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- May 1st Community Meeting
Wednesday, May 1 at 7pm Grace United Methodist Church (lower level hall)722 30th Ave S, Seattle, WA 98144 It’s that time again. Help us elect a board of officers for Leschi CC. You can read about those who have come forward here and we will take additional nominations from the floor. All paid members of LCC are eligible to vote. Katie Sheehy of the Office of Planning and Development will join us to discuss the Comprehensive Plan which is updated every 20 years. Does it cover all the issues? What would you like to see? And what category of neighborhood does Leschi fall in? Why are some neighborhoods exempted from any zoning changes?
- May Meeting: Election of Officers & Comp Plan
At the time of publication, the Leschi News has learned of four candidates for Board member positions, but there is still an opportunity to nominate yourself or someone else at the meeting. Ashley Martin has stepped forward as a candidate for President. She has been our Communications Chair for the past few years and has made significant changes to improve communication on the website and a monthly email reminder of events. Allen Urness is running for Vice-President. He has lived in Leschi for one year along Lakeside Ave and is well aware of the traffic issues there. He has passionately jumped into Public Safety issues and attends all the community meetings that fall into that category. Trevor Lalish-Menagh has been our Vice-President for the past 5 years, graciously serving another year past the two terms when the state asked that elections be held in even years. Trevor has been the emcee for many of our candidate meetings. He has stepped up to be secretary. Matthias Linnenkamp would like to serve another term as our Treasurer. He has made changes to streamline the reporting process and developed a procedure for our Restricted Fund policy. After the election process (all paid members are eligible to vote), we welcome Katie Sheehy from the Office of Planning and Development to talk about the city’s new Comprehensive Plan. If you have any questions, please send them to leschicouncil@gmail.com.
- April 3rd Community Meeting
We are happy to welcome Councilmember Joy Hollingsworth and representatives from SDOT, SPR and SPD to our April meeting. Wednesday, April 3rd at 7pm at the Grace United Methodist Church on 30th Ave S. Agenda General Leschi updates, open to all Traffic calming & pedestrian safety Update from SDOT on the Lake WA Blvd project south of Leschi Leschi traffic and pedestrian safety concerns Update on the Seattle Transportation Plan Personal safety in Leschi, including personal property break-ins and police response Seattle Comprehensive Plan: general overview and what to expect next If time permits: Parks & Leschi: discuss Leschi feedback with CM Hollingsworth, chair of the City Council Parks Committee Note: we are inviting the Parks Dept to attend a future meeting as a dedicated topic.
- Thought-provoking Exhibitions in Seattle
Jessica Jackson Hutchins “Wrecked and Wretched” Frye Art Museum, 704 Terry Ave, ph. 206.622.9250; Wed-Sun 11am-5pm, FREE; runs until May 5 Jessica Jackson Hutchins began the tour of her exhibition with a tall narrow stained glass window Shadow Swing commissioned by the Frye Art Museum for their lobby. Comprised of beer bottle glass that is fused and leaded with other types of glass, it is over 24 feet high and only 19 inches wide. As we looked, it changed color several times, responding to the light. But this wonderful window, off beat as it was with its bulges and cracks, was by far the easiest piece to look at in “Wrecked and Wretched.” As we enter the first large gallery, we see two large painted canvases hung over ladders to create an enclosure, with strange ceramics at their base. The works do not attract us, but rather push us away with their odd colors and forms. As we enter the largest gallery we are confronted with large, oddly shaped ceramics placed on broken off chairs: sometimes the ceramic echoes the colors in the patterned out-of- date upholstery as in Lascaux Reprise 2012/2018 . Lascaux played a major role in the performance that activated these pieces for one evening. One dancer sat behind it in a chair embracing it as another dancer put on a ceramic form that looked like a very heavy set of containers that hung over his shoulder. A third dancer moved more freely around the room interacting with ceramics hanging on the wall. The three performed an excruciating dance that suggested constant effort to connect to each other and occasionally almost succeeding: one dancer held out a long carrot while another dancer reached toward it with a strange device. The most moving moment was when they briefly came together in spite of their heavy loads. Hutchins has said she doesn’t like the idea of art being “about” something. But for me, especially after seeing the performance and seeing so many addicts in the street every day, it is about addiction in many different ways. In describing work like Milagros 1 Blue Arm , a painting with ceramic arms attached to it, the artist said, “I made arms for junkies I knew.” Milagros is made for healing. Hutchins felt her works were “on behalf of suffering people, as symbolic stand ins for their enfeebled body parts.” The artist declares “The title ‘Wrecked and Righteous’ just came to me, as sometimes titles do; it has a cool musicality and a punky sensibility. The hard-lived, the desperate, the urgent is much more beautiful and profound (and funny) to me than the refined or skilled. It also suggests the presence of real authenticity, real righteousness.” If you can overcome your basic aversion to these unbeautiful works, they open a door to our suffering addicts that is strikingly empathetic. To know more come to her conversation with Curator Amanda Donnan May 4, 3-4:15pm. Seattle has several other innovative exhibitions at the moment: Asian Art Museum in Volunteer Park, 1400 E Prospect St., ph. 206.654.1300, Thurs- Sun 10am-5pm Adults $14.99; Seniors $12.99 At the Asian Art Museum, Anida Yoeu Ali’s exhibition “Hybrid Skin, Mythical Presence” (until July 7) features chadors in brilliant colors. Like “Wrecked and Righteous,” they are going to be animated in performances. The Buddhist Bug on March 23, 2024 (sorry that date has passed.) and The Red Chador will be performed on June 1, 2024. The Red Chador was previously performed in Seattle and all over the world: seven women, each with a different color chador walk through the city and assert the power of women, the opposite of the way we perceive chadors. Ali grew up in Cambodia, where as a Muslim, she was in a small minority in a dominantly Buddhist country. These works assert her special identity and transform our perceptions. Her second work The Buddhist Bug is a 328 foot saffron colored creature that twists and turns within the museum into several galleries. There is a human face that emerges from one end (seemingly wearing a hijab) and a pair of feet from the other. Come to the performance on June 1! Henry Art Gallery 15th Ave NE & UW, ph. 206.543.2280, Thurs 10am-7pm; Fri-Sun 10am-5pm, Free 1st Thursdays We are lucky to have “LOVERULES —From the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation” by the well-known Hank Willis Thomas at the Henry Art Gallery (until August 4.) Thomas explores the many techniques of the advertising industry to dehumanize African Americans while also targeting them to buy products. A large painting in the first gallery pays homage to African Americans in Hollywood, but you can only see their faces if you use a flash picture. I was disappointed there was no list of the names. At the Twilight’s Last Gleaming , a flag covered with stars, hanging from a flag pole and spreading across the floor represents the 20,923 lives lost to gunfire in this country between 2012 and 2022. The artist’s own cousin was shot and killed, leading to this homage. Winston Wachtler Gallery, 203 Dexter Ave, ph. 206.652.5855,Tues-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat 11am-5pm Another artist who pays homage to relatives who died, here of drugs and addiction is Barry Johnson. “Never Leave Before Saying Goodbye” subtitled “lost Boys” is a deeply felt series of oil paintings on exhibit at Winston Wachtler until April 13 (203 Dexter Avenue). The artist stands, sits or lies among large trees, by the sea, and in a field, deeply grieving his loss. ~Susan Platt, PhD www.artandpoliticsnow.com
- Life and Times in Leschi: John M. Frink
Our neighborhood’s Frink Park is named for Leschi residents John and Abbie Frink, who donated the land to the city of Seattle in 1906. Born in 1845, John Frink arrived in Seattle in 1874. Starting out as a day laborer, and later a schoolteacher, he made his fortune as Seattle’s first manufacturer of industrial equipment, including iron and steel products for logging and mining. His Washington Iron Works, established in 1880, remained in the Frink family until 1969. The factory, destroyed in the Great Seattle Fire, was replaced in 1892; the building still stands, at 400 Occidental Avenue South. In 1885 he helped establish the Seattle Electric Company and was named its superintendent. After a while it took over most of the city’s private streetcar lines, until it was acquired by the predecessor of today’s Puget Sound Energy, and then municipalized in 1919. The Frinks were members of the First Presbyterian Church, headed by the Rev. Mark Matthews, an indefatigable anti-vice crusader and the bane of open-town politicians—the ones who tolerated, endorsed, or profited from vice and corruption of all sorts here in the early 20th century. John Frink, a member of the school board and the city council, later served eight years as a Washington State senator, from 1891 to 1899. In 1900, Mr. Frink ran a losing campaign for Washington governor. He was nominated as a Republican with the backing of John L. Wilson, who, with money from the Empire Builder, James J. Hill, of the Great Northern Railroad, had recently purchased the Seattle Post-Intelligencer . But Frink was a victim of the vengeance of Seattle’s popular mayor, Tom Humes, who thought he should have been the candidate. Humes, who ran a wide-open city, spent the campaign attacking his fellow Republican with more vigor than he mustered against the Democratic nominee. In a big Republican year, Frink, presumably on the anti-vice side, given his choice of pastors, was the only one to lose, not even carrying King County, while Republicans won everything else statewide. Frink did come within 1% of victory, nonetheless. But he was only a bit player caught in the political machinations, a saga told well by Murray Morgan in his book “Skid Road.” For a good time, read it. Any historian should aspire to be as good a storyteller as Morgan. John Frink became a member of the park board in 1906. That year, the board was attempting to obtain financing to acquire the roughly 15-acre parcel known as “Washington Park,” which had been platted for private use. Instead, the Frinks bought the parcel and quickly donated it to the city. Since there already was a Washington Park (now part of the UW Arboretum), the board renamed it to honor the benefactor. He remained on the park board until 1914, serving as its president from 1908-1909. Frink also involved himself in civic affairs in other ways. He spoke out in opposition to the planned Lake Washington Ship Canal and locks. In a 1908 speech he cited numerous reasons, largely having to do with cost and usefulness. He also complained that, since the canal was first proposed in 1854 by early settler Thomas Mercer, very little had been accomplished towards the goal. It would be almost another decade before the canal was completed—63 years to the day after Mercer’s proposal. Most of Frink’s reasons for concern do not seem to have stood the test of time. However, he failed to speak to the environmental disruption that would result from the elimination of the Black River outflow from the south end of Lake Washington—an important Indian fishing area. The lowering of the lake also eliminated wetland areas of Native sustenance around the lake, including in Leschi. In 1905, the Frinks built a mansion just across 31st Avenue South, at Jackson Street. The Olmsted Brothers, who developed plans for the park, also prepared designs for the private residence. The house remains, having left the Frink family in either 1978 or 1984. A friend of mine, the Frinks’ great grandson, told me that the family sold it for much less than it was worth, due in part to racism fueling their fear that Blacks were going to be moving into the neighborhood and lowering the property values. I met a woman who went there with a friend for an estate sale in 1984. They ended up buying the whole house, for $111,000. Upon returning home, she thought better of it and disposed of her share soon afterward. In recent times, the house has been known for the sign on its north side counting down daily the number of days till the end of Trump’s presidential term. The house went on the market in 2021 for $2.5 million, selling for a bit less. The new owners have preserved the sign. Perhaps before long it will be repurposed to enumerate the days remaining in Trump’s prison term. John Frink died in 1914; Abbie died in 1946. ~Roger Lippman The author writes monthly about Leschi history and his experiences over his 48 years in the neighborhood. In the coming months we will meet some past Leschi residents who once upon a time were inspired to creativity by their walks in Frink Park.
- Pollinator Pathway
If you’ve lived in the Central Area for 14+ years you may remember a project called the Pollinator Pathway. It was conceived by Sarah Bergman to plant native, pollinator attracting plants in the planting strips along E. Columbia from Madrona to Seattle U. The Central Area District Council (CANDC) wants to resurrect the pollinator project, expanding it to include any yards and/or containers along with planting strips. We are in the very early stages of Bring Back the Birds and Bees CD, but envision providing various levels of support to people in the CD who want to create pollinator gardens. There will be an initial pilot program to work out the kinks and then we hope to have the funding to run with it. If you are looking for a fun volunteer opportunity, we’re looking for help with grants, plant acquisition, website design, posting flyers, outreach and more! Below is the beginning of the document we’ll use for funding and outreach: Bring Back the Birds and Bees CD Purpose: The Central Area Pollinator Pathway project is designed to create Central Area-wide opportunities to build community through gardening. There is an additional goal of improving the natural environment in the Central Area by increasing habitat for bees and birds, which then helps improve all aspects of neighbors’ well-being. Scope: Through social media, posters, neighborhood blogs, community councils and other community groups we will offer free native plants. The free plants come with the opportunity to be mentored in creating habitat for bees and birds by partnering with groups such as (TBD), and/or any other group that makes sense. In addition to mentoring, if the gardener is interested, we will also encourage neighbors to volunteer to help with the planting. Eligibility: Anyone living within the Central Area Neighborhood District Council defined Central Area boundaries: Broadway/Boren/Rainier/MLK/Massachusetts/Lake Washington/Madison who has access to a planting area may request participation in the Central Area Pollinator Pathways project. Plants and mentoring will be allocated on a first come first served basis as long as funding is available. Funding: In order to purchase the plants and provide a stipend for our mentors we will explore funding through private charitable organizations. Contacts: Mary Pat DiLeva: mpd12000@hotmail.com , landline 206.324.5161, cell 206.839.7468; John Stewart: stewartj@seanet.com , cell 206.658.3700. ~Mary Pat DiLeva
- Leschi Elementary School Update
Join us on April 27 for a day of community, commemoration, and music! At 12pm on Saturday, April 27, we will welcome members of Powell S. Barnett’s family and former King County councilman Larry Gossett to rededicate the portrait of Mr. Barnett which adorns the entryway of our school. Beginning at 1pm on the same day, our annual jazz concert sponsored by the Garfield Golden Grads student support group will commence, featuring Butch Harrison and Good Company! Attendance is free and open to all, but if you are able, please consider making a contribution to the Leschi PTA’s family support fund. Please visit our website at leschipta.org for updates and to support our work on behalf of educators, students and their families. Our Annual Giving Campaign is currently in full swing and 10% of the funds raised will be shared with other low-income school communities in central and south Seattle. Please check with your employer as many will make matching contributions for charitable donations! ~Benson Wilder
- March 2024 Leschi Public Safety Meeting
Date: Wed, Mar 6th, 7pm Location: Grace United Methodist Church, 722 30th Ave S, Seattle, WA 98144 The goal of this meeting is to kick off the effort to collaborate as a community to build a plan and momentum to work towards solutions. Please check back on this post ahead of the March 6th meeting for potential updates to the attendees and agenda. At the meeting we will briefly review last year's meeting takeaways and status (spoiler: not much progress, so let's discuss how to change that). We'll then open up the floor to discuss whether those issues still feel the most pressing; we welcome folks to surface new concerns. We'd like to propose forming a Leschi Public Safety Committee to help us hold ourselves accountable to keeping this conversation going and working towards solutions. That group would meet on a to-be-determined basis, likely monthly via Zoom. This will be a community meeting without any official panelists. We have invited Councilmember Joy Hollingsworth to our April meeting. We are working to get in touch with SDOT about status of our questions to them from last year and to find a time for them to join a meeting.
- Hit the Road, Get This Burger
Fall City Roadhouse: 4200 Preston Fall City Rd SE, Fall City; ph: 425.222.4800; fcroadhouse.com Hours: 4pm–7pm Wed–Sun; Closed Mon & Tues Should you find yourself heading eastward along Route 202, you’ll stumble upon a haven nestled at a crossroads: The Roadhouse Restaurant & Inn, also known as the Fall City Roadhouse. Just a half-hour’s drive from Seattle, this charming outpost beckons weary travelers, adventure seekers, and locals alike to indulge in a hearty dinnertime escape. Founded in 1916 as the Riverside Tavern, it’s been known by other names as well. A memorable one is the Bang Bang Bar. If that rings a bell, it’s because this Roadhouse happens to be the Roadhouse featured in David Lynch’s early ’90s serial television murder mystery Twin Peaks . If that doesn’t sound appetizing, don’t worry: The real Roadhouse is nothing like its fictional counterpart. The atmosphere is cozy and warm, a respite from the monotony of the long road. A fireplace burns just off the main entrance, though diners were not seated next to it. While the interior could stand some quality of life updates, the overall dining experience is excellent. Orders arrive quickly and the caliber of the food is top notch. On the menu, the main event is the Roadhouse Burger. Eight ounces of juicy, well-seasoned American Wagyu beef cooked to perfection on a glossy, toasted, artisan bun. Comes with most of the usual trimmings: shredded lettuce, tomatoes, onion, mayo, house special relish. The cheese will cost a little extra, and so too will the caramelized onions if you opt for those — highly recommended. Bacon too if that’s your thing, but this burger stands well on its own without it. Once you sink your teeth in, you’ll realize this is heaven. Served with tasty French fries and ketchup, or a house salad. For a premium, you can sub out for a Caesar or onion rings instead. The pandemic was not kind to the Roadhouse: In a 2021 interview with the owners, KCPQ-13 reported that it was “on the brink” of closing. However, it’s managed to survive, and with food this good, hopefully it’s thriving. In last year’s June edition, I listed some of the great gourmet burgers in Seattle, such as those at Heyday, Yard House, and Nordstrom Grill. There’s still others I still lament like Gordon Biersch that we don’t have locally anymore due to pandemic closures. I mention this to say that I would put the Roadhouse Burger that we almost lost up against any of those other delightful burgers any day of the week. It’s that good, and we’re lucky to have it. ~Brian Ward, Leschi resident
- Jaune Quick-To-See Smith: Memory Map
Seattle Art Museum, 1100 First Ave, ph: 206.654.3100 Mon & Tues Closed, Wed-Sun 10am-5pm This show: Feb 29–May 12. See website for ticket prices. We are so lucky to have the major retrospective of the outstanding Native American artist, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith until May 12. Smith is a brilliant artist as well as an activist for other Indigenous artists. For example, early in her career, she participated in ensuring funding for the Institute of American Indian Arts, a crucial school that has trained many successful Native artists. She usually works in the European technique of oil on canvas and printmaking with Abstract Expressionist and Pop art stylistic references, although an early series was painted on animal skins. She turns the modernist tradition on its head. Rather than the utopian abstractions that mask imperial drives, she fills her work with Native perspectives on ecological and political conditions. She inserts into her drips and strokes and bright colors pictograph-like images of horses, humans, dogs, coyotes, birds, and salmon. These two dimensional signs are often combined with written comments and collaged texts that directly comment on the catastrophes that result from White people’s greed and ignorance. One work includes the entire text of an Isaac Smith treaty from 1850’s that took Native land. Trade canoes are a major theme in Smith’s work. In this exhibition we have eight, two actually built of pinewood lath with her son Neal Ambrose-Smith. As an object in itself a canoe can simply refer to a means of transportation and community connection. The cultural significance and challenges of canoe journeys are now familiar to us. Revived in 1989, this year hundreds of canoes from all over the Northwest came to Alki Beach where the Denny party landed in 1851 greeted by Chief Seattle. The artist states: “Remember when the trade canoes came up river, they would be piled with bags of moldy flour, wormy beef, whiskey laced with lead and blankets smeared with smallpox” (p. 21 Memory Map, interview with Lowery Stokes Sims) Jaune Quick-to-See Smith began depicting canoes at the time of the 1992 celebration of Columbus’ arrival in 1492. Needless to say, the arrival of Columbus was no cause for celebration among Indigenous peoples. So this first canoe called Trade Gifts for Trading Lands with White People is full of amusing details, such as the “gifts” strung across the top of the painting are Indian themed kitsch. The canoe is empty unlike her subsequent canoes. The trade canoes in the exhibition are full to capacity with people, animals, trees, and imaginary creatures. They are often surrounded by a sea of collage that speaks to the abuses and contradictions of native life. But one of Smith’s amazing talents is taking the dreadful and making it amusing even as we don’t lose sight of the horrors. I think this is called Indian humor. Tongass Trade Canoe 1996, a blockbuster painting, refers to the attempt to bring oil drilling to the fragile Tongass National Forest, the calving land of the Caribou, whom we see galloping across the top of the painting. Above are real laundry baskets suggesting a commodity that comes from oil drilling. The Tongass, after a decade of fighting, was finally protected in 2023 from development (we hope). Smith’s takes on famous white artists and, in my opinion, outdoes them by adding much more meaning. The maps in the exhibition were initially inspired by Jasper Johns but look where the artist goes with them. In Homeland , we see the focal point of the radiating lines is Montana in the upper left where the artist was born. There is a US map underneath, but the radiating lines and colors create an entirely new dynamic. Smith dismisses the traditional lines of US maps, the states, as arbitrarily cutting across Indian lands and tribes. Look for other repeated icons in her work, especially horses and buffalo and food and General Custer in deep trouble. What the artist cares most about is the land and the deep connection of all Indigenous people to their land in spite of the ravages of the White greed for oil, gas, and other sources of “energy’. In 2023 she curated a major exhibition at the National Gallery called: The Land Carries Our Ancestors , Contemporary Art by Native Americans that demonstrated that this theme pervades contemporary native art. It included fifty Native artists and essays like “Sky as Place, Land as Body, Landscape as Spiritual Compass,” by heather ahtone and “Land/Landbase/Landscape” by Smith. Creating this exhibition simultaneously with her own retrospective speaks to her deep connection to her community. So clear your schedule and come see more than once “Jaune Quick-to-See Smith Memory Map” an outstanding exhibition by one of the most creative thinkers working today. ~Susan Platt, PhD www.artandpoliticsnow.com
- Life and Times in Leschi: Frink Park, Part 4
For over 25 years, Darrell Howe and Darcy Thompson have been restoring and maintaining Frink and Upper Leschi Parks. Together they have donated thousands of hours on their own and helped organize thousands more hours from other volunteers. They were recognized in 2011 with the Seattle Parks and Recreation Department’s 2011 Denny Awards for Outstanding Volunteer Stewardship, for helping to successfully restore about half of the park’s acreage by removing invasive species and replanting with native ones. Additionally, they helped restore and protect Frink Creek and the half dozen wetlands and seeps that dot the park. They also obtained funding for park maintenance and restoration projects, including: In 2007 the Green Seattle Partnership funded a project to remove invasive plants, including ivy, and plant native species. In 2011, EarthCorps crews were funded to improve trail sections in the northern part of the park, improving trail stability and protecting against erosion. One section of trail was relocated from a boggy area to drier ground, with invasive vegetation removed. In 2014 the King County Conservation District funded the restoration of two degraded wetlands and their buffers in partnership with the Friends of Frink Park to reduce invasive species and increase native plant and wildlife habitat. To get involved with Frink Park preservation efforts, go to frinkpark.org . Where, actually, is Frink Park? Some of its boundaries are pretty clear, since it bumps up against streets and residences. King Street (mostly stairway) and 31st Avenue South are evident. But many people, including me, probably assumed that once you are going down Washington Street from 32nd, you have entered Frink. Wrong! You have entered Upper Leschi Park, which is managed by the city in the same way as Frink – that is, basically wild and undeveloped, with a few primitive trails. Upper Leschi Park is that part of Leschi Park lying west of Lake Washington Boulevard South. Continuing east on Washington Street, you come to a curve, where a street sign indicates the beginning of Frink Place. As the road briefly straightens out again, there is a small meadow on the left, and a footpath on the right. That footpath is within Frink Park. The meadow across the street, on the left, is mostly in Leschi Park. The trail descending from the meadow to the left takes you through Leschi Park. It later forks, bringing you either to the south side of the tennis courts or to the lowest remnants of Yesler Way. The trail from the meadow to the right goes down through Frink Park to the remnants of the old caretaker’s cottage. The abandoned ruins were sometimes a site for graffiti and Garfield High School student beer parties. Lately the place looks fairly clean. Now head back up to 32nd and Washington. This time, go south on 32nd to the dead end. There you’ll find paths into Frink Park. The Main Street right-of-way right there, but not evident, but there is a small park boundary sign where the foliage begins. Parks Department maps show the entire Main Street right-of-way as within the park boundary. Continuing on the paths will keep you in Frink. Now, let’s look at the parks from the east, along Lake Washington Boulevard South. The dividing line between Leschi and Frink is Main Street, which not only is not very main, but in this area only exists on maps. Walking south from the tennis courts, you are bisecting Leschi Park, between Lower and Upper. After rounding the big curve, you’ll eventually come to a row of houses on the left. Looking down the hill, there are three houses below, on 35th Avenue South. Align yourself with the north end of the northernmost and you have found the notional Main Street. A straight line from there to the west defines the boundary between Leschi and Frink parks. South of the King Street stairway, lying to the east of Lake Washington Boulevard, there’s a triangle of land purchased by the city’s park fund in 1908. At one time, much of it was the clay tennis court described here last month. Now it’s rugged woods. It narrows as it goes south, ending at Lane Street. ~Roger Lippman The author writes monthly about Leschi history and his experiences over his 48 years in the neighborhood.
- Board Elections Coming in May
Typically, we would have held Board elections last May but with the changes to the Constitution and Bylaws, the State had requested that elections be moved to even years. Both our President and Vice-President had been term limited (Two-2 year terms) but they graciously agreed to stay in office for one more year. The Leschi Board consists of 4 officers (President, Vice-President, Secretary and Treasurer) and all four positions are elected every 2 years. Any officer who is not term limited can opt to run again. The Chairs of committees who are appointed by the President but have usually come forward and expressed an interest in serving. Committee chairs have voting privileges. The Board meets monthly on the Tuesday after the first Wednesday. Our general meetings are held on the first Wednesday. Board meetings are held by Zoom unless we are able to find a meeting place that is free. Changes in meeting date and time must be agreed on by the Board and publicized. We are printing the duties of the officers as defined in the Constitution/Bylaws in BOLD and suggested additions proposed by the board will be in italics . ARTICLE VI Officers – Duties Section 1. President. The President shall: preside over all meetings of the Council and of the Executive Board; appoint committee chairpersons, write President’s Message for the Leschi News the months that it is published; and be an ex-officio member of all committees except the Nominating Committee. Suggestions: The President should work with the board and the community to establish strategic priorities for the council. Priorities have to be set across programming, community engagement and what causes to focus on. The president will also ensure that the council builds and maintains meaningful, sustainable relationships with community leaders, the city and county. Lastly, the president is responsible for running an effective board, which includes facilitating meetings, making committee appointments, and encouraging progress on strategic priorities. Section 2. Vice-President. The Vice President shall assist the President as needed; perform the duties of the President in the President’s absence; and act as chairperson of the Nominating Committee. Suggestions: The Vice President supports the president, specifically in efforts of relationship building. The vice president also helps committees be effective and leans in on organizing and driving community meetings. Section 3. Treasurer. The Treasurer shall execute and maintain records, collect dues, maintain a list of all paid members, receive funds, pay bills, keep records of all transactions, balance all funds, and prepare monthly financial reports for Council meetings. Treasurer shall prepare a proposed budget for Board annually. The treasurer shall retrieve Council mail from the post office. Suggestions: In addition to the duties stated in the articles, the treasurer is responsible for keeping the organization in good standing with tax and licensing authorities and ensuring it retains its 501c(3) status. The treasurer also oversees the grant process, ensuring that the application and administration of any grant follows the requirements stated in the grant. Sec. 4. Secretary. The Secretary shall prepare meeting agendas, execute and maintain records and minutes of all general and Executive Board meetings and provide a copy to the newsletter editor, provide all officers with copies of relevant documents, maintain copies of all outgoing correspondence, channel correspondence to appropriate persons, maintain lists of meeting attendance and council members, and maintain all records, reports, and documents of the Council. No suggestions were submitted for the office of the Secretary. The President will choose a nominating committee consisting of 2 persons led by the Vice-President by April 15 of even-numbered years. If you are interested in running, please contact the Vice-President. It is also possible to nominate from the floor at the May meeting. Do not hesitate to contact any Board officer to discuss the position. Contact information is listed on the masthead of the Leschi News . ~Diane Snell





