Politics
If Bertha busts the budget, who pays?
Is it right for Seattle to foist Bertha overruns onto state taxpayers, when it was Seattle voters who insisted on a risky project with a Tiffany price tag?
Is it right for Seattle to foist Bertha overruns onto state taxpayers, when it was Seattle voters who insisted on a risky project with a Tiffany price tag?
Guest Opinion: The state Constitution sets up for an inevitable conflict between environmental protection and paying for school construction. We end failing both causes.
The War on Poverty was about improving job skills, education and health, not eradicating poverty, per se. Those debating its success or failure would do well to remember that.
The new session opens on Monday. And yes the Legislature needs watching.
$5.4 million already spent, a $12 million tech upgrade on the horizon, and no word on when the reform - or the spending - might end.