Important Meeting Tomorrow For Lincoln High School to Get a Field

Update 2:

Two items.

One, I absolutely think the students at Lincoln HS deserve a practice field with a track. The Lincoln HS community - including its alumni - have absolutely done their part to get this high school up and running. They are right at the top/near top on academic measures and they appear to have a lively, vibrant school.

Two, as I read various Lincoln outlets on the field issue, I keep hearing "the money for this was in the last BTA and that was voted in years ago."

Capital Facilities and Planning are the ones who generally decide the order of projects in any given BEX/BTA. So this project not being done by now isn't strange. As well, I have not seen any language from that community that they were "promised" any date.

That said, the athletes are truly suffering and the support for a new school community has been lacking on this issue.

I do find it odd - given the different

I will be watching the live-stream.

end of update


Update:

Between a couple of Wallingford community groups, I have gotten a better understanding of the issues around changing their park. It's interesting because Hamilton International Middle School and Lincoln High School bookend the park. My mother-in-law used to live directly across the street from the park.

I can see why the neighborhood fought it off (and why they seem to have won because of legal issues).

The Wallingford Community Council is reminding its members about the meeting tomorrow so the meeting is likely to be both full and loud. What's great is that there is a site from the Friends of Lower Woodland Park that explains the options for Lower Woodland Park. I think Option A is horrific and if you look at their map overlays, you can see why.

Option C looks the best but SPS is saying it's the most expensive (which is what they say when they don't want to do something.). Basically it would be a hybrid soccer/football field near the corner of 50th and Aurora.

However, those who truly know and use this park understand the stakes: Option A will compromise the historic Olmsted design and degrade the park’s integrity for the next half-century. Under this plan, the eastern side of the park will become a congested, single-use facility that excludes the general public, while the western side remains a neglected area prone to encampments.

Option A, meanwhile, removes 7 to 9 historic European Linden trees that were planted at the Olmsted brother's direction in 1910.

Reading on, this site has a great timeline of how we got here. Apparently, the Parks Department is actually listening to the general public since it doesn't look like SPS will. Here's how the timeline section ends:

We all want a field at LWP and all are frustrated with this process; the question is what’s the right field location for the next 50+ years of increased density and use of this park?

And know who got us all here? Seattle Schools who seemingly crossed their fingers on figuring out a field situation for LHS and that somehow they would eventually get their way without concerning themselves with neighbors. 

end of update


I find all of this rather baffling. I recall this being an issue when Lincoln HS was reopened several years back. I do have to wonder why it feels like this is being slow-walked by SPS and Seattle Parks and Recreation. 

Lincoln High parents and supporters have now gotten this meeting with the district.

Saturday, April 25th 10am-11:30am
Hamilton Middle School

At the meeting, SPS Capital Projects Executive Director, Richard Best, and the Lincoln Project Team will review the latest information on the project to build a new synthetic athletic field for Lincoln High School students and the community. 

SPS will share the evaluation of the final two options: 

  • Lower Woodland Field #2 

  • N. 50th Street and Aurora Ave. N. (currently overflow parking) (There are two options, A and B.)

After the meeting, SPS will consult with Seattle Parks & Recreation to make the final selection. 

SPS will post the latest questions with answers on the project website before the meeting. Please feel free to share the information about the meeting.

You can also watch at live stream of the presentation on SPSTV. 

(Visit www.seattleschools.org/lincoln-field for streaming information.)

This live-streaming seems unusual for a school meeting. Hmmm.

Parents claim that Superintendent Ben Shuldiner and the interim Superintendent of Parks, Michele Finnegan "need to stop pointing fingers at each other for delays and they need to keep this project moving."

Well, Shuldiner just got here so there's that. 
 
From an earlier Facebook post at the Build Lincoln Field page:

Superintendent Ben Shuldiner—a key decision-maker—is not planning to attend. According to project leadership, Shuldiner has directed staff to “make the emails stop flooding my inbox.”

No idea who could have told this group what Shuldiner said - their principal? I doubt it.

But now Shuldiner has said he WILL be in attendance.

Parents also claim:
Fear of litigation and the desire to appease all stakeholders has resulted in decision paralysis and stalled progress.

Again, who told them that?


BTA V says: 

Lincoln - Develop new athletic field with synthetic turf and track, $5M

The project falls between Seattle Parks & Recreation and Seattle Public Schools —the first owns the land, the other runs the project. 

The district has a whole webpage on the journey to figure this out. The district even has a Project Team, complete with a design and engineering firm.

A siting study was started in Fall 2025. I'm unsure where that went.

It appears the original thought was to take space from the nearby Wallingford Park so that Lincoln would at least have a practice field with a track (as do a couple of other high schools like Roosevelt HS). That seems to have stalled out.


Why do these kids have to be bused everywhere for their sports? There's a cost to all that busing.

Lincoln athletes also navigate seasons without:
◦ Dedicated locker rooms
◦ An equipment room
◦ An onsite trainer’s office
◦ A true home field advantage
Lincoln is the only high school in Seattle without its own dedicated field and track. That is an equity issue, plain and simple.

More information, including student stories and correspondence with district leadership, is available at: BuildLincolnField.com


Comments

Anonymous said…
Thanks for covering this. I really hope Option A is rejected and option C is chosen. A few million dollars more should not be a deterrent when we’re talking about permanently changing one of Seattles best and highly used parks. Design choices for our parks must be based on what is best for encouraging safe, enjoyable multi-use by the entire community, not what is cheapest/easiest for SPS.
Anonymous said…
Previous comment from - ILoveWoodlandPark
Anonymous said…
I am tired of the Wallingforn NIMBY community constantly shutting down any development plans for their community. The same moms who are saying they need the open grass fields at Wallingford Park for their babies will be the ones in 15 years realizing there is no athletic fields for their teenagers attending Lincoln HS.

Returns Wallingford Park to its original use. Build athletic fields for Lincoln at Wallingford Park.

-A Ballarc Mom
(Who ends up with all the density that Wallingford keeps shutting down for their neighborhood)
Ballard Mom, you allude to Wallingford Park having "an original use." Was that as a field when Lincoln HS was previously open?
Anonymous said…
Wallingford playfield originally a field used by local groups and schools for sporting events. Several decades ago, yes. But that was its original use.
https://www.historicwallingford.org/learn/local-history/#WallingfordPlayfield
Anonymous said…
(From Ballard Mom - who is currently watching the grassy green area of Soundview Park being developed into a turf field. It can be done!)

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