From Cal Anderson Park to Seattle Center, Seattle Weekly captures the demonstration’s atmosphere.
Tens of thousands take to Seattle’s streets to support the #MeToo movement and marginalized communities.
Some state projects aimed at homeless families and disabled veterans won’t happen.
Businesses fear a ballot-passed tax could be far costlier than a negotiated deal.
Advocates hope to revamp the current system to ease the toll on kids and their foster families.
A passed bill eliminating victims’ restrictions may not be heard in the state Senate.
Democratic legislators are pushing a number of bills to make voting easier.
A greeting and mission statement from your new Seattle Weekly editor.
Plus, park renovation in Kirkland.
A lust for cheap laughs leaves the master composer’s depths unplumbed.
New legislation could make it harder for tenants to be evicted.
The Navigation Team was created to ease the impact of encampment clean-ups, but its growth is on hold as some question its effectiveness.
The former Army base could ease the city’s low-income housing shortage or school overcrowding. It just probably can’t do both.
The move comes after the company announced plans to increase worker pay and benefits.
The news ushers in a two-year monitoring period in which the city can’t slip up.
If legislators don’t act on the governor’s legislation, a plan could land on the November ballot.
What is the Attorney General smoking?
And guns and climate too.
People lacking a permanent addresses often don’t know when they are supposed to appear in court. And they don’t have the money to pay the fines that follow.
Plus, the Eastside comes together in support of its Muslim residents.
