Idle no more.
CRUEDA chair Lisa Herbold says she doesn’t “expect any opposition” to the final bill.
Third-party candidates won’t rock the two-party boat. But Washington can afford to go rogue.
Business groups and some neighbors oppose the bill, saying it will ‘tie the city’s hands.’
With the passing of activist “Uncle” Bob Santos, Gossett is the last surviving member of the powerful civil-rights quartet.
When you drill down on it, blocking routine encampment evictions is the only sensible policy until enough shelter is provided for the homeless.
Challenged by an industry and a neighborhood in constant flux, Glazer’s Camera widens its scope.
“It’s still a cis-het-white guy club, but it doesn’t have to be that way.”
Murray’s plan would relocate Jungle campers to an ad hoc encampment on an adjacent field.
Any reduction in demand may help reduce rental prices across the city, according to a Zumper data geek.
Seattle’s long-running workshop for teens has a lofty goal: dismantling systemic racism.
It’s not simply that his supporters can’t stand Hillary Clinton. Those inside the Xfinity Arena really like Donald Trump. They are drawn to him. They aren’t going to abandon him.
Complicating the worker-vs.-boss narrative at City Hall.
In a era of declining union influence, organized labor is making big strides in Seattle.
Seattle architect Robert Hutchison designs the new while honoring the old in quickly transforming Seattle.
Could the Lummi’s win over the Cherry Point coal battle influence the debate in N.D.?
He’ll also hold a fundraiser in Bellevue.
The federal government may soon impose far stricter regulations on how much arsenic and mercury can be in our state’s waters.
By sticking to the playbook, they hope the lethal action helps lend credence to recovery efforts.
A son-in-law to Chief Seattle, William DeShaw is one of the most mysterious characters in Puget Sound history.