S’no Joke: Weather Comes to Seattle

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10TH Ave. on Capitol Hill, facing north – February 14, 2021

Seattleites have long had a love-hate relationship with snowy weather, just as they did over the weekend when the region was blanketed with shovel-loads of the white stuff.

Some Seattleites adore the snowy weather that they usually have to drive to mountain passes to enjoy.  When snow levels sink to 100 feet, these snow lovers waste no time waxing skies and breaking out sleds and snowboards. It’s a perfect excuse to show off their REI togs and Patagonia parkas.

Others Seattleites, however, cringe at the very mention of the forecaster’s scariest three words: “lowland snow expected.” Oldtimers can remember that famous newspaper lede from the San Jose Mercury, printed during one Seattle snowpocalpse: “Fear swept the streets of Seattle last night, but the snowplows didn’t.” 

Recent transplants from snowier regions make fun of Seattle’s love/hate relationship with snow. Those are the folks who are always telling stories that start out like this:  “When I was a kid, I had to trudge miles through five-foot drifts to get to school.” Midwest expats don’t necessarily endear themselves when they tell snow jokes about Seattle. They sling mean one-liners like: “I’ve never seen anything like Seattle grocery stores when locals panic, preparing to brave 3-4 inches of snow.”

 Among themselves, these newcomers chortle over Seattle snow driving with observations like: “Who’d dream of seeing so many Subaru Outbacks losing control in one place.”  Or “It’s like Mad Max with Amazon vans.” Or even: “I love seeing the region’s single snow plow stuck on I-5.”

But whatever one may think of the sick Seattle snow jokes, there’s also a serious political side to the occasional snow event in the city. Like that time in 2008 when snow paralyzed the city for two weeks in December. Things got ugly. Turns out the employee in charge of snow response had left his number two in charge. Neither man had any experience.

Among their worst mistakes: they refrained from using rock salt for environmental reasons. They didn’t clear packed snow and concentrated on West Seattle, home to Mayor Greg Nickels, Deputy Mayor Tim Ceis and Seattle Department of Transportation director Grace Crunican.  And, oh, anyway, Crunican had spent the Christmas holiday in Portland. On Christmas Day, there were 11 slow plows out of use, allegedly because they needed “to rest.”

In the aftermath of the snow, Mayor Nickels, Deputy Ceis and Councilmember Richard Conlin, the Council’s transportation chair, all had good things to say about the department’s response. Asked by the Seattle Times, the mayor said he give himself a B-minus.

That was the wrong political response. In fact, that led pundits to believe the snow debacle may have caused the progressive two-term mayor (good on transit, good on gun control, good on the economy etc.) to lose his primary bid for a third term.

Losing elections because of faulty snow response has wounded many a politician. Two months after a failed snow response, Chicago’s Mayor Michael Blandic lost his job to the city’s first woman mayor, Jane Bryne. Even New York’s Mayor Mike Bloomberg took flak for an inept snow response, nixing a prospective presidential run. Citizens care about safe and navigable streets.

One who couldn’t quite get the snow thing to work for him was Charlie Chong, the West Seattle              activist. In the 1990s, he had tried unsuccessfully to get the city to invest in cheap snow removal equipment. “Snowplow Charlie” was popular as a city councilmember but couldn’t pull off any of his three runs for mayor.                                                                                    

Then there’s Seattle’s Mayor Jenny Durkan who has decided not to seek reelection. She managed to chalk up a fair score during the 2019 snow and hasn’t provoked outcry over this February’s event. But never say never when it comes to keeping a city running during inclement weather. It’s still February and it’s never too late for a return of the Seattle Freeze.

Jean Godden
Jean Godden
Jean Godden wrote columns first for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and late for the Seattle Times. In 2002, she quit to run for City Council where she served for 12 years. Since then she published a book of city stories titled ā€œCitizen Jean.ā€ She is now co-host of The Bridge aired on community station KMGP at 101.1 FM. You can email tips and comments to Jean at jgodden@blarg.net.

2 COMMENTS

  1. Speaking of the political risks of mishanding weather disasters: There’s gotcha story about how Sen. Ted Cruz and his family left Houston for a Caribbean holiday during the Texas crisis. Cruz badly flubbed his response. He was tagged with an earlier jab at a Democratic mayor for vacationing in Mexico, for lying about his intentions, with requesting a return police escort and — even worse politically — leaving Snowflake, the family dog, behind in a freezing cold house.

  2. Speaking of the political risks of mishandling weather disasters: There’s gotcha story about how Sen. Ted Cruz and his family left Houston for a Caribbean holiday during the Texas crisis. Cruz badly flubbed his response. He was tagged with an earlier jab at a Democratic mayor for vacationing in Mexico, for lying about his intentions, with requesting a return police escort and — even worse politically — leaving Snowflake, the family dog, behind in a freezing cold house.

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