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Jun 16, 2023

Alaska Communications

Alaska Communications announced that president and CEO, Bill Bishop, died June 13. Originally from North Pole, Bishop joined Alaska Communications 19 years ago, serving in a variety of sales and executive roles. Bishop was currently taking a leave-of-absence to focus on his health and medical treatments. During this time, the Alaska Communications board of directors appointed Jim McCarley interim CEO. McCarley will continue in this capacity until a permanent placement is determined. Alaska Communications, an affiliate of ATN International, is a provider of advanced broadband and managed IT services for businesses and consumers in Alaska.

City of University Place

The City of University Place named Patrick Burke as its new chief of police. Burke is a 12-year veteran of the Pierce County Sheriff's Department (PCSD). He assumes the position from Greg Premo, who is retiring after nearly 30 years with the PCSD, the last four as University Place's police chief. Burke has been with the PCSD since 2011 and has worked as a patrol officer and in contract assignments with Pierce Transit, the Puyallup School District and the City of Edgewood. He has been a use of force instructor for 10 years and served on PCSD's SWAT team for five years. Burke holds a bachelor's degree in business administration from Pacific Lutheran University, where he also played football. Burke will oversee the city's existing 16-person police force which, thanks to the passage of a dedicated public safety levy, will grow to include eight additional patrol and traffic officers, as well as a specialist to address park safety, homelessness and crime prevention.

Life Science Washington

Life Science Washington Institute (LSWI), a Life Science Washington affiliate focused on supporting early-stage companies and entrepreneurs in Washington state, announced two new grant programs, the SBIR/STTR Matching Fund and Washington Competes, to expand the pipeline of diverse and early-stage companies located throughout Washington. The new grants were unveiled at Life Science Washington's annual East West Life Science Summit as part of a larger discussion among medical innovators about the challenges startups and entrepreneurs face in serving rural and underserved populations. Each grant program can award up to $25,000 to Washington-based life science companies that are developing technologies that will improve the health and wellbeing of Washington citizens. The new grants are made possible through a partnership between the Commerce Department and LSWI to redeploy money that was returned to the state's Life Science Discovery Fund. The SBIR/STTR Matching Fund program will focus on supporting companies outside of King County, where SBIR/STTR awards have been less common. The Washington Competes program will be open to all Washington-based life science companies but will prioritize companies outside of King County, as well as companies that are women-owned or socially or economically disadvantaged. Along with these new grants, LSWI will continue its Washington Innovation Network (WIN) and Commercialization Support programs. Each new grant program will have an information session when the full solicitation is released on June 23, 2023.

CalmWave

Health tech company CalmWave was named the 2023 Digital Health Awards Winner for Connected Digital Health: Clinical Decision Support Tools. CalmWave uses AI to gauge hospitals' Operations Health to improve nurse retention and patient outcomes by reducing alarm fatigue in intensive care units. CalmWave's platform uses AI and expert services to help healthcare organizations optimize operations and make data-informed decisions. Utilizing a healthcare organization's data and machine generated signals, CalmWave allows leadership to manage staff, increase retention rates, and improve patient outcomes. Headquartered in Seattle, CalmWave has raised a pre-seed round led by Bonfire Ventures with participation from Tau Ventures, AI2 Incubator, Seachange Ventures, Hike Ventures, and the co-founders of PagerDuty.

Jun 15, 2023

MainStreet opens new Redmond apartments

The DJC reported in March that Porch + Park was leasing its apartments and appeared to be done. And it was reported in April that Ethan Stowell would open Tavolata Redmond in the new building. Now developer MainStreet Property Group is making it official. Today marks the ceremonial opening, with a ribbon-snipping ceremony and tours of the six-story, 106-unit building. The location, at 16050 Cleveland St., is a short walk to the future downtown light rail station. And the building, designed by GGLO and built by GenCap Construction, is also now home to Rubinstein Bagels.

JLL Capital Markets

Heikkila

JLL Capital Markets announced this month that veteran multifamily specialist Seth Heikkila was returning to the fold. He makes the move from Institutional Property Advisors. his new role, says JLL, will emphasize debt advisory in the multifamily market. JLL's Tom Wilson said in a statement, “We are thrilled to welcome Seth to our team. His exceptional reputation in the market and proven track record of success makes him a valuable addition to our organization. We are confident that his expertise and dedication will help us continue to provide the highest level of service to our clients.”

Corliss starts on 120 Pierce County units

Last month the DJC reported on several active and planned developments at Sunrise, south of Puyallup, where Corliss Management has been developing and selling sites for decades, both in the single-family and multifamily sectors. Latest to break ground, the family-run company just announced, is a 120-unit garden apartment project with the interim name Area 33. Eric Corliss said in a statement, “Affordable housing is critical to fostering inclusive and vibrant neighborhoods. By offering quality and affordable living options, we are committed to enhancing the lives of individuals and families, ensuring everyone has access to comfortable homes with all the amenities our neighborhood development offers.” The builder and partner is Schuur Brothers Construction. Completion is expected by next spring, with a new address likely to emerge next to Sunrise Park, also developed by Corliss.

Seneca Group

Elliott

Linn

Cooney

Seneca Group recently promoted three of its staff to the rank of principal. With that company, Jacob Cooney has helped Amazon develop 4 million square feet of offices. Architect Ann Linn has aided projects for clients including Amazon, the Wright family's Space Needle Corp. and Chihuly Garden and Glass. And Reeve Elliott has worked on projects for both Amazon and Expedia.

Carney Badley Spellman

Weston

Blass

Liberman

Seattle law firm Carney Badley Spellman elected Eric Liberman, Ceslie Blass and Amy Weston as a shareholders. Liberman represents and advises clients in disputes related to commercial construction projects and government contracts. Liberman has represented large general contractors and sureties, as well as subcontractors, property managers and insurance companies on public and private projects. Liberman has represented clients in federal and state court cases and arbitrations, GAO bid protests, and appeals before state and federal boards of contract appeals. He also has experience managing large scale e-discovery projects. Blass focuses her legal practice on working with and representing general contractors, subcontractors, developers, design professionals, and suppliers in navigating the legal aspects of the construction industry, including resolving contract disputes, bid protests, CPARS disputes and appeals, lien and bond claims, L&I appeals, and contract drafting and review. Weston advises early stage and emerging technology companies in three main areas: Commercial Contracts, Privacy, and General Corporate Counsel. She advises clients on privacy and other regulatory compliance and best practices, and helps clients safeguard proprietary inventions, systems, and processes, and supports start-up and emerging companies at all stages of their corporate lifecycle.

Allklean

Water damage restoration company HighGround Restoration Group, a portfolio company of Trivest Partners, announced the expansion of its family of brands with the successful acquisition of Allklean. Headquartered in Post Falls, Idaho, Allklean offers a services including water damage restoration and carpet cleaning to residential customers. Allkleen has served the greater Spokane and Coeur d'Alene region for 22 years. Allkleen is led by founders Kevin and Lisa Bunce. Founded in 1981, Trivest Partners, with offices in Miami, Charlotte, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and Toronto, is a private investment firm that focuses exclusively on the support and growth of founder-led and family owned businesses in the U.S. and Canada, in both control and non-control transactions.

Climate Vault Solutions

Seattle-based Climate Vault Solutions launched after closing its Series A funding round for $9.4 million. The funding will be used to further drive carbon measurement, reduction, removal, and reporting as Climate Vault Solutions amplifies the mission started at non-profit Climate Vault, Inc. to provide organizations with an all-inclusive climate partner. The round was led by the Inclusive Capital Partners Foundation, a private foundation based in San Francisco, with additional investment from King Philanthropies, Valor Siren Ventures, and ThirdStream Partners. Climate Vault Solutions is the all-inclusive alternative to traditional voluntary carbon market solutions. Its data-centric solutions will enable organizations to measure, reduce, remove, and report their operational carbon footprints, plus the impacts from their products, employees, portfolios, and events. The Inclusive Capital Partners Foundation is a private foundation dedicated to supporting organizations that address pressing environmental and social challenges.

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