Welcoming Wallingford is a new group seeking to engage in the Housing Affordability and Livability Agenda (HALA) dialogue in the Wallingford neighborhood. This is a cross-post from Wallyhood.

Here in our wonderful, walkable Wallingford, we’re neighbors. Some of us have been in Seattle, or in Wallingford, for decades. Some of us have recently moved here for a job, or for school, or seeking an opportunity not available in our home town. We own our homes, after saving for years. We’re renters, because we like the freedom, or because we can’t afford to buy. We have kids at home. We’re single. We’re empty nesters. We represent diverse identities and backgrounds. We work as teachers, software developers, deli clerks, lawyers, artists, architects, postal carriers, advocates. We are Seattle.

Our city has long shown leadership in progressive values and economic innovation, and we continue to break new ground in progressive policy—raising the minimum wage to the highest in the country, guaranteeing every worker sick leave, voting through one of the largest transit expansions of the modern era.

And yet….

We’ve got a housing affordability crisis.

Our neighbors across Seattle are struggling to make ends meet as housing costs rise. Many are being pushed out of their homes by rising rents and into under-resourced suburbs, often far from their jobs. Seattle’s communities of color and our low-income neighbors are disproportionately burdened by displacement and economic exclusion, and the loss of long-term residents poses a critical threat to many communities. In five years, rents increased 43% while homelessness increased 73%. The bottom third of wage earners spends 50% of their income on rent. Sales prices of homes in Seattle have increased by 63% in the last five years, and 118% in the last fifteen years. In Wallingford, homes sales prices saw a 21.7% increase over the last year. Houses that aren’t even livable sell for $700,000! (Just look at this location: fire-damaged and long-abandoned.) Some of us—those of us fortunate enough to have purchased houses years ago—have seen a significant increase in our home equity. But others of us—those renting, those looking to buy, our children—are not so lucky.

This is why we—those of us signed below—generally support the goals and methods of the Housing Affordability and Livability Agenda (HALA) and Seattle 2035. We respectfully disagree with the Wallingford Community Council’s conclusions. We understand that changes to height and density in our urban villages, including Wallingford, make many of our neighbors nervous. While a watchful eye is warranted, we do not want fear of change to overwhelm our values of inclusiveness, sustainability, and progressive innovation. And we want to join with the rest of the city to address this crisis.

HALA is not any one solution: It is a breadth of 65 recommendations identified by a 28-member advisory committee representing a diverse range of interests. (Check the full list of participants here.) It represents one of the most progressive efforts in the country to address housing affordability and avoid the fate of San Francisco. Some recommendations are straightforward, while others reflect political compromise and legal constraints. More work is needed, but the goals of HALA and Seattle 2035—including housing affordability, equitable development, livable and walkable neighborhoods, and environmental sustainability—are critical to our future, and likely shared by our neighbors.

If we in Wallingford say “NO” to the core strategies of this affordability effort while offering no better alternative, what will we say “YES” to in order to achieve these goals? Can we engage to improve, rather than squash, the proposed strategies?

As we walk around Wallingford, and the rest of Seattle, we see duplexes and triplexes, corner stores and small apartments—all of which are excluded by Seattle’s single-family zoning. Our neighborhoods would be impoverished if previous generations had insisted that only stand-alone houses, one family per lot, were allowed. Neighborhoods with a mixture of housing options and types of development make for more diverse, affordable, and livable cities.

We worry about our kids, and our neighbors’ kids. We work to secure funding for their schools, to build parks they play in, to save for their college. But when they grow up and leave our homes, where will they live? Can they afford to become artists or teachers, work for environmental justice or own a small business, and still live in their hometown? Our millennial children earn 20% less than boomers did at the same age. In Seattle, it takes twice the median income to afford to buy a home at the median price. Is it fair, let alone just, to expect that our restaurant cooks, baristas, shop clerks, and nurses must commute long distances to work in Seattle because they cannot afford to live here?

Yes, Seattle is changing, because that is what successful and vibrant cities do. Thriving cities also make space for the breadth of humanity, welcoming both the artist and the CEO; the barista and the billionaire.

We want to create a Welcoming Wallingford, one that affirms inclusivity and works toward affordability; and yes, that will require that we make space for new neighbors.

We know the status quo cannot deliver us affordability or long-term livability. We don’t accept that solutions lie only elsewhere in our city.

We recognize that homogeneity—of income, race, education, or employment—makes for an anemic and unjust city. We recognize that homogeneity of housing options impoverishes our city.

We agree that in a rapidly changing climate, urbanism and transit are part of the solution. We need to reduce the need to drive alone and the scarce real estate devoted to parking.

We don’t want “can afford to live here” to stand in the way of “being able to work here” in one of the most prosperous cities in the nation. We wish to welcome everyone who contributes to our community to also share in our livability and prosperity.

We welcome you to join us. (And follow us on Twitter: @ WelcomingWally.)

Welcoming Wallingford

Paul Chapman, Seattle resident since 1988, Wallingford homeowner since 1998

Mark Foltz, Wallingford homeowner since 2008

Bryan Kirschner and Holly Ferguson, Seattle residents since 1996, Wallingford homeowners since 2003

Michael and Julie Mayer, Seattle residents since 2001, Wallingford homeowners for over a decade

Rick Mohler, Seattle single family homeowner since 1986, Wallingford property owner since 1991, Wallingford single family/ADU homeowner since 2004

Doug Trumm, Seattle resident and Wallingford renter since 2014

Jessica W., Seattle resident for 10 years, Wallingford renter, volunteer with Seattle Tilth and KEXP

Tim Gould, Seattle resident since 2000, Wallingford renter, UW staff member and volunteer environmental advocate

Kevin Kane and Jake Weber, Seattle single family homeowners since 1984, small business owner in Wallingford/Fremont for 20 years and director of local non-profit

Clare Breidenich and Carson Lemmen, Wallingford homeowners since 2008

Tiare Mathison, Wallingford renter

Jeffrey Linn, Wallingford homeowner since 2003

Ben Anderson, Seattle resident since 2007, Wallingford homeowner since 2013

Erin Sterling, Seattle resident since 2007, Wallingford resident since 2013

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Welcoming Wallingford (Guest Contributor)