or anyone working to improve land use, but when I read his post, “Blogging about land use is easy…” a while back, I had to hold back a flamer of a comment.  Nothing about improving land use policies seems easy to me.  The political blowback on any progress seems almost preconceived and is downright insidious.  Take neighborhood planning.  Are we being walked down a garden path?  Our attention directed anywhere but behind the Oz curtain?

I attended the March 1 Neighborhood Planning Forum at the UW Evans School. Six hours on a Saturday, there we were. Ninety predominantly white, older folks in sweaters and khakis, at a lecture on democracy in city planning and reciprocal responsibility between city and neighborhoods. We broke into focus groups that predictably found DPD problem number one,  completed a survey, and then reassembled where Norm Rice wrapped it up with a by your leave, nothing’s definite folks. NP is still just a proposal.  Several times he mentioned “clustering,” that he thought transportation was the key, and warned of “inclusivity.”   As we filed out, he gave us a copy of the DON memo proposing the NP updates. (The Department whose budget and staff had been cut.)  So that went well, not.

Not long after came the comp plan amendments fiasco. Depending on who you talked to, the citizen-initiated amendments weren’t even going to be considered, which is why the amendment process wasn’t even publicized until two days before it was opened. And what was that placeholder the Planning Commission submitted as an amendment dated 2009?

Concurrent with debate on comp plan amendments came Council Bill  CB 116010 proposing to amend SEPA requirements and crashing council member email systems with heated protests for all sides.  Nothing was said about language in the bill that as far as I can tell based on knowledge of the English language would assign control of the Seattle Land Use map, including changing its boundaries, to the director of DPD.   What?   Could someone tell me what I’m missing here?  For that matter, what about all these bills and Legislation pending, indexed by word “SEPA”   It’s not just what’s being tossed about as SEPA 10

Yesterday came the heralded City Neighborhood Planning Forum, which brings us to what?  More munch and crunch on information gathered from citizens by the city.  While credit and many kudos are owed to Chris Leman, chair of the City Neighborhood Council; and  more, who is probably the hardest working and best informed neighborhood activitist and advocate in Seattle (email or call him with questions and you’ll get more than you ask for) – cookies and coffee at forums with surveys are really so much about citizens giving it up for the city, after all.   Meanwhile, back at the city, major policy changes, code updates, housing agenda changes, transporation policies, environmental policies, public health policies are in process, all of which have major impacts on the existing neighborhood plans, and could even bench, sideline, or render moot significant portions of those plans,  like zoning, multifamily (including single family) building codes, and the urban villages that so many  of us consider the core of our city’s  plan for the future. 

Thinking inside and for our neighborhoods is a good thing. But equally and sometimes more important is thinking as  citizens of our city.  We vote for councilmembers in districts that — county and city – change.   But all Seattle residents vote for the city executive, i.e., mayor.   Some city-wide questions now begging for answers include an accounting for where things stand in the zoning of our city.  Where is the map?  What are the numbers?  Who controls the changes and what have they been?   Why is our Mayor proposing code and zoning changes based on population growth that hasn’t happened and that he has no basis in reality to expect?   A new grassroots Livable Seattle Movement is hard at work combining its expertise and research on housing and building code and zoned capacity realities that every Seattle citizen has a right and a responsibility to know.  LSM gets its data the old-fashioned way – by analyzing census data, land value assessments, housing values, and recorded sale prices.  Sign up on the LSM website to be notified when new research is published or a new proposal is presented to City Council.

Finally, it’s deja vu all over again for the neighborhood planners going  into NP Round 2 reading (at least the title of) Peggy Sturdivant today in Crosscut Seattle regarding Neighborhood Planning, Part I:

Crosscut.com Even the neighborhood boundaries are an issue. Only 60 percent of Seattle’s land mass is included in the plans, despite boundary overlaps. Due to a decreased budget and a desire to align with the city’s Department of Transportation, one proposal calls for updating neighborhoods within the six transportation sectors, at a rate of one sector per year, rather than the individual neighborhoods consecutively. The neighborhoods are most commonly divided within 13 districts.

What proposal is that?  Citizens need to take a strategic look at what’s happening in and to our city.  Greg at Smarter Neighbor’s is dead on in a way.  At the  end of the day, it’s not rocket science and you don’t need a degree in architecture, land use or environmental law, or public policy.   We all have a vote.  We’re all invited to each and every city council and design review board meeting.  We’re all part of the process whether we participate or not. 

Categories: Government · Land Use · Neighborhood · neighborhood plans
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Evans School Neighborhood Forum Study

April 20, 2008 · 1 Comment

Results from the March 1 Neighborhood Planning Forum at the UW Evans School of Public Affairs were shared with invited members of focus groups held at the University Heights Community Center on April 17 and 18. Nice to read that more than 90 reported attendees, 15 percent of whom were renters, believe renters should be included in this round of neighborhood planning.  They weren’t last time.  Too bad they don’t share those feelings regarding minority citizens.

Respondents were mixed where it concerned minority engagement in the planning process. Most respondents disagreed with the statement that “city staff sufficiently engages racial and ethnic minority groups in the neighborhood planning process,” while 15% indicated they did not know and only several indicated they agreed. A larger representation of these racial and ethnic minority groups would have given a more accurate perception of city efforts to engage under-represented groups.

 

Less than 25 percent of the UW Forum participants represented minority participants.  The overwhelming majority were older, very well educated and, although they lived in the city more than ten years, more than two third were new to the neighborhood planning process.

 

 

 

Categories: Neighborhood Planning · UW · growth management act
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Cool…it’s a Towerwarming, and the Neighbors are Invited

April 17, 2008 · Leave a Comment

One of the all-time best cafeterias ever isn’t there anymore,  but Friday,  April 25 from 12 Noon to 2 in the Photo courtesy The UW Daily. afternoon, University District residents are invited for cookies, coffee, and a guided tour of the University of Washington’s inauguration of its new perch in the former Safeco Tower.  Its new name, you might have guessed, is University Tower.  The community event is one of many scheduled on campus during the UW Alumni Association-sponsored annual Washington Week .  Bring the family or grab a friend and check out live entertainment, open houses, tours, Husky spring sports, and lots more for no dough.  You can even film yourself live on UWTV.  

Categories: Neighborhood · UW

U District Pole Art

April 5, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The Wilsonian\'s Up in the Air Project \The University District Service Fund’s ”Up in the Air” art project is almost out of poles! The non-profit project of the Chamber of Commerce began in 2004 with a grant for metal frames for 70 low-level light poles from NE 41st Street to NE 50th St along University Way NE. Students from the UW School of Art and Sculpture partnered with local businesses under the direction of Professor John Young and the Chamber Service Fund to create one-of-a-kind sculptures that would be mounted on the metal frames. Two phases have been completed and the final phase is scheduled for completion this Spring 2008.  According to Teresa Lord Hugel, Chamber Executive Director who has been very involved in this project from day one, very few pole spaces are left. Click here  for more details and a gallery of one-a-kind-sculptures you can also see while you’re promenading along the Ave between 41st and 50th.  

Categories: Neighborhood
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University District Community Council Meets April 9

April 4, 2008 · Leave a Comment

ANNUAL MEETING ANNOUNCEMENT

APRIL 9, 2008 U-HEIGHTS CENTER ROOM 110

7:00 PM

 

ALL U District residents are encouraged to attend the University District Community Council’s annual membership meeting on Wednesday, April 9.   Come get to know your neighbors and discuss all of the things happening in our community.  The Livable Seattle Movement will present and request our support for an action agenda to ensure that new development in our City and our neighborhood is undertaken in a way that preserves the quality of life for all of Seattle’s residents (Read the complete agenda, including neighborhood photos and four point agendaLivableseattlemovement.org, at  LivableSeattle .

 

Categories: Housing
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Monster Sighting on Brooklyn at 52nd

April 2, 2008 · Leave a Comment

sun-mar-30-2008-002.jpg

The Whiteboard on Brooklyn at 52nd is all the monster left behind.

See the pictures and read all about Monster Sightings on Brooklyn on this U District architecture student’s blog!

Categories: Land Use · Neighborhood
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Design Review Board Calendar – Northeast

April 2, 2008 · 1 Comment

Building project on your block got you down?  Read the SmarterNeighbors’ blog post Stopping a Building in its Tracks and learn exactly how to pull the plug on shoddy development in your neighborhood.  Here’s where you check dates, details, and meetings locations on the Design Review Board website .   Below are details for the University District and Northeast in April and May, including plan designs where available.
8511 15th Ave NE on April 7
Reviewer: Northeast Design Review Board
Review Meeting: 8:00 PM, University Heights Center (see notice)
Review Phase: Recommendation (see past reviews)
Project Number: 3006480 (see permit status)
Planner: Scott Kemp
Monday, April 7, 2008
13730 Lake City Way NE
Reviewer: Northeast Design Review Board
Review Meeting: 6:30 PM, University Heights Center (see notice)
Review Phase: EDG–Early Design Guidance
Project Number: 3008515 (see permit status)
Planner: Marti Stave
Monday, April 21, 2008
14349 15th Ave NE
Design Proposal available at review meeting
Reviewer: Northeast Design Review Board
Review Meeting: 6:30 PM, University Heights Center
Review Phase: Recommendation (see past reviews)
Project Number: 3005703 (see permit status)
Planner: Tamara Garrett
14027 Lake City Way NE
Design Proposal available at review meeting
Reviewer: Northeast Design Review Board
Review Meeting: 8:00 PM, University Heights Center
Review Phase: Recommendation
Project Number: 3007337 (see permit status)
Planner: Shelley Bolser
 

Monday, May 5, 2008 (tentative)
3831 Stone Way Ave N
Design Proposal available at review meeting
Reviewer: Northeast Design Review Board
Review Meeting: 6:30 PM, University Heights Center
Review Phase: EDG–Early Design Guidance
Project Number: 3008385 (see permit status)
Planner: Bruce Rips
3920 Stone Way N
Design Proposal available at review meeting
Reviewer: Northeast Design Review Board
Review Meeting: 8:00 PM, University Heights Center
Review Phase: EDG–Early Design Guidance
Project Number: 3008142 (see permit status)
Planner: Bruce Rips

Categories: Design Review Board · Housing · Land Use
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U District Museum Without Walls Needs Volunteers By April 4

April 1, 2008 · Leave a Comment

More than a half million square feet of office space

The Museum Without Walls Planning Committee is in the midst of planning its first exhibit at the new University Tower, which still bears the Safeco masthead on 45th and Brooklyn.  A temporary outdoor exhibit that examines the history of activism in the University District, in addition to an oral history project that includes interviews with neighborhood residents, is the first of many of the Museum’s planned projects.  Volunteers are needed. Your volunteer hours will be credited as community match in the grant being written with a Department of Neighborhoods Large Matching Fund.  Go to the website by April 4 to get involved in this neighborhood project. And check out the blog at Museum Without Walls Blog.

For more information on the University Tower Property, see UW Tower Properties

Categories: Neighborhood
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