You know, I like Seattle. A lot. In fact, I love it here.
But there are sometimes things about my newly adopted city that really bug me.
This city is all too frequently run by and for people who live north of I-90, but there’s a pretty significant portion of the population that lives in the southern half of the city. And here’s an example, from a subject that’s near and dear to my heart…

(graphic ruthlessly stolen from The Seattle Times but hey, at least I didn’t hotlink it)
There’s a news story in today’s paper about how the city’s parks department is considering creating a couple more off-leash areas… and guess where they both are?
Up in those red circles.
Where’s the off-leash areas in the southern half of the city? What the heck is the deal with that?
Now, personally, I live smack in the middle of downtown. If you see the parks # 6 and 8, and drew a line between them, that’s where I’m at. I can handle that there aren’t any dog parks down here; the one at the Denny Regrade park (#6) is awfully small, and the one at Jose Rizal park (#8) is kind of weird, perched on the side of a steep hill and frequently quite muddy.
The thing is that downtown real estate costs so much that the city can’t afford to be plopping a couple of acres aside for dogs to run around off-leash. No problem, I get it, I agree.
But in the southern half of the city? The land there is even cheaper than it is on Queen Anne or Magnolia! And it’s not like there aren’t people living down there; West Seattle, Beacon Hill, Columbia City, the Rainier valley… there’s lots of people living in the southern half of the city.
It’s something that needs to change in Seattle. The southern half of the city doesn’t get nearly as much positive stuff. It is, of course, a money issue; the rich folks tend to live up north.
This is just an example, a small one, of how things need to change. The first thing I’d do is switch Seattle to having districts for city council members instead of each position being elected city-wide. The problem with city-wide elections is you wind up with horrible GroupThink on the council; nobody has to stand up for any particular neighborhood and each member only has to keep most of the city happy at any given time.
If there were a couple of council members that had the majority of their district in the southern parts of the city, they’d have to answer to angry constituents about how the city is treating them, and things would change.
Second, I think people need to get more involved. Personally, I’m going to start writing more letters and emails, and maybe start going to more meetings- the one tonight the article mentions might be a good place to start.
Hopefully we can get some things changed… the first thing, getting the council reorganized, is something that takes the entire city’s approval- and the last time it came up, it was shot down. But the second thing- getting individual citizens involved- can happen without a buy-in from everyone.
If you live in the south half of Seattle and want to change things, give me a shout!