City News
Mother of Miami Gardens rests in peace
Tributes for trailblazing public servant Shirley ...
Read More A case of magnitude: DeSantis’ frontal assault on Voting Rights Act and fate of Black district
By Michael Moline On October 26, ...
Read More FL Republicans urge D.C. mayor to remove Black Lives Matter mural
By Mitch Perry On October 31, ...
Read More Texas teachers are struggling financially. The school voucher war killed a salary raise
By Sergio Martínez-Beltrán On November 30, ...
Read More On World AIDS Day, Afiya Center works to center voices of North Texas women living with HIV
By Zara Amaechi On December 1, ...
Read More Thousands Rally in Downtown Los Angeles in Support of Palestine
By Semantha Raquel Norris On October ...
Read More Westchester County District Attorney Miriam E. Rocah Will Be One Of The Featured Guest Speakers Participating In Social Justice Week
On October 25, 2023 Pace University ...
Read More Can the historic Brooks Clinic, closed for a decade, be revived by Southside leaders?
By David Moreno On November 17, ...
Read More Medicaid is a ‘lifeline’ for Texans, but the state kicked off more than 728,000 kids this year
By Elena Rivera On November 16, ...
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The number of shots fired in King County dropped last summer. Is gun violence on the decline?
Noel Gasca November 26, 2025 / 1:24 pm The King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office says the number of shots fired during the third quarter of the year has dropped for a second year in a row. Law enforcement agencies in King County recorded 292 shots fired incidents between July 1 and Sept. 30 of this year.…
Read More UW sees fewer students from China, India after federal immigration restrictions
Ann Dornfeld November 24, 2025 / 4:44 pm The University of Washington had a 9% decrease in students from China and India this fall, the home countries for about two-thirds of the university’s 7,900 international students. Overall, international enrollment dropped 7% across the university’s Seattle, Bothell, and Tacoma campuses. That mirrors a national trend after the…
Read More These Seattle-area clinics plan to take care of people who’ve lost their health insurance
Eilís O’Neill November 21, 2025 / 3:52 pm About 380,000 Washington state residents are expected to lose their health insurance because of federal changes to Medicaid and the elimination of federal subsidies for plans bought on the health insurance marketplace commonly known as Obamacare. That will leave them with extremely limited access to health care. Community…
Read More Seattle nonprofits feel the pinch of rising food prices as Thanksgiving approaches
Ruby de Luna November 18, 2025 / 2:13 pm Americans will be forking out more for Thanksgiving meals this year as the cost of food continues to rise. Meats, along with poultry and fish, are up more than 5%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Nonprofit organizations are not immune from the high costs. Peter…
Read More WA’s new ban on medical debt in credit reports at risk of federal override
Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard November 17, 2025 / 10:47 am Just months after Gov. Bob Ferguson signed a Washington law to keep medical debt off consumers’ credit reports, the Trump administration is looking to block such policies. The federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau now says federal law preempts laws like Washington’s. The federal agency’s position is a reversal…
Read More Advocates stunned as WA lawmaker helps slash funds for groups clearing old drug convictions
Moe Clark / Investigate West November 12, 2025 / 1:52 pm When Camerina Zorrozua learned in April that Washington had slashed its state funding of her Spokane-based legal aid organization, she frantically called state Rep. Tarra Simmons. “I was so alarmed, and I asked her straight up, ‘What happened?’” said Zorrozua, the legal director and co-founder…
Read More States hope to use rural health money to keep doctors, combat chronic disease
By: Nada Hassanein November 11, 2025 8:10 am In their competition for rural health care dollars from a new federal fund, states are seeking money to bolster emergency services, address chronic diseases, and recruit and train more doctors and nurses. All 50 states submitted their applications to the federal government last week to get shares of…
Read More Native American children significantly more likely to be arrested, detained in Washington
Melanie Henshaw / InvestigateWest November 10, 2025 / 3:52 pm For the past 30 years, it’s been clear: Native American children in Washington state are far more likely to be arrested and jailed than white kids. The state’s courts and Washington Department of Youth and Families have acknowledged the justice system continues to hold back Native American…
Read More How FedEx is preparing for flight cuts at Memphis, airports across country due to shutdown
Corey Davis Nov 6, 2025 Memphis-based FedEx is keeping a close eye on how its operations could be impacted by flight cuts at airports across the country due to the ongoing government shutdown. Memphis International Airport is on a reported list of 40 major U.S. airports that face a 10% reduction in flights. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced…
Read More As AI threatens white-collar jobs, Washington trade schools are booming
Monica Nickelsburg November 05, 2025 / 11:05 am Brendan Hancock is about to graduate for the second time. His English degree from a traditional four-year college didn’t turn into the stable career he was looking for, so he decided to start over at the Northwest Washington Electrical Industry Joint Apprenticeship and Training Committee (NWEJATC) in Mount…
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