Seattle, WA
Reimagine Seattle: Neve Mazique – Front Porch
The challenges of the previous two years have modified the best way we reside, the best way we work, and the best way we present up for one another. They’ve additionally given us a uncommon probability to collectively reimagine our future. Via the Reimagine Seattle Storytelling Mission we invite group members to mirror on their present experiences in Seattle, how they’ve been impacted by current occasions, and their hopes for the way forward for our metropolis.
A Scorpio At Events
BY NEVE “ZiqueBeast” Mazique-Bianco
Seattle, Duwamish Land. You wrap me up within the blackest firs. They usually stated this was a white place. A cracker kingdom of icy interactions. That is an entry actuality phantasm of traumatized passive aggression magic. Within the 98118, our tamarind, coconut, bean, and lentil brownness is as myriad as our dialects, the crows are outdated punks who know our faces, if not our names, a few of us are witches, and most of us are homosexual. Seattle is a Scorpio at events, trying to find the nights who can bear in mind their goals. Seattle is Disabled in each approach possible, and it has each foot on the wild different facet. Duwamish land is a portal that shimmers, stays open, as lengthy you permit a present behind.
My Black summer season, 2020, that juicy summer season of our discontent, was fabricated from roses. I grew them, sweethearts, and stewed in them underneath the celebs. Spells multiplied me, and I grew to become digitally nearer to my physique than ever. Seattle phases, those in parks and those on computer systems, the theaters with homes and those that float like butterflies, are hungry for transformation, even when they aren’t prepared for it. My contracted joints crave appreciation for the way they’ve held onto their kind, they’re technique performing’s most interesting. So, I allow them to push me the place they wish to go for some time, till I see a approach to take a brand new path within the woods. The one which brings me again to satisfy myself and different selves, on the assembly of the selves, a scorching climate revelation near blue water. I grew to become prolific in paintings, spell work, and connection throughout the pangea, our old-world form. The isolation was so subsuming, so indulged, that our anxiousness grew to become a friendlier crystal, and all of us discover ourselves new gods, together with those known as entry, intimacy, consent, solidarity.
On the hour once I needed to squeeze every little thing round me, all of us needed to preserve our distance.
So, I made certain to the touch what I might. I acquired to say, flowers and filth and smells and songs will get you there. Now we’re dancing nearer.
Spring, lastly, two years later is fabricated from music and psychic spears and cherry blossoms and angel numbers. Crabapples, pink vehicles, and winks from strangers are small miracles and delicate nightmares to want on. I want that town of Seattle as it’s identified, would change into much less afraid of the wants of its peoples. Give roofs to everybody. Mild up the night time of these of us who’re owls a bit of later. Give us the park again. Defund the slave catchers. Allow us to all be there. Let harmonies and rhythms take over, pay the dancers exotically, give the veins of this earth, its mountains, forests, and waterways, again to its folks, the Duwamish folks.
Loving this place and wanting it to like me higher is the feeling of slowly going free. Self-hatred is not any match for the wonder and would possibly of Mt Tahoma. The peanut brittle shone mild via the fissures in my loveship and I needed to marvel if this place was a house. With discovered sticks of western white pine I constructed it stronger, and to my shock, discovered I’m nonetheless in love with Seattle and the lands that encompass it. We suck on science fiction right here sooner or later, we get up after we wish to, typically we even maintain arms and dance, the nights are darkish sufficient that even our excessive fires can’t compete with the present of stars. Each winter births literature, terpsichores, and coloration for the within of our eyelids. And each summer season is Black.
Each summer season is Black.
Each summer season is Black!

Born in 1989, NEVE grew up disabled, mixed-race, and queer on a river within the a part of New Jersey the place they drive vehicles and horse-drawn wagons over the rolling inexperienced hills (Lenni Lenape). NEVE started dancing professionally in 1998 with the all-Black, Harlem, NY-based built-in dance firm Def Dance Jam Workshop. They’re a 2020 Pina Bausch Fellow! Their new choreographic work, “Flora hereafter: how flowers survive” premiered in AXIS Dance Firm’s 2021 House Season at Z Area in San Francisco and has already toured to a number of continents.
NEVE believes in God(exxes), Collective Entry and Liberation, Transformative Justice, Land Again, Proper of Return, Reparations, Anarchism (in relationships and governance), the Loch Ness Monster, the Multiverse, the idea that every one dwelling beings are folks, and You. They’re at present a contributing author for the South Seattle Emerald, and collaborate with their confidante in arms, fellow Seattle multidisciplinary artist Saira Barbaric as themselves, and as Mouthwater. Be taught extra about NEVE at nevebebad.com.
This piece was commissioned by the Seattle Division of Neighborhoods. The opinions expressed and knowledge contained herein don’t essentially mirror the insurance policies, plans, beliefs, conclusions, or concepts of the Metropolis of Seattle.
Seattle, WA
Emerson Elementary closure: Flooding from broken fountain
A broken water fountain inside Emerson Elementary School in South Seattle has caused significant damage to the second floor of the building, and classes on Friday and Monday have been canceled.
The water fountain caused significant damage to the school’s classrooms, supplies, and materials on both floors of the school located at 9709 60th Ave. S. in South Seattle, Emerson Elementary announced.
In response to the damage, classes have been canceled, and Emerson will remain closed for an extended period while substantial repairs are made to allow students and staff to return to a safe and healthy school building.
Seattle, WA
Mayor Harrell Celebrates CARE Department Two-Year Anniversary and Permanent Responder Program – Office of the Mayor
Seattle – Today, Mayor Bruce Harrell celebrated the two-year anniversary of the creation of the Community Assisted Response and Engagement (CARE) department, combining Seattle’s 911 Center with the new Community Crisis Responder (CCR) team. Initially launched as a small team with limited hours and service area, CCRs steadily expanded in size and footprint and have been successfully and safely dispatched to over 6,700 incidents over the past two years as an alternative to a police response. This integrated model pairs call-taking and dispatch with unarmed behavioral health responders, giving Seattle a new way to respond to non-violent crisis calls while preserving police and fire resources for where they are needed most.
“I’m proud to celebrate two years of the CARE Department and our Community Crisis Responder pilot program, which is now becoming a permanent part of Seattle’s public safety system. CARE represents the fulfillment of our vision for a comprehensive approach to public safety – a third branch working alongside police and fire to ensure every resident receives the right response at the right time,” said Mayor Harrell. “I want to thank Chief Barden and all the dedicated CARE employees for their exceptional work connecting people in crisis with compassionate care and vital services. I look forward to celebrating this department’s continued success for many years to come.”
Under the new police contract announced by Mayor Harrell earlier this week, there are no longer any limits on how many CARE responders can be hired and they can be solo dispatched to low-acuity emergency calls. Mayor Harrell’s public safety sales tax plan would provide $9.5 million to double the number of CARE Community Crisis Responders (CCR) with 24 new positions in 2026, as well as supervisors, a new training manager, and additional equipment. The expansion will increase the number of CCRs on staff and extend service hours, ensuring more Seattle residents have access to compassionate, effective crisis response. The investment will also add 12 dispatcher and call taker positions to ensure the 911 Center, which has already fielded more than 581,000 calls and texts in 2025, is fully staffed.
“Today we are significantly closer to achieving the vision of three co-equal departments of first responders, and a Seattle 911 equipped to send the best first response to a call. Philosophically, the police and fire departments represent physical safety and health provision; and the CARE department represents mental and emotional health provision,” said CARE Chief Amy Barden. “All three departments should and must be anchored in a philosophy of rehabilitation. I congratulate the pilot team of CARE responders and express my gratitude to the outstanding professionals in Seattle 911 who have made all this progress possible, who have converted a theory and a dream into reality.”
The Seattle CARE department represents a new paradigm in public safety, a third City department which works in partnership with police and fire and is focused on helping people in need of behavioral health care. Seattle’s unique approach to diversified emergency response is designed to connect people in crisis with help and free up police resources to answer the calls where they’re needed most. CARE’s model and practices were highlighted by the National League of Cities as a case study of the “Community Response Model” as part of their Reimagining Public Safety Initiative.
Since launching in late 2023 as a limited pilot of six responders focused on Downtown and the Chinatown-International District, the CCR program has steadily expanded and demonstrated strong results. In 2024, the pilot expanded to additional neighborhoods and seven days a week with 10 additional responders. In early 2025, it added more CCRs and expanded citywide, responding to more than 5,000 incidents citywide. Today, CCRs operate citywide seven days a week to ensure reliable response times and the ability to surge resources to emerging needs in partnership with 9-1-1.
CARE recently launched a digital dashboard, enabling the public to view data from 2024 to date, showing call volume by precinct, the busiest times of day for Community Crisis Responders and most frequent call types.
What People Are Saying
Charlotte Joseph, Deputy Chief CARE
“Seattle 9-1-1 is extremely grateful for the opportunity to work collaboratively with our public safety partners at SPD, SFD, and the Community Crisis Responders with the goal of providing the community with the best first response. The work done in 9-1-1 is essential to the public safety ecosystem. We remain dedicated to employee development, as we focus on enhancing skillsets and knowledge about the alternative response options and best practices within public safety.”
Catriana Hernandez, CARE Crisis Response Manager
“We are beyond excited to celebrate our two-year anniversary. It was no small feat in standing up a new program. This has only been made possible through our partnership with local government, public safety, and community services. They have tirelessly supported our emerging nationwide vision of a more holistic, adaptable, and data-driven approach to mental health emergencies”
Seattle, WA
Seattle’s new agreement with police officers guild
The City of Seattle has reached a new collective bargaining agreement with the Seattle Police Officers Guild (SPOG), which represents all Seattle police officers.
Under the agreement, police officers will receive a retroactive pay increase of 6% for 2024 and 4.1% for 2025. Officers will get an additional 2.7% increase in 2026, and the 2027 increase will range from 3% to 4%, depending on the Consumer Price Index.
“This contract supports our officers’ work to address crime and delivers on our promise to create a comprehensive, diversified public safety system that protects every neighborhood in Seattle,” Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell said.
Harrell said the contract also strengthens police accountability by allowing civilian investigators to work on cases involving potential termination, and streamlines disciplinary processes to address misconduct swiftly and appropriately.
“The agreement modernizes our wages and keeps benefits high so that we can, of course, maintain a well-staffed police department, which translates to public safety for everyone,” Seattle Police Chief Shawn Barnes said. “I commend Mayor Harrell for his tireless dedication in securing a collective bargaining agreement that not only strengthens support for our officers but also enhances public safety in Seattle. This agreement reflects our shared commitment to the community and ensures that the brave men and women of our police department can continue to serve with pride and dedication.”
Major changes for Seattle’s CARE department
The agreement was ratified by SPOG members last weekend and makes big changes to the Community Assisted Response and Engagement (CARE) department. It is now elevated from a pilot program started in 2023 to a permanent part of public safety in Seattle, on par with the police and fire departments. It also removes limits on its number of employees, allowing for the expansion and direct dispatch of CARE crisis responders for those experiencing a behavioral health crisis, due in part to homelessness, mental illness, and addiction.
“This expanded agreement between the City and SPOG is the most significant milestone since the CARE responder pilot launched two years ago, and I commend Mayor Harrell for keeping diversified response a top and unequivocal priority,” CARE Chief Amy Barton stated. “Going forward, we will finally be able to predictably and consistently send the best first response to a 911 call — something our community has demanded and deserves. Further, law enforcement officers can now be significantly freed up to respond to high-priority police calls.”
Harrell said the money for the officers and the expansion of the CARE department will require no new money, as it has already been worked into the budget.
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