Bridget Chavez
Local News
Paradise under pressure: The Enchantments buckling under trash, waste and overcrowding
Volunteers struggle to maintain the Enchantments, hauling out 12 pounds of toilet paper in one day as federal cuts strain resources.
CHELAN COUNTY, Wash. — Behind the postcard views of the Enchantments in the North Cascades lies a crisis.
Trash, human waste, graffiti, and crowds are threatening the fragile alpine environment. Volunteers say years of federal staffing cuts have left this wilderness on the brink.
“There’s just human waste everywhere,” said Matt Lyons with the nonprofit TREAD. Lyons said there have been problems there for a while, but this is the worst he's ever seen.
“A lot of graffiti, a lot of trash, a lot of problems happening in the Enchantments this year, "Troy Campbell, who heads up the Leavenworth Chamber of Commerce, said.
Sarah Shaffer of Wenatchee Outdoors said the situation seems to be getting worse.
“There’s poop just on top of rocks with toilet paper on top of rocks. It’s just a really crappy situation," she said. "“My daughter and I actually packed out 12 pounds of just toilet paper."
Trash mars the Enchantments in North Cascades
The 4.5-mile trail to Colchuck Lake is one of the most popular hikes in the state, attracting up to 2,000 hikers a day in peak season. But the resources to protect it are nearly gone.
Where there were once 11 U.S. Forest Service rangers in the region, there is now only one. That single ranger is responsible for nearly 900 miles of trail.
“She’s out here by herself hauling toilets that can weigh 300 pounds when they’re full,” Lyons said. “I don’t know how she does it. She’s a hero.”
Earlier this year, the Trump administration slashed Forest Service staffing nationwide, insisting hikers wouldn’t notice the cuts. But in the Enchantments, the impact is impossible to ignore.
Back in April, KING 5 emailed the U.S. Forest Service to ask what those cuts would mean for Washington trails. At the time, the agency downplayed concerns, responding in an email:
“We continue to evaluate our needs, resources, and personnel, within allocated budgets, to carry out our mission. The Forest Service remains committed to ensuring public health and safety while balancing access to recreation areas.
• Recreation services and public access are vital to local economies. It is our intent to maintain access to recreation opportunities to the greatest degree possible.
• Protecting the people and communities we serve, as well as the infrastructure, businesses and resources they depend on to grow and thrive, remains a top priority for the USDA and the Forest Service. We are incredibly proud of our firefighters, and we will ensure they have the training, tools, and resources they need to work alongside our state and local partners, as well as private landowners, to continue the work to protect lives and livelihoods.
• The Forest Service continues active management activities, including hazardous fuels reduction projects and prescribed fires, and are being conducted under the agency’s available funding authorities, including annual appropriations.”
But months later, volunteers and local leaders say the agency’s assurances don’t match the reality on the ground.
With little official presence, volunteers are doing what they can. Wenatchee Outdoors logged 57 hours of cleanup in July. TREAD has contributed 75 hours this summer. The Leavenworth Recreation Ambassador Program averages 288 hours each month.
But even with all that effort, the problems are growing. Waste vaults at campsites overflow. Graffiti mars granite walls. On Aasgard Pass, the rugged climb to the core of the Enchantments, volunteers are cleaning graffiti off granite.
“We went caveman and just beat it with other rocks," Vernon Nelson, with Chelan County Mountain Rescue, said.
And while volunteers can clean, they can’t enforce. That falls on the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office.
Sheriff Mike Morrison said his deputies are stretched thin. He has two deputies assigned to the area. This year alone, there have been 29 rescues in the Enchantments which Morrison said is much higher than previous years. Many rescues involve hikers lured by Instagram or TikTok posts, showing off turquoise lakes and dramatic peaks without warning of the grueling climbs required to reach them.
“They’re showing up in pajama bottoms, Birkenstocks, sweatpants,” Morrison said. “Individuals are clearly not in the kind of shape you should be to go up there.”
Visitors travel from across the country, and even overseas, after seeing viral videos. Some arrive unprepared, without water, food, or the physical conditioning needed for the hike.
“I would call them weak-minded individuals that go up and just don't have the capacity to push themselves so they get tired. They are, in a sense, pushing the easy button expecting the sheriff's office or search and rescue to rescue them. It's happened numerous times," Morrison said.
Campbell, with the Chamber of Commerce, warned the dangers of what's happening go beyond the rescues.
“The entire Enchantments burning down and maybe taking thousands of acres around it, including Leavenworth, with it is one of the things that keeps me up at night,” he said.
Even the wildlife isn’t immune. KING 5 spotted a chipmunk gnawing on toilet paper. And Shaffer, of Wenatchee Outdoors, worries about fecal matter impacting the environment.
“I'm worried about the fecal matter leaching into Colchuck Lake and to other lakes in the area, which can then in turn affect the city of Leavenworth, because they get their water supply...indirectly from Colchuck Lake," she said.
Morrison said he's in contact with the Forest Service, hoping to find a solution soon. Volunteers said some possible solutions include shuttle buses or requiring day use permits. Right now, permits are only required for overnight camping.
Morrison said if things don’t improve, he’s ready to shut down access to the Forest Service road that leads to the trailhead. Closing that gate would stop vehicle access, forcing hikers to walk an extra 3.5 miles each way turning the 9-mile roundtrip hike to the lake into 16.
“It's not much to ask that if I shut the gate and you have to hike 7 miles more total round trip. I don't think that's much to ask," Morrison said. "You should be in the kind of condition to be able to take that challenge on.”
Some, like Shaffer, believe a temporary closure may be necessary to protect the wilderness.
“For me, I'm like, let's just shut it down for a while if that's what we have to do," she said.
Others, like Nelson, with Chelan County Mountain Rescue, feared it would make the area harder to access and enjoy.
For now, the gate remains open. But volunteers and locals alike said without more action, the Enchantments’ natural beauty could be permanently scarred.
“If nothing changes,” Shaffer warned, “we will lose the natural beauty and wonderment of the Enchantments.”
Local News
Seattle closes 3 parks over safety concerns; neighbors say problems are shifting
Seattle closes three parks for safety but fails to curb nearby encampment growth.
SEATTLE — Seattle has temporarily closed three parks, citing ongoing safety concerns and misuse. But neighbors say the closures haven’t solved the problem — and a growing encampment across the street from an elementary school has them worried.
Seven Hills Park on Capitol Hill, Lake City Mini Park, and Blanche Lavizzo Park in the Central District were all closed Aug. 28. Seattle Parks and Recreation says the parks will remain closed for 60 days while the city considers changes such as new lighting, decorative fencing or removing certain amenities.
Neighbors who live near Seven Hills Park say conditions there had spiraled out of control.
“This problem has metastasized,” one Capitol Hill resident said. “The park has been marked as a safe space to come and do drugs and be an outlaw, and that cannot go forward.”
Before the fences went up, photos taken at Seven Hills Park showed tents, trash and used needles scattered across the grounds.
While residents welcome the temporary closure, they fear the activity is simply moving elsewhere.
“We’ve been bombarding the city with our Find It, Fix It reports, and it is only after months that something will miraculously happen,” one neighbor said.
Several blocks away, neighbors say an encampment across the street from Lowell Elementary School has been growing for weeks. Mary Lamery, who lives nearby, says she’s deeply concerned about students seeing or walking past the site.
“When I see an encampment across the street where fentanyl is being smoked, it concerns me greatly,” Lamery said. “Blocking the sidewalk, there’s several tents up there, garbage, abandoned furniture. Who knows what else is on the ground there.”
Lamery says she’s filed multiple complaints through the city’s Find It, Fix It app but hasn’t received a response. The night before school started, she says she flagged down a Seattle police officer to raise the alarm.
“I said, ‘Officer, there’s a fentanyl encampment across from Lowell Elementary, and tomorrow is the first day of school,’” she said.
She says the officer told her he would check it out.
“He said he would, and he understood the importance of what I was requesting and why he needed to go,” Lamery said. “And then he asked me, he goes, ‘Did Find It, Fix It ever get back to you?’ And I said, ‘No, they didn’t.’ And I could see a shift — he just went like this, and he couldn’t believe an agency responsible for attending to that hadn’t made their way there. He said these encampments are an ongoing problem.”
Neighbors say they want the city to take responsibility and act faster.
“Start dealing with this head-on and realize you have a serious problem, and quit making excuses for it,” Lamery said.
“Help us and help these people — help yourselves. This is insane. It’s insane,” another Capitol Hill resident said.
Seattle Public Schools says the encampment near Lowell Elementary is not on school property. The district says it is working with the city and has rerouted a few bus lines to prioritize student safety.
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JBLM soldier sentenced for sexually assaulting college student in barracks
A military judge sentenced Pvt. Deron Gordon to over six years in prison for sexually assaulting a college student.
JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. — A Joint Base Lewis-McChord soldier who sexually assaulted a college student in the barracks in 2024 was sentenced to more than six years in prison Friday.
A military judge sentenced Pvt. Deron Gordon, 20, to six years and three months in prison after he pleaded guilty to one specification each of sexual assault, abusive sexual contact and as a principal to indecent recording.
Gordon was previously charged with additional crimes, but those were dismissed as part of the plea agreement.
Gordon is one of four soldiers who were charged in in connection to the sexual assault of a college student, who is now a commissioned Army officer, in October 2024.
When Gordon pleaded guilty, he said that he and another soldier followed the college student into a bedroom after she had been drinking with them. He said she was unstable walking into the room and when they went inside she was on the bed and not responsive.
Gordon said he and the other soldier each proceeded to have sex with her and they filmed each other sexually assaulting her on Snapchat.
As part of his sentencing, Gordon will be reduced in rank to E-1 and dishonorably discharged from the Army.
Gordon will serve the remainder of his sentencing at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Once he is released, Gordon must register as a sex offender.
The three other soldiers who were charged in the incident are at different points in the legal process, and their cases are being treated separately.
If you or someone you know has been a victim of sexual assault, you can call the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-4673. Additional resources are available on the Washington State Department of Health's website.
KING 5’s Conner Board contributed to this report.
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Local News
Teen sentenced in 2023 deadly Metro bus shooting near White Center
In the plea agreement, the teen said he recognized the man from pulling a gun on him on the bus several days prior and was nervous and scared.
WHITE CENTER, Wash. — A teenager was sentenced Friday to over 23 years in prison for shooting and killing a man aboard a King County Metro bus near White Center in 2023.
King County Judge Brian McDonald sentenced Miguel Rivera Dominguez, 19, to 23 years and 4 months in prison, with credit for time served. Prison time will be followed by three years of community custody.
The sentencing comes after Rivera Dominguez pleaded guilty July 3 of first-degree premeditated murder.
On Oct. 3, 2023, Rivera Dominguez fired five shots from “point blank range” at the head and neck of Marcel Da'jon Wagner, 21, who appeared to be asleep aboard the bus near Southwest Roxbury Street and 15th Avenue Southwest, according to charging documents.
In the plea agreement, Rivera Dominguez said he recognized Wagner from having “pulled a gun” on him on the bus a few days prior.
“i was nervous and scared when I saw him on 10/3/23 but he was not threatening me and I was not acting in self-defense,” Rivera Dominguez wrote.
There were 15 other passengers on the bus at the time, but none of them were injured in the shooting.
Rivera Dominguez, who was 17 at the time of the shooting, fled after the incident and remained at large for a month before he turned himself in.
The shooting prompted concerns about safety aboard King County Metro buses. After the shooting, Metro said it would add security to the H Line, expanding transit security officers who patrol buses and transit centers.
Local News
Let’s Go Washington launches initiative campaign on trans youth sports, parental rights
Let's Go Washington, the backers of the 2024 initiatives, is looking for signatures again.
OLYMPIA, Wash. — Let's Go Washington is back in the initiative game.
The organization, founded by Brian Heywood, sponsored several initiatives in 2024 changing state law.
Heywood announced Monday signatures are being gathered to submit two initiatives to the 2026 state Legislature or potentially voters. The initiatives relate to parental rights and trans youth athletes.
Heywood's organization achieved significant victories last year when voters supported initiatives restricting natural gas use and overturning state laws limiting police pursuits. The state Legislature also passed Let's Go Washington-backed measures banning income taxes and guaranteeing parental rights to access school records. The success came after Heywood invested more than $5 million of his own money into seven initiatives.
"Someone has to stand up and fight back. And what I think I've done is given the voice. I've given voice to 1.2 million people who signed at least one of our initiatives," Heywood said.
However, the organization faced a setback earlier this year when Gov. Bob Ferguson signed legislation overhauling the "parents bill of rights" initiative.
"It stripped all the parts about parental notification or parental access to information," Heywood said.
In response, Let's Go Washington is now gathering signatures for two new campaigns. The first seeks to overturn Ferguson's recent law, restoring their original parental rights initiative. The second would require physicians to assign genders to youth athletes during physicals, prohibiting those considered males from competing against females.
"Allowing biological males to compete in girls sports is a blatant, a flagrant violation of Title IX, I would argue, and also extremely unfair to girls who've worked really hard to get in a position to be top athletes," Heywood said.
Despite failing to pass initiatives targeting the state's climate law, long-term care savings program, and capital gains tax in 2024, Heywood remains optimistic about his organization's impact.
"Four out of seven, I'm pretty, pretty happy with what we did, and we're not done," he said.
If the organization can collect enough signatures by the end of the year, the issues would be submitted to the state Legislature. Lawmakers could either pass the initiatives or let voters decide in November 2026.


