Wednesday, August 20, 2008

And the new Triangle PCO is...

...yet to be announced.

Did you all vote for Mark Lindquist for (democrat) Precinct Committee Officer?

I checked the election board results this evening. They're not posting the PCO finals until September 10.

So, we'll wait.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Election Night

Looks like the good governor has come to the Colman Triangle for her election night soiree. The parking lot at the Northwest African American Museum was full of local TV trucks this evening as my daughter and I took went walkabout in the neighborhood. The KOMO reporter wouldn't talk to my three-year-old daughter, but someone else confirmed the reason for the party.

The Stranger's Eric C. Barnett confirms on Slog:
I’m at the Northwest African American History Museum at the former Colman School in South Seattle, and we’re waiting for Gov. Christine Gregoire to show up for her third event of the night. She’s running late from her last event—a hoity-toity “high-donor” private fundraiser at an undisclosed location—and the crowd is milling around in an increasingly hot room, drinking (mostly wine) and talking (mostly about Darcy Burner). “We Are Family” is blasting from the speakers.
Last week we had Senator Murray. Tonight Chris Gregoire.

All within spitting distance of our local crack house.

One step at a time.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

South Precinct Community Newsletter

South Precinct Email Community Newsletter

August 13, 2008





Dear Community Friends,

Light Rail Testing

As reported in this morning’s Seattle Times, Sound Transit will begin testing link light-rail trains in Rainier Valley on Thursday August 14, adding a new to the traffic on Martin Luther King Jr. Way South. The trains will share streets with cars, buses, motorcycles, bicyclists and pedestrians.

The Light Rail tracks pass through 18 intersections and 10 pedestrian signals, plus three stations in the median. Trains will run as often as every six minutes in each direction, at a top speed of 35 mph. Although engineers have designed state-of-the-art signals and walkways, the sheer volume of activity makes this a hazardous five miles.

Left turns from MLK are allowed only on left-turn arrows, to reduce conflicts with trains going straight. Electronic signs show a train icon whenever trains are approaching. There are several "Z-crossings," where short fences channel pedestrians and force them to look in the direction of approaching trains. There are refuge islands in the median where people can stand, if they can only make it halfway.

Safety During Testing and Operation of Light Rail

With light rail testing and the start of service in the summer of 2009, Sound Transit has launched a safety education and awareness campaign for community members and students. To spread the safety message, Sound Transit has bought billboard space, talked with school and community groups, and hung fluorescent warning signs at crossings. Safety brochures have been produced in 12 languages. A light rail safety brochure should have already arrived in your mailbox. The light rail safety education is designed to:

  • Bring awareness that light rail trains are quiet, so people should always be alert and look both ways before crossing the street

  • Explain the function of the overhead electric power lines, called OCS (overhead catenary system)

  • Demonstrate safe pedestrian behavior and light rail crossing safety signs and signals

  • Inform the public about safe pedestrian and driving habits and signals.

The key safety messages that Sound Transit wants to impart for South Seattle residents are:

  • Link light rail trains move faster than they appear and can’t stop as quickly as a car: cross only at designated crosswalks

  • Trains have the right-of-way; obey all signals and warning signs

  • Trains are quiet; always look both ways

  • Tracks are for trains; never walk or play around trains or tracks

The Sound Transit community outreach team is also available to speak to small or large groups. Please call Carol Doering at 206-398-5095 to schedule a time, day or evening. You may also email her at carol.doering@soundtransit.org. You can also call and/or email to get the safety brochures in the various languages.

Why Traffic Safety Information is in a Police Department Newsletter

We want to give you information that is pertinent to community public safety, not just crime related information. Nothing is more important than the safety of the members of our community. So, if it means we advise you regarding traffic issues so we can raise awareness and hopefully prevent accidents or fatalities, seems like a good use of ink for us.

Until next time, Take Care and Stay Safe!

Mark Solomon, South Precinct Crime Prevention Coordinator

The Squeaky Wheel

Recently I posted about vacant lots in the Colman Triangle, with just a little extra attention paid to the lots owned by Tim O'Shea on Holgate between 24th and 25th. I've written about this lot in my own blog, and this summer have taken to calling him about once a week to clean up his property, and always got "it's on my calendar." And nothing would happen. Last week my neighbors and I stepped up the pressure: several calls daily, promises for more. I was just about to post old Tim to rottennieghbor.com.

On Monday, Tim came by with a crew who spent most of the day clearing the jungle that's grown up around his sometimes-vacant buildings.

There's more to do chez O'Shea: still people squatting there, and the lots are a menace, nuisance, annoyance...but at least the grass is cut.

Good work, squeaky wheel.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Mailbox? Mailbox?

My mailman will not retrieve outgoing mail from my mailbox. He just won't. And my mail won't send itself, so I have to help my letters into the postal flow in other ways.

I've made mental notes to myself about where there are mailboxes close to home. There's one at the QFC parking lot, one on that hill near Colman Park...the one at the 23rd & Union post office (not close to home, but there's a drive-thru box you can send stuff late). But I wasn't near any of those, and I had a Netflick to return, and I really, really want the Netflix people to send me the new season of The Wire right away, so I was motivated to find a mailbox.

Not too motivated, I guess, or I'd have gone to a known location. But I had a lot of bike riding to do today, and was sure I'd see one. No doubt about it.

This morning I rode from home to Westlake, then back by a different route. Granted, I wasn't being too diligent, and I may have ridden past several. The ones I knew about are where they're supposed to be, and there's one down at the southern tip of the Triangle. But that's it.

This afternoon, while riding to Capitol Hill to pick up my daughters from daycare, I was on a mission. Home, through Judkins, up 19th and down into Capitol Hill....nothing. I was looking, too. I walked several blocks of 12th, Netflick in hand, and found nothing. Again, nothing on the way home (the sixty pounds of cargo in the trailer kept me from riding around in search of a blue box).

Mission: failed.

So I did a little research and thought I'd share. In the image are all the mailboxes in the 98144 ZIP code. As presented by the USPS in a semi-authorized mashup with Google maps.

Triangle dwellers, you probably already know how to get your mail out, or maybe you've figured out the secret code to get the mailman to pick up your letters. If not, then I hope you'll find the map useful.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

PlayGarden will welcome special visitors this week

The Seattle Children's PlayGarden will begin a week long session of our Farm In the Garden camp tomorrow. We are very excited to host Senator Patty Murray for a tour of the project. She will tour the site, visit with parents and observe camp from 10:00-10:30am. At 12:00 we will host City Councilman Tom Rasmussen and on Thursday the 14th, our new Superintendent of Parks, Tim Gallagher will join us. We have a fun filled week planned. If you're "in the neighborhood" please feel free to stop by.

Friday, August 8, 2008

Cancer in the South End

There has been some buzz in the press and local blogs this week about the recently-released Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry study, which finds, according to the P-I article published in this morning's print edition, that:

Residents of a broad swath of South Seattle from Seward Park to West Seattle face elevated cancer risks because of air pollution, according to a soon-to-be released government study.

The risks are significantly elevated in pockets of industrial pollution – and skyrocket within about 200 yards of highways, says the long-awaited study by state and federal scientists.


The affected areas are shown in the map I've grabbed from the P-I article, and risks appear highest, theoretically, in the industrial areas around Georgetown, which get pollution from factories, roads, and airplanes.

I decided to bring the study to the Colman Triangle blog because of the red, high-risk areas on the map at the north end of the Triangle (at I-90). I read the P-I article, and was curious, so I dove into the ATSDR report for more information, which I think is worth sharing.

Non-Cancer Risks

The press has focused on cancer, which I'll get to below, but the freeway at the north end of our neighborhood offers more hazards to our health. The bulk of non-cancer risks come from a chemical called acrolein, with exposure coming from car exhaust and cigarette smoke (note, are you still shopping for reasons to quit smoking?). From the report (bold type by me):

Similar to cancer risk, non-cancer hazards are highest near major roadways. Hazard indices decrease with distance from the center of highways, but exceed one (meaning risk is greater than baseline) up to a few hundred meters on either side of major highways. Acrolein is the primary contaminant associated with non-cancer hazards from road sources. The following four pollutants are the main contributors to non-cancer hazards from mobile sources in descending order.


I've linked three of the agents above to the ATSDR info sheets about them. There aren't any well-defined cancer risks to these pollutants, but they do make breathing unpleasant and can affect folks with lung disease (asthma, COPD...) and children more than the rest of us.

Cancer Risks

There are a few things floating around the Colman Triangle that bring an increased cancer risk. From the report:
Diesel particulate matter, benzene, and 1,3-butadiene are the chemicals that contribute to the bulk of risk.
What kinds of cancer, you ask? Benzene is associated with leukemia (and anemia; benzene suppresses bone marrow production of red blood cells), while 1,3 butadiene appears to be associated with a "variety of tumor types."

Keep in mind that cancer results from long-term exposure, and that there are many other, non-cancer but unpleasant effects from shorter-term exposures (follow the links to read about these).

What to make of this?

I'm not a toxicologist or epidemiologist, so my ability to interpret the ATSDR study is limited to my training as a regular old physician (family doctor) and concerned citizen with two kids whose well-being I cherish more than my own. From what I've read, here's what I take away:

  1. Our little neighborhood sits just south of a major interstate with tons of diesel traffic passing through, leaving us with a variety of pollutants in our air, water, and soil. The risk of toxic exposure drops with distance from the freeway (it's about 200 meters from the center of I-90 to Massachusetts), but risks still exist beyond the "red zone." We're also bounded to our west and east by Rainier and MLK, which carry plenty of pollutant-spewing trucks and cars.
  2. Most of I-90 is covered in our neighborhood, which is nice. But...what happens to the pollution in the tunnel? Where does it go? The risk map is red even in the lidded areas.
  3. Kids and the chronically ill, as usual, have it worse than the rest of us.
  4. Cancer is bad, for sure, but anemia, birth defects, and lung disease are also significant effects of the pollutants found in the ATSDR study, and are likely to ruin your good time before cancer creeps in.
  5. Smoking is still stupid. This study reminds me that smoking tobacco is similar to wrapping your mouth around the exhaust pipe of a running diesel engine.
  6. The "fixes" to the problem are mostly to be found in rational public policy. Pollution standards for automobiles and factories should be designed to prevent disease and should be vigorously enforced. In our neighborhood, we can advocate for safe practices from our industrial neighbors (most of the Triangle is zoned for commercial and residential, creating a potential mini-Georgetown effect).
Those are my reflections. I look forward to comments and face-to-face discussions around the neighborhood.

Crossposted

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Construction Progress

I was getting a little worried that construction had halted at the corner of 24th and Grand. It had been quiet there for a while, and I thought the market had claimed another half-finished project.

But there have been folks doing interior work on these places for the last few days, so I guess things are moving forward.

However you feel about townhouses, I'll bet you feel better about completed ones than empty shells, like the Waldorf for squatters.

Night Out Photos

Many thanks to Jerry for taking pictures of the more southerly of the night out parties on Tuesday. Great turnout, fantastic food. And the police brought stickers.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

South Precinct Community Newsletter

The Rainier Valley Post just put up the latest newsletter from Marc Solomon, South Precinct Crime Prevention Coordinator. Many in the Triangle get this regularly from Marc or forwarded from neighbors...or from other local blogs (thanks RVP!).

Marc's newsletter covers the good news about Night Out--record numbers of registered block parties citywide and in the South Precinct--and bad news about two shootings in the South Rainier Valley, one fatal.

We've been fortunate of late with regard to violent crime around the Colman Triangle, but with violence common up around 23rd & Jackson (the CDN Police Scanner frequently reports afternoon fights there), and this from the Police Scanner today...

3:52PM - 2400 S. Judkins - Fight Disturbance - 2 males fighting in the alley. A second caller thinks that one of the two is armed with a gun. Black male, 30s, black tanktop. one possibly with the gun is black male, black shirt, blue jeans. Update: An officer arrived quickly and spotted two eastbound on Judkins, one is carrying something in his left hand, but the officer can't make out what it is. Update x2: Officer: "I have two at gunpoint. Under control for now". Update x3: 2 in custody

...well, I just don't think we can count on every night being a Night-Out-chalk-art-in-the-street-love-fest.

Be safe, everybody!

Another Write In for Mark Lindquist

I also received my ballot and am proud to be a supporter of Mark Lindquist. Mark is energetic, committed to our community and more than ready to take on the challenge of the betterment of the Rainier Valley neighborhood. He has helped spearhead meetings of the neighbors regarding recent arsons and crimes. He is a block watch captain - something he takes very seriously. My ballot will be sent in with Mark Linquist for our PCO written in.

Paula Maxwell

Vacant Lots on Colman Triangle

I've been working on a map of vacant lots in the Colman Triangle. Inspired mostly by the eyesore across the street from me, owned by Tim O'Shea (well-established slumlord). With the help of the King County web site parcel viewer and Google Maps, I've marked and described several of the vacant/abandoned lots in our neighborhood. For each, I've tried to identify the current taxpayer for the property and any permits or known plans for development. Click on the map markers to see info.

It's a work in progress, and the information is only as good as what I can learn from the county site. I'm happy to be corrected.

The goal here is to acknowledge that there are unused properties around us (though Tim O'Shea's are used by squatters and drug dealers), to know who owns them (mostly absentee landlords), and to encourage them to maintain the properties, trim the overgrowth, keep things safe.



View Larger Map

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Mark Lindquist for Precinct Committee Officer!

My mail-in, King County ballot arrived the other day, and was conspicuously without any candidate for (partisan) Precinct Committee Officer (PCO). No candidate, just a line for write-in. What's a voter to do?

Write in Mark Lindquist, that's what.

Mark is a Colman Triangle stalwart, interested in local politics and neighborhood stabilization. He is active in our community, smart, a Democrat, knows everyone, and he wants the job. Our precint, SEA 37-1854 basically sits within the Colman Triangle boundaries, and has a lot of vacancies on the Precinct Team. Patrick Burns, neighbor on 25th, is currently listed as our PCO, but again, no one is listed on the ballot.

According the the 37th Dems, here's the job description:

Precinct Committee Officers (PCOs) are an integral part of the 37th District’s connection to its members. As PCO, you’ll interact with your neighbors and act as the liaison between them and the district. Not only will you help bring your neighbor’s issues to the district for discussion, but you’ll help with Get Out The Vote (GOTV) efforts and host your local caucus.

I'll be writing in Mark Lindquist for PCO on my primary ballot. Mark will be at Night Out tonight around the neighborhood, as always, over the next couple of weeks if you want to talk with him about why he'd like to be our PCO.

Remember that primary day is August 19, and our polling place is:

OUR LADY OF MOUNT VIRGIN SCHOOL, DOWNSTAIRS AUDITORIUM
2800 S MASSACHUSETTS ST
SEATTLE, WA 98144




View Larger Map

Night Out Tonight


Tonight is Seattle's Night Out Against Crime, and the Colman Triangle is hosting (at least) two parties. We'll block the streets on 25th between Massachusetts and Grand, and on 24th between Plum and Holgate.

This is a great opportunity to spend time with neighbors and to raise awareness around public safety. According to the SPD web site:
“Night Out” is a national Crime Prevention event. It is designed to heighten crime prevention awareness, increase neighborhood support in anti-crime efforts, and unite our communities. It is a great chance to learn about crime prevention, while also celebrating your community and spending time with your neighbors.
I'll post photos after the events, if I can get my dust-filled camera to work.

Photo credit:
http://www.plumstead-stories.com