Seattle, WA
VIDEO: Washington Tree Equity Collaborative launched with Roxhill Park event
By Tracy Document
West Seattle Weblog editor
17 years in the past, Seattle’s then-mayor Greg Nickels introduced a tree-planting plan to maintain town from dropping extra of its tree cover.
A number of mayors later, town remains to be fighting stopping cover loss.
The town is engaged on a brand new tree coverage. Separate from that – and but an offshoot of types – Mayor Bruce Harrell was amongst a gaggle of officers and advocates who gathered at West Seattle’s Roxhill Park this morning to announce a brand new statewide tree initiative: The Washington Tree Fairness Collaborative.
This one is a “statewide effort to create tree fairness in Washington,” as described by Jad Daley of American Forests, who emceed the occasion. Daley mentioned his group has studied cover cowl in neighborhoods nationwide – creating this “scoring” instrument consequently – and located much less of it in neighborhoods the place a majority of residents are low-income and/or BIPOC. “This isn’t simply surroundings we’re speaking about – that is crucial inexperienced infrastructure,” Daley declared. Earlier than our abstract continues, right here’s video of the 5 audio system:
Daley mentioned that getting each neighborhood within the state to even a 75 tree-equity rating would take 2.6 million extra timber. An much more formidable objective, attending to 100, would take 13 million timber.
Proper now, although, mentioned state Public-Lands Commissioner Hilary Franz, the state’s timber are declining in quantity and well being: “Washington is named the Evergreen State, but our timber are actually in bother. … Entry to greenspace and shade ought to be a elementary proper.” Much less tree cover means extra warmth, and that’s the climate excessive that’s deadlier than catastrophic storms, Franz mentioned. “The reply is so easy – plant extra timber and plant them in the correct locations.” That prices cash, she famous, mentioning an $8 million request earlier than the Legislature, and $6 million already secured from the federal authorities.
Then it was on to town’s function. Seattle’s Workplace of Sustainability and Setting director Jessyn Farrell acknowledged that the latest cover evaluation confirmed Seattle had misplaced 255 acres of timber, 1.7% of its cover, for the reason that earlier evaluation six years earlier. And related to at this time’s matter, the loss is going on inequitably. She added that addressing the issue means not simply planting timber however taking higher care of the present ones.
Talking subsequent, Mayor Harrell acknowledged that the newest tree-canopy evaluation confirmed that cover loss on public property is a serious drawback, noting that he’s ordered that each tree misplaced on metropolis land get replaced by three new ones.
Bringing it dwelling to the precise piece of public property on which everybody was gathered this morning, Delridge group advocate Willard Brown (above with the mayor) identified the plight of Roxhill Park’s bathroom, a historic wetland that’s been drying out. The world’s standing as Longfellow Creek‘s headwaters is priceless, he mentioned – “it’s very important that the creek stays wholesome.” Some work is deliberate later this 12 months, Brown mentioned. He additionally gently dinged town for large speak and no followthrough on one other West Seattle website, the Myers Means Parcels, which town promised X years in the past can be transferred to Seattle Parks – which has but to occur.
After the speeches, one query was requested: Native greenspace activist and arborist Michael Oxman requested how the speak of accelerating cover matches with what’s taking place in Olympia, with legislators approving upzoning for a lot of the state, opening the door to extra densification. Farrell – a former state legislator – tackled the query, declaring, “There is no such thing as a battle between growing tree cover and growing housing.” She mentioned the largest bother spots even now are public lands and “neighborhood residential” (previously “single-family”) zoning, “not a lot due to growth as due to age and well being.” Franz echoed that “we’ve to deal with each our housing disaster and our tree disaster,” additionally contending they aren’t in battle.
Then it was off to a photograph op, mulching timber within the park’s southwest nook. The mayor had moved on by then however Farrell dug in:
P.S. You’ll be able to test your neighborhood’s Tree Fairness Rating by way of the American Forests map right here. You’ll be able to learn the Memorandum of Understanding that’s on the coronary heart of the brand new collaborative by going right here.
Seattle, WA
Seahawks Projected to Land Pitt TE
PITTSBURGH — The Seattle Seahawks will take their chances with a talented Pitt Panthers tight end, according to the latest mock draft.
Dalton Miller of Pro Football Network released his full, seven-round 2025 NFL mock draft, and has the Seahawks taking Pitt senior tight end Gavin Bartholomew with the No. 193 overall pick in the sixth round.
He came out of Blue Mountain High School in Schuylkill Haven, Pa. with little fan fare and Pitt as his only Power Five offer.
Bartholomew had a great freshman season in 2021, playing in all 14 games and starting eight as Pitt won the ACC Championship.
With Heisman finalist quarterback Kenny Pickett under center, Bartholomew made 27 catches for 317 yards and four touchdowns. He earned an All-ACC Honourable Mention, as well as second team Freshman All-American honors from The Athletic and Pro Football Network for his efforts.
The next two seasons should’ve shown improvement for Bartholomew, but his stats remained either similar or lesser than his freshman campaign.
Offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti Jr. didn’t put much emphasis into getting Bartholomew the ball as much, plus the struggles of quarterbacks like Kedon Slovis, Phil Jurkovec and Christian Veilleux, led to a stagnation in statistical production.
Bartholomew had 21 catches for 283 yards and two touchdowns as a sophomore in 2022 and then only 18 catches for 326 yards and a touchdown as a junior last season.
He finished his senior season in 2024 with a career-high 38 catches for 322 yards and tied his career-high with four touchdowns.
Bartholomew had a season-high five catches for 59 yards in the 55-24 victory over Kent State in the season opener.
He grabbed one touchdown each in the home losses to Virginia in Week 12 and Clemson in Week 13 and then two touchdown catches in the road loss to Boston College in Week 14, his first multi-touchdown game.
Bartholomew earned a spot in the Senior Bowl, where the Seahawks would get a good chance to look at him.
He was on the Senior Bowl Watch List heading into the season, as Jim Nagy, the Senior Bowl Executive Director, has praised him on numerous occassions. He also went to see him prior to the road match vs. Cincinnati in Week 2, which ended in the Pitt’s biggest comeback in 50 years.
Make sure you bookmark Inside the Panthers for the latest news, exclusive interviews, recruiting coverage, and more!
Follow Inside the Panthers on Twitter: @InsidePitt
Seattle, WA
Seattle weather: Prepare for frigid, frosty week ahead
SEATTLE – Another night with frigid temperatures is forecast for much of Western Washington. Watch for icy and slick spots early in the morning. Widespread frost is expected well into the late morning hours until we can get the sun angle high enough to thaw us out.
Frigid temperatures are expected across Western Washington tonight.
A northerly breeze, 5-15 mph, is forecast into the morning, lowering wind chill values to between 20–25 degrees. A Cold Weather Advisory is in place till 8 am on Monday. Be sure to take care of your pets, check on sensitive people and cover your plants and pipes.
A cold weather advisory is in effect till Monday morning. Make sure you protect yourself and your home from the cold.
A hard freeze is forecast through at least Wednesday morning. With a slight chance of showers on Thursday night and Friday, there will be a bit more cloud cover bumping overnight lows by a couple degrees.
A hard freeze is expected in Seattle through Wednesday morning.
A weak disturbance nearby to our north will increase our cloud cover a bit. However, it will remain dry.
High and mid level clouds are forecast to move into Western Washington. However, it will remain dry.
A cold and quiet week ahead with little change in the extended forecast till late Thursday into Friday when we see a slight chance of showers.
An unseasonably cool week ahead for the Seattle area.
DRAFT
Seattle, WA
Overnight emergency shelters open across western Washington
RENTON, Wash. – The first stretch of prolonged cold winter weather has arrived in western Washington, and it’s expected to stick around into next week.
With overnight lows in the 30s Saturday night, many overnight emergency shelters welcomed their first guests at 8 p.m.
At St. Anthony’s Rec Hall in Renton, 40 beds are available to those in need.
What they’re saying:
“We’re providing them with food, a pair of shoes, a pair of socks, and, of course, a warm place to sleep,” said Fenice Fregoso, program director of REACH Renton.
The organization oversees the shelter.
“We’re setting people up for success for the next day,” said Fregoso. “This way, they don’t have to stress on how they’re going to be able to get A, B, and C.”
Local perspective:
Among the individuals taking advantage of the cold weather services is Brandon Lakey. He’s trading the outdoors for a warm, safe cot.
“When it’s cold like this at night, places like this mean life,” said Lakey. “It’s everything, it’s survival. It means that someone cares, that someone’s reaching out to us.”
The Renton overnight shelter will run from 8 p.m. to 7 a.m. Saturday to Tuesday night.
For those seeking information on shelters and navigating to shelter locations, people are encouraged to call the Severe Weather Shelter Navigation Hotline: (206) 245-1026.
For a complete list of daytime and overnight shelters in Seattle and throughout King County visit the King County Regional Homelessness Authority.
The Source: Information for this article comes from FOX 13 reporter Dave Detling who visited the Renton site.
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