Deadly Police Shooting, Downtown Arrests, and Economic Challenges: A Seattle Update
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We're starting with some serious public safety concerns in our community. An independent investigation is now underway after Seattle police fatally shot a man near the Othello light rail station on Tuesday afternoon. Officers responded to reports of a shirtless man waving a gun around one-thirty that afternoon. According to witnesses in the area, they heard roughly thirty gunshots as the situation unfolded. The man was killed after police say he advanced toward officers while pointing a weapon at them. One bystander was injured from shattered glass as bullets traveled through what's typically a busy neighborhood filled with commuters, businesses, and families. Community activist groups are planning protests and demanding accountability, calling for the identification of both the victim and the officers involved. Police did recover the weapon at the scene. Investigators are still looking into whether the man may have been experiencing a mental health crisis.
In other crime news from downtown, Seattle police arrested a thirty-three-year-old man Tuesday evening behind the Smith Tower in an alley on Yesler Way. Officers found him with methamphetamine, cocaine, a knife, and a hatchet. He was taken into custody but then transported to Harborview Medical Center for medical evaluation and was released from police custody. Officers have referred charges for trespassing, narcotics possession, and unlawful use of weapons to the Seattle City Attorney's Office.
Meanwhile, the job market continues showing signs of strain. Private companies nationwide cut thirty-two thousand jobs in November, a sharp slowdown from October. Small businesses with fewer than fifty employees led the losses with one hundred twenty thousand positions eliminated last month. The average wage growth has also slowed to four point four percent this year, down from previous levels. Here in Washington state, the unemployment rate is expected to climb from four point five percent in twenty twenty-five to four point nine percent next year as companies like Microsoft, Google, and Meta continue reducing their workforce.
On the real estate front, Seattle's housing market is showing some shifting dynamics. The city council just approved a record-breaking twenty twenty-six budget with three hundred forty-nine million dollars dedicated to affordable housing development, more than five times what was spent back in twenty nineteen. New construction continues downtown, with plans filed this week for a forty-five-unit apartment building in Uptown to replace older office spaces. Rents across Seattle have largely flattened out, though vacancy rates are creeping up as new supply comes online across the region.
Mayor-elect Katie Wilson recently announced Brian Surratt as her deputy mayor, bringing local leadership into city hall as we head into the new year.
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