How WSDOT will manage the I-5 collapse
Guest Opinion: As the former state Secretary of Transportation, I know the department is ready to respond.
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Guest Opinion: As the former state Secretary of Transportation, I know the department is ready to respond.
READ MORE | 38 COMMENTS
House Democrats prepare to pass their budget. And partisan sniping breaks out on a transportation issues.
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Seattle mayoral candidates called the departure of Seattle Police Chief John Diaz a chance to push for more rapid change. But when should the search begin?
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Supporters of a coal port near Bellingham want to keep the focus on what they see as the main issues: More jobs and revenue for local governments.
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The Washington state Liquor Control Board is running behind one part of its work. And it has received a wider variety of testimony than expected.
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A law aims to put an end to a cycle of toxic products in the household.
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The transportation safety board questions how 787 could have been certified. The Mariners are close to resigning Felix Hernandez. Worries about drones hit D.C. as well as Seattle.
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Facing eviction next spring from its Stewart Street terminal, Greyhound has come up against an unlikely roadblock in its search for a new Seattle home. It's a standoff the city has seen before.
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Thousands of people turned out for seven regional meetings about plans to export coal for burning in China. Officials must now decide whether to tackle the concerns about train traffic and global warming.
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What about deep reforms, such as less subsidy of red states by blue ones, and retargeting poverty programs to the poor?
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In Whatcom County, people see a Cherry Point shipping terminal as a source of well-paying jobs and opportunity for local residents
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Green Acre Radio: Protection and restoration of habitat go hand-in-hand with the revival of salmon.
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UW legal scholar Hugh Spitzer explains seven constitutional amendments that would promote democracy and force D.C. to operate more openly.
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Green Acre Radio talks with the people attending public meetings about proposed facilities to export coal to China. The vast majority are opposed.
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The state has never seen an environmental review take comments from so much of the state. And unexpectedly large numbers of people are showing up to oppose shipping coal for burning in China.
READ MORE | 5 COMMENTSThe latest from news outlets and blogs around the Northwest and beyond, chosen by Crosscut editors.
"Snowden’s leak is thus doubly damaging. The scandal isn’t just that the government is spying on us. It’s also that it’s giving guys like Snowden keys to the spying program. It suggests the worst combination of overreach and amateurishness, of power leveraged by incompetence. The Keystone Cops are listening to us all."
"Anyone who did not suspect that the government would continue to use as much technology as it could to gather as much private information as it could—a rock-solid constant since the time of Hoover’s F.B.I., at least—has not been paying attention."
"Snowden's whistleblowing gives us the possibility to roll back a key part of what has amounted to an "executive coup" against the US constitution. Since 9/11, there has been, at first secretly but increasingly openly, a revocation of the bill of rights for which this country fought over 200 years ago. In particular, the fourth and fifth amendments of the US constitution, which safeguard citizens from unwarranted intrusion by the government into their private lives, have been virtually suspended."
The editorial advises this is old news and a necessary practice. "Amid many real abuses of power, the political temptation will be to tie data-mining into a narrative about a government out of control. Such opportunism can only weaken our counterterror defenses and endanger the country."
"A former senior White House official, and a very bright man, said this week he didn't believe it was mischief but incompetence. But why did all the incompetent workers misunderstand their jobs and their mission in exactly the same way? Wouldn't general incompetence suggest both liberal and conservative groups would be abused more or less equally, or in proportion to the number of their applications?"
Four agencies close for business today.
Money and power speak loudly, which explains why Karl Rove and SEIU have not trouble getting tax exemptions (and donor-hiding) privileges, while upstart groups run afoul of the IRS.
Obama chops off the head of Steven Miller, acting commissioner of the IRS.
In a sweeping and unusual move, the Justice Department secretly obtained two months’ worth of telephone records of journalists working for the Associated Press as part of a year-long investigation into the disclosure of classified information about a failed al-Qaeda plot last year.
In American history, the Department of Interior has been a school for scandal.