SEATTLE Bright meteor lights up sky over the Pacific Northwest
Seattle resident Gerald Tracy woke to a flash of greenish light that lit up his apartment in the historic First Hill neighborhood, located on a hill about 100 meters above sea level, early Wednesday morning. He initially thought it was lightning, but immediately checked Reddit — and found that dozens of people across the region had seen the same thing: a bright fireball streaking across the sky. More than 100 witnesses from Washington, Oregon and British Columbia have already reported the...
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USA Vulnerability and Security: How Crises of Different Scales Expose Systemic Weaknesses
Events from three seemingly unrelated news items — a major crash on a highway in New York, allegations of professional misconduct by a teacher in a...

REACTIONS Trump, the Iran War and the "Tired Hegemon": How France, Germany and Australia See the US
At the end of April 2026, discussion of the United States in France, Germany and Australia revolves around several connected storylines: the US and...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, 04/30/2026, in Seattle it is cloudy, temperature around 66°F. Wind northwest, 3.7–5.0 mph, humidity about 53%, pressure 30.03 inHg, visibility...

WORLD Delcy Rodríguez Demands Full Repeal of EU and US Sanctions
Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez issued a categorical demand to the European Union and the United States for the complete cessation of all...

WORLD US Prepares Strikes on Iran and Blocks the Strait of Hormuz
CENTCOM command has completed drafting a military operation plan that foresees a series of short, powerful strikes on key targets in Iran. Axios...

SEATTLE Seattle leads U.S. bike-commuting rankings
According to data from Strava, the popular fitness app, Seattle cyclists rode more than 3.3 million miles last year. That figure was the highest...

SEATTLE Seattle News Digest: Funding, AI and Safety
Overview of the day's key events: additional funding for a stadium in Everett, a possible moratorium on data centers in Seattle over rising...

REACTIONS How the World Argues with America: Russia, Japan and Saudi Arabia on the US's New Role
At the end of April 2026 the United States is again at the center of global discussions, but the focus has shifted: fewer talks about the “default...

WORLD Emergency Summit in Jeddah: Fragile Ceasefire and New Challenges
On April 28, an emergency consultative summit was held in Jeddah, coinciding with a period of fragile ceasefire achieved through Pakistani mediation....
Seattle

Diplomatic mission of the king: Charles visits the US amid a crisis in relations
King Charles III and Donald Trump are polar opposites in style and temperament. The British monarch, a meticulous adherent to protocol and ritual, is...

Washington sues GEO Group for blocking inspections of immigration center
Washington state officials have gone to federal court seeking to force private prison company GEO Group to allow health inspectors into the Tacoma...
Disaster assistance centers open to help December flood survivors in Washington
Assistance centers are opening in western Washington so residents affected by the December flooding can apply for help from the Federal Emergency...

Scientists Study Salmon Survival Amid Climate Change
In Squire Creek near Darrington, Washington, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife research scientist Michaela Low, wearing a wetsuit and life...

Seattle Mayor Expands Free School Meals and Childcare in Schools
Seattle Mayor Kate Wilson announced a plan that will make breakfasts and lunches free for all students in the city’s public schools. Beginning in...

Soccer Crises and Criminal Schemes: News Digest
A roundup of major developments from the worlds of sports and crime: the Vancouver Whitecaps may leave the city due to financial problems and lack of...

Edgewater Bridge between Everett and Mukilteo reopens after reconstruction
The Edgewater Bridge, which connects the cities of Everett and Mukilteo in Washington state, will reopen to traffic Tuesday evening after the end of...

Shoreline residents: tell us about buying a home
The Seattle Times is launching a series of stories about the real estate market in the Seattle area, and this time the focus is the city of...

Rare Owls Near Tri-Cities: Now Live
In the Tri-Cities area (the cities of Kennewick, Pasco and Richland), located in southeastern Washington about 350–400 km from Seattle, a camera has...
Events

What's Happening in Seattle: Week of April 29, 2026
A busy week in Seattle: on Thursday, April 29, the region's capital hosts several big concerts — Bush at Wamu, Queens of the Stone Age at the Paramount, and jazz with Karrin Allyson at Jazz Alley; on Friday and the weekend — atmospheric shows by Patrick Watson and a country concert by Treaty Oak Revival. Outside the city — the Skagit Tulip Festival with photo fields and farm stands (Apr 29–30), and the start of Seattle Restaurant Week with special menus at roughly 220 restaurants (Apr 29–May...
Neighbors

Week in British Columbia: flood, beach and breakdown
In today’s digest: the owner of a Vancouver nightclub accuses authorities of slum-style landlordship after another flood from provincial social housing; San Josef Bay on Vancouver Island was named one of North America’s best beaches; and elevators on a BC Ferries vessel went out of service temporarily, causing inconvenience for passengers.
Vancouver nightclub owner accuses authorities of slum-style landlordship after another flood
Alan Goodall, owner of the Aura bar on Granville Street in...

British Columbia: Vancouver and Province News
Expanding family mediation, the "Vancouver Whitecaps" MLS crisis and a lottery drama over half a million dollars shape the province's agenda.
Expansion of family dispute early-resolution program in British Columbia
British Columbia is continuing its move toward out-of-court mechanisms for resolving family disputes. As of May 1, 2026, the early resolution program, which previously operated as a pilot in Victoria, will officially expand to all provincial courts on the central coast, in the...

Vancouver News Digest: events, safety and law
A roundup of top news from Vancouver and British Columbia: a lineup for the May long weekend, a large-scale securities fraud, and new measures to combat armed violence in the province.
Weekend ideas in Vancouver: things to do April 27–May 3
A new month begins, bringing a host of vibrant events in Vancouver. From April 27 to May 3 the city offers dozens of options for entertaining activities — from documentary films and live music to craft markets and unique culinary experiences. In this...

Vancouver News Digest: roads, education and soccer protest
Today's edition covers three key stories: overnight closures on Highway 1 due to construction, an international university fair, and a "Save the Caps" fan protest at B.C. Place.
Highway 1 ramp closures: Metro Vancouver drivers face nighttime disruptions for weeks
Spring works to widen Highway 1 through the Fraser Valley are entering an active phase, and drivers should prepare for traffic pattern changes starting as soon as this coming weekend. The British Columbia government has announced...
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 unique mass-timber building with 81 units for Indigenous people; and a medical emergency caused delays on the Vancouver–Nanaimo ferry route.
Former British Columbia premier Mike Harcourt builds housing for the “disappearing middle class”
Former British Columbia premier Mike Harcourt, now 83, has again attracted public attention — this time not with...

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...
USA

US Supreme Court, Race and Power: How One Ruling Redraws the Political Map
Seemingly modest Supreme Court decisions sometimes reshape real politics far more than high-profile elections. The story about Louisiana’s congressional map is one such case. Formally, it’s about technicalities of racial gerrymandering and the interpretation of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. In substance, it’s about how much the idea of racial-minority representation still functions in American democracy and who will control Congress in the coming years. Against this backdrop, even baseball news —...
Force, Implication, and the Fragility of U.S. Institutions
In three, at first glance unrelated, narratives — war with Iran and an energy crisis, a new criminal case against James Comey over an Instagram post, and the fight over funding the Secret Service amid an assassination attempt on Donald Trump — a common thread emerges. It is the turning of politics into a perpetual state of emergency, where security apparatuses, the justice system, freedom of speech and even global energy flows are woven into personal and partisan conflicts centered on the...

Power, Media and Public Trust in an Age of Crises
The events described in a recent KTVZ piece about the forced evacuation of Donald Trump from the White House Correspondents’ Dinner and the analysis of a measles outbreak in the U.S. in a WRAL report may at first glance seem entirely unrelated. A political thriller in a Washington hotel and an epidemiological crisis in South Carolina — two different worlds. But in both cases the same key question is central: how do institutions that depend on public trust — the press, authorities, and public...

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 apartment, a council terminates a consultant’s contract, a president threatens strikes on Tehran. But a common thread runs through these narratives: a deep crisis of trust in institutions of authority and a struggle over control of force and resources — from a municipal budget to a state’s military capabilities. Seen through these accounts, society at...

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,...
Reactions

How the World Responds to Washington: Views from Brazil, South Korea and South Africa
At the end of April 2026, the United States again finds itself at the center of foreign news — not as an abstract superpower, but as a very concrete,...
How the World Sees America: Brazil, Ukraine and Israel
At the end of April 2026, the United States again finds itself at the center of global debates — but not only because of the familiar topic of...

How the World Sees America in the War with Iran: India, Israel, France
At the end of April 2026, talking about America in the world almost automatically turns into talking about the US and Israel’s war against Iran, the...
How the US Looks from Afar: War with Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, and Washington’s New Image
Today's image of the United States in South Africa, Israel and South Korea is being shaped not by abstract reflections on “America in general,” but...

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...

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...
World

Delcy Rodríguez Defends Venezuela's Historical Rights to Essequibo
As part of the "Great Pilgrimage for a Venezuela without Sanctions and for Peace" campaign, acting president Delcy Rodríguez firmly asserted the country's indisputable historical rights to the disputed territory of Essequibo. In response to criticism from Guyana's President Irfaan Ali, who objected to her brooch featuring a map of Venezuela, Rodríguez stressed that such complaints are absurd, since it is the only map she has known in her life. She also announced that Venezuela is preparing to...

Hormuz Strait: global shipping crisis and insurance collapse
Since the start of the US–Israeli military campaign against Iran, the Strait of Hormuz has become the main choke point strangling the global economy. About 20% of all the planet’s oil and liquefied natural gas supplies pass through this narrow corridor. The effective closure of the strait has led to nearly 2,000 ships being stuck in the Persian Gulf awaiting passage, and rumors of a possible full blockade have heightened fears of a global recession. Even if the strait can be reopened, shipping...

War in the Persian Gulf sharply raised demand for ship-tracking
The conflict in the Middle East, and especially heightened tensions with Iran, has caused an unexpected surge in the popularity of vessel-tracking apps, the Financial Times reports. The Strait of Hormuz has come into focus — a key route for oil and goods shipments where thousands of ships have faced security threats. Governments, companies and media rushed to buy services that provide an instant view of maritime traffic.
One of the main beneficiaries was the firm Kpler with its MarineTraffic...

US Chargé d'Affaires Urges Venezuela to Seize Opportunity
US Chargé d'Affaires John Barrett addressed the Venezuelan Oil Chamber with an appeal to take advantage of the restoration of bilateral relations and the opening of the energy sector. He described the current moment as a key opportunity to transform the country into a global energy hub, emphasizing the importance of cooperation to achieve this ambitious goal.

Diplomatic deadlock between US and Iran: no war, no peace yet
Despite an apparent stalemate in diplomatic efforts to end the conflict between the US and Iran, analysts are confident the parties will not return to full-scale hostilities. Reuters, citing a US official, reports that President Donald Trump was dissatisfied with Tehran’s latest proposals, which sharply reduced hopes for a swift settlement. Experts emphasize that the current situation resembles a slowdown and delays in negotiations rather than a complete collapse of diplomacy.
Tehran put...

Tehran Proposes Phased Talks to Washington
Iran has put forward a new proposal to the United States through Pakistani intermediaries that envisages addressing issues in stages. According to Axios, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi discussed the plan during a visit to Islamabad. The main idea is to split the talks into three separate blocks, starting with a cessation of hostilities and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, while deferring the nuclear issue to a later stage.
Researcher Hossein Royouran revealed details of the...

Venezuela Condemns Attempted Attack on Trump
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez strongly condemned reports of an attempted attack on former U.S. President Donald Trump and his wife Melania during the Correspondents' Association dinner on Saturday evening. In her statement on social media she emphasized her commitment to peace, offering good wishes to Trump and all attendees of the event. "We reject any acts of violence," Rodríguez wrote, "and remind that violence is never the solution for those who defend the banner of peace."

Oil Didn’t Spike to $200: How the Market Absorbed the Strait of Hormuz Shock
Despite the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the escalation of the US–Israeli war against Iran, oil prices did not reach the forecasted $200 per barrel. Since the start of the conflict on February 28, Brent rose to a peak of about $119 in late March, but then fell below $90 during lulls, averaging around $100. Light Arab crude temporarily exceeded $140. This movement shows that the market absorbed the shock rather than exploding in a sharp surge.
From the outset there were alarming...

War has disrupted steel supplies, and Iran's auto industry is suffering losses
Direct strikes on Iran's car factories are not being carried out, but the war has significantly undermined the foundation of the sector — sheet steel. Disruptions to supplies and rising steel prices caused by the conflict are creating serious obstacles to car production. The key question arises: is the current situation a temporary glitch that can be fixed, or is it the start of deeper, more sustained pressure on production chains and the market for Iranian cars?
Knowledge

Concrete boats that became roads: how Seattle residents believed the impossible
In the 1930s Seattle faced a huge problem. The city sat on both shores of the vast Lake Washington, and people had to spend hours driving all the way around it or take a ferry. A bridge was needed, but a conventional bridge across such a wide, deep lake would cost a fortune. Then one engineer proposed an idea that seemed utterly crazy: build a bridge that would float on the water like a giant boat.
That engineer was Lacey V. Murrow, and he believed in something almost no one else did. His idea...

The city of boxes where Seattle's homeless chose a mayor: how Seattle learned to respect those who lost...
In 1931 a strange town appeared on the shore of Seattle's bay. Its homes were made of old crates, rusted metal and cardboard. There was no electricity. But the town had a mayor, it had rules, and people there cared for one another. That town lasted nine years — longer than any similar camp in America. And it taught the whole country an important lesson: even when people have nothing, they can create a real community if given the chance.
When houses were built from what was found in the...

Turtles and Builders Who Became Friends on One Street
In 1999 something very strange happened on the streets of Seattle: people dressed in giant sea turtle costumes walked arm in arm with workers in orange vests and hard hats. They sang songs, carried signs and blocked traffic together. It looked like a parade, only very serious. And the most surprising thing was these two groups normally didn’t get along at all. But that day they realized they wanted the same things, they just spoke about them differently. This unusual friendship changed Seattle...

The Chief Who Didn't Want the City to Bear His Name
Imagine an entire huge city was named in your honor. Sounds cool, right? But what if you really don't want that? What if it violates the most important rule of your family and your people? That's exactly what happened to a man named Si'ahl — the leader we know as Chief Seattle.
This is one of the strangest and most touching stories about how a city got its name. And it teaches us something important about listening to one another, even when we speak different languages and believe different...

The Boy Who Stopped a Tram with His Bare Hands: Seattle's Forgotten Steel-Road Heroes
Imagine this: a steep hill, a heavy tram full of people rolling backward faster and faster, and the brakes don't work! And only one twelve-year-old boy stands between the tram and catastrophe. This isn't fiction — it really happened in Seattle in 1912, and the story has almost been forgotten. Yet it tells not only of a brave child but also of how kids helped build an entire city on wheels.
The children who pushed the city uphill
In the early 1900s, Seattle was a city of trams. Picture a web of...

Grandmother Orcas Who Remember When Salmon Was Big
Imagine your favorite food is pineapple pizza. You eat it every day, your mother ate it, your grandmother did too. Your whole family loves that exact pizza. Now imagine that one day all the pineapples disappeared. Forever. You’re offered pizza with mushrooms, with cheese, with tomatoes, but you only want the pineapple one. That’s roughly what happened to the orcas in Puget Sound, Washington. Only instead of pizza they had chinook salmon, and instead of vanished pineapples — blocked rivers.
This...

Secret Waterways: How Smugglers Mapped Modern Seattle
Imagine that almost a hundred years ago ordinary people in Seattle turned into real sea pirates. They carved secret routes through the islands, hid cargo in hidden compartments of boats, and used underground tunnels to move what the government had banned. The most surprising thing — many of those secret routes became the basis for the roads and routes Seattle residents still use today. This is the story of how lawbreakers accidentally helped build a modern city.
When America tried to ban the...
Glass Bubbles Where Children Planted a Jungle in a Tech City
Imagine waking up one morning, looking out the window and seeing three huge glass bubbles, like spaceships, rising in the middle of an ordinary city block. And inside them — real jungles with trees that almost touch the ceiling! That’s what happened in the South Lake Union neighborhood of Seattle a few years ago. But the most interesting thing isn’t the glass spheres themselves; it’s who helped create this remarkable garden and why it was built amid computer offices.
This story began when the...

How Ordinary People Saved Pike Place Market — Seattle's Heart
Imagine your favorite place in the city — a park where you play, a library where you read, or a market that sells delicious doughnuts — suddenly slated to be demolished by bulldozers. Wiped off the map and replaced with a boring parking lot. Sounds like a nightmare, right? That almost happened to Pike Place Market in Seattle in the 1960s. But a group of ordinary people — not superheroes, not millionaires, just fellow residents — decided it wouldn't happen. And they won. This story shows that...