The Latest Race & Identity 'Black lives do matter. People do matter. Everybody is somebody': Remembering Rev. Jesse Jackson's visit to KUOW Civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson died Tuesday. In a statement reported by NPR, Jackson's family said, "Our father was a servant leader — not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world. We shared him with the world, and in return, the world became part of our extended family." Dyer Oxley Government December's record flooding caused $182M in WA infrastructure damage, Ferguson says Washington state will be claiming $182 million in infrastructure damage after devastating floods swept the region in December, Gov. Bob Ferguson said on Tuesday. Sami West Tuesday Evening Headlines Mayor Wilson delivers her first State of the City speech, WA Senate passes 'millionaires tax,' and Seattle's City Attorney ends a policy that prevented one judge from hearing criminal cases. Paige Browning Government Wilson gives first 'State of the City' speech but no answers on one key question Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson's first “State of the City” speech Tuesday was light on details or proposals — but did include a promise of coming legislation and a glimpse of how the mayor is weighing her first hard decision. Scott Greenstone Sports This sport's athletes may be the fittest of them all, at least by one metric Scientists have measured all kinds of athletes, and one sport consistently come out on top for maximizing the body's ability to convert oxygen to energy. Jonathan Lambert The federal government is rolling back greenhouse gas regulations. What's it mean, and what's Washington doing? The federal government just took away its own ability to fight climate change, by ripping apart the legal finding that emissions are bad for human health. Sarah Leibovitz What's going on with the Boeing IMAX Theater? As Pacific Science Center gets set to sell a parcel of land including the Boeing IMAX Theater to the Space Needle, movie fans are wondering what will happen to the state's largest movie screen. Jason Burrows Politics ‘Absolutely good news’: Washington state's financial outlook brightens as budget talks heat up Washington state budget writers finally got some rosy news Monday, as they prepare to release their spending plans. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard Immigration Washington lawmakers want to restrict ICE access to schools, health facilities Legislation to force federal immigration agents to get court approval before entering schools and health care facilities cleared the Washington state Senate on Thursday. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard Latin America Venezuela's oil revival brings hope — but little relief for workers As U.S. sanctions ease and oil money begins to trickle back after Nicolás Maduro's removal, Venezuelans weigh hopes for recovery against the harsh reality of surviving on wages that barely cover food. Manuel Rueda Prev 271 of 1649 Next Sponsored
Race & Identity 'Black lives do matter. People do matter. Everybody is somebody': Remembering Rev. Jesse Jackson's visit to KUOW Civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson died Tuesday. In a statement reported by NPR, Jackson's family said, "Our father was a servant leader — not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world. We shared him with the world, and in return, the world became part of our extended family." Dyer Oxley
Government December's record flooding caused $182M in WA infrastructure damage, Ferguson says Washington state will be claiming $182 million in infrastructure damage after devastating floods swept the region in December, Gov. Bob Ferguson said on Tuesday. Sami West
Tuesday Evening Headlines Mayor Wilson delivers her first State of the City speech, WA Senate passes 'millionaires tax,' and Seattle's City Attorney ends a policy that prevented one judge from hearing criminal cases. Paige Browning
Government Wilson gives first 'State of the City' speech but no answers on one key question Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson's first “State of the City” speech Tuesday was light on details or proposals — but did include a promise of coming legislation and a glimpse of how the mayor is weighing her first hard decision. Scott Greenstone
Sports This sport's athletes may be the fittest of them all, at least by one metric Scientists have measured all kinds of athletes, and one sport consistently come out on top for maximizing the body's ability to convert oxygen to energy. Jonathan Lambert
The federal government is rolling back greenhouse gas regulations. What's it mean, and what's Washington doing? The federal government just took away its own ability to fight climate change, by ripping apart the legal finding that emissions are bad for human health. Sarah Leibovitz
What's going on with the Boeing IMAX Theater? As Pacific Science Center gets set to sell a parcel of land including the Boeing IMAX Theater to the Space Needle, movie fans are wondering what will happen to the state's largest movie screen. Jason Burrows
Politics ‘Absolutely good news’: Washington state's financial outlook brightens as budget talks heat up Washington state budget writers finally got some rosy news Monday, as they prepare to release their spending plans. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard
Immigration Washington lawmakers want to restrict ICE access to schools, health facilities Legislation to force federal immigration agents to get court approval before entering schools and health care facilities cleared the Washington state Senate on Thursday. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard
Latin America Venezuela's oil revival brings hope — but little relief for workers As U.S. sanctions ease and oil money begins to trickle back after Nicolás Maduro's removal, Venezuelans weigh hopes for recovery against the harsh reality of surviving on wages that barely cover food. Manuel Rueda