 Matt Hagen
Two years ago Mary Alyce Burleigh bought herself a bright yellow
scooter. The former Kirkland mayor and current city council member
uses it to zip around town to meetings and local fundraisers. She
finds she is as busy in her retirement as she was during her 29
years as a teacher for Redmond High School. Recently she parked her
scooter and perched on a city park bench in downtown Kirkland to
talk with Hannelore Sudermann about life, civic involvement, and
getting 80 miles to the gallon.
My goal was always to be a high school history teacher. I
really took a broad range of courses at WSU. As a high school
teacher you have to know a little about a lot of things. When I
graduated in ’64, I got what I believe was the only high school
history position on the west side open to a woman. In those days
most history teachers were coaches, and the only teams were for
guys.
I taught at Burlington Edison for a year, and decided I really
needed to go back to graduate school. I just felt I wanted to
know more. So I reenrolled at WSU. It made me a much better
history teacher. What you learn in graduate school, which you
really didn’t focus on as an undergraduate, is how history is
written. I learned to focus as much on how and who wrote the
history as much as what they wrote.
I decided to serve my community. After that first year of
graduate school I went into VISTA [Volunteers in Service to
America]. This is during the Vietnam War and the beginning of the
civil rights movement. I went down to Florida and South Carolina to
work with migrant workers and textile workers. We were tutoring and
doing things like nutrition and sanitation education. It was like
going to another part of the world. The white textile workers
wanted nothing to do with us, and the government didn’t want us to
work with blacks. . . . What I learned was invaluable, but I
realized, “I’m not doing anything for anybody here.” So I resigned
and came back to Washington. I was lucky enough to land a job at
Redmond High School, where I spent the next 29 years.
I met my husband when I was involved in the Eugene
McCarthy [presidential] campaign in 1968. . . . I’ve always had an
interest in civic involvement. That VISTA experience, that was
enough to radicalize anybody: To be in America and have third-world
conditions. I think also my education at Washington State
contributed. . . . It was just the time. You saw that social
justice was something you had to start working on in a serious
way.
I taught in a British comprehensive high school for a
year (1977-78) on a Fulbright grant. I was teaching Anglo-Saxon
invasions and Tudor-Stewarts as well as 20th-century world
[history]. If you’ve seen the Sidney Poitier movie, To Sir with
Love, it was like that. It was a very tough school, and there
was very limited equipment. There weren’t enough textbooks, and
discipline was not good. I was considered to be a great success,
because my kids were sitting down in class.
[In the States] we moved to North Rose Hill. When we
annexed to the city of Kirkland, it seemed apparent that we needed
to get ourselves organized as a neighborhood. I was one of 12
people who organized the North Rose Hill Neighborhood Association.
We wanted to get the neighborhood involved in civic affairs and try
to get people a sense of community and belonging. Now Kirkland has
a neighborhood association in every neighborhood. They are not
created by the city. They are independent units on their own.
I ran for city council in 2002, after my husband died. I
have learned that most of the problems facing Kirkland or any other
town are regional in solution. For example, the bumper-to-bumper
traffic through the center of town between four and six p.m. is
commuter traffic. They’d rather be sitting down here than sitting
on the freeway.
One of the fun things I do is represent the Association
of Washington Cities on the Shorelines Hearings Board. Anybody who
wants to, say, build a dock, if they don’t get a permit, they can
appeal to the Shorelines Hearings Board. If they do get a permit,
and the Department of Ecology doesn’t like it, we hear it. We’ve
given up on Lake Washington in terms of people porcupining it with
docks. The real issues are up in the San Juans and in Puget Sound.
Docks have a negative impact on habitat, salmon habitat. Our job is
to project the shoreline and the habitat.
Towns can change. Where the library is now, used to be a
gravel potholed parking lot. Where the marina is now, same thing.
You certainly didn’t have any quality restaurants. Everything you
wanted to do, you went into Seattle. We never came downtown,
frankly, the first 15 years we lived here. There was nothing to
come down here for. Now I’m down here all the time. This is the
heart of our town. It’s sort of our living room. People think of
Kirkland as a small town with a small town feel. But we’re the
17th-largest city in the state. We have close to 50,000 people.
What gives you that? It’s that residents know people. That’s what
creates a sense of community. That’s what being a small town
is--it’s feeling connected with the community.
I’m so grateful that the people on the city council back
in those days had the foresight to take a look at the waterfront,
which was all shipyards and oil tanks, and think, “That’s going to
be parks.” They had this vision to say that we could have these
parks. They really set the town and culture. Our job is to not mess
it up, but to build on it.
We do things gracefully, if possible. With Tent City [a
homeless encampment that circulates through church parking lots in
eastern King County], the goal was to make it work and engage the
community in the process. I got a call one Friday afternoon from a
pastor telling me Tent City will be here next Saturday. By Monday,
the city had an informational Website up. We went through a public
process and tried to address peoples’ concerns. There were some
people who went to whatever community Tent City was coming to, and
rile up people. When Tent City was moving in, I went over and
welcomed them, and moved a few boxes. One of these guys reported me
to the attorney general for violating state law or something. That
prompted a headline in the Eastside Journal: “Mayor
Criticized for Helping the Homeless.” I have that one in my
scrapbook.
A former student of mine found the scooter on Craig’s
List. She said, “Why don’t you get this one?” So I did. It’s a
Honda Metropolitan. For a place like Kirkland, where you can
basically ride all over the place, it’s just fun. And it’s
different and kind of cute. It has character. It was named by the
previous owners “Bumble,” so I put some bees on it. I don’t ride it
in the rain or in the dark. And I try to stay off the major
arterials.
I love our community, and I love my neighborhood. I spent
last Saturday morning spreading bark at Mark Twain Elementary. . .
. Our school district spends zero on maintenance and landscaping.
And we think it’s important that a school looks like it’s valued
and it looks good from the outside. We spent four hours picking up
litter and spreading bark around, so when the kids come to school
on Monday it looks good.
I play on the over-55 coed softball team, The Kirkland
Classics. They’re a fun bunch. But this was not a great season for
me. I got hit in the back of the head with a line drive and ended
up with five staples. And then I dove for a ball in the infield and
landed on my face and got a concussion. Other than that, it’s a lot
of fun. I think there’s a different mindset. People don’t look at
it as retiring and sitting in a rocking chair. It’s more, you
retire from your job and you get involved with something else.
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