Joshua McNichols
Reporter
About
As KUOW's Growth and Development reporter and co-host of KUOW's Booming podcast, Joshua's "growing pains" beat sits at the nexus of housing, transportation, urban planning, government and the economy. His favorite stories also include themes of history, technology, and climate change.
Joshua holds a B.A. in Architecture from the University of Washington. Public Radio is his second career; architecture was his first. He is proud of the many odd jobs he's held in his life, such as salmon fisher, author, bike courier, and bed-and-breakfast cook.
Location: Seattle
Languages Spoken: English
Pronouns: he/him
Professional Affiliations: The Society of Professional Journalists, Western Washington Chapter
Podcasts
Stories
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How would federal funding cuts impact Seattle's budget? Mayor Bruce Harrell explains
Seattle Mayor Bruce Harrell has a long to-do list. He has bridges to fix, housing to build, and a World Cup to prepare for by next year. To make all that happen, Seattle needs federal dollars.
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Seattle's to do list isn't penciling out
The Trump administration has used executive orders to cut funding for cities that don’t cooperate with its immigration enforcement agenda. So how does Seattle spend its federal money? And if that money goes away, what can we do to replace it?
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How Seattle could raise more money by lowering most business taxes
Seattle leaders want to give the city’s business tax system a makeover. Wealthy companies like Amazon could end up paying more and small businesses, like restaurants, could end up paying nothing.
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How much does it cost to live comfortably in Seattle?
On today's episode, we ask more than 300 Seattleites: How much money would it really take to live comfortably in this city of millionaires? And if you can't make enough, what can you do to feel more comfortable here?
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Elder care facilities driven by profit turn to automation, expert says
Elder care is facing rising pressure to cut costs and increase profits. In response, companies are turning more to video surveillance and artificial intelligence.
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ICE fears turn sweet cherry season sour
To supply the world with cherries, Washington farmers need a lot of workers to show up for a very short harvesting window. Usually they do, but not this year. Today, how a culture of fear is pushing Washington cherry growers to the brink.
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Mayor Harrell says Seattle's FIFA countdown clock sends a political message
Seattle started its official countdown Wednesday, marking one year until it hosts the FIFA World Cup.
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Housing, trees, and parking: In Seattle, you can pick two
We can’t have all three. Not in equal measure. Right now, trees are slowly losing. But with sufficient incentives in place, that could change.
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The real threat to trees isn't housing
After years of heated arguments, Seattle just passed a law allowing more homes per residential lot. But to gain more housing, we’re going to lose something else people care about: trees. Could there be a way to have both?
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The Sun Belt's shine has dulled. Here's what it means for Seattle home prices
Seattle had about 10% more homes than buyers in April, according to Redfin. That’s just enough to call it a buyer’s market. But the slowdown is mild compared to Sun Belt cities like Miami, Austin, and Phoenix.