City law now requires landlords to offer housing to the first qualified applicant, among other things.
After threatening to clear the sober homeless encampment, the city has taken a step back.
“She is like a shooting star… a once-in-a-lifetime candidate.”
The Capitol Hill locale was the site of five election parties and lots of chatter.
Part two of our series looking at neighborhoods that might not be neighborhoods.
In the bidding war for an exclusive contract with the Port of Seattle, the money comes out of drivers’ pockets.
We’re the third city to ban the widely discredited practice.
It’s immoral, and just a bad idea.
With a September deadline looming, questions over who gets a say in labor negotiations remain.
Sally Bagshaw and Jeanne Kohl-Welles want to give Camp Second Chance another chance.
Campers include a young toddler and an English mastiff.
Part one of our series looking at neighborhoods that might not be neighborhoods.
Two new online movements offer white people ways to fight racism directly.
His long legal career has played out in the newspapers. Now Browne is telling his story in his own words.
For years the city has been neglecting one of the key elements of urban livability. Now, with development booming, experts are concerned and activists are demanding that it take the issue seriously.
The King County Metropolitan Council has taken strong steps to insulate wealthy communities from marijuana, leaving poor minority neighborhoods to pick up the slack.
A team of researchers assessing the effects of Seattle’s new minimum wage say it’s helped a little.
A ban on source-of-income discrimination and a cap on move-in fees make their way through Council.
The secretly negotiated contract was a mixed bag, in terms of reform.
Bill caps renters’ move-in costs; plus, a study confirms rents are high and landlords discriminate.
