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Issue #78

King County Backers of SeaTac Good Jobs Initiative turn in petitions The SeaTac Good Jobs Initiative took a major step forward Wednesday as supporters filed more than 2,500 signatures and called on the city to place the initiative on the November 2013 ballot. Only 1,541 valid signatures are required to qualify the measure in the…

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Issue #77

King County Supporters protest Seattle teacher’s transfer More than 100 supporters of a teacher at Seattle’s Center School packed Wednesday night’s School Board meeting to protest disciplinary action that will move him to another school next year. Decked out in green clothes and armbands, they insisted Seattle Public Schools board members reinstate Jon Greenberg at the…

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Issue #76

King County Fast-food walkouts: Local politicians support the gesture, but not the wage The only thing that spread faster than Thursday’s city-wide labor walkout at Seattle fast-food joints were the local politicians scrambling to support it. As hundreds of activists marched from fast-food chain to fast-food chain to demand $15 an hour and the right…

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Issue #75

The State Water dispute clouds future for Whatcom County farms, factories Everyone involved in Whatcom County’s water rights disputes seems to agree that a local settlement would be a good idea, but representatives of Lummi Nation have made it clear they will not sacrifice Nooksack River salmon to benefit farms, industries or cities. Both the…

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Issue #74

The State Will Hanford ever be cleaned up? For 42 years, tank AY-102 has stored some of the deadliest material at one of the most environmentally contaminated places in the country: the Hanford nuclear reservation. This complex along the Columbia River holds a storied place in American history. It was here that workers produced the…

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Issue #72

King County A dog’s breakfast of endorsements in Seattle mayor’s race With multiple ballots, Rube Goldberg rules, runoffs, and super-majority requirements, Seattle Democrats’ endorsement meetings seem choreographed by a secret committee made up of five bores and a sadist. Endorsements in the contest for Seattle mayor, by Democrats and a variety of liberal, labor, and…

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Issue #71

(Daily Clips will not publish Wednesday, May 29, so that the editor can attend the May meeting of the King County Democratic Central Committee. See you there.) The State Bridge collapse a major break in trade corridor For farmers, business owners, and government officials up and down the West Coast, Washington’s bridge collapse on Interstate 5 represents…

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Issue #70

(Daily Clips will not publish Monday, May 27, because even your Daily Clips editor needs a holiday once in a while.) The State Span wasn’t built to take critical hit The Skagit River Bridge wasn’t particularly worrisome to state engineers. Structural inspections showed its condition to be average. But bridges of its generation, circa 1955,…

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Issue #69

King County Seattle City Council panel OKs zoning for big pot-growing operations Indoor pot-growing operations as large as a football field would be allowed in some Seattle industrial areas under new zoning approved Wednesday by a City Council committee. The proposed rules would prohibit large indoor farms in the industrial sanctuaries closest to the Port…

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Issue #67

The State Inslee vetoes part of CRC funding Gov. Jay Inslee signed the $8.7 billion transportation budget (SB 5024) Monday that puts money toward maintaining state roadways and continues spending on existing big-ticket projects, but he vetoed several sections, including one that would have spent $81 million in planning money for a replacement bridge carrying Interstate 5…