Neighborhood news site MyBallard has details on Mayor Katie Wilson’s decision to pause a planned encampment removal near NW 41st St and the Burke-Gilman Trail as the new mayor shapes her administration’s approach to homelessness:
The encampment is located at NW 41st St and the Burke-Gilman Trail, where 17 people are currently residing. On Monday, camp residents were given notice to vacate within 48 hours. Wilson visited the site on Tuesday to “understand in detail for myself what’s working and not working in our current approach,” Wilson said in a statement. A few years ago, the city installed large concrete blocks to discourage people from camping there, and it’s been cleared multiple times in the past.
In her Wednesday statement on the pause, Wilson said her administration “will soon be announcing concrete steps to expedite the expansion of emergency shelter and will move quickly to open new shelter space.”
Thursday morning, Wilson was scheduled to announce a “significant action on transit and homelessness” involving the city’s shelter resources at a meeting of her transition team.
Despite the Ballard pause, the city’s ongoing process around encampments has continued with more than 100 sites reported as “resolved” so far in the first weeks of 2026.
Near the stadiums, RVs and tents were reported cleared this week as the Seahawks are preparing to host the 49ers in the NFL playoffs Saturday night.

(Source: City of Seattle)
UPDATE 10:30 AM: Wilson has announced an executive order to speed up the creation of new shelter and affordable housing in the city with a new “interdepartmental team” tasked with identifying “options for financial incentives, permitting changes, and other policy changes.”
The order also calls for the process to identify city-owned public land “and other public lands” which could be used to site new emergency shelter and housing.
According to the order, the team is planned to complete its recommendations by March 2026.
Accelerating the Expansion of Emergency Shelter and Affordable Housing
Mayor Wilson is ordering immediate action to bring people inside by expediting the expansion of shelter and affordable housing.
Her executive order to accelerate the expansion of emergency shelter and affordable housing will:
- Rapidly expand and expedite the provision of new shelter and affordable housing by immediately launching an interdepartmental team to identify options for financial incentives, permitting changes, and other policy changes.
- Identify and prioritize city-owned public land and other public lands which could be used to temporarily or permanently site new emergency shelter and housing.
- Coordinate with regional partners to identify shelter programs that have capacity to add units to existing programs.
- Identify best practices working with organizations with expertise in behavioral health to support substance use disorder treatment and mental health counseling for housing and shelter programs.
The mayor’s executive order accelerating the expansion of emergency shelter and affordable housing is available here.
The order comes as sweeps and clean-up policies continue. According to the city, there have been more than 1,500 “open” encampment reports filed by residents in the past three months through services including the Find It, Fix It app.
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