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News and Opinion on Neighborhoods, Schools and Local Governments of Redmond, WA.
Thursday, December 14, 2017
New Council Members sworn in
Wednesday, December 13, 2017
OPINION: School district tax rate structure and 2018 bond need study
Dr. Traci Pierce, LWSD Superintendent, and Eric Campbell of Main Street Property Group will be featured speakers at the January 4th Education Hill Neighborhood Association meeting. (7 pm, United Baptist Church) Mark your calendars!
-- By Paige Norman, Founder, Education Hill Neighborhood Association (EdHNA.)
There has been a lot of conversation about the upcoming Lake Washington School District (LWSD) Bond and Levy proposal in February 2018.
- What is a Levy? A “Levy” is a pay-as-you-go-model; a certain amount of money is collected each year for a limited number of years.
- What is a Bond? A “Bond” resembles a mortgage; a bond is sold with a promise to pay back the money to the bond buyer with interest. The payments are made with the portion of the property tax devoted to bond measures. Bonds are up to 20-years in maturity dates. Bonds are sold as needed to build schools; so not all bonds are sold at once.
https://paigesprattle.blogspot.com/2013/11/ >
Over the years I have NOT been a supporter of Bonds because I have felt the District didn’t use the money in valuable ways for the future of the District.
In the past the District has used “leftover” monies from Bonds to build Portable/temporary classrooms (that turn into long-term classrooms) instead of using the funds to build brick-and-mortar buildings that house more students and have a longer life-span (not to mention bathrooms and aesthetics).
Visit King County's online open house to review sewer improvement plans in Redmond
The King County's "Online Open House" (OOH) concept is an excellent communications tool. I e-mailed the Mayor and City Council recommending use of (OOH) to educate, engage and attract citizen feedback on projects of importance to Redmond residents and the city. After couched discussion by our elected during last night's study session, the Mayor and Council President Margeson appeared supportive. An OOH would have been useful during the Community Centers campaign. In the future, the tool could be used for: Design Review analysis, LWSD connections, transportation projects, major proposed land-uses, homelessness, small business, and affordable housing. - B.Yoder
King County's Press Release:
Summary
King County is hosting an online open house to enable people to review and comment on plans for its Lake Hills and NW Sammamish Sewer Upgrade Project in Redmond. The online open house is available through Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2018.
Story
People interested in learning more about King County’s Lake Hills and NW Lake Sammamish Sewer upgrade Project are invited to participate in an online open house through Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2018.
Because project construction will be noticeable to users of West Lake Sammamish Parkway, Marymoor and Idylwood parks, and the Sammamish River Trail when it begins in 2020, King County hopes people will review design plans and share input on ways to minimize construction-related disruption.
Community member feedback so far indicates people put a high priority on preserving summertime park and trail access, coordinating construction schedules with nearby schools, and workable detours for motorists, cyclists and pedestrians. People also value protecting plant and animal habitat.
King County’s Lake Hills and NW Sammamish Sewer Upgrade Project entails upgrading nearly 4.5 miles of sewer pipe in Redmond to meet the needs of the growing community.
In addition to adding more capacity, King County will also install 1.5 miles of recycled water pipeline as part of the project, which could expand potential use of this resource in the future.
Additional information on the Lake Hills and NW Sammamish Sewer Upgrade Project is available online, or by contacting Kelly Foley at 206-477-8621.
This release is also posted on the Department of Natural Resources and Parks website: http://www.kingcounty.gov/ environment/dnrp.aspx
Spread the good cheer! Make Christmas for someone else possible by donating blood
HOLY CROSS BLOOD DRIVE FRI., DEC 22nd 12-6pm
An especially Merry Christmas to all who have donated blood over the last year at Holy Cross or the other churches in our Redmond Interfaith Blood Drives. While you are celebrating the holidays with family and friends, others may be signed up for a surgery or need a transfusion just to have a little more energy to keep going. YOU can help them enjoy their holidays, too, by offering to donate on:
FRIDAY, DEC 22nd
12-6pm (closed 2:30-3:30pm)
We'll have lots of yummy Christmas goodies to share with donors and those that “try to give”, too!
Church of Holy Cross (corner of 162nd AVE NE and NE 116th ST )
Friday, December 8, 2017
UPDATED: Redmond Neighborhood Blog "About Us" is revised and edited
Bob, Lexie and Pam |
The "Redmond Neighborhood Blog" mission is to keep our community better informed, connected and responsive to each other, with attention to local governments and our neighborhoods. My vision is positive. progressive change in our community.
I've lived in Redmond 38 years and started blogging about 10 years ago. When I first moved here from the mid-west to sell medical supplies, Redmond was a rural one-stoplight town. My family loved visiting the downtown feed store to play with the chicks; golf the downtown course; drive through the horse farms; line up at for ice cream and fresh milk at Thenos and generally just enjoy a peaceful lifestyle away from the big city. Well, those days are over.
I've been writing "Redmond Blog" under a known premise that governments fostering "transparency (openness) and participation" are good governments. My open government reporting of the City includes reporting on the Lake Washington School District and EvergreenHealth District governments. Transparency is improving and our local governments are healthier.
Several environmental issues in the mid-2000's tormented me so I started blogging to cope, "get the word out," and leverage voice. (A city planning commissioner Korby Parnel suggested I write a blog.) Environmental Issue 1: A housing project on Education Hill threatened the neighborhood forest and an important wetland frequented by science teachers. Public notice was pathetic so we got the word out. Mayor Ives negotiated a wider buffer. Notice was improved; two neighborhood meetings are now required. Issue 2: Hiking along Evans Creek in the city's southwest industrial district we found and reported riparian buffers severely abused by a wood recycling company. We were surprised the city "let this go" so leveraged voice. Soon, six state and local agencies were called in for remediation. Mayor Marchione later proclaimed "Riparian, as habitat of local importance." Issue 3: Years later, Lower Bear Creek was threatened by a WSDOT SR520 widening project. We worked with city and state officials to raise awareness and request funding. The creek was eventually re-aligned to preserve federally protected salmon habitat.
Years ago, I found Evergreen Hospital's concealed public Board commission's chambers and started attending their meetings and reporting on them. Public Record Requests revealed an executive/pediatrician's salary of $600,000 and other misfeasance. In short time, CEO Brown abruptly resigned and the commissioners hired Bob Malte from Colorado Springs as CEO. Mr. Malte reshuffled personnel and re-branded Evergreen to "EvergreenHealth." The hospital currently is winning many regional and national awards under Malte's helm.
Thursday, December 7, 2017
PIM electric-Bike demo at "down pour coffee bar."
I'm not waiting for Santa!
I and Council Member Steve Fields are meeting Justin Roberts, the brand manager of PIM and at "down pour coffee bar" today for an electric bike ride (demo)! The public is invited to all of Steve's Coffee Time meetings! Merry Christmas!
B. Yoder
Justin just lent me a bike to try! My maiden voyage was awesome. Climbing 166th is now in my sights. After I conquered it I'll write you.
UPDATED: Three LWSD Ballot Measures on February Ballot
Lake Washington School District will have three measures on the February 13, 2018 election ballot. The measures are a bond and two replacement levies. Read more about these three upcoming ballot measures.
The $299 million bond in a large way addresses the capacity needs of Kirkland schools. It would fund:
1) an addition at Lake Washington H.S.; a new elementary school in the Lake Washington Learning Community; the remodel/rebuild and enlarge Kamiakin M.S. the creation of special education learning spaces.
2) a choice high school in Sammamish, the remodel/rebuild and enlarge Alcott Elementary School; the creation of special education learning spaces; land; and site-specific capital projects/contingency.
The $299 million bond in a large way addresses the capacity needs of Kirkland schools. It would fund:
1) an addition at Lake Washington H.S.; a new elementary school in the Lake Washington Learning Community; the remodel/rebuild and enlarge Kamiakin M.S. the creation of special education learning spaces.
2) a choice high school in Sammamish, the remodel/rebuild and enlarge Alcott Elementary School; the creation of special education learning spaces; land; and site-specific capital projects/contingency.
According to the district, the replacement "Bond and the Capital Projects Levy" will maintain the current tax rate while the replacement "Educational Programs and Operations Levy" will reduce the current tax rate. The total tax rate for all three measures will be reduced from the current amount of $3.16/$1000 of assessed value to $2.93/1000 of assessed value.
"This is a great way to sell these ballot measures -- we're raising the $299 million for school construction, and the tax rate is actually going down!"
-- Comment by Toby Nixon
Source: Kirkland Facebook group
"This is a great way to sell these ballot measures -- we're raising the $299 million for school construction, and the tax rate is actually going down!"
-- Comment by Toby Nixon
Source: Kirkland Facebook group
Monday, December 4, 2017
Redmond Lights
"Redmond Lights" Luminary Walk on the Central Connector Trail.
Twas a cold, rainy, nasty night full of good cheer. Thanks to Kiwanis hot chocolate and caroling for keeping us warm.
Twas a cold, rainy, nasty night full of good cheer. Thanks to Kiwanis hot chocolate and caroling for keeping us warm.
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
Microsoft plans to rebuild Redmond campus and hire 8K more workers
King 5 sound-bite, 11/29
Microsoft plans to rebuild the Redmond campus -- with creative innovations -- for 8K new workers.
Redmond will be on the map drawing visitors and companies from all over the country (and world) making the mayoral election in two years a prize for the winner. We can surmise housing prices will continue to rise even further and perhaps a need for even more than four new hotels. The crunch on our schools will be dramatic. And the list goes on.....
Don't miss this "Microsoft Live" article by Natalie Singer-Velush. Good video clips here too. (Thanks to Rachel King for bringing this article to our attention on Chat Cafe and EdHNA facebook sites)
Rachel Lerman of the "Seattle Times" published a story yesterday titled "Microsoft plans multi-billion dollar expansion, renovation of Redmond campus." Find it here.
B. Yoder
Don't miss this "Microsoft Live" article by Natalie Singer-Velush. Good video clips here too. (Thanks to Rachel King for bringing this article to our attention on Chat Cafe and EdHNA facebook sites)
Rachel Lerman of the "Seattle Times" published a story yesterday titled "Microsoft plans multi-billion dollar expansion, renovation of Redmond campus." Find it here.
B. Yoder
Monday, November 27, 2017
Redmond's Station Designs
Seattle Transit Blog
at By Dan Ryan
Last Thursday, Sound Transit and the City of Redmond held an open house to share the latest designs for the two stations on the Redmond Link extension, planned to open for service in 2024. Following a Sound Transit Board decision in June to ratify alignment recommendations from the City of Redmond, the agency has moved quickly advancing design on stations in Downtown Redmond and Southeast Redmond.
The Downtown Redmond station is a simple elevated design between Cleveland St and NE 76th St. Elevating the station eliminated conflicts with pedestrians and vehicles crossing the line. The Redmond Central Connector trail is diverted very slightly to the north. There will be space for bus access and layover on both sides of the station area. The station platform is centered above 166th Ave NE, with entrances at either end.
Councilmember-elect Jeralee Anderson asks for feedback on infrastructure projects
The following is a letter from Dr. Jeralee Anderson, Redmond Councilmember-elect demonstrating the thorough community engagement process her company, Greenroads, requires to achieve sustainable certification on infrastructure projects like the King County Sewer Update project. After reading her Letter it's quite clear Dr. Anderson should be looked upon as a key Redmond community engagement expert and leader for ALL aspects of city government.
LETTER: I'm including an excerpt from Greenroads (my company's recipe book for sustainable infrastructure projects) about community engagement, which is a required practice in order for projects to qualify to achieve certification for sustainability performance in our program. I thought you [and others] might find it helpful when framing feedback to council. What specific areas (the four bullets) noted below need work, in your opinion? If it's "all of them," what is the priority you would place on making improvements in each area? It will be helpful information for me to bring your perspective on the system in place with me Jan 1. Based on what I heard from a number of people and other candidates, this is a major issue.
Jeralee Anderson |
I'll ask Councilmember-elect Steve Fields if he can schedule a public coffee time to study Jeralee's needs. BY
Goal
Promote active participation from community, agency, and business stakeholders in Project decision-making.
Instructions
Create a Community Engagement Plan (CEP) and implement it at the beginning of the Project’s initial scoping, land acquisition, and design development activities. The CEP should extend for the duration of project planning through completion of design.
The primary components of the CEP are:
Sunday, November 26, 2017
2018 Redmond Citizen Police Academy
REDMOND, WA -Redmond Police Department is accepting applications for our 2018 Citizen Police Academy, where community members are given a hands-on opportunity to learn about police procedures and investigation techniques.
Internet photo "ride-along" |
Some of the activities may include going on a ride-along, learning about SWAT, meeting our K-9 team, learning crime scene processing, and taking a tour of the King County Medical Examiner’s Office.
Interested candidates must be at least 21 years old and have no felony convictions. Priority will be given to people who live or work in the City of Redmond. Space is limited to 25 people and will fill up quickly.
Information about the course and the application can be found on our website here.
For questions regarding the Citizen’s Academy, please contact crimeprevention@redmond.govor 425-556-2632.
Thursday, November 16, 2017
Thank you, Father, for having created us and given us to each other in the human family. Thank you for being with us in all our joys and sorrows, for your comfort in our sadness, your companionship in our loneliness. Thank you for yesterday, today, tomorrow and for the whole of our lives. Thank you for friends, for health and for grace. May we live this and every day conscious of all that has been given to us. -From The Catholic Prayer Book
Thursday, November 9, 2017
UPDATED, 11/13, LWSD parents comment on the Re-Boundary Proposal
Minute 35 -- John Muir overcrowding comments
Minute 41.10 -- Public Comments on Proposed Re-Boundary
Hour 1:09 -- Superintendent Dr. Pierce's Boundary comments
Minute 41.10 -- Public Comments on Proposed Re-Boundary
Hour 1:09 -- Superintendent Dr. Pierce's Boundary comments
***Hour 1:36:15 -- Deputy Superintendent Dr. Jon Holmen's Boundary presentation and Board President Dr. Chris Carlson's input.
***Hour 3:11:20 -- Superintendent - Director talk time.
Source: November 6th School Board Meeting
The Boundary Committee is composed of 10 Principals and 8 Administrators -- no parents.
***Hour 3:11:20 -- Superintendent - Director talk time.
Source: November 6th School Board Meeting
The Boundary Committee is composed of 10 Principals and 8 Administrators -- no parents.
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