l-r Melissa Stuart, David Carson, Jeralee Anderson, President Jessica Forsythe, Varisha Khan, V.P. Vanessa Kritzer, Steve Fields (remote.) Staff have backs to the camera. |
News and Opinion on Neighborhoods, Schools and Local Governments of Redmond, WA.
Monday, October 9, 2023
Glimpse Of Redmond Councilmembers In Action
Wednesday, July 19, 2023
UPDATED: Public Servants: City Councilmember and School Board Director Salaries
The Mayor of Redmond faced controversary over consideration of salary increases for Council members. Currently, *seven council members each receive $18,648 per year and over $28,000 in benefits. They have about twice as many formal meetings as school board directors. Directors receive $4,000/year much of which is typically directed to their annual retreat. No benefits. I will report EvergreehHealth commissioner compensation at a later date. Operating budgets will be quoted.
RCW 28A.343.400 Compensation—Waiver. Each member of the board
of directors of a school district may receive compensation of fifty
dollars per day or portion thereof for attending board meetings and
for performing other services on behalf of the school district, not to
exceed four thousand eight hundred dollars per year.
Any director may waive all or any portion of his or her
compensation under this section as to any month or months during his
or her term of office.
The compensation provided in this section shall be in addition to
any reimbursement for expenses paid to such directors by the school
district.
-- Source: Public Record Request, 7/19/2023
The School Board holds a Study Session and Business Meeting every other week. They hold Executive Sessions and Special Meetings. They get no benefits, health care insurance, etc. There are 5 Board members.
* With the exception of Councilmember Varisha Kahn, all the Redmond councilmembers and LWSD directors attended their meetings on a regular basis.
cc: COR Council
Friday, April 7, 2023
UPDATED: City Council Meeting Notes, 04 April 2023
CM Melissa Stuart Featured City Council group picture not available |
https://www.facebook.com/
(short pause at start of tape)
ADVANCE TO 3:00 for poet Laureate Laura Da's description of her poetry inspired "Nature & City History Walk" around our lakefronts.
ADVANCE TO 4:52 for Dr. David Morton's "Item From The Audience" suggesting solutions to various city challenges.
ADVANCE TO 11:53 - Mayor Angela Birney kicks off Council's OMBUDS report where resident inquiries (positive and negative) are addressed. As follows:
Thursday, August 25, 2022
City Council Selects Name for New Community Center
Posted on: August 22, 2022
Citizens give testimony asking for "Senior" in the Center name. |
REDMOND, WA – At their Aug. 16 business meeting, members of the Redmond City Council voted ( *four to one) in support of naming the City’s new community center the Redmond Senior & Community Center. The name recognizes the new facility as a space for all generations to enjoy, gather, and recreate. Throughout the robust naming process, community members shared that they appreciated the name’s descriptiveness and that it clearly identifies the building as a place where seniors can feel comfortable and welcome.
The name was selected in accordance with the City’s process for naming new city facilities and included extensive community outreach and involvement. Initially, 31 names were collected from key stakeholders and then staff reviewed the options and narrowed the list to three. This list was shared with the Redmond community for feedback at community events and in an online questionnaire, which received nearly 350 responses. Following this outreach, Parks and Recreation Department staff presented the options and feedback to the Parks and Trails Commission, which put forward a recommendation that was presented with the feedback to City Council. The Council discussed the recommendation and alternative names at length and determined the approved name was the best suited for the new building.
“We are excited for this important milestone and thank everyone who shared their voices throughout the process,” said Mayor Angela Birney. “We are now one step closer to providing a new welcoming space in Redmond that is designed for all ages to recreate, meet, and build community.”
The Redmond Senior & Community Center will be a 52,000-square-foot facility. The building will utilize LEED-certified materials, efficient energy-conserving systems, and rooftop solar panels which will provide 50% of the building’s electricity. The City began outreach for the project in 2020, which confirmed Redmond’s need for a larger center to serve the senior population, while also serving the entire community with cultural arts, events, and multigenerational recreation experiences and gathering space.
The new community center is slated to open in late 2023 on the site of the former Redmond Senior Center, adjacent to City Hall on Redmond’s Municipal Campus. The design concept includes a senior lounge and library, a multipurpose community room with a commercial kitchen, active recreation areas and gym, locker rooms, classroom and meeting space, and a supervised Kid Zone for Redmond’s youngest community members.
For more information about the project, visit redmond.gov/RSCC.
Comment: * David Carson, Steve Fields, Jessica Forsythe, and Malissa Stewart voted "yes," Jaralee Anderson voted "no." Vanessa Kritzer was on family leave, and Varisha Kahn didn't show. (Ms. Kahn is about 25 years old.)
Surprisingly, the debate on "name" took several meetings and was contentious at times. I personally didn't hear one citizen give pro-Red Oak CC testemonity. Staff pushed hard for Red Oak. Council member Steve Fields concluded "we are very fortunate to have this community resource, regardless of name." Applause from both sides followed -- Bob Yoder
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Opinion: Councilmember Varisha Kahn Is Back!
Varisha Kahn |
Breaking news! Councilmember Varisha Kahn physically, in-person attended both Council meetings last night for the first time in over 20 months. Here's a June, 2020 snippet from Crosscut praising her:
Varisha Khan is a first-time city council member in Redmond. She drafted, proposed and passed recent legislation that protects Redmond residents from late fees and evictions, and offers support during other hardships. She recognizes this pandemic as a collective trauma for society and the only way she feels she can cope is by doing what she knows: helping her community through writing humane policy that mends a frayed social safety net."
-- Dorothy Edwards, June 22, 2020, Crosscut.
In addition to remote attendance Varisha presided over the Public Safety Committee for several months and coordinated the new Safety and Sustainability work plan. Other than that, her in-person attendance was rare until last night.
Since not everyone participates when attending remotely, the Mayor started a roll call policy for accountability.
Councilmember Kahn's constituents are diverse and her representation is critical. Ms. Kahn is the youngest councilmember in the history of this City. She's a woman in her mid-twenties (the average age in Redmond is 34.5 yrs.) She's a Muslim. And, she's a native, having graduated from Horace Mann Elementary.
The six councilmembers have worked hard to carry her load. Varisha is pretty confident. She is articulate, likes to talk, and eventually makes her point heard.
-- Bob Yoder, 6/22/2022
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
Updated: Council Decides On Senior & Community Center Funding
The proposed $48 million Senior & Community Center adjacent to City Hall will be funded, in part, by $16,000,000 "council-manic" bonds. These bonds don't require voter approval or increase taxes and will utilize future revenues to pay the bonds.
Council voted 5-2 (Carson, Kahn) for "Option 3" bonding at their March 8th Study Session. They chose a $16,814,039, 20-year council-manic bond bearing 3% interest. Total debt after 20 years is $21,000,000. Interest after 20-years is $5,393,340.
"One-time money" ($16,814,039) from 2021 construction taxes will not be spent. Enormous construction activity in Redmond's urban centers generates one-time money. The City accumulated $11,066,344 one-time money in 2020, as well. According to the Council President the funds must be used for capital expenditures, not operations.
Councilmember David Carson prefered "Option 1." He liked that $2 million in interest is saved up front over the life of the loan. "Not knowing what could come, paying the price down as much as possible is a safe, conservative route," said Carson.
CM Kahn was present and quiet.
-- Bob Yoder, 3/15/2022
Sunday, January 9, 2022
UPDATED: Councilmembers Jessica Forsythe and Vanessa Kritzer Elected Council Officers
The election was held during the January, 4th Regular Council meeting. A video of the meeting is here.
Councilmember Jessica Forsythe was elected Council President, (5-2) Carson, Fields, Kahn, Kritzer, Forsythe. (Stewart nominated Anderson.)
Councilmember Kritzer was elected Vice President, (4-3) Anderson, Stewart, Carson, Kritzer. (Forsythe nominated Anderson, Anderson declined the nomination, Anderson and Kritzer nominated Stewart for Vice President. Carson and Fields advised against it.)
Councilmember Kahn nominated Councilmember Fields for President. Mr. Fields declined. Fields nominated Ms. Kahn for V.P. Ms. Anderson voted "no." Ms. Kahn nominated Mr. Fields for V.P. Councilmember Anderson voted "no." Councilmember Malissa Stewart was nominated for V.P. Councilmember David Carson discouraged her owing to lack of experience. (This is her first year as a representative.)
Council President Jessica Forsythe |
Jessica Forsythe
Position #3Council Term Expires 12/31/23
Email Jessica Forsythe
Phone: 425-305-7206
Boards/Committees: Presiding Officer of the City’s Parks and Human Services Committee of the Whole, Eastrail Regional Advisory Committee, Eastside Human Services Forum (EHSF)
Jessica Forsythe is an award-winning Creative Director and owner of a small graphic design studio which works primarily with clients who seek to better their community. Ms. Forsythe is a thoughtful, creative thinker who takes a holistic approach to every project. She believes strongly in being involved at the local level and knows first-hand the impact one person can have on their community.
Originally from Northeast Ohio, Jessica graduated from Kent State University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Communication Design with a concentration in Environmental Design. She has worked in environmental design, architecture, branding, and was the Art Director for the Seattle Symphony. She has volunteered with numerous community and charity organizations, most notably her decade-long involvement with Help Portrait International for which she is the Founder of the Redmond, Washington Chapter. Jessica has also served on various non-profit boards including the League of Women Voters Seattle-King County Executive Board and as the c3 Treasurer.
She enjoys hiking, running, cycling, kayaking, skiing, and rock climbing.
Council Vice President Vanessa Kritzer
Vanessa Kritzer
Position #5
Council Term Expires 12/31/23
Email Vanessa Kritzer
Phone: 425-305-9892
Boards/Committees: Presiding Officer of the City’s Finance, Administration, and Communications Committee of the Whole, Community Facilities District (CFD) Board of Supervisors, Eastside Transportation Partnership (ETP), Sound Cities Association (SCA), WRIA 8 Salmon Recovery Council, Lake Sammamish Kokanee ILA Management Committee, King Conservation District Advisory Committee.
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
Anderson, Fields, Stuart Sworn In To City Council
(lr) Melissa Stuart, Steve Fields, Jeralee Anderson Courtesy of redmond.gov |
Redmond, WA – In a ceremony during last night’s Redmond City Council meeting, newly elected Redmond resident Melissa Stuart (Council Position No. 4), along with re-elected residents Steve Fields (Council Position No. 2) and Jeralee Anderson (Council Position No. 6), were officially sworn in. Their terms are effective January 2022 through December 2025.
Melissa Stuart, MNPL, is a non-profit leader working to improve the lives of children, youth, and families.
She’s currently working on behalf of youth at Boys & Girls Clubs of King County. Her past work includes securing affordable access to behavioral healthcare for families at Youth Eastside Services, ensuring educational justice for youth in foster care at Treehouse, and more. Stuart is a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer, former board member at Zero Waste Washington, and previously served as a Redmond Library Trustee. Melissa grew up on the Kitsap Peninsula. She lives in Redmond’s Overlake neighborhood with her husband and stepson.
Anderson, Fields, Stuart (click to enlarge) |
Jeralee Anderson is the President/CEO and Co-founder of Greenroads Foundation, a Redmond nonprofit organization focused on sustainability education, performance management, and strategic programming for transportation capital projects. She received her doctorate in sustainability and civil engineering from the University of Washington in 2012 and is a licensed professional engineer. She currently represents the City as an alternate on the Cascade Water Alliance (CWA), and she serves as an Association of Washington Cities (AWC) representative on the State Public Works Board.
"On Deck" Varisha Kahn, Vanessa Kritzer, David Carson (click to enlarge) |
Wednesday, September 15, 2021
Redmond Historical Society "Duwamish River" Video Presentation
The Redmond Historical Society recorded Saturday's program about the Duwamish River. If you'd like to view it, the link is https://youtu.be/5xSrz_
Virtual Saturday Speaker Series
Saturday, 10:30 AM, October 9, 2021
"The Snoqualmie Tribe: A Brief History of the Lake Sammamish Area"
Zoom Webinar
To register: https://tinyurl.com/4n5jvxfy
Speaker: Steven Moses
Director of Archaeology & Historic Preservation, Snoqualmie Tribe
Steven Moses is the Director of Archaeology & Historic Preservation and a Tribal member of the Snoqualmie Tribe. Join him as he explains the Indigenous connection to the north Lake Sammamish area from 13,000 years ago to today. Steven will touch on the recent archaeological discoveries of Bear Creek and its significance as a fish habitat. He will also discuss ways in which our communities can work together to preserve our shared history of the Pacific Northwest.
Thursday, August 26, 2021
Critique On A Redmond Council Meeting
I'm a local government nerd and try to watch City Council meetings on Facebook LIVE whenever I can. A few actions really annoyed me at their last Study Session and I'm getting it off my chest here; other actions were commendable.
1, Our councilmembers work exceptionally hard and they're smart. We, the electorate did well!
2. Even though Mr. Fields committed to keeping his zoom camera on when talking he rarely does. In the few meetings Ms. Kahn has attended, she seldom turns her camera on. Seeing faces and body language is an important part of communication. Otherwise, it's like listening to a radio.
3. Councilmembers Kritzer, Padhye, Anderson, and Forsythe always put their cameras on so you can watch them talking. Cameras help in public engagement. Ms. Kritzer and Padhye usually sit on the Dais as does Ms. Anderson & Mr. Carson. Seeing their faces and body language is extremely helpful. Yes, we are a broad, attentive viewing audience who wants to be informed and participate.
4. Ms. Kahn on three occasions talked endlessly. She may have made 1-2 points. "Be Brief, Be Bright, Be Gone" is something to think about.
5. V.P. Jeralee Anderson did a fabulous job running the "Environmental Sustainability Priority" conversations. [She's given an environmental TEDx talk on "green roads."] Jeralee made sure everyone had the opportunity to participate equatibly. Jeralee has good body language and engages well.
6. The Council Safety Committee was considered for "housing" an environmental sustainability standing committee. The Mayor (not in attendance) through President Padhye was concerned about staffing. Padhye said a Director's attendance was common practice. Five councilmembers said an environmental executive would be fitting. (as do I.) Council will take a vote next Business meeting.
7. Mr. Fields scolded President Padhye over a simple procedural question. It was uncivil and unbecoming of a councilmember. (His area of interest is policy.)
-- Bob Yoder, 8/26/2021
Wednesday, July 7, 2021
UPDATED: Council Holds First In-person Meeting In Over A Year
(l-r) Varisha Kahn, Jessica Forsythe, Tanika Padeya, David Carson, Mayor Angela Birney, Vanessa Kritzer, Jeralee Anderson, Steve Fields.
Council had their first hybrid / in-person Regular meeting on July 6th, 2021. Prior to this, meetings were remote owing to COVID.
In this particular meeting, Varisha Kahn, Jessica Forsythe and Jeraleee Anderson wore masks. Everyone else were unmasked, including the mayor, the city attorney and city clerk. Mr. Fields was participating remotely. Carol Helland, Director of Planning and Ms. Hite, Director of Parks were sitting unmasked at the table. Some members of the audiance were not masked.
I'm not sure why three were covered. Were they fearful of the Delta variant? My guess is some were trying to set an example to encourage the public to mask since the pandemic isn't over.
Council Member Varisha Kahn, in the committee meeting, attributed her full-face covering to a scratchy throat.
-- Bob Yoder, 7/7/2021 - photo: redmond.gov
Thursday, March 25, 2021
Notes On Redmond's 2050 Outreach Results
This winter the Administration conducted comprehensive surveys asking citizens "what will Redmond be like in 2050." Council discussed "Redmond 2050" in their last study session. Below, are a few of their thoughts on the subject:
David Carson doesn't like unoccupied housing units. After one year he suggested double taxing them. Unoccupied housing relates, in part, to investors trying to lock up a good deal. Fallow housing drains our housing stock. Mayor Angela Birney said no-can-do, that the issue is in the hands of the state legislature.
Steve Fields said an acquaintance felt Redmond was becoming more "soulless." Fields appreciated the city's successes but indicated Redmond's "look and feel" and design standards were affecting the character of the City.
Jessica Forsythe felt our parks were missing corridor links and thus walkability; especially in our downtown parks and Overlake. Mental health resources are important.
Varisha Kahn was unresponsive.
Vanessa Kritzer (and Jessica) want to build a working relationship with the City of Bellevue. Vanessa looks to improve the quality of life through child care resources, education and human resources. Mental health resources are important.
Jaralee Anderson - my notes on Jeralee are poor but a lot of her interest is in transportation and green roads.
Tanika Padhye is interested in 10-minute communities and building a police facility in Overlake.
-- Bob Yoder, 3/25/2021
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
UPDATED 3/25: Redmond Council Is Shaking Their Governance
Redmond City Hall |
A previous budget discussion triggered Council to review municipal forms of government during their study session last night. For years, the City has been governed in the "Strong Mayor" format and still is. Like Council, our Mayor is elected to a four year term but also serves as the CEO and Chief Administrative Officer. For 12 years "Strong Mayor" John Marchione assigned Jane Christianson as Deputy Administrator Officer to carry out operations. Jane Christianson was terrific, a real pro, the best. He later hired two co-Deputy Administrators, and just before retiring promoted the Parks Director to COO, a new position. Mayor Angela Birney then replaced this COO with the Finance Director (a past City Clerk) who is a numbers and strategic person; less a manager and people person.
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Updated: The First Inhabitants Of Redmond
In meetings, Redmond City Council, led by CM Vanessa Kritzer and CM Jessica Forsythe, are recognizing the Salish tribe as being the original inhabitants of Redmond. CM Varisha Kahn came up with the idea. I'm not sure what this has to do with governance but I certainly find this honorable and a kind acknowledgement of our indigenous. Below, is some background on the Salish tribes in our area -- we have many: Sammamish, Squak, Snoqualmie, and Duwamish. The Lower Bear Creek restoration identified the presence of Muckleshoot, Tulalip and Stillaguamish tribes. All are Salish.
It appears the Sammamish tribe may have been named after the Great Blue Heron - "our species of local importance."
-- Bob Yoder
The Coast Salish is a group of ethnically and linguistically related Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast, living in British Columbia, Canada and the U.S. states of Washington and Oregon. ... The Coast Salish are a large, loose grouping of many tribes with numerous distinct cultures and languages. The Sammamish (/səˈmæmɪʃ/; indigenously, [t͡saˈpaːbʃ]) people were a Coast Salish Native American tribe in the Sammamish River Valley in central King County, Washington.
Their name is variously translated as ssts'p-abc ("meander dwellers", a group residing around Bothell),[2] s-tah-PAHBSH ("willow people") or as Samena ("hunter people"), which was corrupted into Sammamish.[3] According to Hitchman, it does not mean "hunter people", the name is derived from samma, meaning "the sound of the blue crane" and mish, meaning "river." The name may have originated with the Snoqualmie—some tribal members once lived along the lake near the bottom of Inglewood Hill—but this has not been verified.[4] They were also known to early European-American settlers as "Squak", "Simump", and "Squowh.",[5] Squak is a corruption of sqwa'ux, meaning Issaquah Creek, which was a village site on Sammamish Lake. They were closely related to the Duwamish, and have often been considered a Duwamish sub-group as part of the Xacuabš ("People of the Large Lake") who lived near Lake Washington. Like the Duwamish, the Sammamish originally spoke a southern dialect of Lushootseed.
Salish Indian religious beliefs focus chiefly on guardian spirits. Guardian spirit, supernatural teacher, frequently depicted in animal form, who guides an individual in every important activity through advice and songs; the belief in guardian spirits is widely diffused among the North American Indians.
Wikipedia, 12/8/2020
Monday, September 28, 2020
Opinion - Labeling Councilmembers
I recently wrote a post where I labeled three councilmembers harshly and I want to apologize. Below are my changes:
In cultural, religious situations Varisha Kahn is an effective activist. She's a very good speaker and deeply concerned about the community. Jessica Forsythe is a kind, soft-spoken councilmember in the Fields camp. She cares a lot about the environment. Mr. Fields is hard working, assertive, ambitious, a driver and cares about the environment too. An accountant, he brings much to the table during the finance and budget process.
Bob Yoder, opinion, 9/28
Thursday, September 17, 2020
UPDATED OPINION: MAPS-AMEN Should Unclench Their Teeth
In a Facebook Forum Aneela Afzali of Maps-Amen mildly attacked four members of council (Padhye, Anderson, Kritzer, and Carson.) She was after them to approve a Resolution supporting her cause. (AWWPP) related.
Fields threw me under the bus when I challenged him about Aneelah's "bridge building." In cultural religious situations Varisha Kahn seems an activist; Jessica Forsythe is kind and soft-spoken, in the Fields camp. Redmond has a strong interfaith community! What makes the Muslims so special? Let's treat all faiths equally! Let's focus on the rich diversity of religions we enjoy in our city! - Bob Yoder, 9/17/2020
Aneelah Afzali
Executive Director
Aneelah Afzali is Executive Director of MAPS-AMEN. She is also on the board of the Faith Action Network, and on the Steering Committee of the Washington Immigrant Solidarity Network. A graduate of Harvard Law School, Aneelah left her legal career in 2013 to serve as a community activist and interfaith leader. Since then, she has worked on addressing the growing divide in our nation by building bridges of understanding and unity to advocate for justice together.
Monday, September 14, 2020
School Board Limits Their Comment Period To Thirty Minutes
The City of Redmond Council has recently been burdened with over 30 hours of verbal comment on an anti-Muslim religious issue. They also received over 1300 emails on the same topic. A Muslim council member appeared pleased with the hundreds of emails she received. Is it possible the City of Redmond could learn from our LWSD Board in dealing with testy issues?
"In the 8/10 Board meeting there were 13-pages of public comments compiled on three topics: Inclusion/Equity (4) and Return to School/Fall. Board members read the comments for Inclusion/Equity and summarized comments submitted for Return to School/Fall for the 30-minutes set aside for public comment."
"In the 8/20 meeting there were 6-pages of public comments regarding Inclusion/Equity; these comments have also been posted on the district website. Board members read all of the comments submitted during the 30-minutes set aside for public comment."
###
In order to provide a full remote learning environment in September, every K-5 student will be provided a device and mobile hotspots will be provided to ensure that all students have connectivity.
Board of Directors of the Lake Washington School District No. 414 hereby adopts the 2020-21 budget:
General Fund $491,088,202
Associated Student Body Fund 6,470,521
Debt Service Fund 79,128,277
Capital Projects Fund 132,906,498
Transportation Vehicle Fund 1,161,241
-- Excerpts from LWSD Board Packets, 8/24 and 8/10/2020
-- Bob Yoder, 9/14//20
Friday, September 4, 2020
OPINION UPDATE #3: Point - Counterpoint: Religious Distress In Redmond
"....a VIRTUAL FORUM exposing the group "Alliance for Persecuted People Worldwide" (APPWW), which has been promoting anti-Muslim hate and bigotry, even as it masquerades as a human rights organization."
COUNTERPOINT: (a comment on my post)
"Please refrain from calling this a hate (APPWW) group.
Please explain how Muslims putting people to death for their Christian beliefs is not hateful.
Please also explain how Muslims peacefully pushing homosexuals off of buildings is not hateful.
Please also explain how female genital mutilation is not hateful towards young women, and towards women in general.
If you can explain all of these things, then maybe you can redefine what hate really means.
You are condoning hatred of Christians in your post - you do realize this, right?"
City Council has received 3 thousand emails and scores of presentations addressing this topic. I know of one councilmember that responded to 300 emails. Council spent over 3 hours listening to APPWW topics during their last 2 Regular Business meeting. When will Council find a solution to move forward on the work the public is expecting of them? Write a resolution and be done with it! The LWSD manages their firebrand issues with finesse. Maybe they can help our council.
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Five Of Twelve Letter-Sorting Machines At Redmond Post Office Dismantled
Source: KUOW, 8/19/2020: https://www.kuow.org/stories/nearly-half-of-mail-sorting-machines-in-seattle-area-already-dismantled?fbclid=IwAR2rNffu9mnMcQJ3fH7oYlH1mmw3nkn-tuT02IQE2G593ZsHEWLl6ZtPuO4
Monday, December 30, 2019
City Of Redmond Swearing In Ceremony
l-r Angela Birney, David Carson, Varisha Kahn, Jessica Forsythe, Vanessa Kritzer |
Thirteen different council/mayoral candidate signs were staked. Amazingly, most were removed within a day following the election. (click to enlarge) |