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PART II | Dwindling salmon runs to Lake Washington [3]
Seahawks | Norm Johnson kicks off new wine FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 2016 in Kirkland [2]
A DIVISION OF SOUND PUBLISHING
Sears | Historic Kirkland building bought by local couple [8]
Council approves letters supporting rapid transit on CKC BY TJ MARTINELL tmartinell@kirklandreporter.com
T
he Kirkland City Council has officially declared its support for proposed Sound Transit projects that would place rapid transit on the Cross Kirkland Corridor (CKC) and elsewhere in the region. At its Jan. 19 meeting, the council voted to authorize
Mayor Amy Walen to sign two letters to the Sound Transit Board of Directors, one from the city and another from the joint Eastside cities. The first letter from Kirkland emphasizes the city’s belief in a need for rapid transit of some kind on the Eastside Rail Corridor, which includes the CKC. Although the council in the past has
pushed for bus rapid transit, the letter seeks for Sound Transit to provide “adequate funding” for a light rail line between the Totem Lake Urban Center and downtown Bellevue, though the letter also calls for “flexibility to instead construct and operate the highest level of Bus Rapid Transit (BRT).” “The need for this flexibility stems from the fact
that Bus Rapid Transit may provide better, more flexible service and may better address the concerns that we have heard in extensive public outreach in the Kirkland community, and that new modes of public transportation might well be available over the next decade and authorized by Sound Transit,” the letter reads. The letter also calls for
Sound Transit to provide BRT on Interstate 405 — something critics of rapid transit on the CKC have supported as an alternative — while ensuring that the BRT offers “reasonable access points” in Kirkland. The letter includes specific recommendations for several candidate projects Sound Transit is considering as part of its ST3 ballot measure this
November, along with required elements. One of the stipulations is that “only vehicles that are quiet and have zero or ultra-low emissions, such as electric vehicles, can operate on the CKC.” City Manager Kurt Triplett said during that meeting that at the moment there is no specific timing for when any of the projects would be [ more TRAIL page 3 ]
Three Kirkland priests included in sex abuse list One former Kirkland priest suspected of crimes left off list
in the 1970s after the man filed an anonymous lawsuit against Moffat, alleging sexual abuse. Five other men had also filed similar lawsuits against two other local priests in the Seattle Catholic Archdiocese at the BY TJ MARTINELL same time. tmartinell@kirklandreporter.com Kirkland Police Spokesperson Lt. Mike Murray said Three former priests, who that there is no active invesworked at several different tigation going on at this time Kirkland churches, were in response to those included named last week by the on the list from Kirkland. He Archdiocese of Seattle in a added that they can’t launch list of clergy and religious an investigation unless a leaders who the church believes were involved in sexual victim comes forward. “If we don’t have a victim abuse of a minor in Western we can’t arbitrarily create Washington. a case even though they’ve However, not among the names of accused was former (the Archdiocese) reported that,” he said. “That’s one youth minister Jim Funnell of the problems with those at St. John Vianney Church investigations.” who was alleged to Quigg also served have molested a child at Sacred Heart in KIRKLAND in the mid-1980s for Bellevue, where he more than a year. A maintained a sexual lawsuit was filed and relationship with an scheduled before the unidentified teenager. parish district settled out of court for $635,000 in 2012. Parish leadership were not The three priests named in made aware of the allegations until 2014, and information the Archdiocese release who about Quigg’s actions in 1980 served in Kirkland at some point included Harold Quigg were kept private at Quigg’s request and also because and Stephen Trippy, both the archdiocese concluded of whom are deceased. The that the incident did not third priest is Gerald Moffat, who is listed as being in “per- constitute sexual abuse of a manent prayer and penance,” minor under canon and civil law at the time. Quigg was a status which applies to a prohibited from participatpriest permanently removed ing in any public priestly from all public ministry. In 2003, a 43-year-old man ministry, presenting himself publicly as a priest or wearcommitted suicide in the ing clerical garb in 2004. It parking lot of the Kirkland [ more PRIEST page 2 ] church where Moffat served
CRIME
Kirkland based Creme Tangerine packed the streets at Pike Place Market in Seattle when they celebrated the anniversary of the Beatles rooftop concert during the past seven years. The band has moved the annual event to Kirkland. CONTRIBUTED, Creme Tangerine
Creme Tangerine to play rooftop concert in Kirkland tomorrow BY TJ MARTINELL tmartinell@kirklandreporter.com
This weekend Creme Tangerine will be taking to a rooftop in downtown Kirkland to celebrate the Beatles final concert in London. Creme Tangerine, headed by Kirkland Performance Center Executive Director Jeff lockhart, will
perform on the rooftop balcony of the Livengood Alskog building at 121 3rd Ave tomorrow at noon. The free 45-minute event is put on by the KPC and the Kirkland Chamber of Commerce to benefit Northwest Harvest and will include well-known, memorable Beatles songs, including those performed during the last concert.
Previously, the rooftop concerts were held at Pike Place Market in Seattle starting in 2009 in tribute to the 40th anniversary of the Beatles last concert. This year, Lockhart said, they are holding the performance in Kirkland after they decided to play at Pike Place during the summer to accommodate the large crowds. “We just decided as long
as people wanted to keep coming out we’ll keep doing it,” he said. “It’s been so cool over the years to see streets packed, shoulder-to-shoulder with people celebrating the music of the Beatles on the last weekend of January,” Crème Tangerine’s leader singer Byron Prather said in a press release. “This music truly is a common bond people share together.” Lockhart said originally they had no plans to perform until fellow Beatles fan David Alskog, lead partner of Livengood Alskog law [ more BEATLES page 5 ]