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| | |  | The median home price in Laurelhurst has actually dropped 1.1%, bringing it to a grand total of $2,060,286. (Joe Mabel / WikiMedia) |
| What’s Up With Seattle Children’s and Laurelhurst? | Laurelhurst discourse has spread across Seattle like wildfire over the last week. It boils down to the resurfacing of a decades-old agreement between the residents of Laurelhurst and Seattle Children’s Hospital. The agreement limits the number of medical helicopter flights that can land at the Laurelhurst hospital, due to concerns about noise and wind disturbances apparently outweighing children’s medical emergencies. Jane discusses in-depth on today’s podcast. [City Cast Seattle 🎧] | - 🏥 The players: Seattle Children’s is the go-to hospital for specialized pediatric care for Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, and Idaho. Currently, only the most serious cases are allowed to land at the hospital. The rest land 1.2 miles away at the University of Washington’s Graves Field and ride in an ambulance the rest of the way. Laurelhurst neighbors the hospital and is one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the city, with the median household income sitting above the census’s $250,000 threshold.
- 🚁 A long history: In the 1980s, Seattle Children’s began trying out medical airlift programs using helicopters to get around the traffic. The hospital was given a conditional-use permit from the City, but neighbors tried everything they could to block the project, including lobbying the state legislature to enact laws that would make it harder for hospitals all over the state to build helipads. In 1992, the Seattle City Council granted formal approval of the helipad. However, as a compromise, most flights were directed to Graves Field at UW, unless the emergency was… extra emergent. Plus, they created a Helicopter Advisory Committee (two doctors, two members of the community, and two officials from the City and the County) to review the “clinical rationale” for each landing decision. [HistoryLink]
- 🤳🏼 Why now? Though this agreement is 30 years old, it apparently gained attention again because of a now-deleted thread by a helicopter pilot on X (FKA Twitter), then Reddit picked it up, then the TikTok videos began. In a statement last week, the hospital said it receives “3 or fewer helicopter transports per week” and that nearly all of those patients are admitted to an intensive care unit. Laurelhurst Community Council’s website went down shortly after this discourse bloomed again, but The Stranger has the details on their meeting minutes. [The Stranger]
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| | | Thinking about Napa or Sonoma for your next wine trip? If you are open to something a little different, Dundee, Oregon offers a slower, more personal wine country experience just a few hours from Seattle. Walkable, welcoming, and rooted in exceptional Pinot, it is where plans loosen and moments linger. | | This spring, enjoy exclusive lodging offers for City Cast listeners. Start slow, stay awhile, and experience wine country at your own pace. | |
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| What Seattle’s Talking About |
| 💡 New rate system: City Light has introduced the Residential Time of Use rate: a program where Seattleites can opt in to dynamic pricing with electricity costing more during peak hours (5 PM to 9 PM), when demand is highest, and less when demand is the lowest (midnight to 6 AM). They also created the Energy Insights tool to help suss out if this program is right for you. [Seattle City Light] | | ⚖️ Millionaires tax survives: This week, Washington’s Supreme Court denied millionaire Brian Heywood’s referendum attempt. Heywood filed a lawsuit alleging that a clause protecting Washington’s new 9.9% income tax for earners making more than a million dollars a year from a referendum was unconstitutional, but the state’s Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the clause. [Washington State Standard] | |  | A peek inside the Law Library at the Temple of Justice at the Washington State Capitol. (Photographer / WikiMedia) |
| 🥁 Student arrested: A UW student was arrested for repeatedly drumming next to a Turning Point USA (TPUSA) event on the HUB Lawn last week. The event was a “Prove Me Wrong” table with Nick Freitas, a Republican politician and prominent right-wing influencer. Now the student and protestors say the university is suppressing dissent. [The Daily] |
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I was sad to read that this week, the Hill’s Cafe Suliman closed suddenly. A sign taped to the front of the restaurant read “Closed today and forever until workers are paid what they’re owed!!! Signed the workers.” We’ll be talking about the state of the Seattle restaurant scene on the podcast soon! |
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