Politics Seattle’s booming, but construction workers fear a bust Construction workers wonder what a proposed business tax will mean for them as they build a city even they can't afford. by Margo Vansynghel / May 14, 2018
Environment A totem pole is the Lummi’s cry to free an orca from captivity Lolita has been stuck in a small tank for 48 years. Now, the Lummi Tribe is fighting for her freedom. by Karen Ducey / May 11, 2018
Culture Seattle isn’t religious — until relics come to town Thousands of Seattle Catholics flocked to St. James Cathedral to see saint Padre Pio's remains. by Lilly Fowler / May 8, 2018
Culture In Yakima Valley: America’s best tamales and a family tale Union Gap’s Los Hernández Tamales has scored a prestigious James Beard Award. by Lilly Fowler / May 4, 2018
Culture So Seattle: The military surplus store that’s a mainstay in Belltown The Federal Army & Navy Surplus store, with its MREs and Ghillie Suits, has been in business since the 1950s. by Mike Seely / April 25, 2018
Culture Amid rapid change, blue-collar Astoria pauses for poetry Take a deep dive into the living folk culture of Astoria’s Fisher Poets Gathering. by Knute Berger & Matt M. McKnight / March 30, 2018
Politics In their own voices: Why Seattle’s youth marched The many reasons some of the 50,000 Seattlelites joined the March For Our Lives protest Saturday. by Matt M. McKnight / March 24, 2018
Politics From Tumwater to Seattle, students unite in gun walkout They’re from different communities, but high school students all over Washington joined in the national walkout by Kristen M. Clark & David Kroman / March 14, 2018
Culture Renovation unearths Seattle Prohibition-era jazz club art Murals that date back to Seattle's Prohibition Era jazz scene have been unearthed inside a stairwell at the old Louisa Hotel. by Karen Ducey / February 26, 2018
Culture The key to mastering the art of lion dancing At the Northwest Kung Fu Academy in Seattle’s Chinatown-International District, the artful practice of lion dancing is an all-year-long affair. by Matt M. McKnight / February 15, 2018
Culture Seattle’s oldest vegetarian spot hopes to survive development boom Sunlight Cafe is Seattle’s longest running vegetarian restaurant. A group of five women opened the place in 1976, wanting to serve simple, healthy dishes at reasonable prices. by Matt M. McKnight / January 22, 2018
Politics Anger, frustration over Trump fuels Seattle Women's March 2.0 Tens of thousands of women trekked through downtown Seattle on Saturday for what was dubbed "Seattle Women's March 2.0." by Kristen M. Clark / January 20, 2018