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ArtSEA: “Fine and rare” finds at a new Pioneer Square bookshop
On a rainy morning last week, I pulled up in Pioneer Square and knocked on the glass door of a classic storefront at 400 Occidental Avenue South. A decal on the still-papered windows read Long Bros. Fine & Rare Books, which was on the precipice of opening to the public.
WA conservative groups are banding together to dump carbon pricing
Project 42, a 3-year-old nonprofit working to “change the course of Washington state to prioritize free markets, personal liberty and an individual’s right to prosper,” has its fingerprints all over current conservative efforts, including the drive to kill Washington’s new cap-and-invest program. Washington’s new initiative king...
Your Last Meal | Dan Pashman on his cookbook “Anything’s Pastable”
Home cooks tagged Dan on Instagram, eager to show off their cascatelli creations, which is when he realized: Everyone was pairing their pasta with the same three sauces!. Eager to move beyond marinara and mac & cheese, Dan just released his first cookbook, Anything’s Pastable: 81 Inventive Pasta Recipes for Saucy People.
Seattle Police Department Chief Adrian Diaz out amid controversy
Adrian Diaz is out as Seattle’s Chief of Police. The departure comes amid increasing controversy about discrimination and retaliation on the force, a lawsuit and external investigation into sexism claims, and struggles to rebuild a diminished department. Mayor Bruce Harrell announced at a press conference Wednesday that Diaz would...
ICE deportee alleged ongoing threats over false sex-crime charge
Immigration officials acknowledged an erroneous sex-crime conviction listed in the U.S. charging records against a detainee at the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma, and recently deported the man to Micronesia, where he reportedly faced death threats over the mistake. Detainee Kungfu Karuo, 41, repeatedly appealed to officials and advocates...
Podcast | Why acronyms like AANHPI and AAPI don’t always cut it
AANHPI Heritage Month is coming to a close. May is widely recognized as a time to celebrate Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander, or AANHPI, communities. There have been different versions of this acronym over the years – from Asian Pacific American (APA) to Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI).
WA college students build campus harm-reduction support networks
When Mary Meyer started at Skagit Valley College (SVC) in 2021, she had not set foot in a classroom since graduating from high school almost 30 years prior. Six months before starting classes, she had been released from prison after serving a three-year sentence for soliciting drugs. Upon her release...
WA spent $5B over past decade on homelessness, housing programs
For much of the past decade, the amount of money Washington lawmakers dedicated to housing and homelessness programs grew gradually, climbing from around $200 million to $400 million in each two-year budget between 2013 and 2021. But in the past four years this spending has surged, according to an analysis...
Podcast | The impact of economic anxiety on the 2024 election
Data suggests the U.S. economy is performing well, but many Americans don’t feel that way. How will those feelings influence the 2024 election?. As part of the Cascade PBS Ideas Festival in early May, Kate Linebaugh and Ryan Knutson, co-hosts of the podcast The Journal, took the stage with Wall Street Journal senior political correspondent Molly Ball to dig into this strange economic picture and its political implications.
Tech CEOs join chorus of criticism for Seattle housing plan
Leaders from 28 Seattle tech companies, start-ups and tech-adjacent investment groups have joined a growing coalition of Seattle organizations calling on Mayor Bruce Harrell to bolster his proposed housing plan and allow more density across the city. The CEOs’ letter, sent to Harrell and the Office of Planning and Community...
Poll: Almost half of WA voters are undecided on governor’s race
Six months out from the 2024 election, voters are still largely undecided on the first open Washington governor’s race in 12 years, according to a new Cascade PBS/Elway Poll. While 76% of voters polled statewide said they were paying attention to the election, a full 47% said they still...
Mossback’s Northwest: Lumberjacks, meet the Lumberjills
Twice in the 20th century, a Northwest wood came to the rescue in wartime. At the same time, the cutting of that wood triggered advances that changed not only how loggers worked, but also who worked in the logging business. One war brought the eight-hour workday, cut from 12 or more — and another saw a cadre of working women move into the woods. You’ve heard of Rosie the Riveter? How about Rosie the Logger?
WA mom reclaims son’s story after University of Idaho murders
It’s just one booth among many at the bustling 40th annual Tulip Festival Street Fair in Mount Vernon. Orange sunrise stickers on the booth read “Hug your people.” Copies of a children’s book called The Boy Who Wore Blue are stacked high. Bracelets that say “Live Life Like Ethan” are displayed. And fresh-cut tulip bouquets feature only one white and yellow variety. This booth is all about celebrating the life of Ethan Chapin.
Podcast | How war created demand for NW spruce – and “lumberjills”
In the early 20th century, Sitka spruce, a giant conifer native to the Pacific Northwest, became known as an excellent material for building airplanes. As a result, when the U.S. entered World War I, the demand for that wood exploded. The American military set up what was called the “Spruce...
ArtSEA: NW Folklife Festival kicks off summer concert season
Memorial Day is upon us, and according to local custom, this weekend marks the beginning of our outdoor music season — regardless of whether the weather cooperates. That’s thanks to the sprawling Northwest Folklife Festival, which since 1972 has presented an electric cross-section of cultures across multiple stages. The free four-day celebration (May 24 - 27) enables the joy of discovery by presenting diverse musical traditions (blues, taiko, bayou, polka and neo-soul, as a small sample) and movement (tango, contra, swing and break-dancing), all within the Seattle Center grounds.
Washington voters favor anti-tax initiatives — for now
The three tax initiatives destined for Washington’s November ballot are popular with voters, according to the results of a new Cascade PBS/Elway Poll. None of the proposals – to repeal the capital gains tax, to kill the cap-and-invest carbon pricing system, and to make the long-term care insurance program optional – gathered support from a majority of voters in the May 13-16 poll. But two of them got pretty close.
Your Last Meal | The Leftovers with Kathleen Hanna & Food Not Bombs
Today Kathleen tells us about her major, if accidental, contribution to a Nirvana record, what it means to be punk-rock while living a comfortable adult life and what it was like working at McDonald’s as a teenager. Then host Rachel Belle meets the co-founder of Food Not Bombs, a...
Inside Seattle’s burgeoning community of literary translators
Anton Hur has translated horror, fantasy and historical fiction. He’s wrestled with what kind of voice a dragon has and how to create the appropriate tone for a person who’s depressed. And he’s co-translated Beyond the Story: 10-Year Record of BTS — a volume of 500-plus pages — with only a month to finish the translation.
WSF says building new diesel ferries would create two-year delay
A suggestion by Washington gubernatorial candidates to build diesel-powered ferries instead of planned hybrid electric vessels — to save time — would actually create a two-year delay in adding boats to the fleet, according to an analysis by Washington State Ferries. The two Democrats and two Republicans considered...
Podcast | Meet Samuel Wolfe, the Origins season three filmmaker
Cascade PBS has just revealed what’s to come in the third season of Origins. The company recently announced Samuel Wolfe as the director chosen to take on the newest season of Origins, a project that awards regional filmmakers $40,000 to create a docuseries on communities they belong to. Previous seasons have focused on refugees in the state and the experiences of growing up Black in Seattle.
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