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Friday, July 26

Two boys from Angola play soccer. They are some of about 200 asylum-seekers who lived at an encampment in Kent during June and early July. (Ken Lambert / The Seattle Times)

State announces where $16.4 million in asylum-seeker aid will go
Washington’s Office of Refugee and Immigrant Assistance announced unprecedented investments this week to create a more coordinated response to the state’s growing asylum-seeker crisis. Although King County first began seeing an increase in new arrivals nearly two years ago, the state’s $16.4 million distribution to more than 20 organizations marks the first large-scale effort to try to address asylum-seekers’ growing housing and legal needs. Continue reading at The Seattle Times. (Ken Lambert)


PNW tribal fish hatcheries get big boost from Biden administration
The Department of Interior and Commerce invested $240 million in fish hatcheries that directly support tribes in the Pacific Northwest. As part of the Invest in America agenda put forth by the Biden administration, the money will directly support Pacific salmon and steelhead fisheries essential to tribal communities. The investment is part of an agreement the administration and tribal communities in the Upper Columbia River Basin made to restore the salmon population to abundant levels. Continue reading at KIRO 7. (Jeff T. Green)


State to start investigating deadly police encounters
The State of Washington is about to change the way it investigates deadly police encounters. Starting December 1, the state’s Office of Independent Investigations will head up inquiries into cases where police are involved in deadly incidents. Currently, when a police officer kills someone, detectives from an outside neighboring or surrounding agency conduct the investigation. In 2021 state legislators voted to change that and created the new agency to handle all deadly use of force investigations. Continue reading at King 5.


Print

Aberdeen Daily World
Aberdeen city councilors rebuke Mayor Doug Orr

Capital Press
EPA urged to revamp pesticide evaluations
Editorial: BLM’s new rule a waste of paper

Everett Herald
Party planned for Lynnwood light rail as opening nears
Providence Everett launches early breast cancer detection program
‘Something’s gotta give’: Mukilteo ferry captain asks boaters to steer clear

News Tribune
Those summer sniffles could be COVID-19 as higher levels now detected in Pierce County

Puget Sound Business Journal
Kroger-Albertsons $24.6B merger temporarily halted
Seattle hotels report strong first half thanks to unlikely source
County jail to accept misdemeanor offenders busted in downtown Seattle

Seattle Times
State announces where $16.4 million in asylum-seeker aid will go
County representative blames Seattle City Attorney, not jail, for safety issues
Biden administration commits $240 million for hatchery fish amid decline of PNW’s wild salmon

Spokesman Review
The dead’s eyes, tissues and assorted parts are bringing new life to local patients
EPA awards Gonzaga $19.9 million to prepare Spokane for deadly effects of climate change
Comment: Find your apple: improving health and wellness for all of Washington state

Washington Post
What to know: A map of Oregon’s Durkee Fire, the largest in the U.S.
Extreme heat is wilting and burning forests, making it harder to curb climate change

WA State Standard
IT outage caused drop in blood donations in the Northwest
U.S. home prices hit a record high as sales fell. Here’s how housing experts explain the trends

Broadcast

KING 5 TV (NBC)
State to start investigating deadly police encounters
Indigenous student barred from graduating in tribal regalia

KIRO 7 TV (CBS)
Resources stretched thin as wildfire season ramps up
Several wildfires force road closures across Washington
PNW tribal fish hatcheries get big boost from Biden administration
Local homeless sweep laws swiftly changing after supreme court decision
Campfire ban begins Friday in Olympic National Park and National Forest
Monsanto agrees to $160 million settlement with Seattle over pollution in the Duwamish River
Snohomish County man files federal complaint against county over neighbor’s shooting range

KNKX Public Radio
Octopus farming in the U.S. would be banned under a new bill in Congress
Monsanto agrees to settlement with Seattle over Duwamish River pollution

KXLY (ABC)
New program offering free groceries for kids every summer
People in Keller told to leave now for 30 thousand acre wildfire
Swawilla Fire evacuees uncertain if their homes will survive the flames
$8 million coming to Spokane to help the community during extreme weather

Web

Cascadia Daily News
Bellingham airport director ousted after less than a year
Formal probe of county’s handling of sexual harassment allegations dragging on
Op-ed: Community organizer: We need more tiny home villages

The Urbanist
Seattle Looks to Rescue Sound Transit’s 4th Avenue Transit Street Plan

Thursday, July 25

Photo illustration: Axios Visuals. Photo: David Ryder/Getty Images

Scoop: State law doesn’t block police from questioning teens, Seattle chief says
Interim Seattle police chief Sue Rahr issued a directive this month clarifying that a 2021 state law doesn’t stop police from questioning juveniles who witness crimes. The 2021 state law at issue requires that police connect minors to a lawyer before interrogating them as part of a criminal investigation. On July 9, Rahr issued an internal directive clarifying that officers can still question juvenile witnesses without connecting them with a lawyer, as long as the youths aren’t suspects and there isn’t probable cause to hold them in custody, SPD officials tell Axios. Continue reading at Axios. (Axios Visuals)


Washington State health officials are rewriting a policy to more closely regulate drinking water systems that serve up to four residences on one farm.

Washington farm groups cry ‘foul’ as health officials rewrite water policy
Washington farm groups Tuesday asked the state Health Department to drop its plans to more closely regulate drinking water systems that serve up to four residences on one farm. At the request of the federal Environmental Protection Agency, state health officials plan to require the farms to apply every five years to be exempt from being regulated as a public water system. Continue reading at Capital Press.


The state is easing some cannabis rules.

Washington cannabis regulators moved forward with a pair of changes to state code
Last week, the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (LCB) approved a pair of rule changes that will impact how cannabis is taxed and tested in the state. The rulemaking action concerning taxation is further along in the process than the one concerning testing. It regards changes to the excise tax levied on medical marijuana. Cannabis products sold in the state are subject to a 37% excise tax in addition to other state and local sales taxes. The new rules would remove that tax for approved medical cannabis patients who buy from specific dispensaries. Continue reading at The Inlander.


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Axios
Scoop: State law doesn’t block police from questioning teens, Seattle chief says

Capital Press
Washington farm groups cry ‘foul’ as health officials rewrite water policy

Columbian
Poll: Washington women don’t trust Supreme Court
Jury awards former Port of Seattle police chief $24.2M over wrongful firing
Pursuing peer counseling that’s a cut above: Program aims to train barbers, beauticians to provide support

Everett Herald
‘It’s like the wild west’ on popular road for shooting near Granite Falls
Woman, 43, dies inside Snohomish County Jail, sixth death since September

The Inlander
Washington cannabis regulators moved forward with a pair of changes to state code
As Spokane inches toward a new shelter system, unhoused people take to parks to beat the heat

News Tribune
$18.9M project to close busy Pierce County thoroughfare. Here’s why and for how long

Olympian
DNR and Squaxin Island Tribe partner to conserve last major kelp bed in South Sound

Peninsula Daily News
The hidden first responders
Port Angeles Food Bank to go solar with state grant

Puget Sound Business Journal
Seattle jail faces capacity problem as frustration mounts in downtown

Seattle Times
How climate change is remaking this top WA job
Thousands of acres are burning in Yakima County, leading to evacuations

Skagit Valley Herald
Scam calls impersonating Sheriff’s Office: what to know and do

Spokesman Review
Evacuation level raised for growing Swawilla Fire on Colville Reservation
Providence to cut six family medicine resident spots and end sports fellowship

Washington Post
The fight to make landlords turn down the thermostat
Companies are reshaping operations to cope with a changing climate
U.S. economy grew 2.8% in second quarter, a robust unexpected strengthening

WA State Standard
Man’s suicide in basement cell prompts renewed calls for more jail oversight in WA
Comment: Why WA school budgets are getting tighter, and what can be done about it

Wenatchee World
Chelan Recycling Center a total loss after fire
Chelan County PUD billing statements return to ‘normal’
Fish and Wildlife Commission issues cougar, wolf decisions

Yakima Herald-Republic
Firefighters dealing with multiple wildfires in Yakima Valley: U.S. 12 closed in both directions

Broadcast

KING 5 TV (NBC)
POLL: Washington voters on abortion rights
Washington small business program threatened by budget cuts
King County Council to decide on closing youth detention center
Washington restoring Capitol Lake in Olympia to its natural state
Majority of Washington voters say US Supreme Court ‘out of touch’
New evacuations ordered as 10 large wildfires burn across Washington
Airborne arsenic levels at Cedar Hills Regional Landfill could exceed safe breathing limits, analysis finds

KIRO 7 TV (CBS)
Black Canyon wildfire erupts overnight, reaches 6,500 acres in size
Prosecutors file Boeing’s plea deal to resolve felony fraud charge tied to 737 Max crashes

KOMO 4 TV (ABC)
Pierce County at odds over how to allocate $2.5M in funding to combat homelessness
Intentional encampment fire at Kinnear Park promotes arson and bomb squad investigation

KNKX Public Radio
Record dry conditions, lightning spark dozens of wildfires across Pacific Northwest

KUOW Public Radio
‘Defund is dead’: Seattle leaders say it’s time to hire more police
It has now been 15 years since the federal minimum rose to $7.25
3 babies hospitalized in King County amid whooping cough outbreak

KXLY (ABC)
Fire near Clarkston estimated at 100 acres
City of Spokane increasing water conservation guidelines as river flows drop
North Idaho library network declines to change policy on kids accessing materials

Web

Cascadia Daily News
First-of-its-kind hydrogen ferry built in Bellingham sets sail in California

MyNorthwest
Man killed in Pierce County deputy-involved shooting
King County Council sees heated comments over family justice center
School resource officers won’t be at certain Kent high schools in 2024-25
Snohomish County Jail sees its sixth death of an inmate since September

The Urbanist
Tacoma’s Almost Reality as an Olmsted-Designed Park City
Balducci Pushes Traffic Safety Framework for All King County Departments

Washington Observer
Adding up Olympia’s lobbying industrial complex

Wednesday, July 24

Washington spent $13 million to restore Murden Creek where it runs under Highway 305 on Bainbridge Island, but just downstream is a city-owned culvert that partially blocks salmon. (Kevin Clark / The Seattle Times)

WA nears a plan to remove key culverts for salmon — after spending $4B
As the Washington State Department of Transportation spends billions of dollars removing concrete and metal pipes that block spawning salmon, another state agency is finally finishing a strategy to fix all the state’s fish migration barriers. Department of Fish and Wildlife officials last week revealed key parts of a plan to prioritize which of tens of thousands of these man-made blockages would, if replaced, bring back the most salmon. Continue reading at The Seattle Times. (Kevin Clark)


Shorter camping stay limits in WA state parks to begin in August
Campers in Washington’s state parks will soon find themselves unable to stay in one site quite as long. New rules approved by the Washington Parks and Recreation Commission limit camping stays to no more than 10 consecutive nights in one park in a 30-day period and a maximum of 90 days per calendar year in all state parks. The new limits go into effect Aug. 18 and will apply year-round. The parks system will honor existing reservations and enforce limits on new reservations after Aug. 18. Continue reading at The Washington State Standard. (Getty Images)


Washington Secretary of State launches new campaign to break down mail-in ballot process
The Washington Secretary of State’s Office has invested $1.8 million in an effort to battle misinformation surrounding mail-in ballots. The new campaign, created with the help of the creative agency Happylucky, uses stylized imagery and animation to promote mail-in voting and highlight its security. Videos published by the campaign break down the process from when ballots are sent out to how they are counted by local elections offices. It also explains how staff reach out to voters if there are any issues with their ballots. Continue reading at KXLY(WA Secretary of State)


Print

Aberdeen Daily World
Fire breaks out at homeless camp

Axios
Washington’s wildfire season ramps up

Capital Press
Wautoma solar project next to step into the spotlight

Columbian
State agency will take over investigations into police use of deadly force investigations in Clark County

Everett Herald
With looming earthquake threat, Everett breaks ground on $80M reservoirs

Kent Reporter
King County Council approves traffic safety study in Fairwood
Sheriff’s Office cuts school resource officers at Kentwood, Kentlake

News Tribune
Wreck with police caused her death, lawsuit contended. Now Tacoma will pay $2 million
‘Someone who never stopped caring.’ TNT columnist Matt Driscoll dies unexpectedly at 43

New York Times
Planet Sets Record for Hottest Day Twice in a Row

Olympian
The world’s first fully hydrogen-powered ferry just launched. It was built in Bellingham

Peninsula Daily News
Indigent defense caseloads may decrease
Public comment being sought on Project Macoma

Port Townsend Leader

Fire danger ‘very high’ in Jefferson County

County updates trails connection on comp plan

Puget Sound Business Journal
First Mode layoffs expected to affect up to half of its employees
Property tax assessment disparities are impacting these residents most

Renton Reporter
Peer counselor offers hope in Renton courts

Seattle Times
WA ferry workers bear brunt of delayed, angry passengers
What to do with all that lavender? WA farmers got creative and made oil
WA nears a plan to remove key culverts for salmon — after spending $4B

South Whidbey Record
Whidbey has a toad-crossing zone

Spokesman Review
Wildfires burn nearly 10,000 acres on Colville Reservation
Sunday was the hottest day ever recorded on Earth, scientists say
Spokane County nationally recognized for its Teen Text Line: ‘You’ll get the help you need if it’s within our ability’

Washington Post
Sunday was the hottest day ever recorded on Earth, scientists say
How ‘carbon cowboys’ are cashing in on protected Amazon forest
Delta under federal investigation as it cancels thousands of flights

WA State Standard
Shorter camping stay limits in WA state parks to begin in August

Broadcast

KING 5 TV (NBC)
Seattle attorney pushes for increased safety along protected bike lanes
Interim Chief Sue Rahr talks progress, obstacles after 60 days leading Seattle Police Department

KIRO 7 TV (CBS)
Fires threaten towns, close interstate in Pacific Northwest as heat wave continues
Interim SPD Chief addresses gun violence, drug ordinance enforcement amid staffing crisis

KNKX Public Radio
Colleagues, political leaders, and family react to sudden loss of Tacoma columnist Matt Driscoll

KXLY (ABC)
Washington Secretary of State launches new campaign to break down mail-in ballot process

Web

Cascadia Daily News
Intalco Aluminum to pay $5M to feds over EPA violations
County OKs $150K Birch Bay incorporation feasibility study
Whatcom County Council asks executive for vast range of actions on homelessness

Crosscut
U.S. and Canada update 60-year-old Columbia River Treaty

MyNorthwest
WA to pay $15 million to 3 sisters who were sexually abused in foster home
‘Food is finished:’ Refugees in Kent call for help as health, food struggles remain

Tuesday, July 23

A pigeon eats a piece of bread at a homeless encampment along M Street near The Evergreen State College’s Tacoma campus on Oct. 12, 2021. TONY OVERMAN

$2.5M in federal funding is at stake. Why can’t Pierce County agree on homelessness plan?
With the clock ticking on $2.5 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) dollars, Pierce County leaders seem farther apart than ever on their approach to homelessness. Democrats on the Pierce County Council want to use the money to build a temporary stability site somewhere outside Tacoma, saying it would provide important shelter for those experiencing homelessness.
Continue reading at The News Tribune. (Tony Overman)


Thousands of low-income WA families qualify for a tax credit they aren’t claiming
Less than half of Washington residents eligible for a tax credit aimed at low-income working families received it last year — the first year it was available. Still, the state met its goal of reaching at least 40% of those eligible for the Working Families Tax Credit, according to a recent Department of Revenue report. The report said 45% of eligible households claimed the credit. It also found 86% of applicants were approved for it and 56% of applications were processed within 30 days. Continue reading at The WA State Standard. (Getty Images)


A farmworker picks pears at Rowe Farms outside of Yakima, Aug. 16, 2023. A recent court ruling is expected to increase wages for foreign guest workers on tree-fruit farms. (Genna Martin/Cascade PBS)

Federal court orders higher pay for foreign guest workers in WA orchards
Foreign guest or H-2A workers at Washington’s tree-fruit orchards will get paid more under a federal court ruling issued earlier this month, in the latest development in a yearslong court battle over how foreign agricultural workers are paid. Under the ruling from the U.S. District Court in Seattle in the case brought by Familias Unidas por la Justicia, or FUJ, a Burlington-based farmworkers union, the U.S. Department of Labor will reinstate prevailing wages set in 2022. Continue reading at Crosscut. (Genna Martin)


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Axios
Tourists and workers return to Seattle
Delta faces investigation over “continued widespread disruptions”

Columbian
North Cascades Highway closes again due to wildfire
‘There is no moving forward’: Clark County Council at impasse on railroad
Vancouver schools, teachers union still negotiating as end of contract approaches
After stabbing at Clark College, internal review finds school’s emergency response system ineffective
32 cottage-style homes planned: Evergreen Habitat for Humanity project is nonprofit’s largest to date

Indian Country Today
Columbia River Treaty modernization doesn’t change much for salmon

News Tribune
$2.5M in federal funding is at stake. Why can’t Pierce County agree on homelessness plan?

Olympian
What lies beneath? Estuary work to find answer this week by draining Capitol Lake

Puget Sound Business Journal
SBA increases maximum loan amount, targets climate-focused projects

Seattle Times
Many more kids are being shot and killed in King County in 2024
7 officers, 3 others hospitalized after high-speed chase in Spokane
WA county closes jail and will pay family $2.5M after man’s suicide

Snoqualmie Valley Record
Conservation easement placed on Camp Waskowitz

Spokesman Review
Weird winter weather was the pits for Green Bluff peaches and cherries
Spokane City Council shoots down resolution supporting enforcing homeless camping law
Three of six city of Spokane pools extend hours because of high temperatures this weekend
Opinion: Artificial Intelligence can be our first line of defense in limiting the effects of wildfires

Washington Post
Four years after covid, many students still losing ground
U.S. is making progress on its climate goals — but still falling short

WA State Standard
Thousands of low-income WA families qualify for a tax credit they aren’t claiming

Yakima Herald-Republic
Defensible space provides room to prevent wildfires from destroying homes

Broadcast

KING 5 TV (NBC)
14-year-olds, 13-year-old arrested for brandishing ‘fully automatic’ firearms at Seafair parade in Seattle

KIRO 7 TV (CBS)
Delta Airlines passengers still stranded at Sea-Tac Airport

KNKX Public Radio
Tri-Cities forum draws support for Lower Snake River dams

KUOW Public Radio
Garfield County pledges to keep jail shuttered after suicide went undetected

KXLY (ABC)
Memorial service for former Congressman George Nethercutt at Gonzaga Tuesday
Evacuations expanded to town of Keller for wildfire

Web

Cascadia Daily News
Tiny home villages move likely delayed after neighboring business alleges city violated contract

Crosscut
Are offshore wind turbines in Washington’s future? (Springer)
Federal court orders higher pay for foreign guest workers in WA orchards

The Urbanist
King County Launches ‘100 Days of Action’ Against Gun Violence

Washington Observer
More on the Medicaid problem

Monday, July 22

The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission voted 5-4 on July 19 to keep wolves on the state endangered species list. State biologists said wolves no longer qualified to be on the list.

Washington wolves stay state endangered species
The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission voted 5-4 Friday to keep wolves as a state endangered species, rejecting the recommendation of state scientists who said Washington wolves are not in danger of extinction. The majority sided with wolf advocates and Gov. Jay Inslee, who argued reclassifying wolves to “sensitive” was premature because wolf packs have not moved into the South Cascade Range or southwest Washington. Continue reading at Capital Press. (Capital Press)


Ryan Wixon (center) looks at the camera as he takes a break from drumming. His daughters, Ahyoka, 10, (left) and Lily, 7, (right) gather around him. (Grace Deng/Washington State Standard)

Prison powwow: Native families connect with their loved ones behind bars
In line to enter a state prison north of Olympia, 10-year-old Ahyoka Wixon cannot stay still. Ahyoka and 7-year-old Lily Wixon are there to participate in Washington Corrections Center’s annual powwow on July 11 alongside their father, who will be singing and drumming. The powwow is organized by Tribal Sons, the prison’s Native affinity group. Wixon and other Native leaders in prison said they’re working on rehabilitating themselves and their fellow Native prisoners, and the powwow makes “all the difference.” Indigenous people are incarcerated at higher rates than any other group in Washington state, and the disparity between Indigenous and white incarceration has roughly doubled in the past decade. Advocates attribute the disparity to over policing of Indigenous communities and high rates of poverty. Continue reading at The Washington State Standard. (Grace Deng)


Jisu Choi, 23, center, listens before a training exercise during State Trooper basic training on Thursday, July 11, 2024, at the Washington State Patrol Academy in Shelton.

More mentors, better facilities, gear that fits. WA police departments are upping their game to recruit more women
It’s estimated that just 12% of police officers nationwide are women. At 11%, Washington state lags below that already low number. Several law enforcement agencies across the state have signed on to a goal to increase women in the ranks. They’re recruiting women by offering strong mentorship programs and better-suited gear and facilities, among other strategies. But so far, success is mixed, and larger agencies especially continue to struggle. Eight agencies in Washington state have signed on to the hiring goal —Kent, Lacey, WSU Pullman, Richland, Seattle, Tacoma, Vancouver, and the Washington State Patrol. But amidst a national shortage of police candidates, progress is slow, especially for bigger agencies. Continue reading at KUOW. (Megan Farmer)


Print

Aberdeen Daily World
Fire District 2 seeks to renew EMS levy

Auburn Reporter
Convicted Auburn officer’s attorneys seek new trial, new judge

Axios
Why homesteading is growing among Seattleites
Wildfires erupt in West, Canada amid major heat wave
Delta struggles to recover after industry-wide airline meltdown

Capital Press
Washington wolves stay state endangered species
WSU grass farm studies yarrow for low-impact lawns

Columbian
Kids Online Safety Act could see vote this month
Olympia’s Capital Mall to become mixed-use urban space
Night skies in the Gorge are getting brighter. This group is pushing back
Clark County officials address election security concerns as 2024 primary approaches

Everett Herald
Global tech outage leaves a mark on Snohomish County
United Way delivers 100k free books to Snohomish County kids
Food safety team defends its work: it’s a ‘high pressure, thankless’ job
‘We don’t have openings’: SnoCo recovery houses struggle with demand
When you get lost in WA, what’s the cost to get rescued? Surprisingly little
Miners Complex tops 500 acres in Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest.
Washington’s 988 Crisis and Suicide Lifeline marks 2nd anniversary as advocates call it pillar for mental health support (Orwall)

Federal Way Mirror
Rent increases rattle Belmor Mobile Home Park residents

Kent Reporter
High-profile juvenile crimes continue to rock Kent this summer

Mercer Island Reporter
District to roll out MI Phone-Free Schools policy

News Tribune
Airline travel increasing across the country. Is Washington back to pre-pandemic levels?
FDA elevates recall in 7 states of California farm’s rice, which may contain foreign ‘rodent’ object 

Peninsula Daily News
District adding community paramedic

Puget Sound Business Journal
Businesses, agencies ramp up backup systems after global tech outage
Alaska posts record revenue, awaits DOJ decision on Hawaiian merger

Seattle Times
‘Endangered’ status to remain in effect for WA wolves
Pacific Northwest faces critical fire risk as wildfires burn
Two years into 988 crisis line, WA works to spread the word

Skagit Valley Herald
Local tribes receive grants for climate resilience
Group tests for microplastics on Skagit River beach
Mount Vernon School District starts live translation, talks strategic plan

Spokesman Review
Airlines start digging themselves out of epic flight disruptions
Many with PFAS in their West Plains wells question airport leadership and Commissioner Al French; he blames criticism on election year politics

Washington Post
Women recognize prevention’s value, but still delay health screenings
Heat pumps, EV chargers and more: U.S. unveils $4.3 billion in local climate funds

WA State Standard
‘Endangered’ status to remain in effect for WA wolves
State AGs ramp up scrutiny of alleged price-fixing in rental housing
Prison powwow: Native families connect with their loved ones behind bars

Yakima Herald-Republic
Defensible space provides room to prevent wildfires from destroying homes

Broadcast

KING 5 TV (NBC)
First weeks of new sailings, King County Water Taxi sees jump in ridership
Washington poll: How voters want the next governor to address state’s key issues

KIRO 7 TV (CBS)
City of Seattle oversight leads to tens of thousands getting $10 checks
KOMO 4 TV (ABC)
Seattle parking rates rise with SDOT’s seasonal price adjustment this summer

KUOW Public Radio
No juveniles in adult prisons, Washington court orders
Battery farms to store green energy are needed, but where should they go? King County considers
More mentors, better facilities, gear that fits. WA police departments are upping their game to recruit more women

KXLY (ABC)
Gray wolves to remain on endangered species list in Washington
Former Spokane Mayor Woodward says city violated her free speech, interfered with election

Web

Cascadia Daily News
What’s the Deal With: Smokey Bear license plate?
Cloud Mountain Farm testing recycled paper alternative against plastic mulch 
North Cascades Highway closed near Easy Pass Trailhead due to wildfire danger
Washington gray wolves will maintain endangered status; restrictions on killing them remain

Crosscut
Global tech outage affects WA unemployment system, payments
WA housing discrimination complaints dip, bucking national trend

The Urbanist
Sound Transit Doubling Sounder North Service This Fall with Four Runs/Day
Kirkland Advances Catalyst Project for ’10-Minute Neighborhood’ Near Houghton