The deftly pleasant councilmember has made it a lot harder to evict the Jungle.
City leaders want to make it easier for poor families to enroll in the Utilities Discount Program.
The ACLU threatens to sue, Murray doesn’t like the word ‘sweeps,’ and a camper says clearing the Jungle ‘sounds right.’
Blue shirts versus red shirts in the final battle.
The author of Shrill could live wherever she wants. Why choose here?
For four decades, the downtown bar has had a window to a city in flux.
Bryan Jarr’s eponymous downtown spot is the first of its kind in Seattle.
DoNormaal, JusMoni, Chanti Darling, The Dip, and Jo Passed.
All the music your sunburnt face can handle.
Despite the onslaught of sad news this month, the local scene kept pumping out gold nuggets.
The city’s plan for clearing homeless encampments ignores the fundamental reasons people are there to begin with.
Some councilmembers agree with them.
The backers of Millennium Bulk Terminals, a proposed coal-export terminal in Longview, are scrambling to get on the last boat to Asia.
After nearly a year of legal wrangling, Carol Burton is back with her students.
“This is a friggin’ waste of time and resource. You would have to build a Berlin Wall …to keep people out of there. And an army to patrol it.”
The initiative would require hotel housekeepers be provided with panic buttons and create a standard response procedure for hotel management to address acts of harassment or assault by guests.
Seattle pizza guru Brandon Pettit calls forth his Jersey background in his latest place for pizza.
It took a years-long legal battle, a lot of red tape, and a 170-mile drive.
Pivot Art + Culture’s new exhibition, Imagined Futures, is drawn from Paul Allen’s collection of outer-space paraphernalia and art. I expected it to be quirky and nostalgic, and it is. I didn’t expect it to be wryly funny, but it is.
The Seattle filmmaker’s 3-D turn distinguishes him in an excellent field.