Posted by Bob Yoder, 10/25/2023
News and Opinion on Neighborhoods, Schools and Local Governments of Redmond, WA.
Wednesday, October 25, 2023
UPDATED: Esterra Park Opens in Overlake Neighborhood
REDMOND, WA - Recently, Esterra Park (2808 Calder Avenue NE), celebrated opening in Overlake Urban Center. This 2.67-acre park is the first major privately-owned public space (POPs) in Redmond and helps meet the needs of the growing neighborhood.
The park was created by leveraging developer incentives written in Redmond’s Zoning Code, with the goal to benefit the entire community. Together, the City, Capstone Partners, and JLL worked with care and intentionality to determine how the community would engage with the space.
From its layout to its accessibility features, as well as the selection of plants and reclaimed wood seating areas, the design elements were meticulously selected to be welcoming and accessible to the community. Notably, the inclusion of a wildflower native pollinator mix aligns with the City and partners’ shared commitment to supporting local ecosystems and providing a haven for the birds and bees.
The completed park, which was designed and approved by the Parks and Trails Commission in 2014, includes public art, a plaza, an accessible elevator, tree groves, a meadow, an amphitheater, and integrates a hill climb to the north of the park to easily access the nearby light rail station.
To learn more about the project, visit redmond.gov/1979.
Tuesday, October 24, 2023
UPDATED OPINION: Teacher Diversity at LW School District Deserves Study
Homeless Hotel Will House 35-65% Adults With Local Community Ties
| Redmond Silver Cloud Homeless Hotel credit Kirkland Reporter |
King County is partnered with Redmond to provide emergency and permanent housing for up to 100 individuals experiencing, or at risk of chronic homelessness. Redmond's "Homeless Hotel" will open in early Winter 2024 after ramping down its temporary use for the refugee resettlement project.
The Salvation Army was selected as operator in September 2023. They will develop a gradual, phased approach for housing up to 100 individuals at this
site.
Q: Who will be considered to live in the building?
A: The target population is adults whose income is at or below 30% of the area median and who are experiencing or at risk of chronic homelessness. 35-65% of units are prioritized for individuals with local community ties.
Q: Will the building have 24/7 staffing?
A: All Health Through Housing buildings have 24/7 on-site support staff and comprehensive, wraparound services, including: • Employment navigators • Behavioral health services available on-site • Connection to physical and behavioral health care • Assistance in enrolling in Apple Health and other public benefits
Q: Will The Salvation Army provide these services?
A: The Salvation Army will provide property management and 24/7 support staffing services in-house. The Salvation Army will also partner with King County’s Department of Community and Human Services and local service providers to provide the wraparound services.
Q: Will there be security?
A: The Redmond Homeless Hotel will have experienced, 24/7 on-site staff who are trained in trauma-informed care, crisis support, and de-escalation techniques. As an evidence-based model, permanent supportive housing does not feature security guard services, but it does call for clinically trained staff to be on-site and on-duty around the clock. Further, The Salvation Army will be responsible for developing a Safety and Security Plan as required by Redmond Zoning Code
Monday, October 23, 2023
Redmond MS Student Named Finalist In National Science Competition
| Advait Badrish |
Redmond Middle School eighth grader Advait Badrish is on his way to Washington D.C. as a finalist in the 2023 Thermo Fisher Scientific Junior Innovators Challenge. This is the nation’s premier STEM research competition for middle school students. Advait was nominated by the Washington State Science and Engineering Fair for his project titled "HeartNN: A High-Accuracy Neural Network for Cardiac Auscultation." Out of nearly 1,500 entries submitted for the national competition, there are now 30 finalists competing for more than $100,000 in prizes. All finalists will receive a $500 cash award. There is also prize money dedicated to some of the finalists’ schools.
According to the competition’s website, the Thermo Fisher Junior Innovators Challenge, a program of the Society for Science, seeks to inspire young scientists, engineers and innovators who will solve the grand challenges of the future. The finalists in this year’s event will travel to Washington, D.C. from October 28 – November 2 to participate in the Finals Week of the competition. Each student will be judged on both their science research projects as well as their demonstration of collaboration and critical thinking skills during team challenges, emphasizing the importance and value of teamwork in STEM fields.
UPDATED OPINON 10/26: Seattle Times Spotlights City Of Redmond Planners
Post and photo by Bob Yoder, 10/22/2023
Under construction, Redmond Square Apartments (aka The Grand) located in the heart of Redmond (Redmond Way and 166th Avenue NE); narrow sidewalks, limited bicycle infrastructure, pedestrian and street shadowing, flat facade. Legacy Partners ($3 billion) partnered with a Bejing-based company to build this monolith. They didn't partner with the community as are the Redmond Town Center owners.
"As Redmond has grown to 76,000 residents, a proper downtown has sprouted up around the city center’s handful of pre-World War II buildings. This kind of reinvention is happening around Puget Sound and across the country, a phenomenon called “retrofitting suburbia” in a 2008 book of the same name. Some argue multimodal Redmond is a national model for the trend.
Planners like the city of Redmond’s Jeff Churchill are tasked with a tricky job: figuring out how to revamp an outdated, car-dependent suburban template into a place that’s easier to get around on foot, bike or transit.
“The vision for this area becoming what it’s becoming has transcended multiple mayors and city council members,” Churchill said. “It’s been a very durable vision with a fair amount of buy-in.”
** “We’re going to put all our growth into downtown,” Churchill said. “That’s been the plan since the 1990s.”
Civic interest in Redmond’s future remains high. On a September weeknight, several dozen people — local residents, civil servants and elected officials — joined advocacy group Move Redmond to see highlights and lowlights of navigating downtown Redmond on foot.
The existing transit center, where express buses whisk residents to Microsoft’s Overlake campus or further along Highway 520 to Bellevue or Seattle, generally won praise. A curbless shared street between two apartment buildings, also known as a woonerf, elicited interest. A block lacking sidewalks near the new light-rail earned a “thumbs down.”
“Redmond is a suburb but downtown is trying to be a city,” Stevens said. “But it could be so much more.”
For example, Redmond touts itself as the bicycle capital of the Northwest, with its annual Derby Days races and its cycling velodrome at Marymoor Park, but on-street bike infrastructure is lacking.
“I’m comfortable riding in the street, but I want the kids I see riding on the sidewalk to feel comfortable being out on the street, especially because that’s something cool about Redmond: families are living downtown,” Stevens said.
These were the kinds of insights that Move Redmond Executive Director Kelli Refer hoped to hear. Folks are eager to see what’s next, provided downtown Redmond keeps sticking with the plan.
That kind of steady hand offers lessons for retrofitting suburbs everywhere.
“Redmond is setting itself up to be a national model,” Refer said."
Gregory Scruggs: gscruggs@seattletimes.com; Gregory Scruggs is the outdoors reporter at The Seattle Times.
###
** What's coming next... (City of Redmond)
** Redmond 2050 is evaluating higher densities by allowing taller buildings (generally between 10 and 19 stories depending on the Overlake station area). This would accommodate 19,000 to 23,000 new housing based on the development alternative options selected. (Draft: Future Vision for Redmond: Urban Centers.)
Saturday, October 21, 2023
UPDATED 10/22: Downtown Redmond Light Rail Update
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Four-car trains will run every 8 minutes carrying up to 800 riders, 16 wheelchairs, 12 bicycles and multiple suitcases. 18-minutes from DT Redmond to Bellevue; 42 minutes from Bellevue to Seattle; 45 minutes to stadiums; 72 minutes to Sea-Tac Airport.
Factoid: Per Move Redmond, "9 out of 10 people who work in Redmond live
outside the City due to the high cost of housing."
Thank you "Move Redmond" for providing these maps, information and your advocacy for transportation connectivity. 10/21/2023
Redmond Middle School Teacher Diversity
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Photos of teachers (not volunteers) hanging in the Redmond Middle School lobby. My guess is the school district tries hard to diversify their staff and executives.
We saw this composite while leaving the Rumble-In-Redmond Robot Combat Competition event.
-- Photo and opinion by Bob Yoder, 10/21/2023
Friday, October 20, 2023
Candidate Bus Ride Along Interviews
Move Redmond did a Candidate Interview Bus Ride Along with Redmond Mayoral and City Council positions who are up on the ballot. We met with candidates at the Redmond Technology station where we then got on the Rapid B line and rode to the Bellevue Transit Center.
-- Kelli Refer, Executive Director, Move Redmond
Thursday, October 19, 2023
Thursday, October 12, 2023
Spectacular "Spectra at Marymoor" Apartments
OneRedmond, Redmond's Chamber of Commerce (and more,) recently organized a tour of "Spectra at Marymoor" -- spectacular, innovative 450 apartment homes with amenities galore. Spectra is only a short walk to Marymoor Park and light rail. V.P. Brad Machat of Quarterra was our fantastic tour guide. He shared the scissors with Mayor Birney at the ribbon cutting ceremony. A few tour stops:
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Phenix Salon Suites will open early 2024. Very exciting! Much more news will come about this exciting business and two others. Note the metallic balcony art!
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This colorful building art was hand painted. Note the ring of evergreens! The East Lake Sammamish Trail runs right by. Popular community garden "pea patches" are on a wait list!
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Spacious outdoor lounge, with full kitchen, outdoor chess, diverse art
and roof greenery delivers tons of natural light.
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Here's Mayor Birney relaxing by the novel green roof.
Garage art adds to the eclecticism of Spectra,
the myriad of chairs and indoor art.
Photos and post by Bob Yoder, 10/12/2023
Lake Washington Schools Foundation: An Introduction
Discover the heart and soul of the Lake Washington Schools Foundation in this video.
Did you know that Lake Washington Schools Foundation (LWSF) and Lake Washington School District (LWSD) are two distinctly different organizations?
LWSF is a non-profit organization that works in close partnership with the school district to support the students in our community. We provide direct services through our programs and also fund district initiatives. We are able to do this work only through receiving donations from supporters who share our belief that every student should have the ability to achieve their full potential.
-- posted by Bob Yoder, 10/12/2023
City Council Interviews Park Commissioner Candidates
The development of SE Redmond Park is underway and the Parks and Recreation is asking for your feedback and participation. Input from these two new Parks and Trails commissioners will be invaluable. Everything you need to know about the proposed SE Redmond Park is HERE.
- Posted by Bob Yoder, 10/12/2023
Redmond To Launch Small Business Resiliency Grant
REDMOND, WA - The City and OneRedmond are partnering on a small business grant fund, which will open for applications on Monday, Oct. 16. The program will offer relief in the form of one-time $5,000 grants to small, for-profit businesses that have experienced financial hardship due to COVID-19 and related public health measures.
The City is dedicating more than $500,000 to this fourth round of city-distributed funding, specifically designed for the small business community. The grant is funded by American Rescue Plan Act federal dollars and a Unique Entity Identifier (UEI) will be required prior to the award.
“The City of Redmond is committed to supporting small business owners,” said Mayor Angela Birney. “These small businesses bring a vibrant and vital energy to our local economy, and it is important that we nurture their success today, tomorrow, and well into the future.”
Echoing Mayor Birney, Kristina Hudson, Chief Executive Officer for OneRedmond, said, “Small businesses are the backbone of our economy, and they have been vulnerable to the lingering effects of the pandemic. OneRedmond is proud to partner again with the City of Redmond on this grant program to help support small businesses who are critical to our community’s economic vitality.”
Eligible businesses must be located within the City of Redmond zip code of 98052 and have 10 or fewer employees. Grants will be awarded through a lottery system performed by an external organization.
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
Bird's Eye View -A Poem by Redmond's Poet Laureate
The Redmond Historical Society invites the community to an exciting conversation with Redmond Poet Laureate, Laura Da’, on the topic of “Currents of Time and Place: Poetry that Engages with History and Image in Cascadia.”
Saturday, 10:30 AM, October 14, 2023. Doors open 10:00 AM.
Location: Old Redmond Schoolhouse, 16600 NE 80th St., Redmond, WA 98052.
This program is the second of the Society’s Saturday Speaker Series for the Fall 2023 season. This will be an in-person program at the Old Redmond Schoolhouse. Admission is free to RHS members, and a suggested donation of $5 for non-members.
UPDATED: Mayor Angela Birney's Story / Pedestrian Safety / RCTV
I found Mayor Birney's Story on Pedestrian Safety while watching Redmond City Television (RCTV) on Comcast Channel 21.
I'm amazed how RCTV programming has improved. There's much more content. Tune in at 9:00AM for a half hour of local news, grant opportunities, and tips.
All of Mayor Birney's 52 YouTube stories can be watched in a rolling sequence.
posted by Bob Yoder, 10/11/2023
Monday, October 9, 2023
Glimpse Of Redmond Councilmembers In Action
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| 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. |
I'm going to periodically report on the important Council "Committee of the Whole" meetings. It will give you a chance to watch and listen to our representatives and see them take action on the agenda. Most of their work with staff gets done here. This is a meeting of the "Planning and Public Works Committee."
Click HERE to watch the tape of five councilmembers discussing Redmond's "signalization intersection project" with Kirkland ($2,218,035.) Scroll the tape to find: Stuart, 15:35m; Forsythe 16:40m; Carson 17:00m; Stewart 21:00m; Fields 22:00m; Krtizer 23:15m. (Kahn did not participate.)
Ms. Khan's term ends December 31, 2023. She's participated in less than 75% - 85% of council meetings. The Mayor would have her exact attendance records.
-- Bob Yoder, Opinion, 10/9/2023
Photo: RCTV Comcast 21
Sunday, October 8, 2023
Halloween Run Through The Park
Zoey reluctantly wears her Halloween costume after a long run in the Redmond Dog Park. Here, she's lapping water from a bowl the city thoughtfully installed.
- Bob & Pam
Redmond Ospreys And Their Nests
| Marymoor Park juvenile osprey / credit Reinke |
According to the Marymoor Park website, this tall osprey nest platform located near Parking Lot B was constructed in 2008, to replace a decommissioned cell tower. The new platform has been used by ospreys ever since.
A juvenile osprey is currently occupying the nest. (A juvenile can be identified by the white fringe around all of its brown wing feathers, which adults do not have.)
I discovered that there are two empty osprey nests only a half mile away and still inside the park. One nest structure is located in a tall lighting tower on the perimeter of baseball field #6 and the other is similarly located on the perimeter of baseball field #8. .
| Empty osprey nests on Marymoor lighting tower |
During all of my visits to the platform, only the juvenile has been present and I have never seen it flying around or accompanied by adult ospreys. However, my visits have all been of fairly short duration, so I presume that the adults are still attending to the juvenile. Nonetheless, the fall migration season has already begun, so presumably the juvenile and its parents may have already departed.
-- John Reinke
Redmond, photojournalist
10/8/2023
Wednesday, October 4, 2023
Redmond Homeless Hotel Opens Early 2024
| Silver Cloud Homeless Hotel credit Kirkland Reporter |
Today, King County Department of Community and Human Services announced the selection of an operator for the Health Through Housing building (AKA Homeless Hotel) in Redmond. The building now moves into the next phase of implementation before opening by early 2024.
The Salvation Army will provide 24/7 onsite operations at the building beginning in 2024. The Salvation Army is a long-standing regional provider of emergency shelter and long-term housing assistance. Throughout the COVID-19 emergency, The Salvation Army worked directly with King County on emergency relief and continues to be a partner in serving people experiencing, or at risk of chronic homelessness.
The Salvation Army brings expertise in creating stability for people experiencing homelessness through strategies, including street outreach and diversion, utility and food assistance, housing programs, and connection to integrated physical and behavioral health care. They will begin hiring staff to provide a range of 24/7 services and support for the new residents. The operator, alongside King County and the City of Redmond, will also engage with local area residents, city leaders, and businesses before occupancy. The first meet and greet will take place in late October.
Last year, the Redmond Health Through Housing building was used to temporarily provide a place for displaced refugees to stay from Afghanistan. From May through December, nearly 800 refugees received temporary housing, resettlement support, and connection to community. Of those who participated, 97 percent secured permanent housing.
-- C.O.R. Press Release, 10/4/2023
CONNECTIONS of Kirkland, Behavioral Health Crisis Center Forum
"Connections Health Solutions" is King County's first of five immediate access multi-service behavioral health crisis response centers. It will be located in the 405 Kirkland Corporate Center behind Olive Garden Restaurant, two blocks from the Kirkland police. It's scheduled to open June/July of 2024.
Heather Genovese, V.P. Clinical Operations of Connections Health Solutions held this ZOOM forum on 9/26, to inform viewers of the facility. Donna Lurie, Board President of NAMI Eastside led Q&A. Notable items from their Tucson facility:
- 24/7 Urgent Care Mental Health Clinic open to all. Treats adults over 17 years of age.
- 15+ chairs for observation by psychiatric providers. No triage. Individuals are seen within 90 minutes.
- 65% stabilized within 24 hours. 65% have comorbid substance abuse.
- 16-bed unit for crisis stabilization; stabilization is usually within 24-hours.
- 16-bed unit for sub-acute crisis stabilization usually within 4 days.
- 60-70% of involuntarily committed individuals convert to voluntary commitment.
- accepts 100% of those coming through the door, regardless of insurance.
- 50-55% are brought in through the back door by police. No one turned away. Peer support specialists remove remove hand cuffs with care compassion and dignity.
- 90% receive outpatient care by a mental health provider within 7 days off discharge.
- 45-Day Transition Program: "warm hand-off to community care" - recovery, support, and coaching.
- For profit.
- EvergreenHealth isn't funding the Center.
"King County invested $11.5 million of state and local dollars toward this crisis center located in Kirkland. It will service five North King County cities. It's the start of what we can achieve together when it comes to community behavioral health." -- King County Executive Dow Constantine.
Posted by Bob Yoder, 10/4/2023 / I participated.
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