Originally posted at 3:09 p.m.
At noon tomorrow, city workers may cut the power at five Seattle motels along Aurora Avenue North, leaving dozens of residents in the dark.
Outreach workers, accompanied by Seattle police, visited the motels today—including the Seattle Motor Inn (formerly the Black Angus Inn), Fremont Inn, Wallingford Inn, Isabella Motel, and Italia Motel—and told long-term guests that unless the motel owners make payment on thousands of dollars in back taxes and utility bills by 5 p.m. today, the city would cut the power.
According to Mayor Greg Nickels’s spokesman Alex Fryer, the city has filed 152 charges for tax violations against the motel owners and is seeking to revoke their business license after four years of discussions. Fryer was not able to provide a figure on the taxes owed.
The City Attorney’s Office has also filed a criminal charge against the manager of the Seattle Motor Inn for failing to comply with city laws requiring motels to copy guests' IDs.
Fryer says the city also believes the motels are “public safety concerns” due to drug activity, prostitution, and other violent incidents at the properties.
According to a press release sent by Fryer late this afternoon, the five motels are "frequent crime scenes" and the scene of 32 arrests and source of 460 calls to 911 in 2008. According to the release, police officers "routinely confiscate drugs...in the motel rooms and former motel employees have reported widespread drug use." Fryer also says staff at the Isabella Motel also posted signs in the office windows, "warning residents to not cooperate with the police or City Attorney’s Office."
Fryer did not have an estimate on how many tenants might be affected by the city’s plan, but says outreach workers have offered housing vouchers to long-term tenants at the five motels. The city's Department of Planning and Development would need to get a court order to evict tenants at the motels.
A representative for the property owner, Limantzakis Properties, was not immediately available for comment. Calls to the motels did not go though—no ring, no nothing—suggesting that phones lines at the motels may have already been disconnected.
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