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Montlake Has a New Mural

June 26, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer Leave a Comment

Photo by Jenny James

A 4th and 5th grade teacher at Montlake Elementary has livened up the school with a mural that showcases neighborhood landmarks like the Montlake Bridge and Café Lago.

When she toured Montlake after accepting a teaching position for fall 2017, Emily Gussin noticed a big blank wall in the school’s covered outdoor playcourt near Calhoun Street. “I immediately asked if the school had ever thought about putting art there, and asked if I could do it,” Ms. Gussin told the Montlake Flyer.

Ms. Gussin, who has a history of making positive graffiti art, was the right person to enhance the space. Before she began teaching, Ms. Gussin travelled worldwide with Few and Far, a group of female artists creating graffiti art for productive, not destructive uses. With this artist’s collective, Ms. Gussin traveled to Israel, among other places, to create a graffiti mural in a 6’ x 6’ bomb shelter at a daycare.

Ms. Gussin is a Seattle native and Ballard High School alum, and her time with Few and Far led her to teach in the district she graduated from. Her father, Hamilton Middle School math teacher Jordan Gussin, suggested she help teach after school graffiti art classes at his school. Ms. Gussin eventually led the classes and got hooked on teaching. After getting her master’s degree in teaching, Ms. Gussin was hired at Montlake, where she is loved by her students for her creativity and enthusiasm.

A special outcome of the mural, Ms. Gussin noted, is that her students have come to see her as a whole person with creative interests that go beyond teaching. “The kids had no idea that I had this interest before,” she said. Two students at the school have since become passionate creators of positive graffiti-style artwork.

Montlake 4th and 5th grade teacher Emily Gussin. Photo by Jenny James

Montlake is a historically landmarked building. For the mural’s creation, school principal Julie Pearson secured permission from the school district’s department of self-help. Although in her first year at the school, Ms. Pearson eagerly took on the challenge. “It was obvious to me when I first arrived that something needed to happen with that blank wall and it was fun to collaborate with Emily to make it work.”

Jennifer Lundgren, Montlake’s art teacher and past recipient of the Washington Art Education Association Elementary Education of the Year Award, plans to work with students to add designs at the bottom of the mural.

The mural now memorializes a piece of Montlake history: it features the “Hop-In” alongside other neighborhood landmarks. The Hop-In, now called the Montlake Boulevard Market, is slated for destruction by the Washington State Department of Transportation.

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Montlake Market Property Owners Sell to WSDOT

May 23, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer 5 Comments

For years and years, Montlake and surrounding Communities have tried to save the Montlake Blvd. Market and Gas Station. We, the Montlake Community Club, have tried every avenue available: The Courts, the State Legislature, the Governor, the Mayor, the City Council and our Federal representatives. The Neighborhood rallied around the cause to fund the attempts with a Go-Fund-Me page to chase the various prospects for change. But in the end, it is likely that our efforts were unsuccessful.

Last week, Kemper Freemans’ family agreed to sell the Market and the Gas Station to WSDOT for $16,000,000. This agreement puts complete control of the two properties with WSDOT and requires that the owners drop the outstanding Federal lawsuit, in which the Montlake Community Club is a co-plaintiff.  Without the property owners financial support, it will be difficult for the MCC to keep fighting this lawsuit, but we are committed to see it through.  We are also certain that WSDOT will do whatever it takes to get their way, despite how many laws they have to break to do it.

The most likely outcome is that both the Market and Gas Station will be torn down. The property will be used for storage and staging for about 5 years. The current Legislative proviso requires WSDOT to put the property up for sale after the completion of the Montlake phase of the SR 520 project. However, we have little faith that WSDOT will abide by the proviso. (They failed to abide by the last proviso.)  We have even less faith that the current Legislature will hold WSDOT accountable.

The SR 520 meeting on Thursday, May 23rd, at St. Demetrios will be a waste of time. Based on what has transpired, there is nothing we can change. Our voice has been and will always be ignored. They have these meetings to check boxes.  The purchase of the property is the last nail in the coffin.

Without a monumental shift in Jamie Pedersen, Nicole Macri, and Frank Chopp’s position, it is too late to save the Market. And it would take incredible courage on their part to take a stand to save the Market. You are encouraged to send them all an email (Jamie.pedersen@leg.wa.gov, Nicole.Macri@leg.wa.gov, and frank.chopp@leg.wa.gov) expressing your frustration at their collective failure to represent us. We can challenge every argument WSDOT makes with logic and data and yet their actions demonstrate that they have sided with WSDOT.

Thank you to all who have for years tried to save a valuable, cultural asset of the Community. Please consider what has transpired the next time you go to vote.

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Filed Under: Page Two

Restaurant Review: D’ La Santa Delivers Time After Time

February 14, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer Leave a Comment

If you haven’t eaten at D’ La Santa yet, just up the hill from Montlake, you’re missing out.

Scouts from the Montlake Flyer have visited D’ La Santa six times over the past year, each visit better than the next. Our favorites: Rib Eye served on a hot plate and Conchinita Pibil, a Yucatan dish of marinated pork with spices cooked in banana leaves.  Both children and adults loved the Molletes, toasted French bread halves topped with refried beans and cheese. Carne Asada tacos are another kid favorite. Meats are the focus here, which made us all the more surprised that the Tacos Gobernador—shrimp sautéed with garlic—were so delicious. Don’t miss the margaritas either, served in a jicara, a type of cup used by Mayan people to scoop water. Other popular dishes are Tacoarte (a family style taco platter), D’la Santa Parrillada (family style meat platter), and Chile en Nogada (poblano stuffed pepper). For dessert, the flan and plantains were both excellent.

Photo: Angelica Villasenor (middle) with her daughters Angelica and Stephanie Iriarte.

D’ La Santa is family-owned and operated, and it shows in the home-cooked flavors and friendly service. Head cook Angelica Villasenor co-owns the restaurant with her daughters Angelica and Stephanie Iriarte, her sons-in-law Manuel Iriarte and Alejandro Castillo, and her brother Herman Villasenor. The restaurant is in the old XO Bistro space at the corner of 10th Ave E and Miller on North Capitol Hill.

Angelica told the Flyer she wanted to create a different kind of Mexican restaurant with D’ La Santa. Mexican food is so much more than cheese melted on top of food, she told us. D’ La Santa’s menu shows just how varied Mexican food is, with dishes from the Yucatan, Oaxaca, Puebla, Guadalajara, Mazatlán, and Sonora. Angelica shopped Mexican markets to decorate the restaurant.

Upon seating, all diners are served a salsa platter with pickled onions, cilantro, white onions, radishes, pico de gallo, and salsa tomatillo. Angelica said the platter lets guests top food how they want to.

After one year and 4 months in business, Angelica credits their success with a homemade cooking style and constant tasting and adjusting. “We aren’t chefs,” Angelica explained. “We cook homemade.” Regulars and new guests alike can look forward to five new dishes coming to the menu soon.

D’ La Santa
2359 10th Ave E
Seattle, WA 98102
Web Site: https://dlasanta.com/

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Last Reminder: Take the Market Survey by Tomorrow

February 13, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer 1 Comment

Responses due by 5 pm Thursday, February 14! 

Please take less than a minute to complete WSDOT’s survey on saving the Montlake Blvd Market. Responses are due February 14th at 5 pm. The Montlake Community Club is urging neighbors to tell WSDOT that the market is worth saving for 45 extra days of construction. WSDOT has also estimated that keeping the market open could add $20 million to the project budget, and we say it’s worth it.

We also know their $20 million estimate is designed to be intentionally misleading and ignores the social impacts and other costs of eliminating the neighborhood’s only market and gas station. This was presented without any discussion of the cost for a full condemnation of the property, which could carry a price-tag of more than $30 million. Despite proving that construction impacts to the property can be avoided, WSDOT is still pursuing a full condemnation and pushing plans to use the site as a staging yard for the next decade.

Take the survey today and tell your friends and neighbors to do the same. And please leave comments when prompted. Many of these questions are misleading and based on limited information.

Survey link: https://survey.participate.online/s3/SR520-Montlake-Market-indv

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Take 30 Seconds to Help Save the Market

February 11, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer 2 Comments

Please take less than a minute to complete WSDOT’s survey on saving the Montlake Blvd Market. Responses are due February 14th at 5 pm. The Montlake Community Club is urging neighbors to tell WSDOT that the market is worth saving for 45 extra days of construction. WSDOT has also estimated that keeping the market open could add $20 million to the project budget, and we say it’s worth it.

We also know their $20 million estimate is designed to be intentionally misleading and ignores the social impacts and other costs of eliminating the neighborhood’s only market and gas station. This was presented without any discussion of the cost for a full condemnation of the property, which could carry a price-tag of more than $30 million. Despite proving that construction impacts to the property can be avoided, WSDOT is still pursuing a full condemnation and pushing plans to use the site as a staging yard for the next decade.

Take the survey today and tell your friends and neighbors to do the same. And please leave comments when prompted. Many of these questions are misleading and based on limited information.

Survey link: https://survey.participate.online/s3/SR520-Montlake-Market-indv

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The Market: The Fight Isn’t Over

February 5, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer 7 Comments

Last week, WSDOT held a public meeting where the department presented new design plans that seek to preserve the Montlake Blvd. Market and limit construction impacts on the market’s property.

The good news is that Graham’s design and proposal will likely cut a year off the project. Further really good news is that it appears WSDOT is conceding it can avoid use of the Montlake Market and Gas Station properties.  Graham’s designs eliminate many of the impacts WSDOT sited in their condemnation and demolition plans for the market property. The bad news, however, is that despite proving their ability to avoid the market and shifting construction impacts away from the property, WSDOT is still pursuing a full condemnation in order to use the rest of the property as a staging and storage yard for the next 10-years, throughout the Portage Bay phase. One of their representatives also claimed they needed the properties for the project’s “associated risks,” although he did not elaborate.

Read more about the meeting in this story by KOMO News.

In terms of saving the market, WSDOT estimated that keeping the market operational throughout construction will add an additional 45 days to the project and $20 million to the cost. This may seem like a lot at face value, but it appears to be intentionally misleading. WSDOT presented this figure without any discussion of the cost to acquire the property and avoided mention of other associated costs, such as lost tax revenue from the market, gas station and cell towers, which runs nearly $1 million per year. All told, WSDOT’s costs to acquire the properties could be as high as $33 million, with WSDOT paying an estimated $20 million on top of that to keep the market operational should the agency proceed with a full condemnation.  Moreover, they are ignoring the social and other costs they’ll impose on the communities we live in, loss of “walkability/bikeability” to and from the Market, drive time, cost and frustration to get to alternative market and gas locations, reduced property values of our homes from proximity to 10 years of loud, noisy construction, and the elimination of one of our few community gathering spots.  And, even using WSDOT’s inflated cost estimate, keep in mind the number is a fraction of the project’s $4.51 billion budget.

These figures amount to what can only be considered as an absurdly steep price to pay, especially in light of WSDOT presenting the new designs last week showing how they can avoid the properties. WSDOT’s only remaining reason for acquiring the Market site appears to boil down to construction staging and storage. The notion of spending $50 million in taxpayer money to turn the heart of Montlake into a construction and equipment staging yard for the next 10 years is unacceptable to the Montlake Community Club. Our neighbors deserve better.

The Montlake Community Club is continuing to engage with our legislators as well as WSDOT to keep staging off of the property and to make sure all options to save the market are pursued. You can help by reaching out to WSDOT Secretary Roger Millar, Speaker Chopp, Rep. Nicole Macri and Sen. Jamie Pedersen at the emails below and carrying this message:

Roger Millar: millarr@wsdot.wa.gov

Speaker Chopp: frank.chopp@leg.wa.gov

Rep. Nicole Macri: nicole.macri@leg.wa.gov

Sen. Jamie Pedersen: jamie.pedersen@leg.wa.gov

We also encourage everyone to take the survey about the market, which can be found here by February 14th at 5 pm.

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Market Open House: Report Shows No Need to Demolish Market or Gas Station

January 29, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer 2 Comments

An independent assessment of WSDOT’s environmental testing of the Montlake Market and gas station properties has some good news for the community ahead of WSDOT’s open house on Wednesday, January 30 (Details: St. Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church from 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm). More info on meeting here.

The report’s author observed WSDOT’s environmental testing conducted in December, took split samples of the drilling materials, reviewed WSDOT’s sampling results, and has assessed the potential risks of the contamination levels on the property. Based on the sampling to date, there is no environmental justification for demolishing the market or closing the gas station to clean-up the contamination that WSDOT has identified. The levels of gasoline-range petroleum hydrocarbons exceeding Model Toxics Control Act Method A clean-up levels are “limited to the Gas Station Parcel.” The assessment concludes that, based on existing data, it appears clean-up techniques routinely employed in gas station contamination clean-up actions can be used here to remediate the soil and groundwater contamination under state law, while leaving the existing buildings intact, the Market in operation, and even avoiding closure of the gas station, except perhaps on a short term basis.

A copy of the report’s executive summary follows below, and a copy of the full report is posted here.

Executive Summary

Operations on the north tax parcel (King County Tax Parcel No. 8805901085, the “Gas Station Parcel”) include a gas station building and three underground storage tanks (USTs) and pump islands. The south tax parcel (King County Tax Parcel No. 8805901090, the “Market Parcel”) contains the Montlake Market supermarket building (Market). The small southwest triangular shaped tax parcel (King County Tax Parcel No. 88059010170, the “Triangle Parcel) is part of the parking lot for the Market. The Market Parcel and the Triangle Parcel together are referred to as the Market Properties to distinguish them from the Gas Station Parcel.

Based on the soil and groundwater sampling and analysis conducted on and near the parcels by the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT), there is no evidence of soil contamination on the Market Properties that contains the Market and cell towers. Soil contamination (petroleum related) appears to be limited to the Gas Station Parcel where the gas station and associated UST system are located. Impacts beyond these parcels appear to be minimal and limited to areas north of the Gas Station Parcel. Therefore, based on the available data, soil contamination is limited to the Gas Station Parcel, is not a significant threat to the Market on the Market Properties, and there is no need to demolish or impact the Market building or its operations to remediate the petroleum soil contamination on the Gas Station Parcel to the north. And, given the existing information, it is also likely that the known soil and groundwater contamination can be remediated under MTCA without having to close the gas station. Preliminary figures developed from WSDOT’s contractor’s January 2019 Third Supplemental Phase II report showing a summary of both properties and off-properties soil and groundwater sampling results are provided in Attachment 1. 

This information provides a strong backstop for any speculation regarding the extent of the contamination on the property.  The good news is that the environmental contamination WSDOT has identified should have no bearing on whether WSDOT can save the Market, the Market property’s cell towers, and even the gas station from the department’s SR 520 construction plans.

WSDOT has indicated they will provide a “property soil-testing update” at Wednesday’s open house, in an attempt to “be as transparent as possible.” They will also be providing design scenarios for avoiding the market and limiting construction impacts on the property in an effort to adhere to the Washington State Legislature’s directive for the department to preserve the market “to the maximum extent practicable.”

The full report is included here.

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Paid Tutors Needed at Montlake Elementary

January 8, 2019 by MontlakeFlyer 2 Comments

Montlake Elementary School is looking for tutors for the remainder of the 2019 school year. As a paid tutor you can work up to 19 hours a week. Tutors assist in one or more classrooms. Tutors do a variety of tasks including working with students one-on-one, assisting with lesson preparations, facilitating small group activities, playground supervision and more! Tutors are such a great asset to our teachers and Montlake as a whole. If you are interested, please contact Principal Julie Pearson at jepearson@seattleschools.org.

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Turkey Trot Earns $30k For Food Bank

December 13, 2018 by MontlakeFlyer Leave a Comment

From all of us at the Montlake Community Club, thank you! On Monday we gave the University District Food Bank a check for $30,000, the net proceeds from the Montlake 5K Turkey Trot & Kids Run. Said Paul Yunker, Development Director of the Food Bank, “It goes without saying that $30,000 is a tremendous donation. We are aware of the amount of work and the support necessary to achieve a donation of that size. Thank you Montlake Community Club and community!”

At left: Bill Lowie, food bank Assistant Director; Sharsti Sandall, MCC President; Paul Yunker, food bank Development Director; Leah Ball, food bank Board President.

We raised $7,000 more than last year, which we attribute to 3 things: increased corporate sponsorship, raffle earnings–which were enabled by fantastic sponsor donations and generous participants, and increased 5K participation. Consider visiting these local businesses who sponsored the race and donated the prizes: Earth + Wind + Fire Yoga, Glam & Tonics AVEDA Salon, Café Lago, Wilcynski Partners Real Estate, Oculus Eyecare, Montlake Blvd Market, Little Lago, Audi Seattle, Bad Cat Events, Darcy LaBelle Real Estate, KHBB Law, Stokes Lawrence, Rivalry Events, Arboretum Dermatology, Sound Community Bank, Meditate Seattle, HDR, Molly Moon’s, Mont’s Market, and Capitol Hill-Montlake Dentistry.

Our volunteers were essential to the race. Volunteers helped with everything from hanging signs to course monitoring. To all of you who helped, thank you!

Thanks to the Arboretum and the Arboretum Foundation for letting us have the race in this beautiful treasure. The MCC has given a donation to the foundation to show our appreciation, and we encourage you to do the same.

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Montlake Elementary Christmas Tree Orders Due Friday

November 28, 2018 by MontlakeFlyer Leave a Comment

Reminder:  Montlake Elementary Christmas Tree Orders Due This Friday at 3 pm!

Dear Montlake Neighbors,

The Montlake Elementary Evergreen Christmas Tree Sale is open for orders.  As with last year, we have a great selection of quality trees, wreaths, door swag, and garlands on offer.  Place your orders early, as some of our trees have very limited supply this year!  All our wreaths, swag, and garlands are on offer at the same low prices as last year.

Two dates to keep in mind: Friday, November 30 is the due date for Evergreen Sale orders.  You can place your orders online at http://montlakepta.org/evergreens, or if you prefer to pay by check, email us at evergreens@montlakepta.org for a paper order form.  Printed order forms and payments should be dropped off at the school office by 3pm, November 30.

Then, Saturday, December 8 between 10am and 12pm will be the big, fun, festive pick up day!  Remember, all trees are pre-sold, so please place your order on time so that we can have your trees and other greenery available for you to pick up.

Thank you for all your support of Montlake Elementary, and Happy Holidays in advance!

Questions: email Matt Wenger or Fran Wall at evergreens@montlakepta.org

 

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