Credit/John Reinke |
News and Opinion on Neighborhoods, Schools and Local Governments of Redmond, WA.
Sunday, October 13, 2024
SUSPENDED IN MOTION, Autumn Fall In Redmond, John Reinke
CITY WATCH: Additional Water Storage Space Needed For Overlake, $24M Price
Internet
Councilmember Stuart asked: what steps are needed to plan for the anticipated water storage deficit
in Overlake, especially in light of anticipated growth in the area. CM Stuart expressed the importance of
addressing potential storage shortfalls ahead of growth.
Staff Comment: Given the ability to move water supply within the system as needed, the needs identified in Overlake can be met by adding storage in multiple locations in Rose Hill and Overlake. The well service area (including the Education Hill Tanks) can be fed by the higher Rose Hill/Overlake pressure zones but the higher Rose Hill/Overlake pressure zones cannot be fed by the well service area.
Additional storage in Rose Hill will directly benefit the Overlake area. The WSP specifically identifies adding a third storage tank on Education Hill. The total estimated cost to add the needed storage is $24 million (in 2023 $).
To provide the total volume identified in the current plan, a new reservoir site will be needed to meet the 20-year demand. 9/16
Source: 10/8 Council memo: Councilmember Comment Councilmember Fields requested information on the key risks facing Redmond’s water distribution and storage system and asked how the Water System Plan addresses or mitigates such risks. READ MORE:
CITY WATCH: The City Council Will Hold Hearing To Oppose I-2066
Vote "yes" on I-2066. Washington residents and restaurants deserve a choice on using gas and/or electricity. It's estimated the average consumer would have to pay ~$35,000 to convert all their appliances from gas to electric. If I-2066 passes gas won't be banned from use by restaurants and households.
Washington State has placed a ballot measure before the voters. Initiative Measure No. 2066 concerns regulating energy services, including natural gas and electrification. Initiative 2066 is scheduled to go to the voters at the General Election on November 5, 2024.
The City Cou the Council to take action on the resolution to declare its official position in opposition to I-2066.
"COUNCIL TOOL" RCW 42.17A.555(1) authorizes the Council to take action to express a collective decision, or to actually vote upon a motion, proposal, or ordinance, or to support or oppose a ballot measure so long as (a) the agenda includes the title and number of the ballot proposition, and (b) members.
(Same Tool used by Council to validate their I-2117 Hearing)
Source: 10/8/24 Study Session "hopper."
Council will hold a hearing at the October 15th, 2024 Business Meeting for the Council to take action on the resolution to declare its official position in opposition to I-2066.
"COUNCIL TOOL" RCW 42.17A.555(1) authorizes the Council to take action to express a collective decision, or to actually vote upon a motion, proposal, or ordinance, or to support or oppose a ballot measure so long as (a) the agenda includes the title and number of the ballot proposition, and (b) members.
(Same Tool used by Council to validate their I-2117 Hearing)
Source: 10/8/24 Study Session "hopper."
Bob Yoder, Opinion: 10/17/2024
National Indigenous Peoples Day For Eastside Youth
Indigenous Peoples were forcibly removed from ancestral lands, displaced, assimilated, and banned from worshiping or performing many sacred ceremonies. Yet today, they remain some of our greatest environmental stewards. They maintain strong religious beliefs that still feed the soul of our Nation. And they have chosen to serve in the United States Armed Forces at a higher rate than any other group. Native peoples challenge us to confront our past and do better, and their contributions to scholarship, law, the arts, public service, and more continue to guide us forward.
Am I enough to be seen as an indigenous person? Watch a short video HERE of students celebrating "Am I Enough."
Mary Wilber, Program Coordinator of the Eastside Native American Indian Association organizes events for our Salish Sea indigenous youth. She invites indigenous students from three school districts to her Monday evening classes at Lake Washignton High.
School Board Directors Tour Two Schools October 15
Some or all of the LWSD School Board of Directors will tour schools in the district on Tuesday, October 15, 2024. Open to the public Board members will not conduct business of the district an no decisions will be made. The board provides a community report about their site visits at their regularly scheduled board meetings. Schedule:
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UPDATED 10/13: Council Notes: Funding For "Mini City Hall" and Avondale Water Main Replacement
Redmond City Hall |
The City is asking our State legislature to fund significant projects next session, as follows:
1) $1,024,475 to replace several miles of aging, brittle asbestos water main pipe on Avondale Road NE. In addition, pavement will be re-surfaced for a total cost of $3.3M.
The pipes "are brittle," with numerous breaks in the last five years. Key concerns are:
- Health and water quality
- Impacts to salmon-bearing streams
- Fire protection
2) $618,000 for 1,700 sf city service space ("Mini City Hall") in the Overlake Bellwether building. With State funding the following services would be provided by 2028:
- customer service
- police desk
- mobile integrated health
- translation services (42% of residents are foreign born)
- multi-cultural lobby with rotating art
- 333 units for low and moderate income (30-80% AMI) families and individuals.
- access to light rail - across street from the Overlake Station.
Saturday, October 12, 2024
Privately Owned Scooter Transportation

Old Redmond Schoolhouse Early Learning Center
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
Sign Up For Osman's "Youth Board" - Be A Voice For The Eastside.
Letter to the Editor: UPDATED: Mayor Birney Has Too Much Power
Unlike its neighboring cities, such as Mercer Island, Bellevue, Kirkland, Woodinville, Bothell, and Sammamish, which ALL have a council-manager form of government, City of Redmond has a strong mayor-council form of government. Under the strong mayor form of government, mayor has too much power: while the council has legislative power, the mayor has veto power; the mayor is the chief executive officer, centralizing executive power. We have all witnessed the damages done allowing downtown homeless housing in Redmond and the entire Eastside when the mayor has too much power yet free from checks and balances.
Letter to the Editor: City Council Deprived Peoples' Rights On Homeless Decision
The Washington Constitution states, “All political power is inherent in the people, and governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, and are established to protect and maintain individual rights.”
Facts about the Plymouth homeless building in downtown Redmond:
- Located across the street from Anderson Park, only 0.5 miles from Redmond Elementary School;
- This is a 6-story, 100-unit, single adult only homeless building;
- No drug testing will be conducted. Drugs will be allowed in the building;
- Other than lifetime registered sex offenders, all other sex offenders are eligible;
- Other than meth producers who were convicted in the past 5 years, all other drug producers and drug dealers are eligible;
- The city made falsely claim and secretly plans to limit eligibility to people with disabilities. According to state law and the common practices of the state, county, and city, mental illness and substance use disorder are all considered disabilities. The city and Plymouth Housing want to secretly limit eligibility for this building to people with mental illness and drug addiction ;
- Homeless people from outside of Redmond are eligible;
- The City of Kenmore started this project via RFP in 2022 and rejected it in 2024 after three public hearings. The City of Redmond approved this project in 7 days with no public input period at all;
- The city is now withholding critical information and refuse to hold any public hearings;
- We, the people, must remind elected officials that they are elected by the people and for the people.
Thursday, October 3, 2024
City Conducting Traffic Safety, Signal Timing, and Operational Improvement Counts This Fall
Credit C.O.R. |
To support many city activities, including traffic safety, signal timing, and operational improvements, city staff are conducting the annual fall traffic and pedestrian counts. This work will be ongoing through early December. Learn more about this work https://redmond.gov/863/Traffic-Co
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
Updated 10/27: Neighborhood Stormwater Threatens Sammamish River Salmon.
In response to this post the City posted this advisory on their website front page.
Redmond's pollution truck advertises their pollution hot line: 425-556-2868 photo by Yoder |
Updated: "Council Conversations" In The Downtown Park
Downtown Park COUNCIL CONVERSATIONS, The Safety Table / photo Yoder |
I sat in at three tables conversing with councilmembers and residents at the busy Safety table, Environmental Sustainablity table and Miscellaneous table. Council V.P. Jessica Forsythe presided over the Safety Table. Feedback from a resident/family living in a downtown apartment was especially interesting. He wanted stop signs placed on Cleveland Street intersections and other downtown intersections -- said he saw pedestrians getting mildly brushed. He said Uber drivers were the worst; always looking at their cell phones. Another guy complained about gangs that prey on residents for their belongings. He thought only 4 - 6 police officers patrolled the whole city and asked for 16 more officers. I think Jessica said the department had over 140 officers (traffic, patrol, detective, drone, criminal, crime etc.) with plans for 4 more. CM (councilmember) Fields asked why the need for 16 more officers? I questioned the need for council taxing their city utilities and raising the business tax to fund a $6 million dollar public safety gap. IMO, the .25% city excise tax on construction was funding enough.
Monday, September 30, 2024
Sunday, September 29, 2024
UPDATED, PART ONE: RHS 25th Anniversary Celebration / John Oftebro
Redmond Historical Society 25th Anniversary Celebration in the new Senior & Community Center |
President John Oftebro of the Redmond Historical Society (RHS) did a fabulous job producing, directing and emceeing the Redmond Historical Society 25th Anniversary Celebration and Social. Over 120 attended. The event was held on Saturday, October 28 at the new Redmond Senior and Community Center. John's an excellent fund-raiser and superlative jack-of-all trades.
Laura-Lee Bennett, the Executive V.P. oversaw the event. RHS Co-founder Miguel Llanos flew up from Los Angeles and gave a 30-minute interactive slide show. John Couch, Redmond's Park & Rec. Director of 30 years dressed-up as Mayor Bill Brown. Chris "Hurricane" Himes, Redmond's first Strong Mayor gave a charming, short speech. Former Mayor Rosemary Ives was on Block Island attending to her family.
Board member Deborah Oftebro assembled lead-members to work the coffee cake and cookie table: Judy Lang, Jo Ann Potter, Deb Akerstrom and a Morelli? My wife Pam and I got to sit with good friends, John Reinke, Gary Smith and Terry Lavender. John Reinke gave the entire audience a holler as he sang along.
PART TWO: RHS 25th Anniversary / Derby Day Parade
At the 25th anniversary celebration John Couch dressed up as Mayor Bill Brown
Parks Director of 30 Years John Couch begs RHS Founder Naomi Hardy to shovel manure in a Derby Days Parade CREDIT/ REDMOND HISTORICAL SOCIETY |
Saturday, September 28, 2024
PART 4: "THIS PLACE MATTERS" - PERRIGO SPRINGS
Richard Morris and his dog stand on the spillway and two children holding a sign "This Place Matters." (click pic to enlarge) |
Perrigo Springs was Redmond's first "watering hole." Indians and early settlers first used the spring. "Daughters of the American Colonists" placed a 2004 rock marker and planted a Corkscrew tree near the spring.
The spring's water source is the Perrigo Creek wetland watershed. Perrigo Creek drains the Hartman wetland watershed. Its cooled water "springs up" into a shallow pond filled with natural stones. From there the spring water flows over a small concrete spillway into the creek below and continues downstream. Upper Perrigo Creek is a dry stream bed much of the time but the spring is active all year.
It's a quiet place. Children and small dogs playing on the spillway These children were floating cork boats. Musicians softly play their guitars while meditating by the Spring. Small families picnic nearby. The city monitors and maintains the Spring site.
Friday, September 27, 2024
UPDATED 10/20/24: Miguel Llanos, Redmond Historical Society / 25th Anniversary Celebration
Miguel Llanos |
Miguel Llanos is seen orchestrating a "Redmond Historical Society (RHS) Speaker series" event / photo Yoder
Miguel was a strong advocate for preserving Old Town and its 2-block row of historic "Perrigo Plat" Craftsman bungalow houses on 164th Street. The old Brown Bag Cafe bungalow on 164th was once owned by long-time Mayor Bill Brown (1913-1948) and did not meet the commission's historic criteria. [Same for the E.A. Walcher House, a 112+ year Craftsman-style bungalow on 8117-166th Ave. NE, also once owned by Bill Brown.]
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
September Is "National Recovery Month."
Monique Gablehouse, EvergreenHealth COO of Post Acute Care |
Monique Gablehouse, MSW, LICSW. EvergreenHealth Hospital
Since 1989, Americans have observed National Recovery Month to increase public awareness of mental health and addiction recovery; draw attention to new evidence-based treatment; celebrate the recovery community; and acknowledge the dedication of service providers and communities that enable recovery.
There is evidence that stigma-related bias among clinicians can contribute to a treatment-averse mindset and to flawed clinical care. However, EvergreenHealth's organizational mission, vision and values inform and support the care we provide. We demonstrate a shared commitment to providing humane, evidence-based, patient-centered care.
In my role as COO of Post Acute Care with system responsibilities for Behavioral Health, I have had the honor of working with the executive team for the Recovery Center at EvergreenHealth Monroe. They have a Medical Detox Unit, a Residential Treatment program, a program for Substance Using Pregnant Persons (SUPP) as well as an After Care and Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP). The dedicated teams work 24/7/365 to make sure that those struggling with addiction recovery in our area have a place to go for help. I am pleased to work at EvergreenHealth, which continues to support patients in recovery. I have spoken with several EvergreenHealth employees in Monroe and Kirkland, and this resource is so important for their friends and family in recovery.
Monday, September 23, 2024
Homelessness and Panhandling in Redmond
Sunday, September 22, 2024
UPDATED: Redmond Historical Society 25th Anniversary Celebration
25th Anniversary Celebration & Social
Redmond Senior & Community Center
Open house 3:00 PM - 5:30 PM
Program begins at 3:45