crosscut.com : Puget Sound News of the Great Nearby. en-us Crosscut http://www.crosscut.com/rss/button.gif http://www.crosscut.com/ Crosscut http://www.crosscut.com/ Copyright 2008 Crosscut LLC. All rights reserved. en-us Sausage Links, top-two headache edition http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15694/Sausage+Links%2C+top-two+headache+edition/ <p> David Postman had a busy morning. First, <i>The Seattle Times</i> chief political writer reported the <a href="http://blog.seattletimes.nwsource.com/davidpostman/2008/07/what_to_call_i1000.html" target="_blank">proper way</a> to describe the <strike>death with dignity</strike> "assisted suicide" initiative. Then he dropped a political firebomb, reporting the state's political parties haven't yet given up trying to ax the "top-two" primary, with both Republicans and Democrats claiming the <a href="http://blog.seattletimes.nwsource.com/davidpostman/2008/07/political_parties_say_toptwo_primary_may_not_count.html" target="_blank">entire '08 election won't count</a>. I thought that headache was <a href="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2004290876_apscotusprimarylawsuitreax5thldwritethru.html" target="_blank">over</a>. Turns out it's just getting started. ... </p> Tue, 08 Jul 2008 14:23:01 PDT Crosscut Sausage Links, "freedom to get drunk and blow stuff up" edition http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15657/Sausage+Links%2C+%22freedom+to+get+drunk+and+blow+stuff+up%22+edition/ <p> <b>Chris Mulick at the <i>Tri-City Herald</i> has today's top story</b>, reporting this morning that Tim Eyman's Initiative 985 and the Service Employees International Union-backed Initiative 1029 would — if passed by voters in November — <a href="http://www.tri-cityherald.com/olympiadispatch/story/232001.html" target="_blank">increase the state's budget deficit by an estimated $300 million</a>. </p> Mon, 07 Jul 2008 13:23:01 PDT Crosscut As the Sonics leave town, it may help the arts http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15610/As+the+Sonics+leave+town%2C+it+may+help+the+arts/ <p>In all the reporting about the Sonics decision, we tend to overlook the intense clamoring over a taxing source, the so-called "stadium taxes," that bedevils the politics. A lot of groups want to lay claim to those taxes, which are supposed to go away after the Kingdome, Safeco Field, and Qwest Field are paid off, but are really catnip to politicians for their pet causes. The taxes have two attractions: they are not really an "increase" if you just extend their life, and they fall mostly on visitors, who don't vote locally.</p> <p>One of the main supplicants is the arts. Thereby hangs an interesting story.</p> Sat, 05 Jul 2008 11:17:01 PDT Crosscut The 100-year gamble to save our quality of life http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15466/The+100-year+gamble+to+save+our+quality+of+life/ A close look at the ambitious "Cascade Agenda," which hopes to preserve the central Puget Sound region's natural systems from a Pugetopolis that sprawls all the way to the Cascades. The mechanisms are known, but it's not clear they can work well enough or soon enough. Thu, 03 Jul 2008 05:00:01 PDT Crosscut The dangers of imperfect storm predictions http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15484/The+dangers+of+imperfect+storm+predictions/ In the wake of the investigation into the 2006 <a href="/mossback/2165/">"Hanukkah Eve" rain storm</a> that hit Seattle and drowned a Madison Valley woman in her flooded basement office, I questioned the terminology of "100-year storms." In doing a <a href="/mossback/2559/">quick survey</a> of media stories, I found that central Puget Sound had experienced a minimum of six "100-year storms" in 20 years. I concluded that the term was misleading. Now, with the terrible flooding in the Midwest this year, it's becoming clear that the terminology is hurting some flood victims. Tue, 01 Jul 2008 09:24:01 PDT Crosscut Seven premonitions you can take to the bank http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15439/Seven+premonitions+you+can+take+to+the+bank/ Predictions at mid-year regarding sweet deals for developers, a Sonics boon, the precarious viaduct, a Boeing handout, Sound Transit, Pat Davis, and cleaning up Puget Sound. Sun, 29 Jun 2008 22:00:01 PDT Crosscut Saving Puget Sound is an economic problem http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15225/Saving+Puget+Sound+is+an+economic+problem/ The laws and regulations that protect it from the most egregious dumping work pretty well, but the only way to finance the prevention of non-point-source pollution is to impose fees. Fri, 20 Jun 2008 17:00:01 PDT Crosscut Polimedia lunch links, flip-flop edition http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15216/Polimedia+lunch+links%2C+flip-flop+edition/ <p>Jim Camden at the <i>Spokesman-Review</i> mined his <a href="http://www.spokesmanreview.com/elections/2008/blog/?postID=5986" target="_blank">YouTube account</a> for videos of Barack Obama's now <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/20/opinion/20brooks.html?hp" target="_blank">infamous switch</a> on campaign financing, while also noting John McCain's back flip on the <a href="http://www.spokesmanreview.com/elections/2008/blog/?postID=5996" target="_blank">off-shore oil drilling ban</a>. ... </p> Fri, 20 Jun 2008 12:05:01 PDT Crosscut Mayor Nickels expands his horizons http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/15002/Mayor+Nickels+expands+his+horizons/ <p>Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels has mounted a new national stage, to go along with his climate-change leadership role. This one is about metropolitan regionalism. The mayor is joining a national crusade by the Brookings Institution, hoping to steer more and wiser funding to American metropolitan regions. The key argument, not exactly a new one, is that cities generate most American wealth and innovations, so the rural-oriented Congress ought to get on board.</p> Thu, 12 Jun 2008 17:36:01 PDT Crosscut The animal-waste problem is, and is not, a load of crap http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/14929/The+animal-waste+problem+is%2C+and+is+not%2C+a+load+of+crap/ Researchers in Snohomish County estimate that pets there account for waste equivalent to a city of 32,000. That's a lot of nasty bacteria in surface-water runoff. Tue, 10 Jun 2008 10:00:01 PDT Crosscut Beach fires? Let's talk about real carbon footprints http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/14876/Beach+fires+Let%27s+talk+about+real+carbon+footprints/ <p>The Seattle Parks and Recreation Department is considering a ban of beach fires at Alki and Golden Gardens parks &mdash; <a href="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2004463452_beach07m.html" target="_blank">not this year, as first announced, but next year</a> &mdash; stating that beach fires contribute to global warming.</p> <p>If the parks staff is really concerned about global warming, perhaps they will also recommend no fires in the barbecue pits at Woodland, Lincoln, Carkeek, and other parks throughout our city. Or perhaps they will cease using the large leaf-blowers at Golden Gardens, which blows sand off the sidewalk and parking lot, or stop driving around Discovery Park in large trucks. In fact, there are dozens of things the parks staff themselves can do to reduce the carbon footprint.</p> Sun, 08 Jun 2008 22:42:01 PDT Crosscut Puget Sound perennial http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/14465/Puget+Sound+perennial/ Washington's magnificent inland sea is back at the top of the region's to-do list. But while virtually everybody yearns to do something about pollution, there is neither political nor scientific consensus as to what exactly is wrong, let alone what to do about it. Fri, 23 May 2008 00:00:01 PDT Crosscut Memo to our sinking ferries: Think bold! http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/14378/Memo+to+our+sinking+ferries%3A+Think+bold%21/ <p><b>Over the weekend</b>, <i>The Seattle Times</i> published <a href="http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2004422060_ferry18m.html" taget="_blank">a good overview</a> of what ails our ferry system. Tim Eyman, by cutting the motor-vehicle tax, launched the first harpoon. Out of money, the ferry captains deferred maintenance and jacked up fares, sending usage downward.</p> <p>The message seems to be: retrenchment. Maybe the opposite course makes more sense?</p> Mon, 19 May 2008 16:00:01 PDT Crosscut The need for cruise control http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/14192/The+need+for+cruise+control/ An environmentalist explains why better federal regulations are needed to police polluters among the world's fleet of cruise ships: State and local authorities can only do so much. Over six months this year, Puget Sound will see 211 big ships bearing 835,000 passengers call on Seattle. Tue, 13 May 2008 22:00:01 PDT Crosscut There's nothing new in a plan to save Puget Sound http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/14151/There%27s+nothing+new+in+a+plan+to+save+Puget+Sound/ While the Puget Sound Partnership works to include citizen comment in the process of developing a plan to save the Sound, some scientists say they already weighed in &mdash; back in 2006 &mdash; but it looks as if their comments are being ignored. Tue, 13 May 2008 05:00:01 PDT Crosscut Puget Sound on Prozac http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/14008/Puget+Sound+on+Prozac/ Pretty as it is, our signature waterway is a chemical dump for everything from oil to sewage &mdash; and even anti-depressants. You may be surprised (and disgusted) by what turns up there. Mon, 12 May 2008 05:00:01 PDT Crosscut Northwest travel: A quick escape to Whidbey Island http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/13505/Northwest+travel%3A+A+quick+escape+to+Whidbey+Island/ A mere 24-hour trip from Seattle can seem like a journey far away. For starters, all those lovely views ... Thu, 01 May 2008 00:00:01 PDT Crosscut A big, new growth management plan is already outgrown http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/13638/A+big%2C+new+growth+management+plan+is+already+outgrown/ The Puget Sound Regional Council's <i>Vision 2040</i>, to be adopted tomorrow, has been outrun by seven years of population growth in the very outlying areas the plan is intended to protect, says the recent former Washington secretary of transportation. He explains what's happened and argues for a recalibration of strategy. Tue, 22 Apr 2008 22:00:01 PDT Crosscut Mr. Ruckelshaus goes to Washington http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/13551/Mr.+Ruckelshaus+goes+to+Washington/ <p>Bill Ruckelshaus, well known in these parts for his leadership in efforts to save salmon and Puget Sound, is having his 15 minutes of national fame. The lifelong Republican has endorsed Barack Obama, with the timing meant to be helpful to Obama's primary efforts in Indiana, where Ruckelshaus is a still-revered native son.</p> <p>Ruckelshaus has had his earlier moments of fame, notably when he joined Elliot Richardson in defying President Nixon by refusing to fire Archibald Cox. It was a moment of great integrity, typical of Ruckelshaus's principled character, and it may have cost him the White House. I can explain.</p> Sat, 19 Apr 2008 12:00:01 PDT Crosscut So much talk about so few fish http://www.crosscut.com/puget-sound/13414/So+much+talk+about+so+few+fish/ The salmon fisheries of the Northwest have spawned a new industry of bureaucrats, lawyers, environmentalists, sport fishers, commercial interests, scientists, and natives, all focused on the absence of fish. Meanwhile, four sockeye returned last summer to a lake in Idaho once teeming with tens of thousands. Mon, 14 Apr 2008 23:00:01 PDT Crosscut