Slog

News & Arts

Line Out

Music & Nightlife

Friday, October 22, 2010

State Tunnel Study Assumes No Tolls, Doesn't Account for up to 45,000 More Vehicle Trips Per Day on City Streets

Posted by Dominic Holden on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 6:44 PM

The south portal, where drivers will pay a toll or exit to city streets
  • WSDOT
  • The south portal, where drivers will pay a toll or exit

Set to be released next week, a state study of the proposed deep-bore tunnel assumes the project will have no tolls and doesn't consider a toll's impact of pouring an additional 40,000 to 45,000 trips per day onto city streets. But state law says the project will require $400 million from tolling revenue to cover costs.

Reading an advance copy of the Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Statement (SDEIS) today to The Stranger, City Council Member Mike O’Brien paged through chapters that detail the tunnel’s impacts on traffic, noise, greenhouse gases, miles per trip, and air quality. The document first asserts that 22,000 vehicles will switch from Highway 99—currently the Alaskan Way Viaduct, tentatively set to be replaced by the tunnel—to city streets and I-5. However, O’Brien reads from chapter nine, “As currently defined, the project does not include tolls.”

Continuing in chapter nine, the document discusses various tolling scenarios but never factors their impact on the other sections about traffic, noise, etc. More than a source of revenue, tolls will drastically alter traffic patterns downtown. At over $4 per trip one way at peak hours, based on the state’s estimates, tolls would push an additional 40,000 to 45,000 trips per day onto city streets compared to a scenario with no tolls on the tunnel.

In other words, the impact study doesn’t measure the actual traffic impacts. The actual traffic projection—based on tolls we need to pay for the tunnel—appears to be over 60,000 vehicles a day.

“You open it up and it says there are going to be slight traffic changes and everything is going to be fine—it’s going to work,” he continues. “Unless you go hundreds of pages into this thing, and realize that’s not the real scenario.”

“It’s a joke,” says O’Brien. “I feel like this particular EIS process is a little bit of a sham.” The council is slated to consider a contract to let the state begin the project this winter. “Without studying the specific impact of tolling, we’re left to make decisions by waving our hands and guessing, which defeats the whole purpose of having an EIS."

More after the jump.

Continue reading »

The Kwazy Quaids Never Fail to Bring It

Posted by David Schmader on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 5:19 PM

CTV has the news:

The Hollywood actor best known for his role as deadbeat cousin Eddie in "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation" and his wife have asked for refugee protection in Canada after being arrested in Vancouver on immigration violations earlier this week.

Oscar-nominee Randy Quaid, 60, and his wife Evi, 47, made the verbal plea for protection at a Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board hearing in Vancouver on Friday afternoon.

The couple said that they fear for their lives in the U.S., and Evi claimed that nine close friends of her husband have recently been murdered, including actors David Carradine, Heath Ledger and Chris Penn.

Previous Kwazy Quaid coverage here.

Ken Schram Agrees with Me

Posted by Eli Sanders on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 4:55 PM

Ack!

For two obviously well-educated men, state Supreme Court justices James Johnson and Richard Sanders are profoundly ignorant.

A related question: After its newsroom's great Justice Sanders scoop today, will the Seattle Times op-ed page double down on its primary endorsement of the guy and back him again in the general?

It's Not Too Late for Filipino Fabulousness at Inay's!

Posted by Bethany Jean Clement on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 4:27 PM

Atasha: service and a show!
  • Malcolm Smith / The Stranger
  • Atasha: service and a show!

Would you like your delicious Filipino dinner served to you by a fabulous drag queen TONIGHT? Of course you would. Reservations are still available. Here's David Schmader's review.

Commenter gnarly sesh says:

fair enough Mr. Schmader, just tried this place on your recommendation, and it was excellent. Louie [a.k.a. Atasha, in drag for Friday dinners] rules.

Advertisement

The Fine Print: Herrera Backers Endorse Heck

Posted by Eli Sanders on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 4:13 PM

The business-minded people at BIPAC ("founded in 1963 as the first business PAC with the goal of electing pro-prosperity candidates to higher office") say they want Republican Jaime Herrera for Congress in Washington's 3rd Congressional district. But then you read (click to enlarge) the fine print...

Herrera-BIPAC-page_10-22-10.jpg

A Checklist for E-Readers and Magazine Apps

Posted by Paul Constant on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 4:07 PM

If you're launching an e-reader or magazine app, Craig Mod has some very important questions for you. He's even made a handy checklist:

* Am I reading text? If the text in your ereader isn’t text but is instead an image (.jpeg, .png, etc) then, by golly, your ereader's incompetent.

Everything else builds off of this.

* Does my ereader make the text less accessible to the visually impaired? If so, then sorry, my friend, your ereader is incompetent (and an asshole).
* Can you copy text? If you can’t, your ereader's incompetent.
* Can you resize text? No? Incompetent. (See accessibility)
* Are you a text-heavy publication such as The New Yorker? Is a single issue of your magazine gratuitously large (500mb+ per month)? Lazy incompetence.

There's more to the list here. It should be required reading for people who are trying to make readable content for tablets and e-readers.

Big Oil Pours Money into Local Races

Posted by Unpaid Intern on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 4:04 PM

Posted by news intern Matt Luby

Tim Eyman's initiative 1053, the ballot measure that would require a 2/3 majority in the state legislature for any tax increases, is likely to pass. The campaign is being heavily funded by oil companies who did not like the recent attempt to raise taxes on hazardous materials-producing companies like themselves and fear similar proposals will manifest again in the future. We've known this for months.

But just in case it doesn't, big oil companies—BP, Tesoro, and ConocoPhillips—are dumping money on obscure state legislative candidates to grease the wheels against future tax increases. Just looking at Public Disclosure Commission reports on state legislative races in the Puget Sound area, Tesoro has given $13,250, BP $9,500, and ConocoPhillips clocks in at $7,200 in contributions to individual candidates. Brendon Cechovic, the political director of Washington Conservation Voters (WCV), asks, "Why would an oil company have any care in the world about state legislative races. What’s that buying? Those are the questions voters should be asking themselves."

I charted out the contributions and looked for candidates getting the large amounts of cash from two or more of the companies. Two incumbent state senators, Steve Hobbs D-Lake Stevens and Tim Sheldon D-Potlatch, got contributions from all three companies, including top-tier ($800) donations from Tesoro. The other two candidates who got top-tier dollars from Tesoro and contributions from one other company were two state senate challengers, Joe Fain R-Covington and Steve Litzow R-Mercer Island.

It's easy enough to figure out why oil companies love Tim Sheldon. He was named one of WCV's two "Green Duds" this year, thanks to his astoundingly low score of 27 on their legislative scorecard. His lifetime score is scarcely better at 33. Hobbs did better with a 64 for the year and a 78 lifetime, but don't let the 64 fool you—it puts him in a tie for the fourth-lowest score of any Democrat in the state senate.

Litzow and Fain haven't been scored yet. Their opponents have, though. Fain is running against state senator Claudia Kauffman D-Kent, a WCV endorsee. Only 14 state senate candidates got WCV endorsements, so Kauffman's record has to be respected by the environmental community. Litzow is facing state senator Randy Gordon D-Mercer Island, who was only appointed this year to replace Fred Jarrett. Gordon's record is slim, but his WCV score for this year is 80, placing him only slightly below Kauffman.

Call me crazy, but it sure looks like big oil is focusing on the upper house, rewarding old allies and kneecapping opponents to make sure they're not held accountable for petroleum cleanup—which is the number one polluter of Washington waterways. As Cechovic puts it, "Those are hot races and the money’s really pouring in there."

Amazon Will Let You Share Kindle Books

Posted by Paul Constant on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 3:43 PM

Amazon will allow Kindle users to lend books to each other for 14-day periods, the company announced this afternoon.
...
“Not all books will be lendable,” Amazon added, noting that it was entirely up to the publisher or rights holder to determine whether to participate in the program.

This is so, so smart, especially if publishers actually allow users to share their books.

If You Think We Have It Bad for Joe Fitzgibbon...

Posted by Eli Sanders on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 3:26 PM

...check this out:

Advertisement

This Glee "Controversy" Is So Stupid

Posted by Paul Constant on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 3:15 PM

Screen_shot_2010-10-22_at_11.13.44_AM.png
Remember how the Parents Television Council declared that a sexy GQ photo shoot of hot 24-year-old Glee actresses bordered on pedophilia? Now one of the actresses who took part in the photo shoot (not super-hot Lea Michele, thankfully) has apologized. Dianna Agron says:

In the land of Madonna, Britney, Miley, Gossip Girl, other public figures and shows that have pushed the envelope and challenged the levels of comfort in their viewers and fans...we are not the first. Now, in perpetuating the type of images that evoke these kind of emotions, I am sorry. If you are hurt or these photos make you uncomfortable, it was never our intention. And if your eight-year-old has a copy of our GQ cover in hand, again I am sorry. But I would have to ask, how on earth did it get there?

The apology came in part because Katie Couric said she was disgusted with the photo shoot, saying "These very adult photos of young women who perform in a family show just seem so un-'Glee'-like...these images don't really — in my humble opinion — fit the 'Glee' gestalt." Is Glee a family show? Does Katie Couric really watch Glee? There's kind of a lot of sex in there.

Nothing Stirs My Nostalgia for Childhood Like Seeing a Kid Fed Ding Dongs™ in a Cage.

Posted by Cienna Madrid on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 3:08 PM

I was going to dress as a spider for Halloween. I know Dominic and Lindy both have a hysterical, unfounded aversion to spiders, but I like them. We have a lot in common—our preference for dark corners, preying on the weak, and drinking alone. Our hairy legs and large, fertile egg sacs. I could go on forever!

Anyway, I was going to be a spider until I saw this ad for Trick or Vote, a political canvassing effort held Halloween night involving hundreds of young people doorbelling in costume alongside kids. It's organized by the Washington Bus. Costumed participants hand out literature on voting, get candy, and remind people to vote days before the November election.


Now I want to be a witch for Halloween.

Trick-or-Voters are meeting at Washington Hall (154 14th Ave) at 3:00 p.m. to canvass their guts out, then returning to Washington Hall for a costume party with booze, candy, and dancing. Trick-or-Vote events are also happening in Vancouver and Spokane. Dress warm. Get candy. Remind people to vote.

The Happiest Hour: The White Horse Trading Company

Posted by David Schmader on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 3:01 PM

scaled.Picture_1.png

Marti Jonjak profiles the cozy Post Alley tavern that doubles as a used bookstore here.

"Voices of NPR"

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 2:47 PM

This is hanging up in the hall of the local NPR affiliate in Bloomington...

voicesofnprnotsomuch.jpg

...and it should be on eBay any day now.

Minecraft Is Ridiculous

Posted by The Stranger Testing Department on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 2:34 PM

We've been avoiding Minecraft for the same reasons that sensible people avoid meth. We witnessed the Minings and the Craftings on the Penny Arcade server, saw how very, very, very much people liked it, and we were afraid. We haven't loaded it on our machines, and we don't even like to talk about it, for fear of invoking dark powers we can't understand.

For those who know nothing of it, Minecraft is a game that's garishly old-school in appearance and interface—and despite still being officially in alpha, the ultra-low-budget game earned nearly $3 million in a month (and has probably earned at least triple that by now). Its sole developer, a sweet and now-bewildered 31-year-old Swedish nerd named Markus “Notch” Persson, has barely had time to buy himself a new hat.

Persson describes Minecraft as "a game about placing blocks while running from skeletons." It's pretty much that simple, with a shared-world, open-ended premise that's ridiculous and brilliant: you mine—breaking down rocks, trees, whatever, into more rudimentary components—and then you craft, combining those components into more complex items—torches, walls, homoerotic Mario and Luigi statues, the USS Enterprise, Planet Earth, a fucking functional 16-bit computer. Every ten minutes, the sun sets on your low-res world and the monsters come out, bent on destroying you and everything you've built. The game has no stated object, and there is no way to win. (Although this bit of unintended comedy comes close.)

The state of the art in ridiculous Minecraft meta-nerdery (as of Tuesday) is this ridiculously (again with the ridiculousness!) painstaking recreation of Bioshock's iconic opening:

Some people have called Minecraft the future of MMOs. If you sign up, you can play right now in your browser. But better first to watch a tutorial on how to survive your first night....

The Stranger Testing Department is Rob Lightner and Paul Hughes.

Advertisement

What Legalizing Marijuana in California Will Mean for Senator Barbara Boxer, Jerry Brown, the White House, Democrats in General and You and Me and Everyone We Know

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 2:17 PM

Over at Narco News, Al Giordano has a sharp analysis—plus a little wild extrapolation, but the man's entitled to his imagination—of what's at stake in California's upcoming Prop 19 vote.

The answer, it turns out, is a lot.

... some Democratic party candidates in California — we’re lookin’ at you Senator Barbara Boxer — are going to win or lose based on whether Proposition 19 pulls enough infrequent voters to the polls. And this is paradoxical because Boxer is among the many Democrats who have voiced opposition to Prop 19, and the lessons that come out of November 2 will ring her bell and go all the way up to the White House and into the 2012 election cycle.

The White House and Gil Kerlikowske are also opposed to legalization—though the first-time Obama voters who swept the Democrats into power (young, cell phone-having, many of them African-American and Hispanic) overwhelmingly support Prop 19. So why are Boxer and Obama (via Gil), and Jerry "Governor Moonbeam" Brown stumping against legalization? And what how will that change their lives in 2012?

RTWT.

Cops Threaten Legal Action that Would Cost the City Big Bucks

Posted by Dominic Holden on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 2:03 PM

In this week's paper:

crying_baby_cop_Robert_Ullman.jpg
  • Robert Ullman
When an officer unlawfully arrests someone, who is that officer's attorney? For the past 40 years, attorneys for police officers have come exclusively from one pricey downtown Seattle law firm: Stafford Frey Cooper.

On average last year, Stafford Frey Cooper charged the city $287 per hour; City Attorney Pete Holmes says city-employed lawyers can do the same job just as well for less than half as much: $102 per hour.

But if Holmes leverages his authority to require cops to use city lawyers—a move that could save the city over $1 million a year—the police guild says they'll take legal action that "could prove very expensive for the city, especially in a tight budget year." Read the hubbub over HERE.

Touche, Bad Actor Productions

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 1:29 PM

My review of BAP's Working Gurl is here.

BAP's response to my review was on a poster outside the office this morning:

workgurlsmalls.jpg

workdetail.jpg

It's clear we were never meant for each other. But this parting kiss is very sweet.

Why Justice Sanders' Comments on Race and Crime Are Stunning

Posted by Eli Sanders on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 1:16 PM

feature-570-2.jpg
  • photo courtesy of the washington state supreme court
I'm really surprised at Slog commenters on this one.

The general consensus among you all seems to be that if a Washington State Supreme Court Justice blithely suggests that yeah, African-Americans in this state are incarcerated at five times the rate of their representation in the general population, but that's just because they have an inherent problem with not engaging in criminal behavior—well, if a justice says that, it's just real talk.

It's just... true.

As the excellent Seattle Times story on the justice's comments points out:

African Americans represent about 4 percent of Washington's population but nearly 20 percent of the state prison population. Similar disparities nationwide have been attributed by some researchers to sentencing practices, inadequate legal representation, drug-enforcement policies and criminal-enforcement procedures that unfairly affect African Americans.

This understates it somewhat. It's hard to find people these days who will say that African American incarceration rates are only a reflection of that community's inherent "crime problem," and not also not about the role of "sentencing practices, inadequate legal representation, drug-enforcement policies and criminal-enforcement procedures that unfairly affect African Americans." (Which is not even to mention little things like history, institutional racism, and class-based advantages unavailable to many African Americans who end up in the prison system.)

When it turns out that one easy place to find people who will say this is on the Washington State Supreme Court—well, that's fairly described as stunning, I think. It's why people in on the conversation with Justice Sanders (and his partner in this argument, Justice Jim Johnson) were offended, and why fellow justices also found the whole thing remarkable, and remarkably unhelpful.

Chief Justice Barbara Madsen said she recalled that Sanders disagreed with the premise that anyone was in prison because of race and asked for a name of someone there because of race.

She also recalled Johnson said something about African Americans committing crimes in their own communities, but that she only heard later that he used the term "poverty pimp."

Madsen said she stopped the conversation because she didn't think it was productive.

I find this all the more notable given Justice Sanders' history of writings that seem, at the very least, racially insensitive. He really believes that no one in all of Washington State is in prison because of their race? That justice in our state is completely race-neutral and fair to all involved?

Having spent a lot of time looking at Justice Sanders' record for this feature, and having tried quite hard to understand his political philosophy, I find his current comments, like others he's made, to be alarmingly baffling—and fundamentally inconsistent.

He casts himself as a defender of individual liberties, liberties that he says are constantly under threat from an over-reaching government that will do terrible things to its most vulnerable citizens if given too much opportunity. Yet he can't imagine—just can not imagine—that this same government has put anyone in prison in Washington State for reasons connected to legacies of racial injustice?

He casts himself as an arbiter of historical truth, and is in fact quite a history buff, splitting historical hairs on whether German officers in World War II were Nazis, for example, and signing an opinion that upheld this state's ban on gay marriage based in part on his interpretation of the intent of legal writers going back to the founding of Washington State and beyond (the opinion uses the word "history" about 25 times). Yet when he's looking at African American incarceration rates he's blind to history, "hasn't seen evidence that African Americans are disproportionately imprisoned because of race," and wants anyone with proof of this dubious trend to contact him immediately?

It doesn't make sense.

And because it doesn't make sense, and is coming from a man with a mind that's well able to make sense of many other complicated socio-historical issues, it begs for another explanation.

An explanation that's not about logic or numbers or history, but something more in the realm of the irrational.

And that, yawners, is why other people—from the Chief Justice of the Washington State Supreme Court on down—find Justice Sanders' recent comments, to use the word that's already out there, stunning.

Two Different Views on Book Piracy

Posted by Paul Constant on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 1:14 PM

Slog Tipper Joe shares this link about a comic book artist whose book was pirated by 4chan and then saw his sales go through the roof. The piracy did more than a positive review at Boing Boing to help sales of his book. Here's a sales graph:

Screen_shot_2010-10-22_at_10.25.56_AM.png

On the other hand, Slog tipper Jason sent along a link to this video of young adult author Jackson Pearce responding to book piracy by making a YouTube video involving a hand puppet. (Short answer: She's very against it.)

Meet Polly: Today's Daymare

Posted by Wm.™ Steven Humphrey on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 12:38 PM

Polly kind of looks like my Aunt Wanda after the stroke. Anyway, at least now I know what I'm dressing up as for Halloween!

Thanks (?) WOW!

Vote No on King County Prop 1: It's a Tax on the Jobless

Posted by Paul Guppy on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 12:35 PM

(This guest Slog post is by Paul Guppy, vice president of research for the Washington Policy Center. More info about Prop 1 in the voters' guide is here.)

Okay, the sales tax is the most regressive and unfair tax in King County, so let’s make it higher. That’s the position of County Executive Dow Constantine and the majority on the county council in putting Proposition 1 on the ballot. They want people to vote for a tax increase or they threaten to make the county less safe by cutting policing and court services.

Proposition 1 would make the county’s tax system more regressive by increasing the sales tax to 9.7 percent, making everything from overcoats to underpants cost more. That would give Seattle the 7th highest sales tax in the country. The sales tax hits poor people hardest because the poor have to spend more—or all—of their money meeting day-to-day expenses, while the rich spend a tiny fraction of their income on daily needs.

Elected officials say they’ve cut and cut and there’s just no more to cut. But in his latest budget Executive Constantine plans to increase county spending by about 3 percent, to $5.1 billion a year.

Where’s that money going? A lot is going to pay for essential services—grea—but a lot is going to low priority stuff like $368,000 to lobby the federal government, $426,000 for county memberships and dues, $1.7 million on weed (the kind in your lawn) control and $4 million to run the Elliot Bay water taxi.

Sure, a lot of things are nice to have, like spending $1.4 million on staff planning, but are they really more important than keeping neighborhoods safe? Some people don’t like having a lot of cops around. Fair enough. But when you or one of your friends is about to become crime victim, you want a cop to show up fast.

A lot of it is going to nice salaries and benefits to some folks on the county payroll. More than 1,400 county workers make over $100,000 a year. Average pay for Metro drivers is $61,000. Metro salaries have increased 38 percent since 2000, and the County is giving Metro employees a healthy 4 percent raise. At the same time a lot of folks are laid off, or can’t get a job in the first place, but they still have to pay sales tax whenever they buy something.

I could moan all day about how the gummint wastes our money, but the failure of elected officials to set clear priorities and responsibly manage $5.1 billion is not really the point. The real point is this: Proposition 1 hits us with a regressive tax increase in the middle of a recession. Bottom line: Prop. 1 would make people who are unemployed and under-employed pay more, so people who already have good jobs can get a raise, all while adding to the inequity of our tax system.

Lunchtime Quickie: Even More Fun With Pit Bulls

Posted by Kelly O on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 12:30 PM

After you teach your pit bull how to fly, you can take him trick-or-treating! With all the neighborhood kids!!! Weeeeee!

Legalize Pot And It Will Be Harder For Kids To Get Pot

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 12:11 PM

People should be able to figure that out on their own. But people are stupid, so...

Here's hoping people in California are watching this ad—because polls are tightening. Via Sullivan.

What Should You Do if a Stranger Offers to Help You with a Task that You're Doing Alone Just Fine?

Posted by Dominic Holden on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 12:05 PM

policebeat-220.jpg
Charles Mudede hands out his advice in a special online-only Police Beat that details the stranger, the task, and the crime at hand.

Real or Spoof?: Zach Galifanaikis Interviewed by Gordon Keith on WFAA-TV, Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas

Posted by Grant Brissey on Fri, Oct 22, 2010 at 12:01 PM

This has got to be a spoof of Between Two Ferns, and if so props to this Gordon Keith fellow. I do, however, want it to be real.

h/t: Danny Noonan!

@SEAshows

The Stranger's Twitter Feed of Seattle Shows
  • Loading Tweets
    loading

Follow @SEAshows
 

All contents © Index Newspapers, LLC
1535 11th Ave (Third Floor), Seattle, WA 98122
Contact Info | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use