Water rights and car tabs are still on the docket.
The latest reboot succeeds by swapping Peter Parker’s angst with daffy levity.
Hosted by Fantagraphics, the low-key affair showcases some of the city’s finest underdogs.
An ominous environment has some liberals rethinking their views toward firearms.
CAIR-Washington launches a program to help launch careers.
The city council took steps toward offsetting the cuts to Medicaid that Congress is now considering.
The rule changes are still under consideration by the Health Care Authority.
City Councilmember Kshama Sawant says the decision came due to dissatisfaction with the team’s methodology.
The $43.7 billion budget didn’t become public until early Friday and received no public hearing before lawmakers voted.
Murray didn’t name the candidate, but made the battle lines clear.
After the NAACP launched the idea in January, Seattle schools are poised to make it happen.
Our favorite posts, poems, and tweets from a day of extensive coverage.
The GOP has been none too please with Inslee’s negotiations.
Neighbors say they hope to see one encampment remain.
The increase will raise $7.3 billion.
A lawsuit against the program calls out the vouchers’ success with tenants’-rights advocate Jon Grant.
Amid a larger shift toward performance metrics, the city will engage in a competitive bidding process for the first time in a decade.
The strategy relies on vouchers for market-rate housing. Critics say that’s not a long-term solution to homelessness in Seattle.
First, it won’t happen. Second, it would be just fine if it did.
The southwesterly suburb’s big day has finally come.
