The Daily Troll: NBA kills Seattle. Again. A loo to love in Pioneer Square? Good news from the north for coal port supporters.
Navy, state protect Hood Canal tidelands.
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Navy, state protect Hood Canal tidelands.
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The bow-tie wearer among the candidates talks about big changes for police, transportation and parking.
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Commentary: When schools and police have problems, the leaders are replaced. But the true problem lies in the influence of unions.
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What can a mayor do about public education? The candidates have a few ideas.
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What you should know about immigration, urban agriculture, Seattle police and funding higher ed.
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Commentary: One of the nation's biggest teachers' groups has just attacked Democrats for Education Reform. Is the party itself pushing people who want to improve schools into the Republican camp?
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Seattle schools' math deficit. In defense of tiny apartments.
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Democrats push through revenue hikes but 5 party members in swing districts vote with Republicans.
READ MORE | 6 COMMENTSLegislators are looking at taxes and political realities as they face a big question: How they can move beyond rhetoric about honoring teachers and meet a court mandate for better funding of schools?
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More affordable housing in South Lake Union. And you might have heard, but it was also Earth Day.
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The late political consultant was committed to civic greatness until the end. Here, his last letter to the state he so loved.
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The House wants a requirement that students perform community service to graduate.
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Governor, lawmakers respond to drunk-driving fatalities in bipartisan fashion.
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After less-than-staggering results from its last "Excellence for All" plan, Seattle Schools sets out to refine things.
READ MORE | 4 COMMENTSQuick action would position the Democrats to start negotiations with the Republican-dominated Senate on priorities for the next two years.
READ MORE | 1 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
A contract for the new Richland School District superintendent outlines his pay, health benefits and how his job performance will be evaluated. It also addresses his "morality." "It is ambiguous," says one official.
Today, child care standards vary wildly from state to state. And even within states, standards may vary depending on the size or type of provider: Smaller, at-home providers are frequently subject to much less rigorous requirements.
The supporters held a rally for the Indian Heritage Middle College, an alternative high-school program, asking Seattle schools today to keep it in the district. The program was supposed to close last year but was delayed by Superintendent Jose Banda. Now it is supposed to move to a space in Northgate Mall.
Educators say shorter school days allow teachers to complete required non-class work at a time when there is no money to pay teachers to do the work outside of school hours. But education analyst Jami Lund said the uptick in partial days is driven by something else -– collective bargaining and districts willing to give up class time when there is no money for teacher raises.
The UW and WSU have developed a plan that takes 32 low-income high school graduates and puts them into a five-year engineering program. The program allows students to get used to the college workload before entering the regular engineering curriculum the next year.
School Board Member Kay Smith-Blum says she is dropping her candidacy for a State Board of Education position. She will stay on the Seattle School Board until at least the end of her term this year and may seek re-election.
The ACT test for high school students will have a computer version available by 2015. A pen and paper option will still be available for a while. More students are now taking the ACT than the SAT for their college entrance exam.
After eight years on the board, DeBell is hanging up his hat, with hopes of doing something new. Three school board seats will be on the ballot this year.
Kim Mead, an Edmonds teacher, becomes leader of the state's most powerful union of public school teachers this summer. She won election as the WEA's president late Friday night.
Oregon operates the second-most-expensive public preschools in the nation, at a cost of more than $8,500 per child for a half-day, Head Start-like program, according to a study just released.