Local Market Update February 17, 2020

LOCAL MARKET UPDATE – FEBRUARY 2020

New jobs and low interest rates continue to fuel the housing market boom. While January is traditionally a slower month for activity, the new year saw steady buyer demand. With the number of sales exceeding new listings, all indicators point to a strong spring market.

The tech industry on the Eastside continues to grow rapidly. Microsoft and Alibaba both have significant expansions underway. Amazon expects to increase its workforce in Bellevue to 15,000 in the next few years, a sevenfold increase from today. As the economy continues to grow, inventory keeps being squeezed. There were 47% fewer single-family homes on the market in January than the year prior. Home prices have been stabilizing for some time, fluctuating slightly from month to month. In January the median home price slipped 2% over a year ago to $892,000.

VIEW FULL EASTSIDE REPORT

Home BuyingSellers February 11, 2020

Is It Time to Downsize?

Image Source: Shutterstock 

Choosing less space often has to do with a desire to live a life that’s simpler. Whether you’re retiring, want an eco-friendly, low-maintenance lifestyle or your children have moved away, downsizing might be the best option for you.

Here are the advantages and disadvantages to consider before making the move and questions to begin asking yourself now.

Advantages

  • Increased cash flow.
    • Spend less on your mortgage payment and you are likely to have more money leftover for other needs or desires.
  • More time.
    • Cut down on time spent on household chores such as cleaning and vacuuming which will leave you with more hours in the day to do something more enjoyable.
  • Lower utility bills.
    • Costs less to heat and air condition a small home.
    • Less square footage decreases the amount of energy expended.
    • Reducing energy is better for the environment and it helps keep your home green.
  • Reduced consumption.
    • You would likely buy less since you won’t necessarily have the room for it.
  • Minimized stress.
    • Homeowners who have successfully downsized often feel happier because they are no longer overwhelmed by the demands of a larger home.
    • Less responsibility, less housework to do, increased cash flow and flexibility equals reduced stress.

Disadvantages

  • Fewer belongings.
    • Moving into a smaller space would mean you would need to give away or donate furniture, books, kitchen supplies, etc.
  • No room for guests.
    • Hosting holiday dinners might be out of the question for a smaller home.
  • Space restrictions.
    • Less space means you could feel cramped.
  • Lifestyle changes.
    • For long-term homeowners, downsizing means changing a lifestyle.

What to consider before downsizing

These questions are important to ask yourself because for some people, downsizing may not be the best option for them.

  1. Does size matter to me?
    1. Think about how much your identity is wrapped in your house.
    2. Is it important for you to have a guest room or a second bathroom?
  2. Will I miss some important things about a more spacious home?
    1. Will moving into a smaller home feel like a step backward?
  3. How will other life events affect my living in a smaller home?
    1. Consider possible scenarios you may not expect such as adult children moving back home or if you plan to add a child.

The Cost to You

  1. How much will it cost to replace the furniture?
    1. When you move into a smaller home this means you might have to downsize your furniture to make room.
  2. How much will it cost to get rid of the stuff I don’t need or won’t fit?
    1. It’s important to have a plan for how you’re going to sell or give away the things you don’t need.
    2. Consider things like family heirlooms. What are you going to do with all your antiques or treasures that your smaller home may not be able to accommodate?
  3. How much will I get when I sell my current home, and will it help cover the cost of buying my new home?

 

If you know downsizing is the right option for you, you’re probably asking yourself, “Should I sell first and then buy or buy first and then sell?”. When you’re ready to discuss your options, let’s talk!

The Gardner Report February 1, 2020

THE GARDNER REPORT – FOURTH QUARTER 2019


ECONOMIC OVERVIEW

Employment in Washington State continues to soften; it is currently at an annual growth rate of 1.7%. I believe that is a temporary slowdown and we will see the pace of employment growth improve as we move further into the new year. It’s clear that businesses are continuing to feel the effects of the trade war with China and this is impacting hiring practices. This is, of course, in addition to the issues that Boeing currently faces regarding the 737 MAX.

In the fourth quarter of 2019 the state unemployment rate was 4.4%, marginally lower than the 4.5% level of a year ago. My most recent economic forecast suggests that statewide job growth in 2020 will rise 2.2%, with a total of 76,300 new jobs created.

HOME SALES

  • There were 18,322 home sales registered during the final quarter of 2019, representing an impressive increase of 4.7% from the same period in 2018.
  • Readers may remember that listing activity spiked in the summer of 2018 but could not be sustained, with the average number of listings continuing to fall. Year-over-year, the number of homes for sale in Western Washington dropped 31.7%.
  • Compared to the fourth quarter of 2018, sales rose in nine counties and dropped in six. The greatest growth was in Whatcom County. San Juan County had significant declines, but this is a very small market which makes it prone to extreme swings.
  • Pending home sales — a barometer for future closings — dropped 31% between the third and fourth quarters of 2019, suggesting that we may well see a dip in the number of closed sales in the first quarter of 2020.

HOME PRICES

  • Home price growth in Western Washington spiked during fourth quarter, with average prices 8.3% higher than a year ago. The average sale price in Western Washington was $526,564, 0.7% higher than in the third quarter of 2019.
  • It’s worth noting that above-average price growth is happening in markets some distance from the primary job centers. I strongly feel this is due to affordability issues, which are forcing buyers farther out.
  • Compared to the same period a year ago, price growth was strongest in San Juan County, where home prices were up 41.7%. Six additional counties also saw double-digit price increases.
  • Home prices were higher in every county contained in this report. I expect this trend to continue in 2020, but we may see a softening in the pace of growth in some of the more expensive urban areas.

DAYS ON MARKET

  • The average number of days it took to sell a home dropped four days compared to the third quarter of 2019.
  • For the second quarter in a row, Thurston County was the tightest market in Western Washington, with homes taking an average of 29 days to sell. In nine counties, the length of time it took to sell a home dropped compared to the same period a year ago. Market time rose in four counties and two were unchanged.
  • Across the entire region, it took an average of 47 days to sell a home in the fourth quarter. This was up nine days over the third quarter of this year.
  • Market time remains below the long-term average across the region, a trend that will likely continue until we see more inventory come to market — possibly as we move through the spring.

CONCLUSIONS

This speedometer reflects the state of the region’s real estate market using housing inventory, price gains, home sales, interest rates, and larger economic factors.

The housing market ended the year on a high note, with transactions and prices picking up steam. I believe the uncertainty of 2018 (when we saw significant inventory enter the market) has passed and home buyers are back in the market. Unfortunately, buyers’ desire for more inventory is not being met and I do not see any significant increase in listing activity on the horizon. As such, I have moved the needle more in favor of home sellers.

As Chief Economist for Windermere Real Estate, Matthew Gardner is responsible for analyzing and interpreting economic data and its impact on the real estate market on both a local and national level. Matthew has over 30 years of professional experience both in the U.S. and U.K.

In addition to his day-to-day responsibilities, Matthew sits on the Washington State Governors Council of Economic Advisors; chairs the Board of Trustees at the Washington Center for Real Estate Research at the University of Washington; and is an Advisory Board Member at the Runstad Center for Real Estate Studies at the University of Washington where he also lectures in real estate economics.

Local Market News January 19, 2020

AS BIG TECH’S EASTSIDE PRESENCE EXPANDS, BELLEVUE PREPS FOR MORE COMMUTERS

Back then, planners designed wide six-lane arterials meant to move vehicles fast. The road grid creates 600-foot-wide superblocks on former farmland.

Now, tremendous growth is straining transportation. Traffic stacks up during afternoon commutes, and Interstate 405 slows to a crawl.

As Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and others grow their Eastside workforces, City staff anticipate a net gain of roughly 18,000 downtown jobs by 2025, joining the more than 52,000 people who currently work in the city core.

Roughly translated, this would boost employment higher than the current numbers in Seattle’s busy South Lake Union.

But local leaders acknowledge remaking a car-dominated landscape doesn’t happen overnight. The City aims to cut the share of downtown commuters who drive alone to work to about one-third by 2035, a reversal of today’s pattern where more than two-thirds drive alone.

To do this, they’re planning for trains, buses, bicycles, walking, vanpools — and maybe even autonomous vehicles — to keep people moving.

In past years, the Bellevue City Council voted to create a safer walking network by converting Sixth Street to a 60-foot-wide, tree-lined walking corridor and shortening a street to complete its circular Downtown Park.

Instead of narrowing six- and seven-lane streets with so-called road diets, Bellevue’s approach to reducing car-pedestrian conflicts relies on skybridges around Bellevue Square, and altering some traffic signals to give walkers a head start at intersections. Smaller streets include walker-activated amber flashers.

Large employers and city officials are also counting on the $3.7 billion Sound Transit East Link light-rail line — projected to serve 50,000 daily passengers when it opens in 2023 — to handle many of the new commutes.

New bike lanes on 108th Avenue Northeast serve a trickle of riders for now. More bike lanes are planned on Main Street. Just east of I-405, the 42 miles of abandoned BNSF railroad tracks are being redeveloped for bicycle riders and pedestrians as Eastrail, spanning from Snohomish to Renton.

Bellevue’s growth spurt won’t necessarily translate into massive public-transit ridership, however, at least in the short term. Private transit is adapting faster.

With aid from a $100 million federal loan, the city has created or widened 11 streets between Wilburton and the Spring District east of I-405 where REI’s headquarters, Facebook and other companies are locating.

That follows citywide spending of $5.5 million to equip 197 intersections with adaptive signals that continually re-time to move clusters of approaching vehicles.

And the permit paperwork for the planned 43-story Amazon tower shows 1,175 underground parking stalls (nearly double the 632 spaces in the current parking garage that this new tower will replace).

On I-405, the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) will build an express toll lane each direction between Renton and Bellevue, to open in 2024, along with exit-only lanes to clear departing drivers off the mainline.

The existing carpool lanes will be converted to a second toll lane each way. Sound Transit will follow with new bus-rapid transit and park-and-ride lots.

Finally, in perhaps its most lofty vision yet, The Grand Connection is a sprawling pedestrian and cyclist pathway that would stretch between Meydenbauer Bay Park on the west, through Main Street and downtown, and across the freeway to Eastrail. With a bridge or park lid above I-405, just south of the nearly completed Sound Transit rail bridge, design concepts show amphitheater steps, sculptures and a row of ginkgo trees.

Unlike the longer Burke-Gilman Trail in Seattle, the Grand Connection would encourage people to linger at cafes and parks. As a traffic-free shortcut, it would reduce the need to drive and park at downtown spots.

There’s no funding yet. Costs vary based on whether Bellevue builds a full park like Mercer Island has over I-90, or a thin bridge, for around $130 million.

A version of this article was originally posted on U.S. News by Michelle Baruchman

Local Market Update January 10, 2020

LOCAL MARKET UPDATE – JANUARY 2020

Homes sold briskly on the Eastside in December in all categories, including the luxury market. The number of listings were down nearly 50% from a year ago and the area had under a month of available inventory. That lack of inventory helped bump the median price of a single-family home up 4% from a year ago to $949,000, which is a $49,000 increase from November.  New large scale developments and a strong economic forecast indicate that the housing market will remain healthy.

VIEW FULL EASTSIDE REPORT

Windermere Foundation January 9, 2020

SUPPORTING OUR COMMUNITY: WINDERMERE EASTSIDE FOUNDATION GIVES OVER $235,000 TO EASTSIDE NON-PROFITS

Take a look below to learn more about these important local organizations.

This non-profit creates lasting life changes for homeless moms and their kids. Acres of Diamonds provides a safe place to recover, rebuild, and break the cycles of addiction, poverty and abuse. Their structured living plan, on-site counseling, parenting support and life-skill training helps moms to re-establish their lives with purpose, confidence, and support.

The Windermere Foundation’s grant will help provide women and children transitional housing and support programs to rebuild lives from domestic and/or substance abuse.

Learn more: https://www.acresofdiamonds.org/

This community-based, philanthropic program make a positive difference in the lives of children and adults touched by hardship or violence. The Assistance League of the Eastside is an all-volunteer nonprofit organization that puts caring and commitment into action through several impactful programs.

This grant will go to the Operation School Bell program that provides basic items of clothing to low-income students, grades K-12.

Learn more: https://www.aleastside.org/

This highly regarded organization is devoted to helping families on the Eastside. Attain Housing offers opportunities for self-sufficiency and a strong support network in addition to affordable and stable housing. Since 1989, they have helped countless families in Eastside communities move away from homelessness and toward a stable and comfortable lifestyle.

This grant will help provide affordable housing to homeless families with children as well as case management for setting financial and social goals.

Learn more: http://www.attainhousing.org/

This impactful organization provides free, easy-to-make meals each Friday for low-income children so they have food to eat over the weekend. Backpack Meals for Kids serves the nearly 200 homeless children in Bellevue. For too many children in the Bellevue Public Schools, the only meals available to them are during the week while attending school. On the weekends, they go hungry. Backpack Meals for Kids is working to fill that gap.

This grant will provide weekend meals and backpacks to Bellevue School District students who would otherwise go hungry.

Learn more: http://backpackmeals.org/

Since 1911, this incredible organization mission has been to foster stability and self-sufficiency for Bellevue’s children and their families through programs that provide food, clothing, education and emergency assistance. By addressing a child’s basic needs, Bellevue LifeSpring helps students focus on their education and break the cycle of poverty.

This grant supports the Breaktime-Mealtime Program which provides 80,000 meals to children during school breaks.

Learn more: https://www.bellevuelifespring.org/

This important organization provides training to businesses and leaders to help identify victims of human trafficking, prevent exploitation, and provide safe employment for survivors. Since their launch, BEST has provided awareness, consultation, and training to employers in a variety of sectors and as result, has seen an increase in the amount of trafficking victims able escape their exploiters and increased prevention effort.

This grant will go to help human trafficking survivors and at-risk individuals to find safe employment so they can afford housing.

Learn more: https://www.bestalliance.org

This fantastic organization runs-after school, sports and recreational programs for kids and teens. The Boys and Girls Club of Bellevue can be found throughout the city providing positive, safe places where local youth can have fun, make friends and learn. Their goal is to inspire and enable young people, especially those who need it most, to realize their full potential as productive, caring, responsible citizens.

This grant will support Project Learn, Boys and Girls Club of Bellevue’s after school and summer camp programs at three low-income housing Clubhouses.

Learn more: http://www.bgcbellevue.org/

This great organization inspires change in the lives of at-risk youth through alternative high school education, counseling, recovery, housing, and life skills programs. The Eastside Academy is like no other school in the state. Their unique model offers a place where youth can receive an education, recover from addiction, receive mental health counseling, build relationships with mentors, find housing, and leverage alumni services all under one roof.

This grant will help pay food expenses for homeless and poverty-level students while they attend this alternative high school.

Learn more: http://www.eastsideacademy.org/

This wonderful organization helps kids thrive by leveraging direct service providers to deliver basic necessities to families in need. For 50 weeks each year, volunteers and staff at Eastside Baby Corner collect community donations, purchase and distribute children’s and maternity items to families in collaboration with organizations helping families in their area.

This grant will help provide essentials like diapers and formula to economically disadvantaged children.

Learn more: http://www.babycorner.org/

This wonderful organization acts as a go-between for local farmers to distribute fresh produce to people who don’t have access to healthy food. Farms for Life is a local organization mobilized to bridge the gap between local farms, who often have surplus crops and those in need of fresh food by reimbursing the farmer for the harvesting and processing costs.

This grant will help buy fresh and surplus produce from local farms using sustainable growing practices and provides healthy produce to families in need.

Learn more: https://farms4life.org/

This amazing nonprofit teaches individuals how to play an active role in their financial well-being. Financial Beginningsprovides accessible and unbiased financial education to youth and adults and educates over 40,000 individuals annually.

This grant will help fund the teaching of personal financial concepts to youth and adults of economically-vulnerable populations.

Learn more: https://www.financialbeginnings.org/

Since 1951, this inspiring organization has been helping young people in challenging circumstances get their lives back on track. Today, Friends of Youth positively impacts over 6,500 children, youth and their families each year by offering youth overnight shelters, championing development initiatives, providing in-home family support for young parents and guardians, parent education, youth and family counseling, substance abuse counseling, transitional housing for homeless youth and much more.

This grant will help fund emergency response and shelter, then long-term housing, to children (ages 7-17) experiencing trauma or abuse in East King County.

Learn more: https://www.friendsofyouth.org/

This impactful nonprofit helps more than 65,000 people yearly through programs that provide the stability, skills and knowledge needed to exit poverty. Hopelink’s services help people achieve stability through the provision of basic needs, such as shelter and food. They believe that with the stresses of homelessness or hunger removed from the situation, family members are more able to focus on the next phase of their journey out of poverty.

This grant will go to support the End Summer Hunger Program which ensures local schoolchildren in low-income families have enough to eat during summer break.

Learn more: https://www.hopelink.org/

This helpful organization’s mission is to develop affordable housing, build welcoming communities, and foster vibrant futures. Imagine Housing develops permanent affordable rental homes in East King County to provide individuals and families a place to live near their jobs, good schools, transportation, and health services.

This grant will target under-18-year-olds in their Support Services Program to provide affordable housing and life skill case management in East King County.

Learn more: https://imaginehousing.org/

For over 46 years, this caring organization has provided financial aid to local families when an emergency arises. Issaquah Community Services (ICS) helps families with aid to prevent homelessness, reimburse lost wages due to an emergency event, prevent utility shut offs and much more.

This grant will provide emergency aid in the form of utility payments to low-income families in the Issaquah School District.

Learn more: http://www.issaquahcommunityservices.org/

This important organization works with the Issaquah School District to drive resources and help all students achieve the promise of their academic potential. The Issaquah Schools Foundation’s vision is to be the unifying organization that enables the Issaquah School District to provide access to exceptional opportunities district-wide that ignite learning, improve educational outcomes and prepare all students to be confident, competent and engaged citizens. They do this by bridging the gap between funds the state provides for basic education and the dollars our schools need to prepare students for success in school and life.

This grant will support students who are homeless, at-risk, or living with a disability, for vital targeted academic intervention in math, reading, and writing.

Learn more: http://issaquahschoolsfoundation.org/

This important organization’s mission is to provide basic needs to community member and to promote self-sufficiency. The Issaquah Food & Clothing Bank is committed to providing quality food, clothing and other items as well as offering one-on-one personalized attention to help families navigate the complex maze of available resources.

This grant will help to maintain a refrigerated box truck utilized as a mobile food bank to remote Eastside communities that have difficulty accessing food bank services.

Learn more: https://www.issaquahfoodbank.org/

This incredible organization embraces children of diverse abilities and their families by providing the finest education and therapies to nurture hope, courage and the skills to soar. Kindering provides early intervention services to infants and children who have special needs or are at-risk, and to their families as well. The non-profit offers a full range of services to support the entire family, including parent education courses, specialized support groups for parents and siblings, specialized programming for foster parents, and a true sense of community for those facing the unexpected journey of raising a child with special needs.

This grant will help to provide developmental support, screening, and early intervention therapies to the very young children of homeless families.

Learn more: https://kindering.org/

Since 1982, this amazing organization has partnered with more than 145,000 domestic violence survivors on their courageous journeys towards safety, stability, and healing. LifeWire is on a mission to end domestic violence and create a world where every person lives in a safe environment free from oppression with the opportunity to thrive. By offering one-on-one advocacy and support, they work each day to ensure the safety and enduring independence of every survivor who walks through their doors.

This grant will support the Hotel-Motel Voucher Program, which provides emergency short-term stays in hotels and motels for victim of domestic violence.

Learn more: https://www.lifewire.org/

With the help of countless volunteers and donors, this non-profit has grown into a powerful force for good in our local community. Mamma’s Hands was founded to provide hope and support to those in crisis. Their mission is to help those in crisis regain their self-respect, and to provide them the support and direction they need to become productive members of society. Their vision: Hope in Every Individual.

This grant will help support three Houses of Hope that house mothers and children from abuse and homelessness to help them develop plans to bring change to their lives.

Learn more: http://www.mammashands.org/

This wonderful community-driven program provides healthy food for hungry kids to take home over the weekend and school breaks. Through charitable donations and volunteer support, Pantry Packs is able to feed more than 800 Lake Washington School District children who are identified by counselors as being “food insecure” and often come to school hungry on Mondays.

This grant will go towards providing weekend, child-friendly food packs to children of qualified low-income families.

Learn more: https://www.lwsf.org/pantrypacks.html

This Issaquah based non-profit was created to provide support and services to at risk youth with an emphasis on foster children and their families. Royal Family Kids’ Camp’s vision is to make a difference in the lives of children who have suffered abandonment, abuse and neglect, and to give them hope for their future. Their goal is to help foster children in King County, ages 7 – 15, attend a summer camp filled with life changing experiences and love that focuses on meeting the special needs of abused and neglected children.

This grant will help support their summer camp and help build positive experiences for abused, neglected and abandoned foster children.

Learn more: http://royalfamilykids.org/

This fantastic nonprofit provides formal attire to teens from low-income families across the state, enabling them to participate in high school milestone events. Ruby Room F-Factor utilizes fashion as a tool to build self-confidence and promote inclusion among foster children, homeless youth and teens in financial need.

This grant will help to provide formal wear at no cost to teens in financial need so they may participate in landmark life events.

Learn more: https://www.f-factor.org/

This organization provides life-changing services to those experiencing homelessness by working within our communities to provide emergency shelter, social services, and connections to permanent housing. Snoqualmie Valley Shelter Services is made up of community members who have a passion for helping our homeless population connect with the care and services they need.

This grant will help provide a safe overnight environment for homeless men and women and for families struggling with homelessness.

Learn more: http://www.svshelterservices.org/

This impactful organization is dedicated to closing the achievement gap between youth in foster care and their peers forever. Treehouse provides students in foster care with academic and other essential support that all kids need to succeed.

This grant will help to support the Little Wishes Program which allows foster care youth to participate in extracurricular arts, athletics, and other educational experiences.

Learn more: https://www.treehouseforkids.org/

This dedicated organization is the leading behavioral health services provider for children and youth, up to age 22, and their families in East King County. Youth Eastside Services (YES) provides evidence-based mental health counseling, substance use and co-occurring disorders counseling and treatment, early childhood behavioral health services, psychiatric services, and education and prevention programs.

This grant will support YES Lifeline, which provides free mental health counseling and substance abuse treatment to low-income youth and families.

Learn more: https://www.youtheastsideservices.org/

Windermere Foundation December 29, 2019

WINDERMERE FOUNDATION DONATES $100,000 TO SEATTLE CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL

The Windermere Foundation’s recent contribution to Seattle Children’s Hospital‘s Homelessness Prevention Fund and Children’s Emergency Patient Fund will help 40 families secure stable housing and retain ownership of their homes this holiday season.

“No parent should have to choose between having a place to live and having a healthy child,” said Christine Wood, Executive Director of the Windermere Foundation. “Our goal is to help take on some of the financial burden of housing and
living expenses so they can focus on their child’s health.”

The Homelessness Prevention Fund provides low-income families with financial support to help cover imminent expenses, repairs, and other needed services. The one-time payment can spare a family from eviction or other hardships triggered by shelter insecurity.

“There are 104 children and 74 parents and guardians who will be able to stay in their homes during the holidays thanks to the Windermere Foundation’s generous donation,” said Roosevelt Travis, Director of the Department of Social Work at Seattle Children’s. “It is truly life changing.”

Additionally, a portion of the donation was directed to the Children’s Emergency Patient Fund which provides modest sums to cover food, utilities, transportation and other essentials to more than 2,000 families each year.

Over the years, Windermere donations to this fund have been used to pay for hotel vouchers, gas cards, and, in the saddest cases, funeral expenses.

“When I am contacted by Children’s seeking funding, I know not every situation is going to have a happy ending,” said Christine Wood. “We’re just grateful that we have the opportunity to relieve some of the burden for these families during what is a very difficult time in their lives.”

Since its establishment 30 years ago, the Windermere Foundation has raised over $40 million to support local low-income and homeless families, and Windermere has donated a total of $318,000 directly to Seattle Children’s Hospital since 2006. The Foundation is currently the 17th largest corporate philanthropist in the Puget Sound, as ranged by the Puget Sound Business Journal.

To learn more about the Windermere Foundation, please visit www.windermerefoundation.com.

Read the full Windermere Foundation press release here.

Local Market NewsLocal Market Update December 11, 2019

LOCAL MARKET UPDATE – DECEMBER 2019

Favorable interest rates and soaring rents boosted activity in the housing market in November. More buyers competing for less inventory kept home prices strong. With the supply of homes far short of demand, sellers can expect well-priced properties to sell quickly this winter.

With just over a month of available inventory, demand on Eastside remains very strong. Sales are brisk, with 45% of single-family homes selling in 15 days or less and 20% of homes selling for over list price. The median single-family home price in November rose 2% from a year ago to $900,000 and was unchanged from October.

VIEW FULL EASTSIDE REPORT

Windermere Foundation November 20, 2019

Windermere’s Winter Drive Collects Nearly 6,000 Items for Mary’s Place

It’s another fall season and the fourth year of Windermere’s #TackleHomelessness campaign with the Seattle Seahawks. As a part of this campaign, Windermere hosts an annual “We’ve Got You Covered” winter drive. This year, 33 Windermere offices in in the greater Seattle area* participated in the drive, collecting new hats, scarves, gloves/mittens, socks, and other warm winter items for Mary’s Place.

Mary’s Place is a non-profit that provides safe, inclusive shelter and services to support women, children and families on their journey out of homelessness. Since 1999, Mary’s Place has helped hundreds of women and families move out of homelessness into more stable situations. But shelter capacity is limited and there are still hundreds of families sleeping outside in cars and tents each night, so Windermere collected items to help them stay warm this winter.

During the four-week drive, our offices collected donations from agents, staff, and the community, which included over 630 hats, 680 pairs of gloves, over 200 scarves, over 2,000 pairs of socks, and an assortment of coats, jackets, sweaters, blankets, toiletries and other items, bringing our grand total to nearly 6,000 items collected for Mary’s Place.

One office made the drive extra special by partnering with a local knitting group. The Windermere Mercer Island office partnered once again with the Mercer Island Tuesday Knitters, to make cozy hats and scarves. This year the knitting group contributed 67 hand-knitted hats and scarves to the winter drive.

The staff at the Mary’s Place donation center in South Seattle were grateful to receive the bins full of donated items that were delivered by Gentle Giant Moving Company. “We are so incredibly grateful to our Windermere family for all that they do for our families!” said Marty Hartman, Mary’s Place Executive Director. “These gifts of warm winter gear will keep our kids and families warm and loved this winter!”

 

Windermere is also grateful to partner with Gentle Giant Moving Company on our winter drive. For the past four years, they have generously given their time, muscle, and trucks to pick up and deliver all of the donations.

And this drive would not be possible each year without the support of the Seattle Seahawks, our offices, and all those who donated. From all of us at Windermere, thank you for making our fourth annual winter drive a success and for supporting families experiencing homelessness in the greater Seattle area!

*Participating Windermere offices:

Bellevue, Bellevue Commons, Bellevue West, Federal Way, Federal Way-West Campus, Kent, Kirkland, Kirkland Yarrow Bay, Lynnwood, Mercer Island, Mill Creek, Property Management – Bellevue, Property Management – Edmonds, Property Management-Everett, Property Management – Seattle North, Property Management – South, Redmond, Seattle-Eastlake, Seattle-Green Lake, Seattle-Greenwood, Seattle-Lakeview, Seattle-Madison Park, Seattle-Mount Baker, Seattle-Northgate, Seattle-Northwest, Seattle-Pike/Pine, Seattle-Queen Anne, Seattle-Sand Point, Seattle-Wall Street, Seattle-West Seattle, Services Company, Shoreline, Snohomish

Home Maintenance November 5, 2019

Your November To-Do List

The month of November brings the end to daylight savings time, for most of us anyway, and the start to the holiday season. Don’t be left in the cold, jumpstart your preparations with this quick checklist.

Check Your Fire Safety System

Test your smoke alarms and CO detectors to make sure they’re in working order. Locate your fire extinguisher and be sure the gauge shows that it has enough pressure. If it isn’t already stored in or near the kitchen, re-locate it closer to the oven for quick action should Thanksgiving dinner go up in flames.

Clean Your Garbage Disposal

Don’t let a stinky garbage disposal ruin your appetite, keep it smelling fresh with a few pieces of lemon rind and some ice cubes. The lemon cleans and deodorizes the odor causing bacteria and the ice scrapes away any debris, as well as sharpen the blades.

Check and Repair Other Plumbing Issues

Run the water in each sink to determine if it’s draining properly.

If your bathroom sink is not draining quickly, a great natural way to clear debris, with ingredients that you likely already have in the house, is to put ½ cup of baking soda down the drain, followed by ½ cup of vinegar, then plug the drain and let it sit for an hour. When you unplug the drain, pour boiling water down until it drains quickly.

Send a snake down your tub drain, then add a hair trap to each drain to prevent future blockage, especially when you have guests over for the holidays.

For a slow kitchen drain, the likely cause is a build up of fat, oil, or grease (FOG drain clog). The best way to clear this kind of clog is with 2 liters of water and a few tablespoons of dish washing detergent. Pour slowing and keep pouring until the drain is cleared.

Pull Out Your Winter Essentials

For those of you in cold climates, get out the shovels and replenish the ice-melt bucket before the snow and ice hit this season. Don’t get caught in the storm, make sure they’re easy to access or easy to pull out when the weather forecast calls for below freezing temperatures.

It’s also a good idea to get out your snow gear and toys. Don’t miss an opportunity to play in the snow because you can’t get to your shed to pull out your snow boots, gloves, or sled!

Check and Replace Floor Protectors

Prevent damage to your floors by checking any pads on your chair legs as well as the rug mat.

Make sure the pads on your chairs, sofas, and tables are intact so when you move them, they won’t rub and scuff or dent flooring. Lift the rug to double check that the rug mat isn’t causing damage to the floor as well. Sometimes, the adhesive can stick to the floors, leaving a residue that’s almost impossible to clean, this is especially important on cement floors.

Prepare the Guest Bedroom

Has it been a while since anyone, besides the dog or cat, has slept in the guest bed? This is a great time of year to wash the sheets and clean the room in preparation for holiday guests. And don’t forget the cobwebs in the corners! Organize and re-stock the closets so your guests can easily access more blankets and towels during their stay.