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KUOW is saying goodbye to Twitter indefinitely. You can read more about why here: https://t.co/PLhbiH2bkX Though we won’t be tweeting, there are many other ways to access our local news! 🧵
KUOW is a non-profit, independent news organization supported by listeners who share our belief that an informed public makes our community and democracy stronger.
Over the weekend, a local Hawaiian hula group and others held a ceremony to welcome a collection of Native Hawaiian remains on their way to being repatriated. They had been taken from Hawaii illegally by colonizers and were on their way home from Europe. https://t.co/SUoST6bQUt
Spoken word poet Troy Osaki writes eloquently and tenderly of Filipino workers on the frontlines to bring visibility to their labor throughout the Seattle and the Pacific Northwest. https://t.co/rxzTz34C4q
In August 2021, after the U.S. withdrew and the repressive Taliban regime took over in Afghanistan, thousands of Afghan people became refugees and came to the U.S., including Abdul Nasir, who lives with RadioActive’s Micah Riggio.
https://t.co/wRxONltmZV
As Melissa Santos from Axios originally reported, out of the 400 permanent art installations included in the City of Seattle’s civic art collection, there’s only one outdoor monument honoring a female historical figure.
https://t.co/dxPg5D4tIC
The plot of "The Laughter" twists and turns around issues of Islamophobia, sexism, and the changing culture of campus life. Seattle University Prof. Sonora Jha discusses her newest novel and why she chose to make her main character so unlikeable.
https://t.co/QCZrdJpbKe
The average wait time for a bed in a community-based residential treatment center in King County is 44 days. Ballots are in the mail for a county levy that would fund five behavioral health crisis centers, including one for children.
https://t.co/l5I2XbeJJh
NPR is not state-affiliated media, and if it is, KUOW's Dyer Oxley is in big trouble. Also, the Port of Seattle got scammed for more than half a million dollars, about the same amount Everett is paying to settle its bikini barista lawsuit.
https://t.co/Ego4ZXYzTU
Washington is growing. It's estimated that Seattle alone will need more than 100,000 new homes in the next two decades. A bill in the state Legislature aims to use “middle housing” to help address this growth.
https://t.co/C3hXzPD8WL
Climatologists, who look to snowpack recordings on April 1 as an indicator of possible drought conditions, say snowpack levels in California were dramatic, 237% of average statewide. In Washington state, the snowpack is currently just above normal, 104%.
https://t.co/RV1q8s8DEi
The Kraken clinched a playoff spot with a win over Arizona Thursday night. So, how far could the Kraken go? The Seattle Times’ Kate Shefte explains the team’s dramatic turnaround from their expansion season to year two and what to expect moving forward.
https://t.co/r8ti68kTt8
One of the bills advancing in the Washington Legislature involves juvenile sentencing reforms, but lawmakers have to decide whether these changes will be retroactive, or only affect people sentenced in years to come.
https://t.co/aKwRaxTrOG
A new state dashboard gives further insight into the number of drug-related deaths and hospitalizations occurring in Washington. The dashboard shows there were 7,598 fatal overdoses from 2017 through 2021, the majority related to opioids.
https://t.co/LtZnLCKn6M