Seattle Local Pulse: World Cup Preparations, Summer Weather, and Community Care episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 21, 2026 · 3 MIN

Seattle Local Pulse: World Cup Preparations, Summer Weather, and Community Care

from Seattle Local Pulse · host Inception Point AI

Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Sunday, June twenty first, and we hope our listeners are easing into the day with a hot cup of coffee. We start downtown, where city officials are under pressure as Seattle continues hosting FIFA World Cup events at Lumen Field. KOMO News reports that efforts to clean up 3rd Avenue and the Chinatown International District are ramping up, with more visible outreach to people living in tents near Jackson Street, while advocates push the city to balance safety with services for our unhoused neighbors. On public safety, Seattle police are investigating an overnight shooting reported near a cluster of tents in the Chinatown International District, close to South King Street. Officers say this appears to be a targeted incident. We keep the people affected in our thoughts, and we remind everyone to give first responders space to do their work when streets are taped off. Weather wise, we wake up to mild clouds over Puget Sound, with highs this afternoon in the low seventies around Sea-Tac and the downtown waterfront. Forecast models from Weather Underground and the National Weather Service point to a dry, comfortable day for outdoor plans, with a gradual warmup into the workweek and a few midweek days flirting with the upper seventies. So it is a good day for a walk along Alki or a bike ride on the Burke Gilman. On the jobs front, local recruiters say tech and health care are still hiring steadily, with roughly a few thousand open roles across King County, including software, nursing, and skilled trades. We also see more hospitality listings near South Lake Union and the stadium district as summer events ramp up. Real estate agents around Capitol Hill and Ballard report that the median Seattle home price is holding around the mid eight hundreds, with condos near South Lake Union and Belltown closing a bit lower, closer to the mid six hundreds. Open houses along 15th Avenue East and in West Seattle are drawing steady but not frenzied traffic. In culture and music, TeenTix highlights all ages events across town, from film screenings to museum programs, and local venues in Belltown and Pioneer Square are leaning into summer shows tonight, with indie rock in small clubs and jazz sets in intimate rooms. From city hall, we are watching budget talks about transit service on key routes like the E Line and Route 7, with council staff signaling that maintaining frequency is a priority as more people rely on buses to reach stadium events and downtown jobs. In schools, several Seattle high school robotics and debate teams are celebrating strong showings at regional competitions, capping off the academic year on a high note. For a feel good story, neighbors in Beacon Hill spent yesterday afternoon filling a community fridge near Beacon Avenue South, stocking it with fresh produce and ready to eat meals for anyone who needs them, a simple reminder of how our city looks out for one another. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Sunday, June twenty first, and we hope our listeners are easing into the day with a hot cup of coffee. We start downtown, where city officials are under pressure as Seattle continues hosting FIFA World Cup events at Lumen Field. KOMO News reports that efforts to clean up 3rd Avenue and the Chinatown International District are ramping up, with more visible outreach to people living in tents near Jackson Street, while advocates push the city to balance safety with services for our unhoused neighbors. On public safety, Seattle police are investigating an overnight shooting reported near a cluster of tents in the Chinatown International District, close to South King Street. Officers say this appears to be a targeted incident. We keep the people affected in our thoughts, and we remind everyone to give first responders space to do their work when streets are taped off. Weather wise, we wake up to mild clouds over Puget Sound, with highs this afternoon in the low seventies around Sea-Tac and the downtown waterfront. Forecast models from Weather Underground and the National Weather Service point to a dry, comfortable day for outdoor plans, with a gradual warmup into the workweek and a few midweek days flirting with the upper seventies. So it is a good day for a walk along Alki or a bike ride on the Burke Gilman. On the jobs front, local recruiters say tech and health care are still hiring steadily, with roughly a few thousand open roles across King County, including software, nursing, and skilled trades. We also see more hospitality listings near South Lake Union and the stadium district as summer events ramp up. Real estate agents around Capitol Hill and Ballard report that the median Seattle home price is holding around the mid eight hundreds, with condos near South Lake Union and Belltown closing a bit lower, closer to the mid six hundreds. Open houses along 15th Avenue East and in West Seattle are drawing steady but not frenzied traffic. In culture and music, TeenTix highlights all ages events across town, from film screenings to museum programs, and local venues in Belltown and Pioneer Square are leaning into summer shows tonight, with indie rock in small clubs and jazz sets in intimate rooms. From city hall, we are watching budget talks about transit service on key routes like the E Line and Route 7, with council staff signaling that maintaining frequency is a priority as more people rely on buses to reach stadium events and downtown jobs. In schools, several Seattle high school robotics and debate teams are celebrating strong showings at regional competitions, capping off the academic year on a high note. For a feel good story, neighbors in Beacon Hill spent yesterday afternoon filling a community fridge near Beacon Avenue South, stocking it with fresh produce and ready to eat meals for anyone who needs them, a simple reminder of how our city looks out for one another. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe so you never miss our daily check in. This has been Seattle Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

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Seattle Local Pulse: World Cup Preparations, Summer Weather, and Community Care

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This episode is 3 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 21, 2026.

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Good morning, this is Seattle Local Pulse for Sunday, June twenty first, and we hope our listeners are easing into the day with a hot cup of coffee. We start downtown, where city officials are under pressure as Seattle continues hosting FIFA World...

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