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Jan 29 4 tweets 2 min read
The 46th Legislative District's Gerry Pollet spent a Sunday morning building up anti-housing strawmen and backing a predictable Seattle Times screed piece. "Today's extensive Times editorial is a "must read
It's a nice day, Gerry. Just go outside. "There is a separate bill that actually would help incr"Does every neighborhood in every city even have the inImage preview of The Seattle Time op-ed
Rep. Pollet's many years of abuse of power in the House Local Government Committee fighting against housing reforms seems to have cost him his chairmanship of the committee and more.
Rep. Pollet's meddling in the last #Waleg legislative session earned him another top spot as a legislative ZERO in 2022. theurbanist.org/2022/03/31/her…

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More from @UrbanistOrg

Dec 16, 2022
BIG: Rep. Gerry Pollet will not be on any House policy committees that directly deal with land use, zoning, and housing. nwprogressive.org/weblog/wp-cont…
Rep. Pollet previous controlled the House Local Government Committee. He wielded his power to block and water down progressive housing and zoning reform wherever possible.
Rep. Pollet’s opposition to progressive housing and zoning reform earned him a place in our #Waleg “naughty” list two years running. theurbanist.org/2022/03/31/her…
theurbanist.org/2021/05/12/her…
Read 4 tweets
Oct 27, 2022
It really does make you wonder. WA Dems are sending out an SOS on the SoS race.
As senate transportation chair Steve Hobbs was highway-obsessed and a huge impediment to getting a package that focused on transit, safe streets, and climate. Hobbs simply is not a climate leader. theurbanist.org/2021/04/12/fiv…
Hobbs has tried to spin his record since, but the fact remains that it was not one of climate action or of fix-it-first discipline. #ClimateCrisis #NoNewHighways theurbanist.org/2021/05/24/sen…
Read 6 tweets
Oct 26, 2022
Great reporting on the fentanyl crisis from @andyengelson via @PubliColaNews. So far, King County has tallied 710 fatal overdoses this year. Of those, at least 473 involved fentanyl. publicola.com/2022/10/26/kin…
Clearly federal, state, and local governments need to be more nimble to respond to the opiate crisis.

One example, federal regulations on methadone treatment aren't scaled to weaning people with fentanyl-level tolerance to opiates.
“When we start people on methadone, by law we can only start them at 30 milligrams. Traditionally a therapeutic dose [for fentanyl] has been in the range of 80 to 120 milligrams.” Paul Grekin of Evergreen Treatment Services said.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 25, 2022
In this op-ed, civil engineer Donna Breske demystifies SPU water hookup fees that homebuilders encounter trying to get projects approved. She argues the agency is overstepping its bounds and double charging. #PermittingReform #HousingCrisis theurbanist.org/2022/10/25/doe…
One 160-unit affordable housing project by @SCIDpda @PHPDA was held up and threatened with millions in fees for a hookup and fire hydrant relocation. It turned out Seattle Fire didn't even want the new hydrant. #PredatoryDelay seattleinprogress.com/project/3027067 A rendering of a 160-unit, ...
When The Urbanist reached out for comment in the process of reporting this story, it turns out SPU changed its mind and rescinded its requirement for a $1 million water main upgrade, which jeopardized the social housing project. #TOD #GrowTheUrbanist theurbanist.org/2022/10/25/doe… A sketch of the Pacific Tow...
Read 4 tweets
Nov 28, 2021
Seattle’s first streetcar line, since closure of municipal lines in 1941, opened in 1982 but was suspended by construction of the Olympic Sculpture Park in 2005 and later destroyed by the state’s waterfront highway project.
At least Galveston had a good reason for suspension.
Still can't believe we replaced an elevated highway and streetcar line with a massive surface highway. Alaskan Way when it was smaller and had a streetcar trackSeattle's massive surface highway today
Read 4 tweets
Nov 28, 2021
Seattle could encourage this with its many alleys. With a little intentional planning and repealing loading mandates, we could have many narrow streets to wander about and enjoy as people spaces. theurbanist.org/2021/05/28/rig…
In Melbourne, laneways are vibrant spaces ubiquitous in the city center. theurbanist.org/2015/09/16/mel…
Read 4 tweets

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