Former Mayor Denis Law received news that King County is preparing to buy the Red Lion Hotel, and he has written to two of our County Councilmembers to ask them to help improve inter-agency collaboration. King County’s plans appear to be intended to relieve the County of further ongoing costs, while failing to return a hotel in serviceable condition. Per King County documents: This property is being purchased to relieve the County of liabilities associated with the License Agreement. The property previously operated as a hotel at this location, is currently vacant, and there are no known plans for the property to be used at this time.
The news that the hotel will likely be purchased by King County with no specific plan to make the property productive motivated former-Mayor Law to speak out for Renton on this topic. Here’s his full letter to Council Members Upthegrove and Dunn.
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Dear Dave and Reagan,
As you are well aware, the homelessness crisis in this state continues to be one of the most frustrating issues with the public. Despite spending literally billions of dollars in tax dollars, the numbers continue to grow. There obviously are no easy solutions but one thing is certain: merely dedicating billions of taxpayer dollars has not made any progress to date.
I strongly feel that a poorly executed plan to decentralize Seattle’s homeless to suburban cities during the beginning of the COVID crisis, including taking over a hotel in Renton, proved to be a total failure that continues to cost taxpayers millions of dollars. This is only one of many such projects and we’re talking about millions of dollars for the Renton location alone.
As you know, the County, operating under a, “declaration of emergency,” took over the Renton Red Lion Hotel in April, 2020, to house up to 200 chronic homeless individuals with a goal to help stop the spread of COVID. This was done with no input from city leaders, which was legal due to the emergency declaration, but totally inappropriate and lacked in any sense of collaboration. To be fair, the COVID crisis was an emergency since everything was shutting down as the pandemic and fear spread like wildfire across the country. However, there was no effective plan of managing and serving this population that was relocated to the hotel and the consequence was considerable. Renton police and fire were overwhelmed with emergency calls for service at the hotel, from arson fires to assaults and other crimes. Local businesses were severIy impacted and in the end, upwards of $18 million dollars in damage was done to the hotel. The county’s contract agreement with hotel owners obligates you to return the hotel to its original condition, which has created another very costly challenge.
The homeless tenants were moved out of the facility within 16 to 18 months, around September of 2021. Fast forward to today, 26 months later, and the hotel remains boarded-up and surrounded by cyclone fencing. This is a major gateway to the city and has remained an eyesore for all this time. To make it worse, the County has continued to pay the owners of the hotel $330,700 per month in lease payments, more than $8.5 million since the buildings were vacated.
I must admit that the numbers I have may not be totally accurate, but they have not been disputed during conversations I have had with a couple county council members. The reason for my angst now, in addition to the hotel remaining an eyesore at the entrance to Renton, is a proposal before the county council to purchase the building. It’s my understanding that this is due to the huge amount of money required to repair the building, and there is no reasonable way the county can justify paying these repair costs and come away with nothing. The purchase price is $36,200,000 and to my knowledge, there has been no public discussion regarding this expenditure. This price is essentially for only the land since it’s likely the buildings would need to be demolished for new development. Here is some of the justification made to the county council for authorizing this purchase:
King County’s “Rationale for transaction:” Under the License Agreement the County is responsible for damages caused by the County’s use. While being used as a quarantine site during the COVID-19 pandemic, guest rooms, and common areas were extensively damaged. Damage ranges from broken furnishings such as mirrors and lighting, to soiled carpeting, to water damage due to demising walls and ceilings from over run toilets and bathtubs. There is also damage from an intentionally set fire in November of 2020. The estimated cost to restore the property to the condition contemplated by the License is $17,920,000. In addition, the County is paying $330,700 per month under the terms of the License. Acquisition of the property will relieve the County of the liabilities of the License.
In the end, taxpayers will pay upwards of $70 million dollars or more for this one initiative to address homelessness in King County. There’s no accounting on how many other similar scenarios exist, and not a surprise that billions of additional tax dollars continue to be budgeted by the state, King County and Seattle to address homelessness. There have been a number of initiatives created by these entities that have been disbanded due to a lack of funding or adequate outcomes. Again, there is no question that this is a very complex crisis, but there seems to be a need for better collaboration between government agencies as well as more public transparency on total costs and results.
I appreciate that you both have taken steps in the past to address the negative impact this effort has had on the Renton community and local businesses. It seems apparent at this point the county has few options remaining other than spending millions more to resolve the Red Lion issue. Finally, I feel it’s totally inaccurate and unfair for housing advocates to label cities as uncaring or unwilling to help vulnerable populations when they challenge the process of addressing homelessness.
I strongly encourage you to work with Renton’s elected officials on future plans for the Red Lion site.
Thank you.
Denis Law
King County again makes moves with no consideration or respect for Renton. Thank you Denis Law for stepping out of retirement to advocate for Renton once again. This is an excellent and important message. Randy please post any & all responses that come from King Council elected officials. Both KC Council Members Reagan Dunn and Dave Upthegrove have been loyal supporters for us in the past. Thank you Randy for continuing to bring timely breaking news to the Renton Community!
Marcie Palmer
Renton Council Member 2004-2015
This is the boondoggle that Carmen Rivera advocated for, and she’s advocating for this in Kennedale.
Thanks for the notice Denis and Randay. Well said Marcie.
Thank you so much
Len Wright
The situation with the Red Lion in Renton highlights a critical opportunity for King County to step up and address the region’s homelessness crisis more equitably. The hope is that the County will transform this site into a full-time shelter, aiding in distributing the region’s population that is experiencing homelessness.
Renton, too, needs to look beyond its immediate boundaries and engage in a more collaborative, regional approach. A more proactive, unified strategy is required to address the complex challenges of the unhoused rather than concentrating them in Seattle.
King County is also looking into Kennydale, and I’m very thankful we have such a progressive council that will advocate for the less fortunate over the whims of property owners.
Costs of repairs to Red Lion are $26 million and the cost to lease it for three years was $12 million. So not counting the costs of utilities, staffing, food and supplies, it cost $38 million to house 200 people for 18 months. That’s about $127,000 per person per year, or $10,500 per person per month. That’s not an affordable housing model that we should emulate in the future.
These politicians are using us as a blank check , it is time to move out of this State, A state a true INSANITY!
On the way out, make sure you vote. Please.
Is there any news on the the people who ‘reported’ you on Facebook? The admins can probably tell you who did the reporting if it was on the Renton Crime and Safety Page.
It would be best if you named and shamed.
I’m working on getting more information. It’s possible it was a automatic function because I had reproduced a letter that referred to the pandemic disease so many times. Frustrating that a letter between a former mayor and county council members would stir censorship, manual or automatic, but that appears to be our world right now. I’ll let you know more when I learn more. Thanks!
Dumb question: How come we’re only finding out about this now?
Does anybody notice that Carmen Rivera was the *only* council member who voted to keep the public from voting on the upcoming Seattle-socialist-let-screw-Renton-businesses-but-keep-walmart-happy employer bill and accept it as is?
All the other council members rejected her stupid motion.
Way to serve the public Carmen.
Carmen’s knee deep in the Seattle Socialist nonsense. Figures she want to skip the democratic process.
All you anonymous know-it-alls are a real bore. Stop spreading hate.
Telling people what our electeds did isn’t hate.
Voodoo economics
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/10/30/mcdonalds-chipotle-to-raise-california-menu-prices-as-fast-food-wages-rise.html
The Seattle Socialists promise sunshine and rainbows! What could possibly go wrong?
(Nevermind SeaTac now has one of highest poverty rates in King County now)
The hotel site would be a better option for the new transit center being built due north on Grady . This site could provide direct on and off access to the freeway for the proposed high frequency bus service that is meant to mimic the light rail that didn’t make it to Renton .
The proposed site due north will add 10 minutes of time between Factoria and the airport . That land could be sold to help offset the sunk cost at the red lion site .
The new bus interchange should be as adjacent to the freeway as possible to avoid the traffic mess at rainier/167 and Grady .
That is a capital idea. The trouble is that I don’t think Renton can eminent domain it now that the county owns it.
Expect King County’s dumb behavior in the next few years. Thanks, Carmen, Ryan, and Kim.
Contrary to popular opinion, I don’t like Squishmallows. But my fursona *loves* them.
Randy, take Bob Hasagawa’s senate seat. He has a lot of negatives ( defunding the police, advocating for no police pursuit of violent crime ) that would make it easy for a real Democrat to push him out
BTW, the Seattle Socialist Party has spent more than $42,000 to bring 23-02 to Renton.
The same people that brought you CHOP, defund the police, and banned police from pursuing suspects of violent crime.
Tell them to go piss off back to Seattle, fix their own problems, and leave Renton alone.
What’s wrong with Socialism? All the good things we have are Socialist.
Seattle grassroots organizations and the DSA are investing in Renton to improve our town and its current backward ways.
If you start going on about price increases, you shouldn’t. We all should do our part to ensure the most vulnerable have great wages.
That’s not what the 23-02 is about. If they wanted higher wages, they could have asked the legislature for it.
23-02 will give every worker a hold over their boss: All they have to do is say that they were retaliated against and get $5000 + attorney fees as the 23-02 stipulated that the employer is presumed to be wrong.
That sounds all well and dandy until you realize no employer will hire anybody who even remotely looks like a crybaby.
And now that there’s a minimum, nobody will hire anybody who isn’t perfect. Whatever that means for the employer.
Randy – do you have any updates on the 200 Mill Ave Redevelopment project? Havent heard anything about that in years.
Thanks.
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