Program could eliminate some crime around businesses

Christopher Anderson, North County Outlook

To help business owners combat property crimes that can potentially drive away customers, a new Business Watch program is being unveiled for the Marysville and Tulalip communities.

The program will be similar to Marysville’s Neighborhood Watch program which has helped residents keep watch for their neighbors for more than two decades, according to Doug Buell, the city’s Public Information Officer.

Marysville and Tulalip police have partnered for the program.

The Neighborhood Watch program has been successful because it helps in many objectives including: “getting neighbors to know one another, identifying common issues, setting shared goals, building a familiarity among each other, which allows for greater crime prevention through awareness,” explained Mark Thomas, the Marysville Police lieutenant who will run the program.

By getting neighboring businesses to work together, Thomas feels that the Business Watch program can also be successful and help businesses identify suspicious behavior faster.

The program is meant to help business owners control their own fate when it comes to crime in their community, said Rick Smith, Marysville’s chief of police.

“The philosophy of Business Watch is to take control of what happens in your business community and lessen your chance of becoming a victim,” said Thomas.

“It is going to be imperative that we work together,” he said at the Greater Marysville Tulalip Business Before Hours Breakfast at the Tulalip Resort on May 31. “These have been difficult times of uncertainty for businesses and the economy. We want to bring certainty back into your lives.”

Business Watch provides a way to actively reduce and prevent crime through cooperation and education, said Thomas. “It provides a platform to help teach merchants to ‘crime-proof’ their own properties, watch over their neighbor’s property, and report and document suspicious behavior.”

Thomas says it’s often the simple day-to-day things that can prevent crime, like being vigilant or instituting changes inside and outside the office that make it difficult for criminals to operate.

Establishing a Business Watch requires continued commitment and dialogue, noted Buell.

“Business Watch, like Neighborhood Watch, is a program that is run by you, the group. It can be as involved and complex or as simple and straight forward as you want it to be,” said Thomas.

The first steps include forming a planning committee to discuss needs and problems, conducting a business survey, planning a kickoff event and convening an initial meeting to identify members and name officers.

If you’re interested in starting a Business Watch group in the Marysville/Tulalip community, contact Lieutenant Mark Thomas at 360-363-8321 or mthomas@marysvillewa.gov, Bob Rise at 363-363-8325 or MVP@marysvillewa.gov, or Tulalip Deputy Chief Carlos Echevarria at 363-716-4608 or cechevarria@TulalipTribalPolice.org.

Andrew Morrison Adds Geronimo, Sitting Bull to Seattle School Mural

andrew-morrisonIndian Country Today Media Network

When ICTMN last covered Andrew Morrison, he was still fighting to preserve the murals he painted on the exterior of Seattle’s American Indian Heritage School.

Yet the fight was not merely about preserving works of art—it was a manifestation of the Native community’s fight to save its school, a key part of its identity. See the article “Will Endangered Seattle School Murals Be Saved?” for more of the story.

On May 31, Morrison made good on his stated plans to complete the wall by adding portraits of Sitting Bull and Geronimo to those of Chief Joseph and Chief Seattle. The feat was accomplished in a day-long painting session, with help from fellow muralists.

“I actually feel like I have lived a fulfilled life,” Morrison says toward the end of the clip. “I really feel like there’s nothing else to pursue at this moment. This is my gift to the Indian country. I really feel, at this point, May 31, 2013, my life was fulfilled.”

Andrew Morrison Adds Geronimo, Sitting Bull to Seattle School Mural (video)

Read more at https://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/06/18/andrew-morrison-adds-geronimo-sitting-bull-seattle-school-mural-video-149969

Even after fix, Skagit bridge will be ‘functionally obsolete’

Jerry Cornfield, The Herald

Millions of tax dollars are being spent to temporarily fix then permanently repair an I-5 bridge that collapsed into the Skagit River.

But when the work’s all done, Washington will be left with exactly what it had before: A functionally obsolete, fracture-critical 58-year-old bridge that could come crashing down the next time it gets smacked hard enough in the right place.

“While it’s going to be in the same (classification of bridge), it’s going to be safe to drive on,” said Travis Phelps, a state Department of Transportation spokesman. “We’ll continue to inspect our bridges every two years to make sure they are in good shape.”

Tearing it down and building a brand spanking new bridge might be desired but Washington can’t afford it.

“Right now we don’t have the funding to replace the bridge,” Phelps said.

That means it will retain the same rating it had the evening of May 23 when a southbound semi-truck hauling an oversized load in the right lane struck several of the bridge’s overhead trusses, causing a 160-foot section to tumble into the river. Two vehicles went into the water, but the three occupants survived.

It’s still going to be functionally obsolete because it was not designed to handle today’s traffic volumes, Phelps said. Moreover the trucks traveling on the bridge are taller, wider and heavier then those on the road when this four-lane bridge opened in 1955.

Washington had 1,624 functionally obsolete bridges as of February 2009, according to a tally published by the Federal Highway Administration. The total includes 55 in Skagit County and 104 in Snohomish County.

Absent a complete replacement, the bridge will continue to be deemed fracture critical, which means it is one freak accident away from collapse. There are thousands of bridges in the same condition nationwide.

Phelps said it will be safe to drive on when a temporary span opens as early as this week. A permanent segment will be in place by Oct. 1.

Atkinson Construction of Renton received an emergency $10 million contract to demolish the damaged portion, remove debris from the water and put in a temporary four-lane segment. Acrow Bridge, a New Jersey firm with offices in Washington, is designing the section.

Crews spent the weekend aligning and securing the spans and hoped to begin putting in the bridge deck today, Phelps said. The deck will need to be paved with asphalt and the lanes striped. Once it reopens, traffic will be required to drive much slower than before because the lanes will only be 11-feet wide, roughly a foot narrower than they were before.

Also Monday, bids are due for the contract to provide a permanent bridge replacement. The state estimates it will cost between $3 million and $10 million.

The contract is scheduled to be awarded Wednesday morning.

Federal funds will cover 100 percent of the costs of the temporary fix and 90 percent of the permanent replacement.

Thus far the federal Department of Transportation has committed $16.6 million for the two projects from its Emergency Relief Fund. The federal agency provided $1 million in the days following the collapse and then last week pledged another $15.6 million.

2013 Northwest Indian Gaming Conference & Expo

WIGA is proud to announce:

2013 Northwest Indian Gaming Conference & Expo

July 15-17, 2013

The 2013 Northwest Indian Gaming Conference and Expo will be held July 15-17, 2013 at the Tulalip Resort Casino in Tulalip, Washington, about 30 miles north of Seattle, directly on I-5 at exit 200.

The Tulalip Tribe’s Resort includes the Tulalip Casino, 378 hotel rooms and luxury suites, casual and fine dining restaurants, the Spa, and 30,000 sq. ft. of conference space. Tradeshow exhibitors will be located in the 15,000 sq. ft. Orca Ballroom. Rooms at the Tulalip Resort for the conference are SOLD OUT! Further accomodations are located at the Holiday Inn Express (1-800-939-4249), mention WIGA or the conference for a discounted rate of $129/night.

Our attendees come from the all of the Northwest states, with the largest number from Washington, followed by Oregon, California, Oklahoma, Idaho, and Montana. Save the date!Our show manager this year is Buss Productions and the contact person is Heidi Buss at (651) 917-2301 or FAX (651) 917-3578 or email at hbuss@msn.com.
NW Indian Gaming Registration Email-1

Feds will review Snohomish County Jail

Rikki King, The Herald

EVERETT — The Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office has asked the federal government to review operations and medical services at the Snohomish County Jail, where at least seven inmates have died since 2010.

Two of the deaths have resulted in pending legal claims against the county alleging that inmates were denied basic medical care.

The review is scheduled this summer, sheriff’s spokeswoman Shari Ireton said Wednesday. It will be done by the National Institute of Corrections, the same division of the U.S. Department of Justice that reviewed operations at the Monroe Correctional Complex after the murder of corrections officer Jayme Biendl in 2011.

The consultants will visit the jail and interview corrections officers, civilian staff and inmates, Ireton said.

Afterward, the sheriff’s office will receive a report with findings and recommendations for change. The report will be made public. The review is paid for by the justice department.

County Executive John Lovick requested the review earlier this year while he was still sheriff. The recommendation came from corrections bureau chief Mark Baird, Ireton said. The recent inmate deaths were a factor in the decision. The justice department agreed to conduct the review a few weeks ago.

The sheriff’s office has made changes since taking over the jail’s operations in 2008, but recognizes the need for additional improvements, Ireton said.

“No death in the jail is acceptable to our staff,” she said. “We have a lot of people and resources and policies and procedures in place to keep that from happening. The challenge we are presented with is a population who may not be in the best of health.”

The report’s findings won’t help the inmates who already have died in the jail, said Everett attorney Royce Ferguson, who represents the family of Lyndsey Elizabeth Lason. Lason, 27, suffocated at the jail in 2011 when her infected lungs slowly filled with fluid. Other inmates said Lason had pleaded for medical care.

The county has acknowledged receipt of the $10 million wrongful death claim but has not otherwise responded, Ferguson said Wednesday. His firm already has hired an outside expert to analyze jail operations as well.

The claim was meant in part to force changes to prevent additional deaths, he said.

“Lyndsey didn’t die from prostitution or from drug use,” Ferguson said. “She died because someone at the jail didn’t do their job.”

Another high-profile death was that of Michael Saffioti, 22.

Saffioti died at the jail in July 2012 from bronchial asthma triggered by severe allergies. His family has hired a Seattle attorney to press for answers. He was in jail for marijuana possession.

The county corrections budget for 2013 is $43.9 million. Of that, $4.3 million is budgeted for medical services. Medication amounts to about $1 million.

There are 337 budgeted corrections staff positions, including roughly 25 medical staff.

The jail’s average daily inmate population is about 1,200.

Ireton on Wednesday outlined some of the concerns the review is expected to address.

One challenge has been hiring and keeping nurses, as evidenced by the post’s frequent inclusion in the county’s job listings.

Qualified nurses are in high demand, and it can be difficult to persuade them to work in corrections, Ireton said.

The review also is expected to include the distribution of medications in the jail, and the use of contracts to house inmates from agencies in neighboring counties, Ireton said.

Medical services at the jail are similar to a community health clinic, Ireton said. Inmates often come in with untreated conditions, including health problems related to years of drug and alcohol abuse. Many suffer from mental health issues or need emergency dental care. Someone never arrested before may be delivered to the jail without their heart medication or blood-pressure pills, Ireton said.

In addition, corrections staff are dealing with people coming down off street drugs, she said. They’re getting inmates to their court hearings and providing services without knowing if an inmate is staying one night or several weeks.

Jails must provide a complex number of services required under federal, state and local laws, Ireton said.

“We see a lot of emergency issues come up because of a lack of care and (lack) of preventative care, and now they’ve finally shown up in a system that has that care,” she said.

Saturday traffic detour to accomodate cancer ride

Skagit Valley Herald

Traffic detours around the fallen Skagit River Bridge will change Saturday to keep traffic away from thousands of cyclists coming south from Canada as part of the Ride to Conquer Cancer fundraiser.

The state Department of Transportation encourages drivers to use caution around cyclists.

The event begins in British Columbia, Canada and will end Sunday in Renton. Cyclists will wind their way through Whatcom County and will be in Skagit County from about 10:30 a.m. through 5 p.m. Cyclists will be on city, county and state roads.

Drivers through the area are encouraged to take an alternate detour. Southbound drivers will take exit 230 onto westbound Highway 20 to Best Road. From there, follow detour signs to Interstate 5.

Drivers northbound will use the standard detour.

For more information, check the DOT website.