solarbird: (Default)
solarbird ([personal profile] solarbird) wrote2003-01-17 01:07 pm

I kind of thought I'd done this already.

We're moving the Murkworks. We don't want to, but we are.

Because we've lost.

When I decided to buy a house in the University District, up here in University Park, I looked at a few key considerations:

1) That the upzone through other areas of the U. District would result in massive new amounts of student housing, relieving economic pressure for illegal student housing up here in this single-family area.

2) That the recently-passed University Urban Plan (which included the upzoning) included a reaffirmation of Universtiy Park as a single-family-zoned area. It reconfirmed the zoning.

Economic and legal forces both pointed towards the elimination of illegal slumlord housing. Purchase trending showed a similar direction. I made a bet that I really couldn't lose; that the area would make it as what it is - and thereby continue to be great, and in fact, get nicer. And if I was wrong, and it went student-slum, well, that's emanently profitable when I sold out.

And for the first couple of years, it looked like I'd bet right.

But after the last few years - and after this past year in particular - I've learned I was wrong. Both of the assumptions are still correct - if you assume that the city will honour its agreements, or even if you just assume it will enforce its own zoning law.

Here's what's happened.

1) UW has decided - through their actions, not their statements - that they want University Park as an extension of the commercial student housing area. They're forcing an upzone, slowly. There are more details on this in nr. 3, below, but basically, they're doing everything they can to encourage illegal, upzone uses in our neighbourhood, including listing housing they know to be illegal through the Campus Housing Service, and letting it be advertised in the student newspaper.

2) DCLU - the land use/zoning agency for Seattle, in charge of zoning code enforcement and building permits - does not work. It does not function. It does not care what you do. If you apply for a permit to do something explicitly illegal in this neighbourhood, it will grant it. If you report illegal units, illegal uses, anything of the sort, they will refuse to enforce. The duplex next to me sold as an illegal triplex. I received a postcard listing the third unit as an illegal third unit - yes, the real estate agent included the word illegal - and listed the three rents. DCLU refused to enforce, saying there was no actual evidence of a third unit. They are hostile to people who attempt to make them do their jobs. They have completely abandoned their mission. I have to assume that money is involved, but regardless, the effect is a corrupt agency acting on behalf of the agents it is supposed to enforce against, and a de facto upzone to at least duplex/triplex. I think they'd stop someone from building a brand new apartment building, but I'm not even sure of that.

My favourite example is one of my rare victories. A slumlord turned their two houses' adjoining yards into a 16-car pay parking lot. It had 16 numbered stalls, posted signs - listing rates and contact information - and they were advertising in the student newspaper. Remember, this is a single-family residental-zoned neighbourhood.

The first complaint was filed in 1997. No action. I started filing complaints in 1998. The first I filed disappeared; the second one the inspector came out and, quote, "could not find it." The third one disappeared. The fourth one, again, the inspector "could not find it."

Keep in mind there's a sign. And sixteen cars parked in it. With numbered stalls.

After this, I wrote them a letter with my fifth complaint saying that I'd be keeping copies of everything I sent them along with photographs. And that I was going to the Council. Which I did. The council did nothing, but it frightened DCLU; they issued a warning and closed the case. Nothing had changed, so I filed it again Months go by as I repeatedly re-complain; eventually they have an "agreement" with the owner that he'll shut it down. The sign goes away over the summer. It's still full of cars; it's still being rented out. DCLU closes the case. (We're up to 1999, if you're wondering.) In the fall, the sign goes back up, and I start the cycle again. The sign goes back down, but again, nothing else happens. I'm screaming constantly at DCLU at this point and taking photographs about once a week. I also go to the council again. (Again, I only get a couple of form-letter replies, and no other responses.)

Eventually, I do, in fact, win. The parking lot is shut down. Posts are installed in the four spots closest to the street to keep people from parking in them. Nothing else changes - it's still a gravel lot with 12 remaining parking stalls - but the sign has stayed down. The sidewalk is trashed, it looks like hell, they were not made to clean it up in any way.

And that's what I count as a win. You can imagine what the losses are like.

Oh, did I mention that after this, DCLU "re-interpreted" the zoning law that permits no more than three cars to be parked on a lot outside in such a creative way that they're now allowed to park 17 cars there now, if they want? As long as they don't advertise it as a pay lot. This is in direct response to my complaints about illegal parking, made so that I wouldn't be able to complain anymore. They admitted that were this new construction, they wouldn't expect more than three spots across the two lots, or maybe four; but, well, this is them retaliating for me making them do their jobs, and that takes precidence.

I took that to the council, too. In person, they are, of course, appalled. Repeatedly. And do nothing.

3) UW, every 10 years, works out an agreement called the University of Washington Master Plan. It's something done with the city through an extensive process that I won't bore you with here; our neighbourhood put in hundreds of hours to it this year. The plan they submitted can be summarised by saying, "We're adding another 10,000 people, 3,500 of whom are students; we're going to build whereever and whatever we want; we offer no mitigation for any impacts this has to the neighbourhoods." Obviously, we fought them tooth and nail, and we actually won some vital concessions for our neighbourhood at the City Council level: 1) That UW would adopt a code of contact for student behaviour off campus, and 2) that UW would stop advertising illegal housing through the Campus Housing Service and student newspaper.

(UW currently has a code of conduct for students, but it stops the second you step off campus. They refuse to hear anything about student behaviour at soon as that line is crossed, no matter how bad it might be. It's a long, ugly story.)

After all the comment periods had passed, UW took most of the city council up to Canada for a junket/illegal lobbying session. The mayor, also at the last minute, ordered DCLU to change its mind and oppose, rather than support, the illegal housing provision. Astoundingly, our measures stayed on the plan - barely. So did several other mitigation efforts.

Until they went back to UW. The Board of Trustees removed all of them except one - a five storey, rather than nine storey, addition to the fence on their golf driving range on 25th Avenue - and sent it back to the council. The council proceeded to rubber-stamp it, 5-2.

And the day after that, UW went and DCLU to upzone the driving range, and got a permit for a nine-storey addition to the driving range anyway. The ink was literally barely dry.

So. UW wins everything there, in part through illegal lobbying, and we are betrayed by the mayor and the council. A lawsuit is in the offing, of which the neighbourhood association is likely to be a part, but we will not see anything from that - it's all about the rezone. The neighbourhood will join it to try to slow the upzone process, because we all know it isn't stopping there, but it won't do anything for the rest of the problems.

4) The mayor, in another betrayal, has nominated a DCLU insider to take over the vacant top management position of the agency. She is everything DCLU currently is and should not be; she is the one person we were lobbying not to get the position. She has a particular loathing for us, as we've made her agency look very bad - by simply exposing what they do - several times before the council. We got them dragged up in front of the council, in fact, though it did very little good in the end. A major goal of her administration will be to simplify zoning law and reduce restrictions on use. She wants the entire code to fit in a shirt pocket. So we will get no relief from DCLU for the next decade, even if we get a new mayor. (Which we likely will. But, well, we thought this one would help us. That was a mistake - though his opponents would have done no better.)

5) Finally, this wouldn't be too bad if the students weren't, um, awful. Of course, most of them aren't. But according to UW statistics, there are almost 2,000 binge drinker students within a 1m radius of the campus, which puts us pretty much at ground zero. Since the really bad parties were forced out of the frat houses after the incidents in 1993, they migrated up here. By "really bad" parties, I don't mean "loud." I mean, "accompanied by fights, thefts, and widespread vandalism." (Remember how UW won't extend its code of conduct; they officially don't care.)

The class of students who used to be able to afford a keg in, say, 1991, can now afford several kegs. A typical big party will have 5-6 kegs, or keg-equivalants. Students who previously couldn't afford a keg at all now can. It's not so much that people have changed; it's more that what they can afford has changed. (Likewise, in an issue that doesn't bother me, the percentage of students with cars has gone from around 30% to over 70%. That's just a guess, but it's a pretty good one. If I were guessing only from my renters, I'd say it was higher than 70%, but I'm assuming it's not really that high.)

Let me put it this way.

The police will no longer break up these parties without at least four officers present. They'll do a knock-and-talk with two, but they won't stop anything without at least four officers. This is because officers have gotten hurt trying it in smaller groups; they get attacked by the students. This isn't fear, this is experience.

And there are often only nine (9) on-duty officers for all of North Seattle after 10pm on weekends. There are supposed to be more, of course, but they're on permanent loan to downtown and Capital Hill. And now the police department is facing cuts.

Besides, most of them say, "It's the U. District - what do you expect?" And blame you for living here.

So.

I see no way we can win. None. I'd like to see one. I want to see one.

But I just don't.

[identity profile] smeehrrr.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)
So where are you going to go?

[identity profile] jessicac.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Tim and I really enjoyed living in the Central District. Close enough for a walk to Capital Hill (15-20 minute walk) the commute to the eastside on bus or driving wasn't bad, and the prices are still low-ish (rising, though, as the area is gentrified).

What is it you want to be in walking distance of?

[identity profile] princessheacock.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 02:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Sounds to me like more reasons not to buy in Seattle-proper.

MAy I suggest the suburbs?

Bellevue's nice.

[identity profile] firni.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 02:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Technically, I live in the 'burbs, and I can't hear my neighbors, or usually see them, except when the leaves are gone from the trees (and then all I can see is the squirrels in their back yard).

I do have to drive everywhere, but that's okay because I never leave the house anyway.

[identity profile] princessheacock.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 03:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Anna can tell you about the neighborhood i live in and all the places I can walk to despite living in a "suburb city"

(not that being able to walk to places was a high priority., but it was nice when I was dependent on buses for transportation)

There are other places in the city where houses are available close to places to shop (Grocery, bookstores, everything)

Note: ANywhere you go in the city you will still need to deal with city government. True getting away from University of Washington is easier. But city government is my big beef with Seattle (and, to some extent, the state of Washington)

Re: Oh, and financially...

[identity profile] princessheacock.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 02:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, that's good.

Would you stay in the landlord business if you moved?
wrog: (Default)

Re: Oh, and financially...

[personal profile] wrog 2003-01-17 05:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Actually, I think now is a really, really good time to be selling real estate, or at least, selling the spare real estate that you don't actually need for living in. The whole mortgage finance industry is apparently going to be the next bubble to pop. Yes, I know real-estate markets are very regional, but once the shit hits the fan and the easy credit evaporates, that's going to drop a nice 16-ton weight on housing prices everywhere. But I also suspect that the Seattle area is going to be particularly vulnerable because of its dependence on the moribund tech industry (the various non-Microsoft companies that aren't really doing that well), the departure of Boeing, and just the simple fact that housing here has just been going straight up without a let-up since the 70s...
(deleted comment)
wrog: (Default)

Re: Oh, and financially...

[personal profile] wrog 2003-01-19 04:48 pm (UTC)(link)
lots to say, but since it's really not about Murkworks moving anymore, I'll do it over here

[identity profile] mamishka.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 02:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Y'know, this is the kind of article that the Seattle Times or PI should write about, don't you think? It's political, it's topical, it's people oriented. If people are going to be shits and there is nothing you can do to stop them, I think it's always worth trying to get some mud on their shiny shoes via the press. Maybe they won't think it's a worthwhile story, but I think it is. And if they won't bite, talk to The Stranger or the Seattle Weekly. They probably would. I hate being fucked over, and I would much rather get even in any way that I can. >:/

A solution?

[identity profile] banner.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 03:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Sell the rental house to the Hell's Angels as a clubhouse. And trust me ALL your problems will go away very quickly! They're very big about being good neighbors and not 'fouling their own nest'. They're also not afraid to do nasty things to anyone who disturbs the peace in their neighborhoods, even corrupt politicians :-)
And if nothing else at least you'll have some revenge! ;-)

Sad when one of the most notorious biker gangs in the world is the lesser of two evils. Sadder still when they're more respectable and honest than our elected officials . . .

cap hill

[identity profile] imalion.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 07:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Capitol hill east of 15th is really nice, with big old houses and a fairly short walk to 15th and a slightly longer walk to broadway. I'd suggest at least taking a look there for murk house replacements. No idea what the prices up there are like though.

[identity profile] starfallz.livejournal.com 2003-01-17 08:04 pm (UTC)(link)
mm. this all sucks a lot. i can understand wanting to get away from the neighbors that are being a menace though. i like your house though. and how close it was to ravenna.
:( you have put so much work into it.
if it has to happen i guess it does. it is sad to see it pass though.

[identity profile] violetdawn.livejournal.com 2003-01-18 08:36 am (UTC)(link)
I empathise. We live in the Roosevelt District in apartments. There's a house on the corner next to us. Far too often for my tastes the residents of said house on the corner and all their friends come home at 2:30 after the bars have closed and stand on the corner shouting "woohoo". Now I realize that living in apartments you need to expect noise, and that's why we're moving to a house next week, but it's rediculous when you get woken from a dead sleep by shouting.

I also understand about the city council. They only take the job because it's a lot of money for so little work. A friend of mine who lives on Beacon Hill had a somewhat different problem but it amounted to the same headache. She and her husband had to rally the neighbors and attend city council meeting after meeting to attempt to save thier house. They wanted to tear it down so that they could build a new library there, despite there being a plethora of other places to build it that wouldn't involve making people sell their houses at a loss and move. They finally won that battle and saved their house, but it was at least a year and a half of your house is on the list to be torn down, okay, it's off the list, oh wait, it's on the list.

[identity profile] llachglin.livejournal.com 2003-01-18 12:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Maybe it makes sense to go to district elections for City Council. Since they're elected at large, they have no specific constituency, and they can ignore parts of the city so long as enough other parts are happy to keep electing them.

If each council member was tied to a geographic district, then that council member would have to listen to the people that lived there. That would help the neighborhoods, diffuse the power of downtown and special interests like the UW, and give people enough of a fighting chance to keep every part of the city represented.

I know I'll get jumped on for this but...

[identity profile] banner.livejournal.com 2003-01-19 12:39 pm (UTC)(link)
This is typical of college professors and administrators, they do not live in Reality, they have no CLUE as to what goes on in Reality, and they don't deal well with Reality at all.

This is also why they always hold such bizzarre political positions, with absolutely no heed to the facts or realities of the situation. This is why Tenure needs to be abolished in all college and school systems. Notice it doesn't exist anywhere in the REAL world.

That said I will point out that colleges rarely if ever treat the nearby communities well, especially liberal arts colleges, and the locals tend to hate them. You get a massive influx of people every year who don't stay there long, but because they often outnumber the locals, can easily run roughshod over the community. Because they represent a huge voting block, the politician's always cater to them and ignore the real residents.

If you look back at when the voting age was changed from 21 to 18 (I remember this, man I'm really showing my age...), you will see that nearly -every- community near a college sued the government (or was sued by the government) over the rights of college students to register as voters in that town. The town's lost and the colleges won, and the balance of power was forever shifted, allowing administrators who can't run a college on budget to be able to force the local's to do as they wished.

And very little hillarity ensued :-P

It is a beautiful part of town where you live, I'm sorry you have to move, but from what you have said, I think moving would be best. You fought the good fight, and I DO ADMIRE you for fighting it. So many people never even try anymore. We don't always win our fights, but it's having the courage of your convictions to try that makes you a better person.
wrog: (Default)

yeah, right

[personal profile] wrog 2003-01-19 10:17 pm (UTC)(link)
well, I'll happily jump on you for grinding your axe against professors in general and the Tenure system in particular when it has absolutely nothing to do with the problems that Dar is talking about. Various points in no particular order:
  • Most professors, unless they're serving as residential advisors or some such capacity, have basically zero interaction with students outside classes and office hours --- and for the folks that are just doing research, that's zero interaction, period. I suppose you could argue they need to be required to spend less time teaching/researching and more time babysitting or something, but this seems rather at odds with the idea that
    • people should perhaps stick to what they know how to do best, and
    • students are in fact adults who can and should be held responsible for managing their own lives.

  • Housing policies, campus security, and oversight of student activity, are matters of administration over which professors usually have zero control. In fact, faculty generally have a hard enough time hanging onto their own departmental budgets and grant money so as to be able to, e.g., pay their own teaching/research assistants something vaguely approaching a living wage and not have 80% of it sucked away as "overhead" to support lavish administrative facilities that provide zero useful services.
  • Administrators do not get Tenure; that would be something of a contradiction in terms. The point of Tenure, after all, is to protect 'rogue' professors who've otherwise proven to their peers their ability to do useful research from administrative retribution/dismissal for, e.g., having unpopular views or for speaking out against the administration too much. In fact one could easily imagine such folks living in places like University Park (hint: you're a faculty member, you want someplace nice to live that's somewhat close to the university, where do you go?) and thus are most likely to be far more sympathetic to Dar's concerns than they are to those of an administration that's probably screwing them over in other ways every chance it gets.

    Do assholes and nutcases sometimes get tenure? You bet. Assholes and nutcases also get appointed to corporate boards or government agencies like DCLU. They can also be elected Mayor of Seattle or President of the United States. All of these are places where the wrong individual can do far more damage than any tenured professor could even dream of. Shit happens.
  • It may be that some of the lower-level administrative folks may be unfirable because of civil service regs due to UW being a public school but that's a whole 'nother can of worms. Never mind that these aren't the folks that are setting the policies and schmoozing with the mayor/city-council.

wrog: (Default)

as for student voting ...

[personal profile] wrog 2003-01-19 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
... your arguments there likewise don't hold water.
  • If students are adults, then they necessarily have rights to representation in governments that are making decisions that affect their lives. Like anybody else, they have interests that might need safeguarding. The fact that they only arrived in town a few months ago and will be gone again in another 3 years doesn't make these interests any less important --- just because I moved into my house mere months ago doesn't mean I deserve any less representation than my next-door neighbor who's been there 30 years. If anything, I'd probably need a bit of extra help given that I don't know my way around town, who the power brokers are, etc. Even for the long-term issues, it still matters; a given student might not be there 5 years from now, but somebody else (with likely similar interests) will take his place.
    And if these interests might conflict with yours, well, too fucking bad; that's what representative democracy is all about --- you work things out; politics is the art of the possible, as they say.
  • Now if what you're saying is that most students don't actually give a damn, I'll even concede this for the sake of argument, but then what happens is they just don't bother to vote, and it's their own funeral. I'd wager a large amount of money that the Seattle city government folks care even less about what UW students might want (as opposed to what UW administration might want) than they care about University Park residents might want. Do Seattle city council candidates ever appeal to the student vote? The liberal-arts college I went to was slightly bigger than the town and not once in four years did any local politician attempt to do this; any one of them could have held a free-beer party and swamped his opponents with 4000 easy votes if your theory were correct.
  • UW does not derive its presence in local politics from the student vote, the faculty vote, or even the administrative vote. Its power derives from its presence as a large landowner, a large business, and a large inflow of tuition, grant and state money that can be channeled to all sorts of interesting purposes including lobbying. The Nordstrom family, Paul Allen, the McCaw brothers, etc... likewise leave their stamp on local politics and nobody voted for them, either. That's life in the big city.

Re: I wish that's all it was!

[identity profile] violetdawn.livejournal.com 2003-01-19 04:29 pm (UTC)(link)
The Administration is one of the reasons I didn't want to go to the UW actually.