Hi, these are the weekly #washingtonstate #kingcounty (that is, #seattle and environs) #COVID #COVID19 #wastewater toots.

A quick reminder that this King County respiratory disease data comes from Washington State, not the federal government.

The West Point (WSPT) sewage treatment plant's 7-Day running average is the lowest[*] it's been since the state switched data providers in fall of 2024. And you know what that means: it's time to deploy some celebratory emoticons: 😍👯🎉The last data was calculated on 11/9.

[*] if you exclude the 0.0 "no data" placeholder values that pop up from time to time in this dataset.

WSPT is one of three King County(-ish) sewersheds in this dataset. You can find overviews, individual sewershed results, and a breakdown of variants for the state wastewater surveillance program, along with other metrics like case counts and hospitalizations for Covid-19 and other respiratory illnesses, at https://doh.wa.gov/data-and-statistical-reports/diseases-and-chronic-conditions/communicable-disease-surveillance-data/respiratory-illness-data-dashboard#WasteWater. If you go to the page and click "learn more" in the statewide view tab, you can find out lots of details about how these data are calculated and how to interpret them. The dashboard gets updated every Wednesday (generally). The Department of Health is here on the fediweb, at @WADeptHealth

Edit to fix up an emoticon fail.

How SDOT plans to connect CID bike routes to the SoDo Trail in 2026

The missing “Georgetown to Downtown North Connection” is marked with blue dots. Map from an SDOT presentation to the Seattle Bicycle Advisory Board (PDF).

The Georgetown to Downtown Safety Project officially opened in September, and it is a massive improvement for bikeability through the Industrial District. However, it does have one glaring problem: It doesn’t actually connect to downtown as the name implies.

However, SDOT unveiled a concept they hope to build in 2026 to close the gap between the SoDo Trail’s terminus at Stadium Station and the Chinatown-International District bike routes that connect to the downtown bike network, and it is similar to what Seattle Bike Blog suggested back in September. The city will work with King County and the Salvation Army-operated shelter to open 6th Ave S to biking and walking. Started as a 2020 COVID emergency response, the 250-bed shelter operates out of a series of warehouses and former commercial spaces along 6th Ave S. The shelter will continue to operate here until at least the end of 2027. However, the shelter complex also blocks the entire roadway with a temporary-looking fence, removing the most comfortable biking and walking route between Stadium Station and downtown. The plan is to instead fence off the area around the shelter but allow a pathway for walking and biking and perhaps also some motor vehicle travel.

A presenter noted that designers and shelter operators were talking about the possibility of removing the east fence entirely, which would create more space for biking and walking.

The design drawing shown at the Seattle Bicycle Advisory Board (“SBAB”) October meeting shows a 15-foot-wide bike path between two fences. However, the presenter said the design was progressing and might not include the east fencing at all, since the shelter currently only uses those buildings for storage. The drawing lists that fence as “optional.” SBAB members noted the concern that fences on both sides, especially opaque ones like the fences currently installed, may not feel comfortable for users. Because the shelter is a King County project, the county is ultimately responsible for moving the fencing while SDOT is funding the design and bikeway install.

The area around the shelter is in something of a limbo period as Sound Transit tries to figure out whether it will build a station there as part of the Ballard Link Extension, which would include a second downtown tunnel. Dow Constantine, then-King County Executive and now Sound Transit CEO, and Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell both pushed for the agency to support a controversial plan to site a station in this industrial location surrounded by elevated freeway ramps rather than in a location with a transfer connection to the existing Chinatown-International District Station and King Street Station. But with current project cost estimates going far over-budget, it’s unclear how a reduced-cost version of the second tunnel might change this site’s future.

Meanwhile, Mayor-elect Katie Wilson campaigned on the promise to build 4,000 shelter beds during her first term. A previous proposal to expand the number of beds and services at this site was abandoned in 2022 following some pushback.

#SEAbikes #Seattle

It's funny, i have anxiety, an actual anxiety disorder and sometimes appointments especially when i have to take a bus kinda' make me anxious because i worry about arriving on time.

It's all working out, i used Google Maps but King County's OneBusAway right now is experiencing issues and can't bring up route info or where buses are and if they are on time.

I have an interview for the place i'm likely moving into this afternoon..

Perfect timing OneBusAway! Thanks.

#Seattle #KingCounty #Metro

Hey south King County! Three new 1 Line stations open December 6th, Kent Des Moines, Star Lake, and Federal Way (Downtown):

https://www.soundtransit.org/southkinglink

#seattle #KingCounty #rail #LightRail #SoundTransit #transit

Discover South King County | Sound Transit

The 1 Line is expanding to Kent Des Moines, Star Lake, and Federal Way. See how to park, pay, ride, and get ready for the big day.

Congratulations to ALL of our endorsed candidates on their victories!

Seattle's future is looking bright!

#Seattle #SEAElex #KingCounty #KCElex #WAElex

Hi, this is the weekly #washingtonstate #kingcounty (that is, #seattle and environs) #COVID #COVID19 #wastewater toots.

A quick reminder that this King County respiratory disease data comes from Washington State, not the federal government.

The West Point (WSPT) sewage treatment plant's 7-Day did get updated this week, after not having been updated last week. It's pretty low. Last data calculated on 11/4.

WSPT is one of three King County(-ish) sewersheds in this dataset. You can find overviews, individual sewershed results, and a breakdown of variants for the state wastewater surveillance program, along with other metrics like case counts and hospitalizations for Covid-19 and other respiratory illnesses, at https://doh.wa.gov/data-and-statistical-reports/diseases-and-chronic-conditions/communicable-disease-surveillance-data/respiratory-illness-data-dashboard#WasteWater. If you go to the page and click "learn more" in the statewide view tab, you can find out lots of details about how these data are calculated and how to interpret them. The dashboard gets updated every Wednesday (generally). The Department of Health is here on the fediweb, at @WADeptHealth

The Seattle Times: "Wilson took a 1,976-vote lead over Bruce Harrell. With a maximum of 1,320 ballots remaining, it is mathematically impossible for Harrell to catch up."

That said! you can still cure your ballot if it's been challenged.

Track your ballot here:
https://info.kingcounty.gov/kcelections/vote/myvoterinfo.aspx

Cure your ballot here:
https://kingcounty.gov/en/dept/elections/how-to-vote/ballots/signature-challenges

#PSA #CallToAction #Seattle #KingCounty #KatieWilson

https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/politics/katie-wilson-elected-seattles-next-mayor/

King County Elections

Led by Director Julie Wise, King County Elections conducts accurate, secure, and accessible elections for King County's over 1.4 million registered voters.

There are a couple of races in King County which _may_ still be in contention depending upon how many votes come in (but it's unlikely), and one race in King County which is LITERALLY TIED.

#KingCounty #seattle #politics #casPol #casPolitics #cascadia #election

The mayoral election in Seattle is very close; please make sure your vote has been counted, by using the ballot tracker below; you can fix any challenges (usually signature issues) and cure your ballot in minutes.

#PSA #CallToAction #Seattle #KingCounty #KatieWilson

https://info.kingcounty.gov/kcelections/vote/myvoterinfo.aspx

https://kingcounty.gov/en/dept/elections/how-to-vote/ballots/signature-challenges

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There are a couple of races in King County which _may_ still be in contention depending upon how many votes come in (but it's unlikely), and one race in King County which is LITERALLY TIED.

#KingCounty #seattle #politics #casPol #casPolitics #cascadia #election

A note about the Harrell campaign: after the primary, he initially started going at Wilson for being too far left. But he stopped that _very_ quickly and started tacking left _himself_, and running against Wilson's lack of executive experience. That resonated and he got back into the race.

This suggests to me that survey numbers on campaigning against her from the centre / right were _disastrously_ bad, and makes me wonder if he'd tacked left right away after the primary and focused on experience the whole time, if he may've been able to win.

To which I can only add: take note. Sure, it's Cascadian politics (always different) but consider NYC.

I'm seeing _multiple_ layers of message.

#politics #seattle #casPol #casPolitics #cascadia

And if you're not immediately understanding it, remember that the politics of the last... 45 years? has been to tack towards your base (left) for the primary, then once you're there, tack to the right ("centrist") for the general.

Harrell's campaign - that got him competitive again after a disastrous primary - is the opposite of that. And it _almost_ worked. He did much better against Wilson in the general than in the primary.

I mean, this could be a one off, but _I don't think it is_. Particularly given that in 2024 Washington State moved left, and here in 2025, where applicable, we moved further left _again_.

So, once more: take some notes.

#politics #seattle #election #casPol #casPolitics #cascadia

@moira I mean, seattle voters have been known to disappoint me, but I do have a hard time imagining how Harrell could have convinced anyone he had any leftist credentials.

He obviously has some support, I think he could have done better to hide any of the dozen messed up decisions he has made as mayor, the consent decree, the supercameras, making himself the face of opposition to the housing initiative, like maybe he could have distanced himself from that but I think if he ran on "I never did any of the things I did" I think he might have lost by a wider margin.

@Montaagge Never overestimate the attention span of the low-info voter.

I'm just talking tactics, not actual record.

@moira I know. I was surprised that Warlord Jenny lost her reelection bid to him in the first place.