Environment How the West’s divided electric grid slows green growth A hodgepodge of utilities run the West’s electrical grid. Will billions in federal funding help them get along? by Peter Fairley InvestigateWest / August 25, 2021
Environment How strengthening the PNW’s electrical grid could end up doing harm A proposal to lay cables beneath the Columbia River is met with skepticism from an Indigenous activist and the river’s advocates. by Peter Fairley InvestigateWest / July 22, 2021
Culture Should #MeToo rob us of art? Are two degrees of separation from Junot Díaz enough to keep an artwork alive? by Florangela Davila / May 5, 2018
Culture 10 things to do in Seattle Roxane Gay is in town, Edward Curtis sesquicentennial exhibits and a Pioneer Square rummage sale. by Brangien Davis & Michael Upchurch & Nicole Capozziello & Florangela Davila / June 21, 2018
Culture At SIFF: bearing witness to stories of ‘cultural genocide’ Dawnland chronicles Maine's Truth and Reconciliation Commission as it collects stories of the Wabanaki people. by Florangela Davila / May 25, 2018
Equity Can dense, urban development solve Seattle's housing crisis? 67,000 people in King County are either cost-burdened or extremely cost-burdened when it comes to housing. Can we build our way out of this mess? by Florangela Davila / February 8, 2018
Politics Will Julián Castro run for President? ‘I might’ A Q&A with former HUD Secretary and presidential prospect Julián Castro. by Florangela Davila / February 12, 2018
Culture Talking race, Bruce Lee and woke white women with W. Kamau Bell The Oakland-based sociopolitical comedian and CNN host was invited by the Wing Luke Museum to tape a video for its Bruce Lee exhibit. by Florangela Davila / February 8, 2018
Culture Meet our newest staff writer Kristen M. Clark Kristen M. Clark joined Crosscut this week as the team’s third full-time staff writer. She’ll be covering the changing region of Seattle and the Pacific Northwest. by Florangela Davila / January 3, 2018
Culture Junot Díaz on why he wrote the immigrant experience through a child’s eyes A Q&A with the Pulitizer Prize-winning author who focused his newest book “Islandborn” on a child’s immigrant experience. by Florangela Davila / March 20, 2018