Tonya Woo: It’s time for Seattle to invest in Little Saigon鈥檚 future
May 13, 2025, 7:50 AM | Updated: 7:52 am

Tonya Woo is on a mission to revitalize Little Saigon in Seattle. But she needs the city's help. (Photo: Tonya Woo)
(Photo: Tonya Woo)
Five months ago, a coalition of Little Saigon community members launched a petition: 鈥淒edicate Resources to Restore and Revitalize Little Saigon.鈥 It wasn鈥檛 just a plea鈥攊t was a plan. We called for real investment, culturally rooted public safety, and a seat at the table when decisions are made about our neighborhood鈥檚 future.
We appreciate the steps the City of Seattle has taken. Through the Downtown Activation Plan and strong community advocacy, we鈥檝e helped bring in hotspot patrols, safety ambassadors, cleanups, a future mobile treatment van, and the 鈥淲e Deliver Care鈥 team.
But these efforts are overwhelmed by the scale of the crisis鈥攁nd the City鈥檚 limited authority and funding. The deeper issues鈥攈ousing, behavioral health, and long-term addiction treatment – fall under the responsibility of King County and Washington State.
And from those levels of government, we鈥檝e received silence, delays, and inaction.
Here’s what we need in Little Saigon
In our petition, we outlined urgent and specific needs: the formation of a multi-jurisdictional task force, dedicated investments in culturally competent public safety and health services, regular sanitation and environmental maintenance, and transparency in how government dollars are allocated in the Chinatown-International District. We also called for a long-term economic development strategy and direct community involvement in the decision-making processes that affect our neighborhood.
Despite repeated appeals, the majority of the petition鈥檚 conditions remain unmet. The people most directly impacted鈥攖hose who live and work in Little Saigon every day鈥攔emain excluded from decision-making in the highest level of power.
Meanwhile, unhoused and addicted individuals are still being pushed into Little Saigon without services, oversight, or support. Our neighborhood has become a containment zone for a regional crisis no one wants to claim responsibility for. And our community is bearing the burden.
A crisis from decades of neglect
This is displacement through historical neglect鈥攔ooted in decades of underinvestment and invisibility.
While many are grateful for temporary police patrols and cleanups, the underlying issues remain. The drug use, overdoses, and violence haven鈥檛 gone away鈥攖hey鈥檝e only moved around the block. And every day, it鈥檚 our residents, elders, and small businesses who are left to manage the fallout.
Little Saigon has not been idle. We are the ones administering Narcan, picking up litter from sidewalks, walking safety patrols, and supporting our neighbors. But we are not public infrastructure. We are a neighborhood. And we are exhausted.
This is what structural abandonment looks like.
‘We need action’
I鈥檝e worked both inside and outside City Hall. I know when a promise is real and when it鈥檚 just political cover. Our community doesn鈥檛 need more vague commitments鈥攚e need action.
Little Saigon isn鈥檛 asking for special treatment. We鈥檙e demanding the same dignity, safety, and partnership that every neighborhood in Seattle, King County, and Washington State deserves. We鈥檝e waited long enough. It鈥檚 time to fulfill the action items outlined in our petition. Supporting this petition isn鈥檛 just about one neighborhood鈥攊t鈥檚 a model for what it looks like to prioritize people over policy.
The time to act is now.
Tanya Woo is a community activist and former Seattle City Councilmember. She is a special contributor to MyNorthwest.com.