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A sister website, White Center Now, launched in 2008 to cover the White Center area immediately south of West Seattle. [5] West Seattle Blog was one of several neighborhood websites to partner with The Seattle Times for hyperlocal coverage in 2009. [6] In October 2024, West Seattle Blog co-founder Patrick Sand died. He was 67.
View of downtown Seattle from one of several common greenspaces. High Point is a neighborhood in the Delridge district. It is so named because it contains the highest point in the city of Seattle: Myrtle Reservoir Park at the intersection of 35th Avenue SW and SW Myrtle Street, which is 520 feet (160 m) above sea level. [3]
Once sworn in, Saka became chair of the Transportation Committee, stating he became the "king of potholes". [12] As chair, Saka proposed a $1.55 billion transportation levy, larger than the $1.35 billion levy proposed by Harrell, which would add an average of $41 for taxpayers. [13]
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It was a steam-powered sidewheel ship named the City of Seattle and made two trips a day, carrying West Seattle homesteaders east to the city, and weekend vacationers west to the beachfront. [5] The King County government operated ferries to Vashon Island and West Seattle from Downtown Seattle from 1917 to 1922.
(The Center Square) – The Seattle City Council’s first action of the new year will be finding a replacement for the District 2 position. Earlier this month, Tammy Morales announced that she ...
Westside Seattle, formerly The Westside Weekly, is a weekly newspaper that serves the areas of West Seattle, Ballard, White Center, Burien, Des Moines, and SeaTac in Washington state. [ 1 ] History
The West Seattle Herald was founded in 1923. In 2013, Robinson Newspapers made the West Seattle Herald part of The Westside Weekly, along with the Ballard News-Tribune, the Highline Times, and White Center News. The Westside Weekly was renamed to Westside Seattle in June 2017. [1] In 2014, Amanda Knox began writing for the paper. [2]