Posts tagged as:

Craig Thompson

joserizalFrom Craig Thompson, Beacon Alliance of Neighbors:

This morning, Katashi Oita’s grandchildren told me Mr. Oita passed away from pneumonia a few months ago. He was in his late 80s. Mr. Oita was one of the original founders of our community council along northwest and west Beacon Hill, was instrumental in establishing the off-leash area at Dr. Jose Rizal Park, and actively engaged city government to make programs for seniors.

In World War II, Mr. Oita served in U.S. Army Intelligence in the Pacific Theatre. He contracted tuberculosis on a troopship, and had a lung removed. He went on to a successful career in engineering, earning advanced degrees. He once told me how impressed he was with the life of Dr. Rizal, and made a point of visiting the Rizal Museum in Manila.

He was a past officer of the Nisei Veterans Committee Memorial Hall, and last year attended the rededication of the hall, which was also attended by Senator Daniel Inouye.

Mr. Oita cared deeply about Beacon Hill, his family, his neighbors. He owned several houses on northwest Beacon Hill, including mine at one time, but finally settled into the top floor of a small apartment building at 12th Ave. S and Judkins, now owned by his relatives. He said, “I have the best view in Seattle.” He overlooked the park he’d helped create, the changing skyline of the city he called home, the comings and goings of vessels at port, the passages of the people he knew.

He was a brave man and a good one. The neighborhood will miss him.

Katashi Oita – 85 – was instrumental in establishing the off-leash area at Dr. Jose Rizal Park. He died Feb. 11. Photo by Said Israilov/Courtesy of the Outdoor Opportunities program

Beacon Hill neighbor Craig Thompson is a professional writer who has also been a teacher, carpenter, landscaper, gardener, and cook, a civilian military trainer and technical editor, a poet and playwright, a jack of trades to practice the craft of words:

Please stop talking. You will have 20 minutes to complete this portion of the test.

1. I’d rather spend an evening with:
(a) Real Change Executive Director Tim Harris
(b) Washington State Initiative Icon Tim Eyman
(c) City of Seattle Deputy Mayor Tim Ceis
(d) Tim’s Potato Chips

2. Who never met a developer he didn’t like?
(a) Charles Royer
(b) Norm Rice
(c) Wes Ulman
(d) All of the above

3. Tunnel is to viaduct as:
(a) Pick is to puck
(b) Pick is to peck
(c) Pick is to pack
(d) Pick is to pocket

4. I’d rather buy drugs in:
(a) Belltown
(b) Fremont
(c) The U District
(d) Bartell’s

5. Sound Transit is to rapid transit as:
(a) Northern Tier is to pipeline
(b) Olympic Pipeline is to Bellingham
(c) Husky Stadium is to public funding
(d) Budweiser is to beer

6. I’d rather put my money in:
(a) Rainier Bank
(b) Seattle First
(c) Washington Mutual Savings
(d) My wallet

7. Post Intelligencer is to The Times as:
(a) KUOW is to The Weekly
(b) The Stranger is to The Weekly
(c) Cross Currents is to The Weekly
(d) Rosebud is to hearse

8. What I get out of my property taxes:
(a) Neighborhood schools
(b) Plugged potholes
(c) A cop on every corner
(d) More property taxes

9. WTO is to downtown as:
(a) Qwest is to Safeco
(b) Tissue is to teargas
(c) SAC is to opera house
(d) Paul Schell is to Norm Stamper

10. Where do Seattle Times editorial writers live?
(a) Phinney Ridge
(b) Mercer Island
(c) Madison Park
(d) Not in the South End

11. The best money spent on art in the City is by:
(a) Artist Trust
(b) The Mayor’s Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs
(c) The Seattle Arts Commission
(d) SEED

12. Sleaze is to puppy as:
(a) Democrat is to King County
(b) Republican is to Bellevue
(c) Weyerhauser is to Boy Scout
(d) Horn is to Weeks

13. Which is the accepted term?
(a) Seahawks Stadium
(b) Mariners Stadium
(c) Ratcity Arena
(d) All of the above

14. Hannauer is to hydroplane as:
(a) Bruner is to Boat Show
(b) George is to journalism
(c) Savage is to sex
(d) Holmgren is to football

15. The absolute best place for coffee:
(a) Your kitchen
(b) Café Ladro
(c) The B&O
(d) Starbucks at Rainier and MLK Way

16. Monorail is to real estate as:
(a) Margaret is to stripper
(b) Heidi is to stripper
(c) Jim is to stripper
(d) Council is to Colacurcio

17. When I think Italian, I think:
(a) The Poor Italian
(b) Pagliacci’s
(c) Domino’s
(d) Remo’s

18. Interagency cooperation does not include:
(a) The Port of Seattle
(b) The Seattle School District
(c) The City of Seattle
(d) Seattle

19. The best place to buy ethnic food:
(a) Ballard
(b) Chinatown
(c) Little Saigon
(d) The taqueria bus

20. Which is correct?
(a) University District
(b) Central Area
(c) North End
(d) South End

{ 2 comments }

From Beacon Hill resident Craig Thompson:

A couple of weeks before the election, I got my first notice of candidacy. Through no fault of my own, I was running for office, 37th District Representative to the State House in Olympia.

All the votes are counted.

The incumbent, Sharon Tomiko Santos, will keep her seat. Hers was the only name for that seat on the ballot.

We never had a debate, though we did meet face to face.

At a community council meeting, our representative told 35 neighbors and state and city reps we weren’t diverse.

Only we were.

Half of the people present were Asian or African American, or multicultural. Our meeting included gays and straights, Jewish Americans and Americans of other or no faiths.

Next morning, a Wednesday, I got the message. A pal told me she’d voted for me as a write-in candidate. Then I got another message. And another. And another.

Before long, I was running for office.

I relished victory.

Odds were steep, but pebbles can make a landslide.

There was a lot of friction at that meeting. Sharon asked us by way of introduction, “Why am I here?”

Our only answer: “We’re your constituents.”

She didn’t care.

She challenged us about two other elected officials, Adam Kline and Eric Pettigrew, and whether they’d met with neighbors before.

They have, with Beacon Hill, Little Saigon, Jackson Place, Rainier Valley and other community leaders over the Dearborn Goodwill development. Together, we landed Seattle’s first binding community benefits agreement. It sets a precedent for the South End, a model for all Seattle.

Larry Gossett and Dow Constantine have engaged Beacon Hill. So have Sally Clark, Tim Burgess, Nick Licata, Jan Drago, plus Norm Rice, David Della and Peter Steinbreuk in their days. And Jim McDermott and Greg Nickels.

Cheryl Chow – how lucky we are to have her in public life – calls Beacon Hill home. So did Sharon Tomiko as a girl.

Zack Hudgins, 11th District Rep, used to live around the corner, he still cares about us. He’s the model of a representative. He helped bring Fisher House to Beacon Hill, so vets’ families have a place to stay while they get treatment at the local VA hospital – and went to Iraq to lead Iraqis in workshops on democracy.

Patty Murray and Dave Reichert came to Beacon Hill for the Fisher House dedication. Without Patty Murray, the South End leg of light rail would not have happened. Zack stays on top of how state policy affects Beacon Hill.

Most of my electeds walk the talk.

Would I become one?

My past is…interesting. Interesting people lead interesting lives.

A run for office would embarrass no one but me.

Still if Ronald Reagan could become governor, then president, Sonny Bono end up in the House of Representatives from Palm Springs, and Al Franken run seriously for the US Senate from Minnesota and Saturday Night Live, perhaps my more youthful indiscretions could boost a run to an august body.

I hope State Representative Tomiko Santos listens up, there’s more to Beacon Hill than the 37th District Democrats know about.

But, then, there’s the city.

And the state.

Our nation.

We are a broader community together than we are this or that, to be reckoned with, it’s our job to make the Constitution true.

I want to thank all those who scribbled my name on ballots, that’s spelled “Craig.”

Maybe next time, I’ll have a yard sign.

Craig Thompson writes Beacon Lights: A Beacon Hill Blog. He is a professional writer who has also been a teacher, carpenter, landscaper, gardener, and cook, a civilian military trainer and technical editor, a poet and playwright, a jack of trades to practice the craft of words. Email him here.

Related:

Last month we told you about State Representative Sharon Tomiko-Santos and her embarrassing performance at the October 18th meeting of the Beacon Alliance of Neighbors’ (BAN).

Today, BAN spokesman Craig Thompson published a rundown of said meeting at Beacon Lights: A Beacon Hill blog:

She was dismissive of public safety concerns and the importance of the Mountains to Sound Trail. She showed no knowledge of the efforts of thousands of volunteers who have honored the memory of the Filipino national hero Dr. José Rizal by making one of two parks in the United States commemorating him a safe, accessible, and beautiful place.

She insulted everyone in the room. I was glad that Cynthia Welti, Executive Director of the Mountains to Sound Greenway Trust, left before the state rep characterized the Greenway as just “a trail.” Some neighbors walked out.

Read more here.

Related:

{ 12 comments }