Seattle Drizzle, Seahawks Surge, and Community Care - Local Pulse Update
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We start with breaking news in sports, because that is what a lot of us are talking about this morning. At Lumen Field last night, the Seahawks pulled out a wild overtime win, sealed by a two point conversion catch from tight end Eric Saubert, who had barely been targeted all season. The team and the 12s are buzzing, and this keeps our playoff hopes alive heading into the final stretch. Over in college hoops, the Huskies men picked up a solid home win at Hec Ed earlier this week, while the women’s team continues a strong nonconference run.
From city hall, council members are debating budget tweaks tied to public safety and homelessness, including shifting a few million dollars toward more crisis response teams and expanded shelter beds near Pioneer Square and in the Chinatown International District. There is also new discussion about stricter rules on street racing along Airport Way and down by Spokane Street after a series of late night complaints.
On the jobs front, regional economists say Seattle’s unemployment rate is hovering near 4 percent. Tech hiring in South Lake Union and Denny Triangle is slower than a few years ago, but health care and construction around First Hill, the U District, and Northgate are still posting hundreds of openings, especially for nurses, medical techs, and skilled trades.
Real estate agents are reporting that the median home price inside city limits is sitting around the mid 800 thousands, with fewer bidding wars than last year. Condos near Capitol Hill Station and apartments in Georgetown and Rainier Beach are seeing more listings, giving renters a bit more leverage, even as overall prices remain high.
In neighborhood business news, a new cafe and co working space has opened on Capitol Hill near Pike and Broadway, while a longtime family owned restaurant in Belltown has announced it will close after the holidays, citing higher costs and slower foot traffic.
Looking ahead, we have holiday markets this weekend at Seattle Center and in Ballard, plus live shows at The Crocodile and Neumos, and a big symphony program at Benaroya Hall. Local high school teams from Rainier Beach and Garfield are celebrating recent basketball tournament wins, and several Seattle schools have reported strong student robotics and debate results heading into winter break.
On the crime front, Seattle police are investigating several overnight car break ins in Fremont and Wallingford and a robbery near Third Avenue and Pine downtown. Officers say they have made at least one arrest tied to a series of catalytic converter thefts in North Seattle. We stay aware, lock our cars, and look out for one another, while remembering that most of our neighbors are just trying to get through the day like we are.
A feel good note to end on. Volunteers in the Central District organized a coat and blanket drive near Garfield Community Center, collecting hundreds of warm items for unsheltered neighbors ahead of the next round of cold rain. It is a reminder that even on the grayest days, this city shows up for each other.
Thank you for tuning in, and make sure to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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