SEATTLE Seattle Sports News Digest
“Seattle Reign” return to their home stadium after a road stretch, the Seahawks make a surprise draft choice, and the Jets swap picks with another team. The weekend’s top sports stories.
Yellow Cartel: Seattle Reign prepare to face Utah Royals as they return to Lumen Field
After five road matches and a two-week international break, Seattle Reign finally return to their home ground, Lumen Field. On Sunday, April 26, Laura Harvey’s side will host the Utah Royals, who under second-year head coach...
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REACTIONS The World Watches Washington: How Russia, France and China View Today's America
At the end of April 2026, the United States simultaneously plays the role of a warring power, a space pioneer, a key link in the global economy and a...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-day weather forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, on Saturday 4/25, Seattle is expected to be mostly cloudy with some breaks. Daytime temperature will rise to 55°F, while nighttime will drop...

WORLD Attack on Iran Proved a Strategic Miscalculation: The Strait of Hormuz
When the United States and Israel struck Iran on February 28, the main justification was to prevent the creation of nuclear weapons that would give...
NEIGHBORS Affordable housing construction and a ferry incident in British Columbia
In today's digest: former premier Mike Harcourt is personally involved in a “missing-middle” housing project for the middle class; Vancouver opens a...

SEATTLE Where Seattle Residents Will Travel This Summer: 2025 Trends
According to new data from research firm Nielsen, travel activity in the Seattle area has fully recovered from the pandemic. Over the past 12 months,...

SEATTLE Washington plans to launch a unified electronic health records system by 2028
Washington state has taken a major step toward modernizing medical recordkeeping: a budget was approved that allocates about $48 million in the...

EVENTS What to See in Seattle April 25–30, 2026
Starting Saturday and through midweek, Seattle and the surrounding area fill with music, festivals, and seasonal events: from intimate jazz nights at...

USA Power, Trust and Security: How Local Crises Reflect a Wider Civic Divide
Stories from a small condominium in Florida, a city council in Texas and the geopolitical standoff over Iran may seem disparate: police storm an...

SEATTLE Fare inspectors return: just eight fines in a year in Seattle
In May 2025, King County Metro resumed fare inspections on buses after a long pause prompted by the pandemic. Inspections were suspended in 2020 to...
Seattle

New "Forest Trailhead" at Woodland Park Zoo Links Seattle to Papua New Guinea
Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle is preparing to open a unique exhibit, the Forest Trailhead, located right at the west entrance. Visitors will be able...

Tiny Cascade Homes, Pride Flag and Retribution: Seattle News Digest
Today in the digest: three tiny homes in Seattle are on the market for $900,000 — a unique cascade property for investors; a dispute in Lynnwood over...

Audit Reveals Financial Failures at Seattle-Area Homelessness Agency
A critical audit of the financial controls at the King County Regional Homelessness Authority (KCRHA) — the county’s primary agency for addressing...

Little Saigon: a Seattle gem fighting a drug crisis
In downtown Seattle, in the Little Saigon neighborhood near the International District that serves as an important cultural hub for the Vietnamese...

Sunny weekend in Seattle: time for a picnic
After a long run of rains typical of a Seattle winter, residents can finally enjoy a second weekend in a row of clear skies and warmth. Forecaster...

Line for Free Care: Seattle's Annual "Field Hospital" Opens
A line for the Seattle/King County clinic began forming on Wednesday at 11 a.m. — 18 hours before doors opened. By 9 p.m. there were 40 people in...

Seattle mayor will convert part of Denny Way into dedicated bus lanes
Mayor of Seattle Katy Wilson on Wednesday announced a major change aimed at speeding up the chronically late Route 8 bus: this summer 13 blocks of...

Seattle: Scandals, Linguistics and Health
In this issue: Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson found herself at the center of a linguistic controversy over the pronunciation of the store name Nordstrom,...

28,000 young Americans got Seattle library cards in fight against book bans
More than 28,000 young people across the United States have obtained a Seattle Public Library (SPL) library card as part of the "Books Unbanned"...
Neighbors

Vancouver: From Homicide to Road Rage
The city has been shaken by news: the third homicide of 2026 occurred in Vancouver, a taxi driver sparked a dangerous chase over an insult, and a free waterfront market is preparing to open.
Tragedy in central Vancouver: stabbing marks third homicide of 2026
Early Friday morning, Vancouver’s crime map was marked by another tragedy. At the intersection of East Hastings Street and Dunlevy Avenue — long considered one of the city’s most troubled areas — an armed attack occurred. CBC, citing...

Canadian news: Housing, healthcare and health
Overview of British Columbia news: rents falling in Metro Vancouver, a nursing-education crisis at VCC, and a doctor’s warning about a popular allergy remedy.
Cost of a one-bedroom rental in Metro Vancouver: April 2026
The rental housing market in Metro Vancouver continued to show falling prices for the fifth consecutive month, a notable trend for a region traditionally seen as the most expensive in Canada. In April 2026 the average cost to rent a new unfurnished one-bedroom apartment was...

Espionage, Allergies and Security
News from Canada: a former RCMP officer is on trial for spying for China, Vancouver and Victoria are the worst cities for pollen allergy sufferers, and restaurants are preparing for the 2026 World Cup by training to fight human trafficking.
Former RCMP officer charged with espionage: Chinese police “went missing” in Vancouver
An unusual trial in the British Columbia Supreme Court is shedding light on the darker side of international law enforcement cooperation and raising troubling questions...

Vancouver: baseball, prawns and remembrance
News from Vancouver: record local support for getting an MLB team, the start of spot prawn season sparking culinary frenzy, and the painful anniversary of the Lapu-Lapu festival tragedy that has split the Filipino community.
Vancouver breaks records: 72% of British Columbians back getting their own MLB team
Public support for bringing a Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise to Vancouver has reached record levels and continues to grow, crossing political and geographic lines. According to a new...

Police and Ferries: Incidents in British Columbia
Vancouver steps up security for the 4/20 festival, and police incidents have paralysed a key ferry terminal, causing major delays.
Vancouver police to increase presence at annual 4/20 festival
Vancouver authorities are preparing for a large event celebrating cannabis culture. On Monday, April 20, the annual 4/20 festival will take place on the plaza in front of the Vancouver Art Gallery in downtown Vancouver, traditionally drawing large crowds of enthusiasts for mass cannabis use. Vancouver...

British Columbia: Housing and Hospitality
News from British Columbia: a controversial supportive-housing bill raises fears of increased homelessness, while Vancouver Island celebrates hospitality successes with a new antiques hotel and prestigious awards.
Supportive-housing bill in British Columbia: a fight for safety or a path to homelessness?
A heated debate has erupted in British Columbia over a new bill intended to regulate life in so-called supportive housing. Authorities say the goal is safety, but critics see a threat to the...

British Columbia News
Bear awakenings from hibernation bring joy and require vigilance. Authorities are rolling out chemical “fingerprinting” and AI to fight the drug crisis. Canada Post is ending door-to-door delivery in Metro Vancouver, moving to community mailboxes.
British Columbia bears emerge: joy and vigilance
Spring in British Columbia has been marked by an important and long-awaited event in the world of wildlife — bears coming out of winter hibernation. This time of year always brings mixed emotions: awe...

Vancouver: congestion, drugs and distrust
News from Vancouver: the Ironworkers Memorial Bridge has become the region’s most congested crossing, triggering a transportation crunch. British Columbia authorities are deploying AI and chemical analysis to track illicit drugs as part of the overdose crisis response. A poll found residents don’t understand the role of the regional district and are demanding reforms ahead of elections.
Ironworkers Memorial Bridge now Vancouver’s most congested crossing
Overview: A new analysis of traffic data...

British Columbia News
In Vancouver, a controversial floating hotel was approved. A court freed evicted residents from removing mobile homes from reserve lands, but did not return their money. Home sales across the province fell on all key measures in March.
250-room floating hotel approved in Vancouver
Vancouver authorities have approved an unusual project that will change the look of the city’s famous Coal Harbour waterfront. The plan is for a floating hotel that will offer visitors a unique stay directly on the...
USA

Fragile Security: Everyday Places Becoming Risk Zones
Stories that at first glance seem unrelated — a girls' summer camp in rural Texas, a shopping mall in Louisiana, and capital punishment statistics in Nevada — are actually about the same thing. They show how our notions of safety, responsibility, and acceptable risk are changing in peaceful, familiar, “non-heroic” places: where children’s laughter, the noise of a food court, and even the strict routine of the prison system should be the norm. A single thread runs through these accounts: society...

Fragile Normalcy: How road, tragedy and business news paint one picture
In three seemingly unrelated reports — about a fire in Jacksonville, a fatal crash in Keene, and a quarterly report from a gaming corporation in Las Vegas — a single theme emerges: the vulnerability of everyday infrastructure and how our lives depend on how resiliently roads, emergency services, and big business operate. Each story describes a brief rupture in the ordinary flow of the day — a major roadway closed by a fire, a highway blocked after a pedestrian’s death, and a local gaming market...

Power, violence and “managed chaos”: what links three news stories
All three pieces, despite their outward differences, form a coherent picture of how modern power manages crises — from street shootings to military and political conflicts to abrupt shifts in drug policy. This is not simply three separate events, but a governing style in which security forces, personal political will and communication with the public are increasingly intertwined, and decisions become sharper, personalized and situational.
In the Gulf Coast News report on the Lehigh Acres...

War as Background: When Media Drama Displaces Human Tragedy
At the center of several news stories that, at first glance, seem unrelated, the same thread appears: violence is turned into a media narrative, and human life becomes expendable material for politics, the entertainment industry, and news cycles. From Donald Trump’s threats to “bomb” Iran and the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz to the case of pop performer D4vd (David Anthony Burke), accused of killing a 14‑year‑old girl, we see everywhere how brutality and the risk of escalation are presented...

Leaders, Violence and Responsibility: How News Reflects a Crisis of Trust
Three stories that at first glance seem unrelated — a change of head at Apple, a shooting on a highway in South Carolina, and a mass shooting of teenagers in a park in North Carolina — unexpectedly form a single narrative about how power and accountability work today. Corporate power, armed power (police), and community power (family, local communities). In all cases the issue is crisis: a change of era at one of the world’s most influential companies, a crisis of violence in American society,...

Fragile Security: How We Learn to Live with Risk
Stories from Japan, North Carolina and Pennsylvania may seem unrelated at first glance: a powerful earthquake and the threat of a mega‑tsunami, a planned teenage fight that escalated into a mass shooting, and a string of “ordinary” incidents — from crashes and fires to a fight for victims’ rights. Together they form a single larger theme: modern societies are trying to cope with vulnerability — to nature, weapons, infrastructure and their own social conflicts. We live in a world where the...

Violence, Power and Control: From Family Tragedy to Global Politics
Stories from three, at first glance unrelated sources – the mass killing of children in Louisiana, Washington’s hard line on Iran in a Gordon Sondland column on Fox News, and Toyota’s win in the WEC race at Imola – unexpectedly converge around one theme: how people and institutions understand and use power and control. In one case power takes the form of monstrous domestic violence, in the second — strategic pressure in international politics, and in the third — regulated, managed combat on a...

Fragility of Trust: From a Chicago Police Drama to Breakups and Wars
At first glance, the three stories — a tragic shot by a Chicago police officer that killed his partner, the breakup of sports couple Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe, and the escalation between the U.S. and Iran — have nothing in common. Different contexts, different scales, from the personal to the geopolitical. Yet they are all variations on the same theme: how trust breaks down and is rebuilt in relationships when it is pressured by fear, power, emotions and publicity.
In each of these situations,...

Vulnerability as the New Normal: From Private Drama to Global Blackmail
What at first glance looks like a set of unrelated stories — the sporting dismissal of an NHL general manager, the painful family drama of Cher and her son, and the geopolitical standoff around the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s nuclear program — is actually united by one important theme. It’s about the fragility of systems, from private lives to international security, and how crisis management becomes a key skill for a family, a state, and a large organization alike. In all three stories the...
Reactions

Washington in the Crosshairs: Australia, Brazil and South Africa Push Back
At the end of April 2026, the United States again found itself at the center of foreign-policy nerves on multiple continents. For Australia, the main...

How the World Sees Washington Today: Economic War, Iran, and Erosion
The outside world now discusses the US primarily not as an abstract “superpower,” but as a source of very concrete risks: from a shock on the oil...
World Through Washington's Lens: Turkey, Germany and Australia Debate New American Power
Against the backdrop of a protracted war with Iran, an intensified confrontation around the Strait of Hormuz and a series of impulsive moves by the...
The World Through Washington: How China, Brazil and Australia Argue With and About the U.S.
In mid‑April 2026 the United States are once again at the center of international debate, but the picture varies greatly depending on where one looks...

The World Through Washington's Lens: How East Asia Debates the US Today
In East Asia the United States is currently viewed through a magnifying glass: everything Washington does — from trade tariffs to military exercises...

Washington Under Fire of Others' Expectations: How Russia, Israel and Turkey Debate the US Role in a New...
Since the start of 2026, the attention of key regional players — Russia, Israel and Turkey — has been almost synchronously fixed on one story: how...

The World Watches Washington: Russia, South Africa and Germany Reassess the US
At the start of 2026, the United States again finds itself at the center of the global agenda — not as a lone "hegemon," but as a turbulent,...

How the world views America today: Ukraine, South Africa and Japan on the new US role
In different corners of the world, the United States appears in the news agenda with different faces — sometimes as the main military backer,...
How the world sees America today: Iran war, "unreliable ally" and new technology...
Around the United States today a rare density of commentary and anxiety is forming: from Canberra to Moscow and Seoul the debate is not about whether...
World

Delcy Rodríguez and Gustavo Petro Agree to Fight Mafias at the Border
Venezuelan foreign minister Delcy Rodríguez and Colombian president Gustavo Petro have reached an agreement to jointly combat criminal groups and smuggling networks operating along the shared border between the two countries. During the meeting, Petro emphasized that "the border cannot belong to anyone but the people of Venezuela and Colombia," and Rodríguez, in turn, announced "decisive steps against drug traffickers" that are already being taken. This cooperation, aimed at strengthening...

Iran's Shadow Fleet: Flags of Convenience in the Strait of Hormuz
In the world's most strategically important oil corridor — the Strait of Hormuz — the problem is not only the intensity of shipping but also the legal nature of the vessels themselves. In conditions of heavy traffic, ships sailing under "flags of convenience," registered in open registries, are actively used here. This practice, common in global shipping, allows operators to effectively evade tracking and sanctions, turning attribution of responsibility for any incident into a complex...

New Wave of Tension: US Boosts Military Power Off Iran's Coast
Amid the failure of diplomatic efforts to resume negotiations with Tehran, Washington is significantly increasing its military presence in the Middle East. US President Donald Trump again indicated that if a deal with Iran is not reached, the country is prepared to return to a military scenario. Lack of progress on the diplomatic front is pushing the American administration to build up military power as a tool of pressure and preparation for tougher action. US officials emphasize that military...

Venezuela's Amnesty Law Ends; New Justice Mechanisms Introduced
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez announced the termination of the Law on Amnesty and Democratic Coexistence, which over two months freed 8,616 people. Cases that did not fall under its scope will now be transferred to the Program of Democratic Coexistence and Peace. Rodríguez noted that the country is launching a Great National Consultation on criminal justice reform so that citizens can directly participate in transforming the judicial system and address historical debts owed to...

Pentagon Proposes Punishing NATO Allies for Refusing to Support War with Iran
An internal memorandum from the US Department of Defense reveals options for retaliatory measures against NATO members that did not provide support to Washington in a military campaign against Tehran. Among the sanctions being considered are suspending Spain’s membership in the alliance and reconsidering the American position on the Falkland Islands in favor of Argentina. The document reflects growing Pentagon frustration that some allies refused to grant use of their airspace and bases for...

Analysis: The US's Path to Predatory Hegemony Leads to a Dead End
According to an analysis in the Chinese newspaper Renmin Ribao, Washington's slide into predatory hegemony means that, in effect, the United States is choosing a future by stepping backwards — such a strategy may bring momentary gains, but in the long term will only make the country poorer.

Venezuela creates commission to assess state assets to boost the economy
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez announced the creation of a Commission for the Evaluation of State Assets, which will carry out a strategic analysis of all the country’s resources. At a meeting with key officials and industry representatives, Rodríguez said the agency will classify assets into four categories: strategic facilities, opportunities for public-private partnerships, non-core state assets, and property to be liquidated. The main goal is to increase the productivity of...

Sudden resignation of US Navy chief amid Iran escalation
On Wednesday evening the Pentagon announced the immediate resignation of Secretary of the Navy John Felan. No official explanation was given, which has spawned a wave of speculation about the motives and timing of the decision, especially against the backdrop of the US’s harsh maritime blockade of Iran and a large-scale purge in the US senior military leadership. The decision surprised observers, as only a few hours before his dismissal Felan spoke at the "Sea-Air-Space" conference defending a...

Latin-American Alarm: Trump's US Between Military Display and Limits of Power
Venezuelan media and social networks increasingly portray America under Donald Trump as hyper‑militarized yet internally constrained — a country whose moves have direct effects on Latin America and the world. Commentators question Washington’s dependence on NATO, the weakening of financial dominance relative to China, and the real limits of presidential power, while demonstrations of military might are accompanied by fears of regional spillover. Particular attention is paid to the confrontation...
Knowledge

The Street Party That Grew Too Big
Imagine you and your friends decide to throw a celebration right on your street. You set up tables, invited neighbors, turned on music — and everyone loved it so much that twice as many people came the next year. Then even more. And more. Suddenly your small block party turned into a huge festival drawing thousands of strangers, requiring ticket sales and hired security. It's great... but no longer like the cozy event it started as. That's exactly what happened on one Seattle street, and this...

The saloon with the scariest name that taught Seattle to bond over coffee
Imagine a wooden building with doors that creak in the wind. Above the entrance hangs a sign that sends chills down your spine: "Bucket of Blood." Yes—one of old Seattle’s most notorious saloons at the end of the 1800s was called that. But this story isn’t about frightful tales—it’s about how the roughest place in town helped create what Seattle is famous for today: cozy coffeehouses where people meet, talk, and become friends.
What was inside the saloon with the terrifying name
Back then...
The Glass Room Where Children Cheer for Fish
Imagine standing in an underwater room with glass walls as huge fish the size of your hand — or bigger — swim past. They’re not in a zoo aquarium — they’re wild, free, and heading home after a long journey across the ocean. And you and dozens of other children shout, “Come on, fish! You can do it! One more step!” Sounds strange? But that’s how one remarkable place in Seattle has looked for more than forty years.
In 1976 engineers from the U.S. Army Corps built something unusual at the Ballard...

The Children Who Saved the City's Memory from the Water Cannons
Imagine your city decided to wash away an entire hill with water. Sounds insane? But that's exactly what happened in Seattle more than a century ago. Massive water cannons eroded the land, houses slipped and fell apart, and streets disappeared under flows of mud. The project was called the Denny Regrade, and its goal was to make the city flat to allow new construction. While adults thought about the future, a group of schoolchildren noticed something important: the hill's removal was erasing...

The underground palace that fed a city without a drop of electricity
Imagine you need to lift water to the top of a high hill so it can then flow by itself to all the houses around. How would you do it? You’d probably think of a pump or a motor, right? But Seattle engineers in 1906 built a huge water tower in Volunteer Park that worked with no electricity at all — just clever design and gravity. And that tower saved the city money for more than a century!
But the most amazing thing was hidden not in the tower, but underground. Workers built a real underground...

The Princess Who Beat the City With a Laundry
Imagine: the 1890s, the city of Seattle is growing fast, new buildings going up, and on the shore of the bay stands a small, crooked cabin. City officials want it torn down, but the elderly woman inside refuses to leave. Her name is Kikisam (Kikisomlo in the original), but the whole city knows her as Princess Angeline. She is the daughter of Chief Seattle, for whom the city is named, and she had just won the most unusual battle in the city’s history — not with weapons, but with soap, water, and...

Salmon Detectives: How Seattle Kids Found Secret Rivers Under Their Streets
Imagine a real river flowing beneath your school that no one has remembered for 50 years. That's exactly what children at a Seattle school discovered when they became "salmon detectives." Their story showed the world how ordinary people—even schoolchildren—can bring nature back into a big city.
The mystery of appearing fish
In the late 1990s, Seattle residents began noticing strange things. Salmon—big silver fish—were showing up in the most unexpected places around the city. Someone saw them in...

The Children Who Turned a Toxic Plant into a Beloved Park
Imagine a place where, instead of swings, there are rusty towers as tall as a ten-story building, instead of a sandbox — huge pipes, and instead of green lawns — concrete platforms. Sounds like a park from a nightmare? Yet Seattle residents consider Gasworks Park one of the city's most beloved spots. And the most surprising part — this park was created because children had the courage to tell adults: "Don't remove the scary metal! Leave it for us!"
This story began in the 1970s, when Seattle...

A Rose That Traveled Across the World: How Children's Letters Connected Two Gardens
In one of Seattle's parks grows an unusual rose. It looks almost ordinary, but it has a secret: its grandmother grew in a garden at the other end of the world, in the city of Tashkent. And between these two roses is a story about how children's letters can change the world.
When cities become friends
Imagine your city has a friend in another country. Not just an acquaintance, but a true best friend you exchange gifts with, tell stories to, and learn from. That's how sister cities work — like an...