Monday's storm largely took the region by surprise. Forecasts on Sunday morning showed a maximum of 4 inches falling south of Everett, and meteorologists thought even that was a long-shot. Some areas saw accumulations well north of 7 inches, including Bellevue, Redmond, Sammamish, and North Bend.
The snow caused a major mess during both Monday commutes. Meanwhile, snow that melted during the day was re-freezing due to frigid temperatures in the 20s across the region. SR 900 between Issaquah and Renton was closed during rush hour Monday evening due to black ice.
On June 30, 1970, the U.S. Navy deactivates the Naval Air Station at Sand Point in Seattle. The aviation facilities are to become surplus, with some land possibly to be transferred to the City of Seattle. It is renamed Naval Support Activity Seattle and assumes a role as a logistical nexus supporting Navy operations throughout Puget Sound and the Pacific.
The last Navy aircraft to touch down at Sand Point was a four-engine P3 Orion carrying Admiral Bernard Stream, who had flown in for the day from the Naval Air Station on Whidbey Island to witness the name change.
Following deactivation, a long-running debate over the use of the land developed. Proponents of maintaining its use as an airfield clashed with neighborhood groups and elected officials such as Senator Warren G. Magnuson (1905-1989) and Seattle Mayor Wes Uhlman (b. 1935), who wanted it to be a public park. Eventually, the aviation supporters lost out.
Part of the land (100 acres) became the Western headquarters of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Another 195.6 acres land became Sand Point Park, which was then renamed Warren G. Magnuson Park, after the long-serving senator. The park was dedicated on December 26, 1975.
While on NOAA’s Sand Point (Seattle) campus last week, Ben sat down with Marla Steinhoff, Mark Dix, Ben Shorr, and Doug Helton to hear about OR&R work being done on the West Coast and Alaska.
Leading the discussion was Mark Dix, Deputy Chief of OR&R’s Emergency Response Division. Mark gave an overview of OR&R’s work and the NOAA Sand Point facility.
Marla Steinhoff, an environmental scientist, discussed the status of two ongoing local cases, the Lower Duwamish River in Seattle and Portland Harbor in Oregon. The sites, both polluted by long term exposure to industrial contaminants, are both moving towards litigation. Marla discussed the Natural Resource Damage Assessment process for both these cases, as well as working with the numerous responsible parties, tribes, local government entities, and trustees.
Ben Shorr, a physical scientist whose work focuses on data management and visualization tools, spoke about OR&R’s DIVER (Data Integration, Visualization, Exploration, and Reporting), the data warehouse and query tool providing natural resource trustees and the public with the ability to access, query, visualize and download extensive information on environmental pollution, sampling, and restoration efforts. Ben also discussed ERMA (Environmental Response Mapping Application), an online mapping tool that integrates both static and near real-time data in a centralized, easy-to-use format for environmental responders and decision maker that OR&R developed jointly with the University of New Hampshire. His focus was on the value of these tools to the NRDA process.
Doug Helton, incident coordinator, spoke about spill preparedness in the Arctic region, including the state of the science concerning the use of oil dispersants in the event of a major spill. Doug also talked about his work on the Emergency Prevention, Preparedness and Response (EPPR) workgroup of the Arctic Council, the importance of OR&R’s Arctic ERMA, and OR&R’s role as NOAA representative to the Alaska Regional Response Team.
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Arthur Orville Petty, Jr., SgtMaj (Ret.), 99, of Woodbury, Tennessee passed on to Post Everlasting on Friday, July 22, 2022. He was born in Paris, Tennessee on Tuesday, August 8, 1922. Preceding him in death were his father, Arthur Orville Petty; mother, Evie May Timmons Randall; wife of 71 years, Margie Ruth Finley Petty; and sister, Betty Jane Petty Wright. He is survived by his daughters, Jeanne C.P. (Todd) Baxter and Marsha Petty both of Woodbury. It didn't matter whether you knew him as "A.O. Petty," "Art," or "Arthur Petty" because everyone he crossed paths with knew he was more than just a man. He was a true American hero. However, SgtMaj Petty was perfectly content with the title "Marine." It was one he earned throughout his life with the scaffolding starting during his childhood. Growing up in Detroit during the Great Depression, SgtMaj Petty quit school in the 8th grade and began working on the streets as a newspaper boy. SgtMaj Petty didn't just read American history. He lived it and served a vital role. When he got old enough, he joined the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), Camp #1694 in Mount Horeb, Wisconsin, where he learned discipline and teamwork. Little did he know then how fitting the job would be. Enlisting in the U.S. Marine Corp on March 13, 1941, SgtMaj Petty went on to serve in World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. At the age of 18, he started his military career at boot camp in Paris Island, South Carolina. From Paris Island, he was sent to San Diego, California, where he was told by his commanding officers that he would be going to China. Missing the boat due to measles, SgtMaj Petty was transferred to San Clemente Island in California. It was there that he quickly rose through the ranks from Private First Class to Corporal and then Sergeant from 1941 to 1943. SgtMaj Petty endeared himself to his commanding officers by entering the interservice boxing tournament. Proving he could fight with just his fists, he won two fights in a single night. They put him in charge of teaching reserve officers how to drill before earning the title of Sergeant, but that came to an end when he received new orders. In the last part of 1943, he was transferred as a replacement to K Company, 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment in Hawaii. The 2nd Division was just returning from the Battle on Tarawa in Japan, and now, it was SgtMaj Petty's turn to go overseas. From 1944 to 1945, he served as the Sergeant Squad Leader and Platoon Sergeant in K Company, 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, getting deployed to the Northern Marina Islands and Japan. The K Company landed on Saipan on June 15, 1944 for Operation Forager. Their objective was to take the city of Garapan. Once completed, they were to move inland and north. It was on the night of the largest banzai attack in history that they found themselves on top of a large cliff looking down on the battle, where history books say 3,500 Japanese lost their lives. The 27th Army Division and the Marines fought a hard battle that night. On the next morning, they moved down off the cliff and took over the battlefield. The battle lasted two more days before they reached the end of the island and officials deemed it secured. Tinian was the next island, but the battle was less fierce than what they experienced on Saipan. Then, it was on to Okinawa. On April 1, 1945, SgtMaj Petty and his Marines made their way to Okinawa. They made a fake landing on the lower end of the Pacific side of the island, while the real landing took place in the middle of the island on the China Sea side. There were three LSTs and the USS Hinsdale (APA-120) in the troop convoy. SgtMaj Petty was on one of the three ships that was hit by Kamikaze pilots. His ship was the first to be hit, leaving a large hole and blowing one Sailor and one Marine overboard. However, his was also the most fortunate of the three as the second ship was hit in the bow and set ablaze. All hands abandoned ship. The third plane came in and hit the Hinsdale above and below the water line, causing the APA to list heavily over on its side. So, SgtMaj Petty aided Marines in getting off the Hinsdale and over to safety. The LST SgtMaj Petty was on stayed at Okinawa seven days and then returned to Saipan. WWII was ending and the 2nd Division boarded ships for landing in Nagasaki, Japan. Following the atomic bombing on Nagasaki, SgtMaj Petty was part of the first group of Marines to enter the area in August 1945, earning him the title of an Atomic Veteran. After a couple of months in Japan, he was transferred to the 5th Marine Division and move from Japan to the United States. The 5th Marine Division was disbanded and consequently a train load of Marines to be discharged traveled from California to Illinois. SgtMaj Petty was put in charge of these wild Marines and would say that his time in charge of those Marines was a story in itself. He was discharged on January 7, 1946 and later on would recall details about the difficult battles during WWII as he watched his comrades around him die or get wounded. With the WWII horrors SgtMaj Petty witnessed, the term "survive" gained an entirely new and real meaning to him. Before his discharge, he had been held in service at the convenience of the government past the date his enlistment was supposed to end on March 12, 1945. However, this did allow SgtMaj Petty to finish his original mission in Saipan and witness the surrender of Japanese Captain Oba with 46 of his armed Japanese soldiers. Several Japanese soldiers escaped to the jungle and cliffs at the battle in Saipan and were hunted until they were found. Captain Oba had fled and successfully led his unit through the jungle, avoiding surrender until 18 months after the Japanese Army had officially surrendered. SgtMaj Petty's discharge was short lived, and he was called back to active duty in the Marine Corp in 1950 for the Korean War. During that time, his leadership was recognized again. In 1951, he was sent to Sidi-bel-abbis, Africa, the Headquarters of the French Foreign Legion. Upon returning stateside, it seemed that before SgtMaj Petty could catch his breath the U.S. was sending him to deal with issues from the Cold War. From 1953 to 1954, he served as the Sergeant Major for the 3rd Marine Division's Inspectors Staff for General Pepper. His job entailed visiting and inspecting all of the Marine Corps bases in Japan before returning stateside once again. SgtMaj Petty had a little time back in the states before he began his tour in the Caribbean. During his time at the Marine Corps Base Pendleton, he shot for them in both the pistol and rifle competitions. He was a N.R.A. Master in the pistol and rifle and a lifetime member of both. Then in 1958, the West Indies received their independence from Great Britain and a ceremony was held in Trinidad. SgtMaj Petty was in command of the United States Marine Drill Formation for the ceremony, so his station was moved to Trinidad. Soon after, he received the orders for reassignment to Marine Barracks, Headquarters, Tenth naval District in San Juan, Puerto Rico as Guards Chief, but he didn't let any time go to waste in showing the Marine Corp was the best of the best. His rank was reassigned to Sergeant Major only a month after arriving. The district took in Cuba, Panama, Trinidad, Roosevelt Roads Puerto Rico, and several small Posts. While there, SgtMaj Petty used his skills as a competition shooter to place fourth in the Pistol Olympic tryouts for Puerto Rico in 1960. Regretfully, the judges had to let him know he needed to be a citizen of Puerto Rico in order to join the Olympic team, but that was fine with SgtMaj Petty because he had plenty on his plate already. He and Margie served as part of the Greeting Party for Vice President Nixon, and then he received order for another assignment. From Puerto Rico, SgtMaj Petty was sent to Camp Lejuene, North Carolina. And on a fall day, called home and told Marge to watch the news. In October 1962, he flew into Guantanamo, Cuba, the night of the Cuban Missile Crisis. His objective was to set up a defense line on the fence line with the D Company, 8th Marine Division. He stayed there over two months before returning to Camp Lejeune. SgtMaj Petty's next assignment was to serve as part of President Kennedy's security team for his meeting with six Central American Presidents. In 1964, SgtMaj Petty was called for the Cypress Crisis. He served with the Sixth Fleet Amphibious Striking Arm in the Mediterranean at Point Sirius for more than 70 days. Staying on station, the Fleet showed it was willing and able to protect Americans and guarantee peace between Greece and Turkey. While stationed over in Turkey, SgtMaj Petty took the time to visit Rome, Italy and walk through the Vatican and see the Colosseum. Then, before the Cold War could be resolved, the U.S. was entering the Vietnam War. SgtMaj Petty and his Marines were deployed in May 1965 to Chu-Lai, Vietnam to begin Operation Starlite. Because of his combat experience, SgtMaj Petty stayed in the field on all Company size operations with I Company, 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marine Division. Again, SgtMaj Petty witnessed the horrors of war. He remembered how the Viet Cong were skilled at camouflage and then recalled having to assist and carry wounded Marines on stretchers to a landing zone only large enough for a single evacuation helicopter. Another time, he and his Marines took enemy prisoners and had to remove the weapons that the enemy had gotten from wounding or killing Marines from the 4th Marine Regiment. Some of those prisoners had to be taken for interrogation. Other battles that SgtMaj Petty served in before leaving Vietnam in September 1965 were: Piranha, Chu-Lai; Rice Straw-Golden Fleece, and the defense of DaNang. Unfortunately for SgtMaj Petty, the hardest part was yet to come. For SgtMaj Petty, it was personal to watch the Marines suffer and die because they weren't just Marines; they were his Marines. To add insult to injury, SgtMaj Petty returned to an ungrateful Nation, which made reintegrating to civilian life even more of a challenge. He had resumes torn up in front of him as soon as his interviewers heard he served in Vietnam. However, SgtMaj Petty tried not to take it personal and knew civilians couldn't understand the nightmare Vietnam Veterans lived. He accredited much of his progress in overcoming his challenges to his family and felt their support while he healed. SgtMaj Petty took pride in his family and in his fellow Marines. The first Marine to receive the Medal of Honor in Vietnam was Robert O'Malley, who was from the 3/3/3 I Company. In 1966, on a normal day in Camp Pendleton, SgtMaj Petty received orders to report to 8th & I, Washington DC, with his dress blues. Art knew immediately it was for O'Malley, but broke out in a sweat as he didn't know if his dress blues would fit and had no time to be issued new ones. As one of six Marines chosen by O'Malley to stand by his side, Art boarded President Johnson's Air Force One and flew to Texas where President Johnson presented the Medal of Honor to Robert O'Malley. While participating in this ceremony as part of the Receiving Line, he met the President, the President's staff, and their spouses. It was a crowning jewel in his military career to see another Marine honored. From Camp Pendleton, in the summer of 1968, AO Petty was sent to Sand Point, Seattle, Washington. As part of his duties, it fell to him to notifying families that their son or husband had died. He mourned with each of them and faced his own mental and emotional struggles after Vietnam. In 1969, with 26 years of active duty, he retired from the Marine Corps as Sergeant Major while stationed at Sand Point, Seattle. It was here that Art was able to continue his love of ocean fishing. He fished everywhere he could everywhere he was stationed-California, Trinidad, North Carolina, California, and Seattle. He loved to fish throughout his life. When he was stationed in Trinidad, he made friends with the locals, and they would go fishing every morning. All of their catches ended up getting thrown into the trunk of Art's car until it rusted out. In the 60's while California, SgtMaj Petty took out a commercial fishing license so that the extra catch could be sold. Every weekend found him selling fish to the fish market. In Seattle, it was salmon fishing that was his joy. Of all the dates throughout his military career, April 5, 1946 was the most remembered because that was the day he married the love of his life, Margie Finley Petty. SgtMaj Petty was a firm believer that behind every great man was an even better woman, and he often doted on the virtues and strength of his beloved wife in interviews. After getting married, Margie followed SgtMaj Petty to North Carolina, California, Trinidad, Puerto Rico, North Carolina, back to California, and finally Washington State. While Art was in Viet Nam, Marge and the girls lived in Madison, TN, among family. North of Seattle is where the family settled in their roots from 1968 to 1989. It was there that SgtMaj Petty found a job working for the Federal Reserve Bank in Seattle, but even a full-time job, full-time hobby, and family, it wasn't enough for SgtMaj Petty's schedule. He was a man of action with a constant urge to better himself and his community, especially for the veterans. He was a founder of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 8870 in Edmonds, WA, and as a man of commitment, he immediately became a lifetime member. He was also a member of the Alderwood Church of Christ and quickly became an active there, too. Margie and Art were married 71 years and raised two daughters, Jeanne and Marsha. Marge also had the habit for having several irons in the fire, going as far as helping to found a church in Puerto Rico while they were stationed there. Then in Washington, she supported her husband by establishing the VFW Auxiliary Unit 8870, and serving as president. They were also a family that believed in serving others and giving back; Marge served as a representative for Elizabeth Arden, as a union representative for Retail Clerks (Seattle), and as a Girl Scout leader for 20 years. When life somehow became a little too dull for the family, it seemed adventure always found them. In 1981, SgtMaj Petty and Margie visited Manila and Corregidor in the Philippines; Hong Kong, China; Guam; Saipan; and Tinian. In Manila, a number of Marines and their wives were talking to the past Secretary General of the United Nations, Romulo, when his phone rang. It was President Marcos of the Philippines, and he had Romulo bring everyone over to the Palace to have dinner with him. During part of this grand adventure, SgtMaj Petty and Margie returned to the old WWII battlefields in the Pacific. While on Tinian, they visited the monuments where the atomic bombs were loaded into the bomb bays of the B-29s that bombed Hiroshima on August 8, 1945 and Nagasaki on August 9, 1945. On Saipan, the Veterans and their wives broke ground for a monument to the Veterans of the Battle of Saipan in WWII. SgtMaj Petty could not have been more proud of his wife, and she couldn't be more proud of him either. At the end of his military career, SgtMaj Petty could claim that he survived three of the major wars in U.S. history-two of which he served in combat. As a Marine, he served in five of the six Marine Divisions. He held the billet of Sergeant Major as a Master Sergeant and was a First Sergeant or Sergeant Major in nine separate battalions and Marine Barracks. He was stationed at: Camp Elliott, California; Camp Lejeune, North Carolina; Camp Pendleton, California; Chagaramus, Trinidad; Gefu, Japan; Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; Hawaii; Nagasaki, Japan; Okinawa; Parris Island, South Carolina; Saipan; San Clemente Island, California; San Diego, California; San Juan, Puerto Rico; Seattle, Washington; Tinian; and Vietnam. By the time they moved to Cannon County to settle down, SgtMaj Petty had met and shook hands with President John F. Kennedy and President Linden B. Johnson. He'd met Chiefs of Staff, a past President of the United Nations, and Governors. This highly-decorated Marine flew on Air Force One, had dinner with a former President of the Philippines, and even met and conversed with former enemy Japanese Captain Oba in Orlando, Florida during a trip in 1986. He is included in five books about the Vietnam War and has had numerous articles and interviews written about him. Even with all of his accolades and accomplishments, SgtMaj Petty didn't let the attention go to his head. He remained a quiet, well-mannered, non-assuming, disciplined, and humble man, but quiet didn't mean you wouldn't notice him. SgtMaj Petty was sure to leave an impact everywhere he went. During his time in Cannon County, he became an active member of Veterans and Concerned Citizen of Cannon County, Hilton Stone American Legion Post 279, and Sunny Slope Church of Christ. He also had the hope of passing on the impact of living history through stories from his military career. However, just words weren't good enough to truly tell the story of history that is often taken for granted. So, SgtMaj Petty took matters into his own hands and made a museum in Clyde Todd's old milk barn that had been converted to an apartment. It included Marine Corps medals and memorabilia from all over the world as well as books, films, and former top secret wartime documents. It may have not made it onto the list of the wonders of the world, but it sure has been one for Cannon County. If you ask how SgtMaj Petty defied all of odds and survived 3 major wars, divine intervention is sure to come into the conversation. God had a plan for SgtMaj Petty beyond what he could comprehend, but this soldier for Christ lived his eulogy and demonstrated what a life of sacrifice and service truly looks like. Through times of doubt and turmoil, SgtMaj Petty found those footprints in the sand that carried him through some of the most tragic events a single man could endure. That is why SgtMaj Petty was so much more than a man. He was a Marine and proud to be an American. Visitation will be held at Gentry-Smith Funeral Home on Thursday, July 28, 2022 from 4-8 pm. Funeral services will be Friday, July 29, 2022 at 2 pm in the Gentry-Smith Funeral Home chapel. Richard Burks will officiate. Interment will be in Curlee Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the family is asking for memorial donations to be made to the Veterans and Concerned Citizens for the Veterans of Cannon County, Hilton Stone American Legion Post 279, or one of the Parkinson's foundations. Share memories and condolences at www.gentrysmithfuneralhome.com Gentry-Smith Funeral Home, 303 Murfreesboro Rd. Woodbury, TN 37190, 615-563-5337 because every life has a story
Published by Gentry-Smith Funeral Home - Woodbury on Jul. 25, 2022.
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Four U.S. Army planes take off from Sand Point Airfield (later the site of Seattle's Magnuson Park) on the morning of April 6, 1924, on the first flight around the world.
One plane could not take off, but the removal of some unauthorized tools and a case of Scotch whiskey reduced the weight and it soon followed the others. The fate of the Scotch is not recorded.
The large, single-engine biplanes hopped along a 30,000-mile route north to Alaska, south and west along the coastline of Asia to India, across Turkey, Europe, and the United States to San Francisco, and finally up the coast to Seattle.
Two of the Douglas Air Cruisers were lost en route, but without injury to their crews. A cheering crowd of 40,000 greeted the two original planes, plus a third plane that had joined the flight in Nova Scotia, when they touched down at Sand Point at 1:37 p.m. on September 28, 1924.
The historic flight was a boost to King County efforts to persuade Congress to acquire and develop Sand Point as a military airbase. The County alternately wooed the Navy and the Army, and ended up deeding the site to the Navy in 1926. An isolationist Congress finally appropriated $1 million for a Naval Air Station the following year.
As KIRO Radio listeners learned recently, Seattle’s National Archives facility, a fixture in the city’s Sand Point neighborhood since 1963, may be sold, and the contents shipped to Riverside, California.
This facility sits on 10 acres across the street from Magnuson Park, and is operated by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The building is an old U.S. Navy warehouse built in the 1940s that was converted to a federal archives in 1963.
It holds millions of documents, photos and maps — all federal records — for Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Alaska, dating all the way back to the 1840s. These are foundational documents — essentially, the administrative and bureaucratic DNA — from the tumultuous years when the Native ground of the Pacific Northwest officially became part of the United States.
The research room there is open to the public, and is used by professional and amateur historians, students, legal researchers, genealogists, and Native Americans to access priceless historical records for a multitude of cultural, legal and other purposes. Only a tiny fraction has been digitized or is available online.
As it turns out, the Sand Point facility quietly made it onto a list of a dozen federally owned “high value assets” that the federal government wants to sell through an expedited process, as part of a law that Congress passed in 2016 and was signed by President Obama.
A federal agency called the Public Buildings Reform Board (PBRB) put the list together, and submitted it to the Office of Management and Budget for approval. With no formal public engagement process, the OMB will decide by Sunday, Jan. 26 whether or not to accept the recommendations of the PBRB.
Pacific Northwest historians and others who care about these sorts of things (full disclosure: Myself included), simply don’t want these valuable and one-of-a-kind materials to leave Seattle.
However, even for those who couldn’t care less about history or archival treasures, the utter lack of public process before deciding the fate of a building that has served a critical role for nearly 60 years doesn’t feel right.
Since KIRO Radio and MyNorthwest first shared this story last Wednesday, countless people have reacted on social media and sent letters to elected officials. Several people have expressed a feeling of being blindsided, and then frustrated by having no formal way to lodge a complaint. At least two KIRO Radio listeners sent messages to noted historian Henry Louis Gates Jr. asking for his help.
The reaction has been particularly swift and angry in Alaska. Historians and others there feel twice-burned, because the Anchorage facility of the National Archives was shut down in 2014, and much of the material was sent to Seattle. As with the materials from Washington, Oregon and Idaho, only a tiny fraction of the Alaska materials have been digitized.
Alaska historian Pennelope Goforth is particularly incensed.
“There should have been more of a public process,” Goforth said by phone on Sunday. “Although, I guess in their defense, when you talk about ‘public asset reform,’ people just go to sleep.”
The failure of the Public Buildings Reform Board, OMB, or any of the elected officials who knew about the possible closure and sale of the Seattle facility to seek public input is an egregious way to implement a program whose goals are government efficiency, Goforth says.
“This turned out to be really horrendous,” she said.
Since late last week, Goforth has led a grassroots opposition effort in Alaska and mobilized historical organizations and elected officials to voice their support for keeping the Seattle facility open. Goforth shared letters of support from the presidents of the Cook Inlet Historical Society and the Alaska Historical Society.
Also since late last week, KIRO Radio has reached out multiple times to the staff of U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, and Seattle City Councilmember Alex Pedersen to gauge these officials’ reactions to the news, and to ask what each was willing to do to try and keep the National Archives facility from closing down.
On Tuesday, Rep. Jayapal wrote:
I’m deeply troubled that the Public Buildings Reform Board [PBRB] neglected to brief state and local elected officials or engage the local public on their proposal to sell the NARA [National Archives and Records Administration] facility in Sand Point, Seattle. When the PBRB contacted my office, they notified my staff that they intended to conduct outreach to state and local officials and stakeholders — critical input when the federal government is proposing to close facilities that serve the public. I urge OMB to withhold approval on the PBRB‘s recommendations until it consults with state and local officials and engages the public.
Rep. Jayapal’s staff also provided the following:
As our office has delved into this issue because of news reports and constituent feedback, it is now clear that that the PBRB failed to engage the Mayor, City Council, or other local leaders in its process. There have also been no general opportunities for the public to engage or provide feedback on the proposal. The law clearly requires that PBRB ‘consult with State and local officials on information, proposals, and other data that the officials submit to the Board’ and ‘conduct public hearings.’ Rep. Jayapal believes these are important steps and no sale should go forward until the local community has had a chance to weigh in. Rep. Jayapal will be sending a letter to OMB calling on them to withhold approval of PBRB’s recommendations until such a process has been initiated and completed.
Also on Tuesday, Kamaria Hightower, a spokesperson for Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan wrote:
Unfortunately, this move by the Office of Management and Budget has had limited input from our community, stakeholders and the tribes[,] and comes as a surprise to leaders not only in our state but [also] Alaska, Idaho, and Oregon. Mayor Durkan has had discussions with members of the federal delegation about this issue.
A staff member from the office of one of Washington’s United States Senators said late last night that they are tracking the issue and are aware of the looming January 26 deadline, despite being otherwise occupied with the impeachment trial that began Tuesday in the Senate.
Thank you to Feliks Banel for originating this news story about a federal agency that is recommending the sale of the Federal Archives and Records Center located at 6125 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115. This 73-year old building is located in the congressional district of U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal and my City Council District 4 near the neighborhoods of Hawthorne Hills, Belvedere Terrace, Windermere, and Magnuson Park.
I was contacted by the federal government for the first time on Monday, January 13, 2020, specifically by the Public Buildings Reform Board (PBRB). According to the PBRB, this was the first time they had reached out to local government regarding the sale of this property, though they stated they had already contacted Congresswoman Jayapal’s office as well as the staff of U.S. Senators Murray and Cantwell.
Over the past week I alerted community leaders, the University of Washington, the City of Seattle’s Office of Intergovernmental Relations, the Mayor’s Office and, the Mayor’s Office of Housing. I also requested a briefing by the PBRB, which they are offering to provide in mid-February. As Mr. Banel has accurately noted, this is after the January 26 deadline for which the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) will decide to approve or reject the plans for this property.
My office let PBRB know that this timeline is unacceptable and we are in the process of scheduling a phone call with their office before January 26. I also told PBRB I am concerned about what appears to be a lack of public engagement for the proposed sale of the property. As I understand it, the law which is the basis for the proposed sale (the Federal Asset Sale and Transfer Act of 2016) requires public engagement as well as local public hearings sponsored by the federal agency.
My team will continue to follow this issue closely and bring much needed accountability, transparency, and public discourse to this process.
And last but not least, should the OMB decision go forward and the process to close and sell the Seattle National Archives facility kicks into high gear, KIRO Radio reached out to the office of Washington State Attorney General Bob Ferguson to ask if would he consider a lawsuit to reverse the decision.
In an email Tuesday, Attorney General Ferguson’s communications director Brionna Aho wrote:
As [Attorney General] Ferguson always says, he has three criteria he looks at before filing a lawsuit: Are Washingtonians being harmed, do we have standing to bring a lawsuit, and do we have good legal arguments. I wouldn’t get more specific than that at this time.
A PBRB staff member said they will post the OMB decision on their website as soon as it becomes available. It’s not clear if the decision will be made on January 26, or if that is the latest the decision could be made.