Responding to safety: Courthouse Vicinity Improvement effort
Over the summer, several incidents of assault were reported in downtown Seattle around the King County Courthouse building, including assaults on residents reporting for jury duty.
As a result King County, the City of Seattle, Downtown Emergency Service Center (DESC) at The Morrison and the Metropolitan Improvement District (MID) began working together on a new initiative – the Courthouse Vicinity Improvement effort – to improve the safety and cleanliness around the Courthouse for employees, visitors and residents of the area.
Along with need for increased security, cleaning up the sidewalk areas outside of the Metro Transit tunnel exits, City Hall Park and Prefontaine Fountain all needed attention.
Meg Goldman, a Project Manager with the Department of Executive Services, is organizing King County’s collaborative effort to implement improvements to the safety and cleanliness of the area.
“I help everyone understand and prioritize the issues, formulate a response and help with internal communications,” Meg said. “It has been a successful collaboration with key stakeholders coming together to define the problem and set out concrete short-term solutions.”
The goals of the group are to stay informed on crime and incident statistics, ensure ongoing information sharing and communication among stakeholders, and develop collaborative County-City-community solutions.
The Courthouse Vicinity Improvement effort is focused on serving a four-block radius that encompasses Third Avenue around the Courthouse, City Hall Park, Prefontaine Fountain and the Pioneer Square transit stations.
The collaboration has led to better security, higher frequency of garbage collection, street cleaning and signage for jurors and residents looking for the Courthouse.
“Effective partnership is vital, due to the fact that the park and sidewalk area is under city jurisdiction, while the courthouse is a County building; the County can’t address these conditions alone,” Superior Court Presiding Judge Laura Inveen said. “The outside perimeter is now cleaner, waste is being removed regularly, and the tents and furniture have been removed from the City Hall Park.”
“There is also a presence of County security officers outside the entrance of the courthouse, which seems to make employees and jurors and others who use the courthouse more at ease,” Judge Inveen said.
As the partnership continues, so too will renewed efforts and new initiatives, including some longer term improvements to City Hall Park. King County remains steadfast on finding long-term solutions to address security, safety and cleanliness.
For now, the short-term solutions are working. “Success looks like a safe, clean, welcoming neighborhood where jurors feel comfortable and secure participating in their roles as jurors and citizens,” Meg said.
Employees are encouraged to report incidents that don’t rise to the need for a call for police assistance using the security incident report form.
Tech Tip: How to wake up your work computer remotely
We prefer that employees take their laptop home when they work from home, but if you have a desktop, that’s not possible. This video shows you how to wake up your computer remotely so you don’t have to ask a co-worker to turn it on when you work from home.
Featured Job: Engineer I – CAD
Closing Date/Time: Sun. 11/26/17 11:59 PM Pacific Time
Salary: $31.23 – $39.58 Hourly
Job Type: Career Service, Full Time, 40 hrs/week
Location: King Street Center – 201 S Jackson St, Seattle, Washington
Department: Department of Natural Resources & Parks – Water and Land Resources Division
Description: This position is located in the Capital Improvement & Preservation Unit within the Stormwater Services Section. Projects in our unit include drainage improvement to minimize flooding, manage stormwater runoff to improve water quality, retrofit stormwater facilities to improve and restore their functions. This unit also provides support to many other Capital Improvement Programs (CIP) within DNRP (e.g. Ecological Restoration and Engineering Unit, River and Floodplain Management Section, Parks) and CIP in KCDOT Roads. This position is to provide CAD and Civil3D services and survey support to civil engineers, ecologists, scientists, and project managers.
Contact: For more information contact Michelle Kobuki at Michelle.Kobuki@kingcounty.gov or at 206-477-4740.
Learn more about this position, or view all available jobs.
Kudos! Clinic staff receive rave from Seattle Times readers
This piece was featured at the top of the Seattle Times’ Rant and Raves list. Kudos to the people working at the Seattle/King County Clinic!
“RAVE To the selfless, kind people who took time out of their busy working lives to provide free medical and dental care to people in need at the Seattle/King County Clinic at Seattle Center on Oct. 26-29.”
Social Media Spotlight: King County Emergency News blog

This blog is maintained by King County Emergency Management. In the event of a widespread disaster or other significant event, it will be used to inform residents in King County, Washington and the central Puget Sound region. The information provided may include safety tips, emergency directives, ways to stay informed, and important updates.
Follow the King County Emergency News blog today!
Click here to view all King County social media pages.
Reminder: Current Administrative Professionals are invited to attend a focus group
The Administrative Professionals Advisory Committee has scheduled a second series of focus groups to hear directly from administrative professionals regarding the success of the program and what is needed to improve it. Feedback provided will help the committee learn how to best support administrative professionals at King County. Register for one of the following focus group sessions:
- Tuesday, November 14, 2017 from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. – Register here
- Thursday, November 16, 2017 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. – Register here
- Wednesday, December 6, 2017 from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. – Register here
We will pay to train you
Crossposted from Clean Water Stories
Our business is unconventional – and that works for a lot of our employees.
We get it. Any of us who work here at King County’s Wastewater Treatment Division (WTD) have been asked what we do for a living – and we’ve seen the smirks and heard the giggles when we explain we help run the region’s sewer utility.
Most of us did not seek out a career in wastewater, but many of us were pleasantly surprised when we found one. The people who operate our treatment plants and build our projects say things like…
- “I like that my job is more than just working in an office.”
- “I was hooked on the first treatment plant tour.”
- “I love the water, and why not be a part of protecting it?”
Read more at Clean Water Stories
Success! Nonprofit Expo hosts a full house
Crossposted from KC Employee Giving
On November 1, Chinook hosted the final Nonprofit Expo Roadshow for this year’s Annual Giving Drive. The conference room was filled from wall to wall with 14 nonprofit organizations, and 70 County employees filtered through from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Organizations that attended the Expo run the gamut from the Make-A-Wish Alaska and Washington to Leukemia & Lymphoma Society to Project Canine and Feral Cat Spay/Neuter Project. Other nonprofit organizations that attended offer services that empower women, provide assistance to marginalized groups and environment preservation.
Read more at KC Employee Giving
Honoring our Veterans through workplace giving
Crossposted from KC Employee Giving
In observance of Veterans Day 2017, we would like to encourage King County employees to give back to the men and women who have served to make America the land of the free. Here are some nonprofits who work to support veterans:
Heartbeat Serving Wounded Warriors (9525) PO Box 704 Snohomish, WA 98291 – provides emergency assistance, morale building programs and innovative therapeutic services for Wounded Warriors and their families.
Last year, Heartbeat assisted 4,730 Wounded Warrior families. Although the organization’s primary focus are families, 20% of soldiers are single. Most notably, Heartbeat recently began providing assistance to disabled children of wounded warriors in their Equine program.
Read more at KC Employee Giving
Prosecuting Attorney’s Office profile: Sean Goode
If you wanted to create a profile for the type of kid who would end up involved in drugs, in gangs, in the juvenile justice system, Executive Director of the Choose 180 Program Sean Goode says the description would match his childhood.
Both of Sean’s parents struggled with mental health diseases: his father with schizophrenia; his mother with a personality disorder. His drug-and-alcohol-dependent father was also highly abusive.
“We left my father when I was 8,” Sean says. “I lived in 12 different places in 12 different years of school. As a result, I dealt with a whole lot of issues, including suicide attempts when I was small.”
Sean’s sister ran away from home. His brother was sent to juvenile prison as an early teenager for murder. Despite all the factors that might also have landed Sean in the juvenile justice system, Sean’s life took a different turn.


