Read up on the biggest issues, elections, and public policies that are shaping our state.
Most dramatically, over 1,000 people attended Spokane's version of the Families Belong Together/Familias Unidas No Divididas rally in Grant Park. And behind the poster boards and the rally speeches, advocates have been constructing a network focused on helping local immigrants directly.
About 25 people delivered children's shoes to Congresswoman Cathy McMorris Rodger's office on Thursday afternoon. The rally was called 'Walk a mile in our shoes' and organizers with Fuse Washington are calling on the Eastern Washington Representative to propose legislation to end the Trump administration’s 'zero-tolerance' immigration policy.
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The protest was a response McMorris Rodgers’ opposition to previous federal rules regarding net neutrality that protesters argued ensure equal access to the internet. The repeal of those rules, say protesters, will allow internet service providers to block websites or apps, control the speed of certain websites and create a faster version of the internet for people who pay more, and a slower version for those who don’t.
Fuse Washington, an advocacy organization, hosted the protest, which drew about 25 people.
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Two Republican Party luminaries, U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse and U.S. House candidate Dino Rossi, will be the warm-up acts at a Wenatchee GOP dinner for a state legislator who wants to split Washington into two states.
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Fuse Washington put a call out for people to rally after Rossi did not respond to a request for comment regarding funding from the gun industry.
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My View From The Dirt: How Taxes Saved My Leg
I was raised in Eastern Washington on a rural homestead by a botanist mother and a wildlife biologist father. Needless to say, I spent a lot of time outside as a child. On walks I learned the Latin names of wildflowers, and I played outside every day after the hour-long school bus ride. Since moving to the Puget Sound, I’ve hiked, snow-shoed, and backpacked around the West Side to get away from the busyness of city life.
My View From The Dirt: How Taxes Saved My Leg
I was raised in Eastern Washington on a rural homestead by a botanist mother and a wildlife biologist father. Needless to say, I spent a lot of time outside as a child. On walks I learned the Latin names of wildflowers, and I played outside every day after the hour-long school bus ride. Since moving to the Puget Sound, I’ve hiked, snow-shoed, and backpacked around the West Side to get away from the busyness of city life.