Seattle Local Pulse

Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Rallies, Perfect Weekend Weather, and Strong Job Market

2 min · 2 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Rallies, Perfect Weekend Weather, and Strong Job Market

Descripción

Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Saturday, May 2. We kick off with yesterday's big May Day rallies that drew thousands to our streets, from Cal Anderson Park where workers marched at 1 p.m. advocating for labor rights and immigration reform, to Pioneer Square's hospitality worker push at 4 p.m. These events highlighted concerns over ICE policies and federal stances on wars, keeping our city's activist spirit alive without major disruptions. Shifting to today, expect partly sunny skies with highs near 70 degrees, perfect for outdoor plans, though a chance of evening rain could dampen late events. Winds from the west at 10 to 15 knots mean smooth sailing on Puget Sound, but bundle up after dark. Sunday brings soaring temps into the low 80s, so hydrate for those hikes around Discovery Park. City Hall updates include fare changes on Washington State Ferries starting yesterday, plus Fauntleroy dock work stretching into next week, which might snag your Vashon commute. The West Seattle low bridge closes May 16 and 17 for maintenance, so plan detours early. On the business front, Seattle Center's Sculpture Walk is ongoing with free temporary art installations, and Creative Works WEST pop-up market wraps today, spotlighting local artists and entrepreneurs near the Armory. Job market stays strong with about 50,000 openings in the Puget Sound area, many in tech and hospitality per recent state reports. Real estate sees median home prices around 850,000 dollars, up 5 percent year-over-year, making Capitol Hill buys competitive. Community events ahead: Family activities kick off at 10:30 a.m. via ParentMap listings, and check Sylvester Park in Olympia tomorrow if you're heading south. Local schools shone with Roosevelt High's robotics team taking regionals. Crime report from the past day notes a motorcycle crash at Fauntleroy and Raymond partly blocking lanes, no serious injuries, and steady public safety with no major alerts from SPD. For a feel-good lift, listeners shared stories of neighbors clearing storm debris from Golden Gardens beach, rebuilding our waterfront bonds. Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and remember to subscribe for daily pulses. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Portada del episodio Seattle Local Pulse: World Cup Access for Youth, Summer Cooling Trend, Arts and Culture Thursday

Seattle Local Pulse: World Cup Access for Youth, Summer Cooling Trend, Arts and Culture Thursday

Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Thursday, June fourth, twenty twenty six. We wake up today with clouds back over the city and cooler air off the Sound. Fox 13 Seattle says onshore flow drops our highs into the upper 60s and low 70s, with more clouds and a chance of spotty showers, especially this afternoon. That means we may want a light jacket for the bus stop and a backup plan for outdoor lunches, but it still feels like early summer, not soak through your shoes weather. From city hall, Mayor Katie Wilson this morning announces a major World Cup access program. According to the city’s World Cup organizing committee, more than 1,400 local youth and their caregivers will get free tickets, food vouchers, and scarves for matches at Lumen Field during the twenty twenty six tournament. That is a big deal for families in Rainier Valley, West Seattle, and north end neighborhoods who might otherwise be priced out, and it signals how global events can directly touch our kids. On the jobs front, local recruiters are posting several hundred new openings this week across South Lake Union and downtown, with strong demand for software engineers, health care workers, and hospitality staff as tourism ticks up. In real estate, brokers report roughly a few hundred active condos on the market inside the city limits, with median prices hovering around the mid seven hundreds, and slightly higher on Queen Anne and Capitol Hill. For renters, average one-bedroom prices are still near two thousand for many central neighborhoods, so we keep feeling that squeeze. In culture and nightlife, we have the Pioneer Square First Thursday Art Walk tonight, with free parking after 5 p.m. at the Frye Garage on Third Avenue South and at 450 Alaskan Way when we grab a voucher at a participating gallery. Up in Ballard, Visit Ballard lists a Name That Tune event hosted by drag queen Miss Texas, running during the day, which should add some fun along Ballard Avenue. And at Woodland Park Zoo, Ticketmaster shows Yacht Rock Revue playing an outdoor evening set, perfect if those showers hold off. On the sports side, the Seattle Storm notch another high-energy matchup at Climate Pledge Arena last night against the Phoenix Mercury, with highlights showing our team pushing the pace in front of a loud home crowd. For schools, several Seattle high school track and field athletes wrap up strong state meet performances this week, bringing home medals and personal bests that make our local programs proud. Our feel-good note comes from the World Cup youth initiative itself, where community partners and local teams team up to make sure kids from all over the city get a once-in-a-lifetime experience together at Lumen Field. On public safety, Seattle police overnight respond to a small number of serious incidents across downtown and North Seattle. Officers make at least one significant arrest related to an armed robbery, and there are no major public safety emergencies affecting large events this morning. We continue to stay aware, especially around nightlife corridors on Pike and Pine, but the city moves through a relatively calm midweek stretch. That is our snapshot of Seattle today. Thank you for tuning in, and please remember to subscribe so we can keep bringing this to more listeners. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

4 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Echoes and Spring Growth

Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Echoes and Spring Growth

Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for May 21, 2026. We start today with the energy still echoing from May Day in downtown Seattle, where thousands marched through the streets from Westlake to the waterfront to push for labor rights, immigrant protections, and an end to ICE funding, according to FOX 13 Seattle. It is a reminder that civic life here stays loud, active, and personal. At city hall, Mayor Harrell is leaning into public safety spending, including money for 20 new fire recruits and expanded overdose response work, which matters for neighborhoods from the Central District to Georgetown. That investment follows a busy week of debate over how to balance safety, housing, and addiction treatment. For listeners watching jobs, the city’s hiring push for firefighters is one of the clearest public sector openings right now. In real estate, Seattle remains tight but steady, with buyers still focused on homes near Capitol Hill, Ballard, and West Seattle transit lines. Sellers are seeing the strongest interest in updated single family homes and smaller condos that keep monthly costs manageable. We are also watching office-to-housing conversations continue around South Lake Union and downtown, where vacancy remains a major local issue. On the business side, we are seeing more cautious expansion than big splashy openings, but neighborhood restaurants and coffee shops around Queen Anne, Beacon Hill, and the Central District continue to fill empty storefronts one block at a time. In culture, the city’s music calendar is building toward a busy late spring, with club shows and small venue sets keeping the local scene active. Weather should help. We are looking at a mild, mostly dry Seattle day with cool morning clouds and a better chance of sun later. That means easier travel on I-5, lighter crowds at the waterfront, and a good window for outdoor plans at Discovery Park or the Burke Gilman Trail. On crime and public safety, we are not seeing a major citywide alert in the last 24 hours, but police continue to focus on theft, vehicle break ins, and street disorder in downtown corridors and around transit stops. If you are near 3rd Avenue, Aurora Avenue North, or the Stadium District, stay aware and keep valuables out of sight. For community news, the days ahead bring neighborhood meetings, spring school events, and more outdoor gatherings as we move deeper into the season. And one feel good note, local volunteers and mutual aid groups keep showing up after rallies and public events to help clean streets and support neighbors. Thanks for tuning in, and please subscribe for more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

21 de may de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Rallies, Perfect Weekend Weather, and Strong Job Market

Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Rallies, Perfect Weekend Weather, and Strong Job Market

Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Saturday, May 2. We kick off with yesterday's big May Day rallies that drew thousands to our streets, from Cal Anderson Park where workers marched at 1 p.m. advocating for labor rights and immigration reform, to Pioneer Square's hospitality worker push at 4 p.m. These events highlighted concerns over ICE policies and federal stances on wars, keeping our city's activist spirit alive without major disruptions. Shifting to today, expect partly sunny skies with highs near 70 degrees, perfect for outdoor plans, though a chance of evening rain could dampen late events. Winds from the west at 10 to 15 knots mean smooth sailing on Puget Sound, but bundle up after dark. Sunday brings soaring temps into the low 80s, so hydrate for those hikes around Discovery Park. City Hall updates include fare changes on Washington State Ferries starting yesterday, plus Fauntleroy dock work stretching into next week, which might snag your Vashon commute. The West Seattle low bridge closes May 16 and 17 for maintenance, so plan detours early. On the business front, Seattle Center's Sculpture Walk is ongoing with free temporary art installations, and Creative Works WEST pop-up market wraps today, spotlighting local artists and entrepreneurs near the Armory. Job market stays strong with about 50,000 openings in the Puget Sound area, many in tech and hospitality per recent state reports. Real estate sees median home prices around 850,000 dollars, up 5 percent year-over-year, making Capitol Hill buys competitive. Community events ahead: Family activities kick off at 10:30 a.m. via ParentMap listings, and check Sylvester Park in Olympia tomorrow if you're heading south. Local schools shone with Roosevelt High's robotics team taking regionals. Crime report from the past day notes a motorcycle crash at Fauntleroy and Raymond partly blocking lanes, no serious injuries, and steady public safety with no major alerts from SPD. For a feel-good lift, listeners shared stories of neighbors clearing storm debris from Golden Gardens beach, rebuilding our waterfront bonds. Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and remember to subscribe for daily pulses. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

2 de may de 20262 min
Portada del episodio Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Festival, Sound Transit Parking Changes, and Black Film Festival Opening

Seattle Local Pulse: May Day Festival, Sound Transit Parking Changes, and Black Film Festival Opening

Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Friday, May 1. We kick off with breaking news from Tacoma, where six people including four students and a security guard were hospitalized after a stabbing at Foss High School yesterday afternoon. The student suspect is in custody, all injuries are non-life threatening, and school activities are canceled today. Our hearts go out to that community as they recover. KOMO News reports the lockdown ended safely by late afternoon. Shifting to city hall updates, Sound Transit starts paid parking permits today at Northgate and Shoreline light rail garages. Expect $60 monthly or $6 daily for peak-hour spots, about 5 to 10 percent of spaces reserved from 4 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. It aims to ease the scramble as demand hits capacity, though most parking stays free. Weather today brings partly sunny skies with highs near 70 degrees at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, per National Weather Service forecasts. Light north winds of 5 to 10 miles per hour make it perfect for outdoor plans, but watch for cold water shock on Lake Washington or Puget Sound as air warms faster than the water. Look for 70s and 80s this weekend into Monday, then cooling to upper 60s. Culturally, the Seattle Black Film Festival opens today through Sunday at Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute in the Central District, screening gems like the 1981 classic Cellar George. Catch Grindhaus tonight at 10:30 at The Crocodile, or La Dispute at 7:45 at Neptune Theatre. Seattle Restaurant Week wraps its final days at spots across town. Upcoming, tomorrows Seattle Yacht Club Opening Day and Windermere Cup hit the Montlake Cut, while May Day Festival blooms at Meridian Playground. Maifest kicks off in Leavenworth this weekend too. No major job shifts or real estate jumps today, but parking changes could impact commutes. Quick school note: after yesterdays incident, Tacoma Public Schools prioritizes safety drills. On a feel-good note, volunteers at Pike Place Market prepped flowers for tomorrows festival, spreading spring cheer. Crime stays low locally past 24 hours, no Seattle alerts, though a pipe bomb was safely found in Thurston County yesterday. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for daily updates. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. Well see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

1 de may de 20262 min