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Seattle Government Ignores Suffering of Chinatown

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Community Impact
Drug Epidemic
Street Report

Chinatown-ID Residents Skeptical

Wednesday morning, Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell will announce new investments and partnerships with The Asian American Foundation and Amazon to help improve public safety and help revitalize business in Chinatown-ID. But a community coalition led by Tanya Woo is only cautiously optimistic since this community has become the city’s human dumping ground and remains ravaged by crime, chaos, and death.

Each day, Asian American grandmas have to walk through this gauntlet of drug addicts and maneuver around the black market of stolen goods on King Street.

“The police here just kind of chase them away, and like, two hours later, they come back,” says one resident.

Right across the street is Ho Mai Park. Instead of laughter coming from children, it’s overrun by men and women smoking fentanyl.

“And who’s gonna bring their families out on the weekends to hang out and make good memories?” asks another resident of the overrun park.

“You look around, we are surrounded by fencing and barbed wire,” says Tanya Woo.

Community activist Tanya Woo says Seattle leaders are intentionally pushing the crime and addiction crisis into the Chinatown-International District.

“People are just being moved around,” she says.

But Woo says they’re now done sitting passively on the sidelines while watching businesses and long-time residents leave.

“And I think this is the year where many of us have committed to being the squeaky wheel and we are speaking up,” continues Woo.

Her community coalition is putting Mayor Bruce Harrell on blast for the second time this year after more public safety failures in this predominantly Asian American neighborhood.

“When’s the last time you saw Mayor Bruce Harrell walk here in Chinatown-ID with the community?” I ask Woo.

Woo turns to supporters around her, who all shake their heads. “Do you guys know when you have last seen the mayor here walking around? Oh, the opening of the park, a year ago.”

She also says Governor Bob Ferguson, King County Executive Shannon Braddock, and District 2 Councilmember Mark Solomon are ignoring their pleas for help.

“We made a direct request and we have not yet met or heard from any of them,” Woo explains.

No one from their offices responded to my requests for comment.

“We are often ignored. We don’t have that political power,” says Woo.

Woo acknowledges the city has tried to make changes to the CID. A few months ago, the problematic Navigation Center shelter was forced to leave after years of shootings, assaults, and drug overdose deaths outside its doors.

And regular city hose downs of the sidewalks have cleared the notorious 12th Ave and Jackson Street drug den.

But those efforts have simply moved the addicts down the block.

“We are worried about our small businesses, our residents, our family and friends,” says Woo.

Woo says the mayor’s had nearly four years to activate and help the CID. Now it appears to be getting even worse under his watch.

“And we don’t want to see a resurgence of what happened last year with violence and frankly all of the deaths.”

Chinatown-ID Blame Mayor for Crime-Ridden Streets

Back in January, Chinatown-ID elders called out the mayor and basically accused him of selling out his community and prioritizing other neighborhoods.

Jonathan Choe

Journalist and Senior Fellow, Center on Wealth and Poverty
Jonathan Choe is a journalist and Senior Fellow with Discovery Institute's Center on Wealth and Poverty, covering homelessness issues for its Fix Homelessness initiative. Prior to joining Discovery, Choe spent several years as one of the lead reporters at KOMO-TV, consistently the top rated television station in Seattle. His in depth stories on crime and deep dive investigations into the homeless crisis led to measurable results in the community, including changes in public policy. Choe has more than two decades of experience in television news behind the scenes and in front of the camera for ABC, NBC, FOX, CBS, and Tribune. He has also been nominated and honored with multiple industry awards including an Emmy. Choe spent several years teaching classes on emerging media and entrepreneurship to under privileged youth in inner city Chicago. As an independent journalist, Choe also contributes regularly to the Mill Creek View and Lynnwood Times and has reported on exclusive stories in the past year for Daily Wire and The Postmillennial.