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UW Tacoma professor charged with felony after alleged domestic-violence incident
UW Tacoma professor charged with felony after alleged domestic-violence incident

Yahoo

time29-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

UW Tacoma professor charged with felony after alleged domestic-violence incident

A faculty director from the University of Washington Tacoma is facing a number of criminal charges for allegedly threatening to kill his girlfriend and driving under the influence in Kittitas County. Kurt Dayan Hatch, 55, has been charged by Kittitas County prosecutors with two counts of a protection-order violation, felony harassment, fourth-degree assault and driving under the influence, court records show. He was arrested at the lodge in Suncadia on May 12. Hatch is the faculty director of the Educational Administration Program and a professor of practice at the university, according to the school's website where his employee profile is shown. He has been in the education field for 22 years. Hatch previously served as principal at Mountain View Elementary in the North Thurston School District and a principal in University Place, according to the Association of Washington School Principals podcast website. 'The University of Washington Tacoma has been informed of an employee's arrest. We take such matters with the utmost seriousness, and the University is currently responding,' according to a university communications representative email to The News Tribune. Efforts to reach Hatch and the attorney listed as representing him in the criminal case were not immediately successful. Kittitas County deputies were dispatched at about 11:38 p.m. to the area of the Prospector Inn in the Suncadia complex after a woman called 911 yelling, 'Quit hurting me,' while crying. A man's voice was also heard in the background, according to a Kittitas County Sheriff's Office report. At the hotel, deputies tried to contact the phone number used to call 911, but the woman said she was looking for her dog and everything was OK, the report said. Cle Elum police officers later found the woman's car parked at the entrance of the lodge, the report said. They also learned she had a protection order against Hatch. Hatch was accused of physically assaulting his girlfriend in November 2024. She had injuries on her body, and he allegedly threw her phone out a bedroom window when she attempted to call 911, according to a probable cause document from Tacoma Municipal Court. In Kittitas County, officers noted Hatch might have violated the protection order and found him, along with the woman, in her car, documents show. Hatch was in the driver's seat and acknowledged his name when asked. Hatch allegedly said the protection order was not in place. A deputy later noted the restraining order expires in 2029. Deputies believed Hatch was intoxicated as he had bloodshot, watery eyes, had slow responses and there was a strong order of intoxicants on him, the report said. Hatch submitted to a breathalyzer test and his result came back with .09 and .084 blood-alcohol content result, documents show. The legal limit in Washington is .08. The woman had a small cut on her chin, and at first said she was 'fine,' when asked about it. She later told deputies Hatch hit her a few times, documents show. He would allegedly start 'backhanding' her to the face as he was driving. The woman said she called 911 that day after Hatch allegedly hit her and said he was 'going to kill them both by crashing the vehicle' while driving in Suncadia, the report said. The woman said she felt her life was in danger and told herself she would jump out of the car if she had the opportunity. At one point, she opened the car door but did not jump, documents show. She said Hatch saw the emergency lights from arriving police officers and allegedly drove to the lodge to get away, the report said. Deputies booked Hatch to the Kittitas County Jail the next day. He has since been arraigned and released on a $50,000 bail. The university spokesperson encourages any members of the community in need of support to reach out. 'Students can access confidential support through UW Tacoma's Psychological & Wellness Services and the UW Office of the Title IX Coordinator. Faculty and staff can receive assistance through the Washington Employee Assistance Program (WA EAP). Anyone can contact SafeCampus to anonymously discuss concerns about safety and well-being, either for themselves or someone else,' the representative said.

$300M downtown Tacoma project never got off ground. Six parcels now on market
$300M downtown Tacoma project never got off ground. Six parcels now on market

Yahoo

time24-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

$300M downtown Tacoma project never got off ground. Six parcels now on market

A new effort to market Tacoma Town Center parcels is under way, this time on the site's west side. The six parcels are bordered by Tacoma Avenue South, Fawcett Avenue and South 21st and 23rd streets not far from the University of Washington Tacoma campus. The vacant land totals 3.4 acres and is across from Jefferson Yards apartments, so far the only developed property on the site. Original Town Center plans called for the parcels to be home to four separate apartment buildings offering nearly 500 apartment units. According to marketing material listed online by CBRE, the site benefits from 'a limited forward development pipeline, an improving demographic base, strong employment and historically tight submarket vacancy... .' The brochure adds that 'the developer of the Tacoma Town Center Development is poised to benefit from continued outsized rent growth.' The material also notes it qualifies for an 8-, 12- or 20-year multifamily property-tax exemption and is Opportunity Zone eligible, which would offer further tax breaks. Tacoma Town Center, as envisioned in the city's amended agreement with developers in 2021, called for 98 affordable units among hundreds of developed units. Jefferson Yards, completed by original developer North America Asset Management Group, created more than 100 market-rate units, but was unable to gain the EB-5 investment financing it sought for the rest of the project. Plans for the multi-phased project called for hundreds of apartments, office and retail space, accompanying infrastructure and a public plaza, at a cost of more than $300 million. Boise-based Galena Equity Partners was brought into the project in 2021 to complete Tacoma Town Center. Galena also stalled on funding and soon was drawn into multiple lawsuits, including with NAAMG in King County for breach of contract and entities in its home state of Idaho over stalled projects in that state. Meanwhile, the Tacoma site has sat undeveloped for years. A separate parcel across from the west parcels was transferred in February 2024 from Tacoma Town Center Parcels LLC to Kurtin Properties in San Diego. Kurtin was given time to market that site separately before any sheriff's sale in a contractor's debt collection case tied to that site. On top of those issues, all the parcels have lapsed into the county foreclosure process for unpaid property taxes going back three years. In the marketing for the six parcels, it states that it is a 'rare site of scale that can be purchased in its entirety or subdivided.' No price was listed in the brochure, and the CBRE listed agent did not immediately respond to emailed questions from The News Tribune. The Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce first reported this week on the six parcels' new marketing.

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