SEATTLE Colorful installation greets passengers at Sea‑Tac Airport
A massive new art installation called "Migration," created by the studio Tieton Mosaic, has added bright color and light to the gray concrete palette of the approach to Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, which locals often call "Sea‑Tac." The nickname comes from the first syllables of the two cities for which the airport is named: Seattle and Tacoma. Installed in May, the composition greets visitors and departing passengers and is also visible from the light rail platform.
The project...
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SEATTLE Ballmer Group to help build affordable housing for families in Washington
In Seattle and surrounding areas many studios and one-bedroom apartments have been built — but family housing with two or more bedrooms is...

SEATTLE King County food safety ratings are back online
After an almost seven-month break, the map of food safety ratings and inspection information for food establishments in King County, Washington, is...

EVENTS Seattle & Area Events: June 12–19, 2026
The week of June 12–19 in Seattle promises to be full: outdoor concerts at Marymoor and on the waterfront, street festivals and carnivals in Ballard,...

EVENTS Events July 15–August 11, 2026 — plan ahead
This roundup is compiled for preliminary planning of your music and sports outings in Seattle and the surrounding area from July 15 to August 11,...

USA A World Living in Extremes
The American agenda these days looks, at first glance, fragmented: destructive storms and record heat, a tense fight for control of the Senate, a...

REACTIONS The World Watches Washington: Turkey, Russia and Germany Rethink the US in the Trump Era
What was once described as "predictable American leadership" is today discussed in three very different countries — Turkey, Russia and Germany — in...

SEATTLE Fight to Ease Miscarriage Pain: A Congresswoman's Personal Story
Congresswoman Mary Gluesenkamp Perez, who represents Washington’s 3rd Congressional District covering the southern part of the state, including the...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-day weather forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, 06/12/2026, Seattle is expected to be mostly cloudy with light rain. The air temperature will be around 63°F, which is slightly below normal...

WORLD Venezuela Signs License with Shell for Loran Gas Field Phase I
Venezuela has signed a licensing agreement with the international energy company Shell to begin the first phase of developing the Loran gas field....
Seattle

Bellevue rededicates mural honoring Japanese Americans
Bellevue College on the east side of Seattle has officially made permanent the mural "Never Again Is Now," dedicated to a tragic chapter in Japanese...

Fires in Seattle and Kraken staff changes
News of the day: large fires engulfed warehouses in Fremont and Ballard, and the Seattle Kraken hockey club announced the appointment of Patrik...

Zahilay Targets Childcare, Buses and Housing
King County Executive Girmay Zahilay used his first "State of the County" address to lay out an ambitious plan for Washington state's largest county,...

Route to picturesque Artist Point in Washington reopens
The Mount Baker Highway (State Route 542), which leads to the scenic Artist Point northeast of Bellingham, is fully open to traffic. This 2.7-mile...

Seattle: New hires, vegan doughnuts and World Cup 2026 transport chaos
In today's digest: the Kraken bolster their front office and coaching staff with experienced figures, vegan doughnut shop Dough Joy is leaving...

Seattle imposes moratorium on data center construction
The Seattle City Council voted unanimously, 9-0, to impose a one-year moratorium on the construction of new large data centers. The decision comes...

Girl survives after Seattle doctors find near-fatal error made in Oregon
The parents of a 13-year-old girl from Oregon have filed a $17 million lawsuit against Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU). They claim surgeons...

World Cup in Seattle, new airport concourse and Seahawks recoveries
The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off in Seattle: a guide for newcomers. Seattle-Tacoma International Airport opens the renovated Concourse C to...

Seattle launches first interactive street kiosks
On Tuesday the first of a series of eight-foot digital kiosks that resemble giant smartphones began operating in Seattle. The devices are installed...
Neighbors

Vancouver: from a "forgotten" conference to a football boom
Digest of news on three vivid events in the life of Vancouver and British Columbia: the historic UN housing conference, an influx of Australian fans for the World Cup, and a slowdown in the housing market.
The "Woodstock" of housing conferences: how Vancouver tried 50 years ago to save the world from urban chaos
In 1976, when the world faced a population explosion, rapid urbanization and the rise of "megacities," an event took place in Vancouver that journalists dubbed the "Woodstock" of...

Lights and Shelter: Vancouver News
Vancouver unveiled a free summer fireworks event, Summer Lights, on July 31, and the premier of British Columbia offered refuge to a Somali referee who was denied entry to the World Cup by the U.S.
Vancouver solved the fireworks problem: new show replaces cancelled celebration of light
Residents and visitors of Vancouver can breathe a sigh of relief: city officials announced a free fireworks display in English Bay this summer. The event, called Summer Lights in English Bay, will take place on...

Vancouver police fatally shot hostage-taker
Lasqueti Island is being sold for the price of a Vancouver condo. A police watchdog is investigating the fatal shooting of a suspect in a home invasion.
Vancouver police fatally shot a hostage-taker during a failed attempt to storm a home
The incident occurred Monday evening on Commercial Drive in Vancouver, when police were forced to use lethal force against a suspect in a reported armed break-in at a private residence. According to an official statement from the Vancouver Police Department...

British Columbia news: weather, rentals and drugs
Rains have reduced wildfire risk in British Columbia, but experts remain cautious. Vancouver led rent declines in Canada, yet remains the second-most expensive city. The province is calling for a unified policy to remediate homes contaminated by drugs after the opioid crisis.
Rains have reduced wildfire risk in British Columbia, but experts remain cautious
This past weekend brought not only disappointment for those planning outdoor recreation in British Columbia, but also a long-awaited...

World Cup Economy and Life in Vancouver
In today's digest: experts question the economic benefits of the 2026 World Cup in Vancouver, a touching squirrel rescue in British Columbia, and approval of a reduced transit pass for low-income residents in the city.
Myths and Reality: Is the World Cup Good for Canada?
The Government of British Columbia has presented an optimistic forecast of the economic benefits from hosting seven matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Vancouver. According to their calculations, the tournament will bring the...

Vancouver News: From 3D-Printed Guns to Luxury Real Estate
Today’s digest covers high-profile Vancouver stories: a local man facing trial over an arsenal of 3D-printed weapons and drugs, the opening of a new $183-million amphitheatre at the PNE, and a unique Bowen Island mansion that has dropped $13 million in price.
Federal charges: Vancouver man to face court over arsenal of 3D-printed guns and drugs
The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has laid 21 charges against a Vancouver resident following an operation conducted last summer. According to CTV...

British Columbia News: Fitness, Economy and Crime
Fresh news from British Columbia: Burnaby has been named Canada’s fittest city, the labour market showed solid growth in May despite global challenges, and a Vancouver resident faces 21 charges after an arsenal and drugs were found in his home.
The fitness city: who beat Vancouver for healthiest residents
When it comes to healthy living in Canada, many immediately think of Vancouver — a city where jogging along the seawall and sunset yoga have become almost a religion. However, a recent study...

Vancouver economy and society: investment, crisis and celebration
Half a million dollars to create 25 jobs, anxiety over the suspension of an overdose prevention site, and free events for seniors — key developments of the day in Vancouver.
Investment in manufacturing: how half a million dollars create new jobs in Vancouver
The Government of British Columbia has announced nearly $500,000 in funding from the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund to support two manufacturing projects in the Lower Mainland region. These investments are aimed at expanding the capacity of...

British Columbia: taxes, ferries and whistleblower payouts
Several notable events in British Columbia: Lululemon founder Chip Wilson won a court case, lowering the assessed value of his mansion by $18 million; the regulator paid a whistleblower $25,000 for the first time; and BC Ferries is introducing a temporary five-percent fare surcharge because of rising fuel costs amid the Middle East conflict.
Lululemon founder’s Vancouver mansion knocked down $18 million in assessments
Canadian billionaire and creator of the well-known athletic apparel brand...
USA

Risk, adrenaline and control: how we manage danger
In three very different storylines — from a water slide with a record drop, through a stolen SUV in the ocean off a quiet suburb, to behind-the-scenes talks between the US and Iran about a nuclear deal and the security of the Strait of Hormuz — a single common theme unexpectedly emerges. It is the human relationship to risk and attempts to put it under control: in the entertainment industry risk is turned into safe adrenaline; in the criminal story uncontrolled risk creates a threat to the...
Crisis of Trust in News: From "60 Minutes" to Street Reports
At first glance disparate stories — an internal revolt at CBS News over the overhaul of "60 Minutes" led by Bari Weiss, a local investigation into towing refunds in Houston on ABC13, mass arrests following Knicks victory celebrations at Madison Square Garden reported by ABC7NY — actually add up to a single larger narrative. It’s a story about how the news business in the U.S. is changing, how media are simultaneously losing and trying to regain trust, and how audiences, authorities,...

Violence, security and trust in institutions: three stories of one America
Three seemingly unrelated stories — the conviction for the killing of a high school student at a Texas stadium, the search for a suspect who struck a police officer in Massachusetts, and a record tax override in the small town of Marblehead — describe the same nervous system of contemporary America. The same themes keep surfacing: fear and violence, the role of police and courts, racial and social fault lines, and above all the question of whether people trust the institutions that are supposed...

How Resilience Works: From a Player Injury to Green Fuel and a Change in NIAID Leadership
At first glance, the three pieces have nothing in common: the injury to New York Giants pass rusher Abdul Carter at practice, American Airlines’ record deal with Google on sustainable aviation fuel, and the appointment of a new acting director at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). But viewed more broadly, they share a single theme: how complex systems — sports, the aviation industry, the national health system — learn to survive under pressure, manage risk,...

Fragile Security: How Violence Becomes the New Normal
The events described in three sources at first glance seem unrelated: Iranian missile launches toward Israel and a local shooting in a park in a Baltimore suburb, which left a police officer, a suspect and a bystander injured. But if you look not at geography but at the essence of what’s happening, a common storyline emerges: violence as a daily, almost routine reality in which security becomes increasingly fragile, costly and dependent on political decisions and public trust.
At the regional...

The Fragility of Normal: When the Familiar World Suddenly Breaks
Sometimes very different news items — about a football club moving, the death of a beloved actor, and a shooting at a city festival — unexpectedly form a single theme: how quickly and without warning what we take for granted can change. A local team that “was always here,” an actor who seems an eternal part of the screen world, a family festival associated only with music and food — all of these can disappear or be shattered in one day. That vulnerability of the familiar order becomes the...

How language and the idea of norms are changing: from laws to sports and radio
Modern news—even when stories seem entirely unrelated — a bill to replace the words “mother” and “father” in New York, a change of the “voice” on a popular NPR radio show, and Detroit receiver Kendrick Law’s ACL injury in the NFL — actually tell the same fundamental story: how society redefines familiar roles and the words it uses to describe reality. Through language and symbolic figures — “mother” and “father,” the “voice of the show,” the “franchise player” — we negotiate what counts as...

Safety, law and vulnerable people: what three recent news stories are saying
All three news items, taken from different cities and even different states in the U.S., at first glance describe unrelated events: a killing at an Atlanta metro station, a double homicide in a Florida shooting, and a contested revision of an “anti‑camping” law in Colorado. But viewed together, a common thread emerges: how federal and local authorities balance providing security with treating vulnerable groups — transit riders, residents of low‑income neighborhoods, the homeless. That balance...

Political Nervousness and Security: How the U.S. Enters the Election Cycle
American politics and public safety today are intertwined far more tightly than a quick glance at isolated news items suggests. Local primaries in Iowa, a fierce race for Los Angeles mayor and a tense hostage standoff in Bakersfield, California — all described in pieces from NBC News, KCII Radio and the NBC News report on the Bakersfield hostage situation (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/bakersfield-bomb-threat-chase-rcna348174) — together form a picture of a country entering a new...
Reactions

The World Eyes Washington: How Australia, Germany and China Debate the US Today
In early June 2026, America again became the central nerve of global politics — but not in the familiar role of a “unipolar leader,” rather as a...
Tariffs, War and Distrust: How Brazil, India and France View the U.S. Today
From the outside it may seem that the U.S. still sets the world's agenda and the rest of the world merely reacts. But if you look at how people in...

America in the crosshairs of three continents: how Saudi Arabia, South Africa and China debate the US...
Over the past days three very different countries — Saudi Arabia, South Africa and China — have been discussing the United States with surprisingly...

"Tariffs, Intervention and Refugees: How Brazil, Turkey and South Africa Are Arguing About the...
While attention inside the United States is fixed on the upcoming elections and new hardline measures by the Trump administration, discussions about...
How the World Sees America Today: Elections, War and the Struggle for Influence
What is said about America in Washington itself is only a small part of the global conversation about the United States. In South Africa, Ukraine and...

The World Through Washington's Prism: How Australia, Ukraine and Russia Debate the U.S
If you look at the news of recent weeks from Sydney, Kyiv and Moscow, one and the same silhouette keeps flashing like in a kaleidoscope — the United...
How the US Is Viewed Today from Tokyo, Canberra and Kyiv
The American agenda has again become so dense globally that separate storylines — from the war in the Middle East to military artificial intelligence...

How the World Sees America Today: Ally, Risk-Taker, and System-Forming Power
In early June 2026, discussions about the United States in foreign media and expert circles resemble a polyphonic chorus: different countries hear...

Alliance Under Pressure: How Seoul, Jerusalem and Kyiv See Today's America
In early June 2026 the United States is simultaneously at war with Iran, balancing between China and its allies in Asia, arguing with Congress over...
World

US and Iran Prepare Preliminary Agreement to Reduce Tensions
According to diplomatic sources, the United States and the Islamic Republic of Iran have achieved a breakthrough in talks and are preparing to sign a preliminary agreement aimed at ending hostilities and containing escalation. A key element of the agreement will be the immediate resumption of navigation through the Strait of Hormuz without fees, intended as a practical step toward de-escalation, while more complex issues—primarily Iran’s nuclear program—will be postponed to a second, more...

IPO on the Horizon: 8 Answers on How Companies Go Public
In anticipation of the expected initial public offerings (IPOs) of giants such as SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic, this piece explains the essence of the process: how private companies become public, what the advantages and risks of listings are for the market and investors, and how such events affect stock markets. The review also presents the largest historical listings to give readers a complete picture of the phenomenon.

New US Licenses Expand Energy and Mining Cooperation with Venezuela
The US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has issued a new package of general licenses intended to broaden the capabilities of American and international companies in Venezuela’s energy and mining sectors. Documents designated as licenses 46C, 47A, 48B, 50B, 51B, 52A and 54A replace earlier versions issued in February and March of this year. In particular, license 50B codifies permissions for major firms such as Chevron, Repsol, Shell, BP, Eni and Maurel & Prom...

Escalation of US–Iran Military Conflict
The United States and Iran exchanged a series of military strikes, leading to a significant escalation of tensions in the Middle East. US Central Command announced “precision” strikes on targets inside Iran, including air defense systems, radars, and military communications centers. Washington said these targets posed a threat to US forces and to freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. In response, Tehran announced strikes on American bases in Kuwait, Bahrain and Jordan, as well as on...

Global alarm over escalation between the US and Iran
Recently international media have been registering growing alarm over the aggressive rhetoric and actions from Donald Trump’s circle toward Iran: from renewed bombings and Tehran’s retaliatory strikes to fears that local clashes could escalate into a large-scale Middle Eastern conflict. Reports emphasize that even countries and audiences far from the region view Washington as a key driver of rising instability, and that the escalation of strikes and threats undermines diplomatic deterrence...

Football and politics on the edge: World Cup 2026 at the center of disputes
Less than a week before the start of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, to be held in the United States, Canada and Mexico, questions are growing louder in sporting and political circles about where the game ends and politics begins. This tournament is likely to become the most politicized in football history, and its organization is already provoking fierce debates about the boundaries between sport and ideology.

Venezuela adopts law to support cocoa producers
The National Assembly of Venezuela approved in the second reading the first 18 articles of a bill to promote the development of cocoa production, aimed at ensuring sustainable growth of the sector with a focus on agroecology and added value. Deputy Jesús Faría emphasized that the new law establishes principles of social justice in a sector where raw-material producers have historically suffered from inequality in the supply chain. The document provides for the creation of mechanisms for a...

Iran Carries Out Massive Strike on US Bases in Response to Attacks
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announced a large-scale missile and drone attack on American military facilities in the region, stating that strikes were directed at bases in Bahrain (headquarters of the US Fifth Fleet), Kuwait (Ali Al Salem Air Base) and Jordan (Al-Azraq Air Base). The IRGC statement emphasizes that this operation was a direct response to nighttime bombings of southern districts of Iran by American forces, and contains a warning that any further US aggression...

Trump and Netanyahu's Dilemma: a Fragile Ceasefire in the Middle East
The recent escalation between Iran and Israel has once again exposed the fragility of the ceasefire regime in the Middle East, as well as the depth of contradictions in the relationship between US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The exchange of rocket strikes in recent days has become a new test for this complex tie. Although the leaders jointly struck Iran in late February, their political and strategic interests have begun to diverge as the conflict has...
Knowledge

Children Who Fought for Their Team (and Taught Adults an Important Lesson)
In 2008 something happened in Seattle that made thousands of kids cry. Their beloved basketball team, the SuperSonics, was leaving for another city. But this sad story actually tells us how children's voices can change the world — even when it seems adults aren't listening.
A Transforming Arena and a Dream Team
Imagine a huge building that can completely change its interior overnight. In 1995 engineers turned the old KeyArena in Seattle into a real technical marvel. The roof of that building...

Salmon Detectives: How Kids Found Secret Rivers Beneath the Asphalt
In Seattle there’s an amazing secret: real rivers flow beneath streets, parking lots and even schoolyards. But almost no one sees them! Many years ago people simply buried these streams in pipes and forgot about them. Along with the streams, the salmon nearly disappeared — the fish that return from the ocean each year to the little creeks where they were born to continue their families. Then ordinary city residents — moms, dads and especially children — turned into real nature detectives.
The...

Clubs Where Music Was Stronger Than Unjust Rules
Imagine that in your city there was a rule: children with dark hair cannot play with children with light hair. You can't sit together at school, you can't go to the same shops, you can't even be friends. Sounds silly and hurtful, right? But long ago, when your great-grandparents were children, America had exactly such unfair rules. They were about people's skin color, and this was called segregation. But in Seattle there was a special place where those silly rules didn't work. These were the...

Music Born from Injustice: How Seattle Jazz Taught the City an Important Lesson
Imagine that in your city there were rules about where your family could live, which store you could enter, which school you could attend — and all those rules depended only on the color of your skin. Sounds unbelievably unfair, right? But that’s how people in Seattle lived less than a century ago. And out of that injustice came one of America’s most remarkable musical stories — a story that still teaches us important things today.
The street where the rules didn’t apply
In the 1920s–1940s,...

The Dancer Who Challenged Unfair Rules: How Filipino Workers Taught America What It Means to...
Imagine being banned from going to your school dances just because you look different from other kids. Or being forbidden from befriending certain classmates because of the color of your skin. That sounds horribly unfair, right? But that’s how thousands of workers from the Philippine Islands lived in America in the 1930s. This is the story of how one young man, who only wanted to dance, became a hero and helped change cruel rules for everyone.
Workers Who Were Forbidden to Have Fun
In the early...

The train from the future they forgot to remove: how Seattle residents fell in love with a ride that was...
Imagine that your city decided to build an attraction for a big celebration. Something completely incredible, like a spaceship. And they said: you have only ten months! Usually even a school takes longer to build. But the engineers said “yes” — and created a train that rides above the street at the height of a five-story building. This happened in Seattle in 1962, and that train still carries people today, even though it was supposed to disappear after six months.
A big fair and an impossible...
Porters Who Built a Dream Home (and Taught a City Not to Fear)
Imagine you work on a train, carrying heavy suitcases, cleaning rooms, and smiling at passengers all day and all night. And when you come home to Seattle, you have nowhere to relax with friends because many places won’t let you in because of the color of your skin. That’s how African American railroad porters lived in the early 1900s. But they didn’t give up — they built their own home. And that home changed the whole city.
People who worked on wheels
At the beginning of the 20th century, when...

The City That Built Ships Faster Than Anyone (and Didn’t Know What to Do with Them)
Imagine your city suddenly decided to build a hundred huge ships in one year. Not little boats, but real giant ships, each as big as several houses! That’s what happened in Seattle more than a hundred years ago, and that story changed the city forever — although it all began with a big problem.
When the Whole World Asked Seattle for Help
In 1917 World War I was underway and America entered the war. The problem was that German submarines were sinking ships faster than they could be built. Food,...

The Market That Almost Vanished (and How Children Helped Save It)
Imagine waking up one morning to find out that your favorite place in the city — where you buy apples from a cheerful farmer, where fish fly over the stalls, where street musicians play songs — will soon disappear forever. In its place they will build gray parking lots and tall hotels. That's what happened in Seattle in 1971 to Pike Place Market.
But this story is not about something disappearing. It's about how ordinary people — moms, dads, grandmothers, students and even children — decided...
Opinions

The Hundred-Thousand-Dollar Question for Washington State
There is a number making the rounds in Olympia this week, and it is doing what big round numbers do: flattering some people, insulting others, and...

Trump's New Spy Chief and the Logic of Retribution. What Could Go Wrong?
The job of Director of National Intelligence was designed to be, above everything else, boring in a specific way. After the catastrophic intelligence...

The Stopwatch Stops: How *60 Minutes* Came Apart
On the first Monday in June, the most respected newsroom in American television held a staff meeting that felt less like a planning session than a...