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Weekend Rallies, Affordable Housing, and Community Cleanups: Your Seattle Local Pulse Update
- 2025/04/19
- 再生時間: 4 分
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あらすじ・解説
Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Saturday, April 19th, 2025.
As we start our weekend, our big story is a wave of grassroots protests planned for today across Seattle and much of the country. Hundreds of rallies have been announced nationwide in protest against recent Trump administration policies, including coordinated efforts under what’s being called the 50501 Movement. Here in Seattle, we’ll see events on multiple I-5 overpasses, at Seattle Central College in Capitol Hill, and in neighborhoods like Ballard and Lake City. Organizers are calling on neighbors to show up between ten this morning and four this afternoon, so if you’re driving near downtown or through West Seattle, expect some traffic delays and increased police presence. The mood has been described as determined but peaceful, with a focus on building community and supporting each other during these uncertain times.
Shifting to City Hall, yesterday the council made headlines by approving new emergency funding for affordable housing near Northgate and endorsing two new bus rapid transit lines, one to Bellevue and another to West Seattle. These moves aim to ease the housing crunch and improve commuting options, and we can expect to see visible progress later this year.
Weatherwise, we’re waking up to patchy clouds with a chance of a brief sunbreak around noon, but light showers are likely by late afternoon. Temperatures will hover in the mid-50s, so pack a rain jacket if you’re headed to any of today’s rallies or out to the farmers markets. Looking ahead to Sunday, expect more of the same—cloudy with a chance of showers.
On the business front, a popular local diner, The Early Bird on Capitol Hill, is celebrating its reopening today with free pastries until noon after a month-long renovation. Meanwhile, Ballard’s beloved bookstore, The Open Page, sadly announced it will close its historic Market Street location next month after nearly forty years, citing rising rents but offering hope for a new chapter online.
For job seekers, the Seattle area unemployment rate remains steady at just under four percent, but local tech job listings are climbing back up, with Amazon and several startups offering dozens of new openings in software, logistics, and green energy roles.
Around the community, Garfield High School’s robotics team just clinched second place at the regional championships and will head to nationals next week—a big win for our students and STEM programs. Over in Queen Anne, yesterday’s Little League opener drew a standing-room-only crowd at David Rogers Park, with the Mariners—our local little leaguers, not the pros—pulling off a last-inning rally for the win.
On the safety front, Seattle police responded overnight to a robbery at a convenience store on Rainier Avenue South; one arrest was made and no injuries reported. Officers remind everyone to take care when out after dark, especially near public transit hubs.
To end on a high note, volunteers gathered along Alki Beach yesterday for the first of a series of spring cleanups, collecting over six hundred pounds of litter and restoring shoreline habitat. Kids, parents, and neighbors worked side by side, and their efforts really made a difference.
That’s it for today. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We’ll see you tomorrow with more local updates.
As we start our weekend, our big story is a wave of grassroots protests planned for today across Seattle and much of the country. Hundreds of rallies have been announced nationwide in protest against recent Trump administration policies, including coordinated efforts under what’s being called the 50501 Movement. Here in Seattle, we’ll see events on multiple I-5 overpasses, at Seattle Central College in Capitol Hill, and in neighborhoods like Ballard and Lake City. Organizers are calling on neighbors to show up between ten this morning and four this afternoon, so if you’re driving near downtown or through West Seattle, expect some traffic delays and increased police presence. The mood has been described as determined but peaceful, with a focus on building community and supporting each other during these uncertain times.
Shifting to City Hall, yesterday the council made headlines by approving new emergency funding for affordable housing near Northgate and endorsing two new bus rapid transit lines, one to Bellevue and another to West Seattle. These moves aim to ease the housing crunch and improve commuting options, and we can expect to see visible progress later this year.
Weatherwise, we’re waking up to patchy clouds with a chance of a brief sunbreak around noon, but light showers are likely by late afternoon. Temperatures will hover in the mid-50s, so pack a rain jacket if you’re headed to any of today’s rallies or out to the farmers markets. Looking ahead to Sunday, expect more of the same—cloudy with a chance of showers.
On the business front, a popular local diner, The Early Bird on Capitol Hill, is celebrating its reopening today with free pastries until noon after a month-long renovation. Meanwhile, Ballard’s beloved bookstore, The Open Page, sadly announced it will close its historic Market Street location next month after nearly forty years, citing rising rents but offering hope for a new chapter online.
For job seekers, the Seattle area unemployment rate remains steady at just under four percent, but local tech job listings are climbing back up, with Amazon and several startups offering dozens of new openings in software, logistics, and green energy roles.
Around the community, Garfield High School’s robotics team just clinched second place at the regional championships and will head to nationals next week—a big win for our students and STEM programs. Over in Queen Anne, yesterday’s Little League opener drew a standing-room-only crowd at David Rogers Park, with the Mariners—our local little leaguers, not the pros—pulling off a last-inning rally for the win.
On the safety front, Seattle police responded overnight to a robbery at a convenience store on Rainier Avenue South; one arrest was made and no injuries reported. Officers remind everyone to take care when out after dark, especially near public transit hubs.
To end on a high note, volunteers gathered along Alki Beach yesterday for the first of a series of spring cleanups, collecting over six hundred pounds of litter and restoring shoreline habitat. Kids, parents, and neighbors worked side by side, and their efforts really made a difference.
That’s it for today. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We’ll see you tomorrow with more local updates.