Let’s Go Washington fined $20K for campaign finance violations

The sponsor behind several initiatives on the November ballot faces a $20,000 fine from the state’s Public Disclosure Commission after the agency said it determined the sponsor, the political action committee Let’s Go Washington, violated state campaign finance laws by failing to maintain and produce necessary records regarding the use of subcontractors to gather signatures for the initiatives. 

In a statement issued Wednesday, the commission noted that half of the fine could be suspended if Let’s Go Washington meets certain conditions, including paying half the amount owed within 30 days. 

The commission held a hearing on Oct. 3 to weigh any fines against Let’s Go Washington over delays in providing required details about campaign finance reports. Additionally, PDC staff alleged that Let’s Go Washington was not clear about whether the five contractors tasked with gathering signatures for the initiatives had hired subcontractors. Under state campaign finance laws, the commission can issue fines of up to $10,000 for each campaign violation.

“LGW has an obligation to inquire and confirm whether its contractors have used sub vendors,” the commission wrote in its order. “Failing to ask or failing to follow up on a contractor’s non-response or refusal to provide the information is insufficient. If this were the standard, any committee could simply ignore the issue and argue it has no knowledge of its contractor’s actions and nothing to report.”

The commission’s final order did note, however, that Let’s Go Washington “properly reported the allocation of its expenditures” totaling more than $12 million. 

Brian Heywood, the Redmond-based hedge fund manager and sponsor behind Let’s Go Washington, said in a statement Wednesday that the organization is evaluating its options with the PDC order and claimed that PDC staff were “gaslighting” in their press release.

“PDC staff never asked for full books of account until August, which we promptly turned over,” Heywood noted. “We were fined for not disclosing sub vendors even though we had no knowledge of any use of sub vendors, and even if we again prove no sub vendors were used, we are still fined $5,000.”

Heywood added that the political action committee has filed its own complaints “based on this new standard” with the PDC against the six groups who first filed the complaints using the same grounds and that Let’s Go Washington expects a prompt investigation before the election on Nov. 5.   

The three initiatives in question would impact current state laws in different ways: I-2117 would repeal the state’s cap-and-invest program and prohibit lawmakers from imposing any similar measures in the future; I-2104 would allow Washington residents to opt out of the state’s long term care program; and I-2109 would repeal the state’s capital gains tax.

More Briefs

Chinook citizens get free tuition at Clatsop Community College

Until now, free college tuition programs have not been offered to tribes like the Chinook Indian Nation that do not have federal recognition.

Several states offer free college tuition for Indigenous students from federally recognized Native nations. For nations like the Chinook Indian Nation who have been fighting for federal recognition for the past 20 years, these higher-education opportunities have been denied, until recently. 

Clatsop Community College announced on May 6 at the North Coast Inclusion Seminar that they would be the first higher-education institute within the Chinook Indigenous lands to grant free tuition to the nation.

“I saw no other option.” Chris Breitmeyer, president of Clatsop Community College in Astoria, Oregon, said in a press release. 

“Knowing that hundreds of tribes are receiving these incredible opportunities while the Chinook Indian Nation is left to fend for themselves should upset every single Oregonian,” Breitmeyer said. “It is our responsibility to do better by our indigenous communities, and we are proud to support the Chinook Indian Nation in this way. We know we have done the right thing, and encourage other higher-ed institutions to follow suit.”

Chinook leadership believes that local support for the Chinook Indian Nation is pivotal to their continued efforts for federal recognition, and is grateful to Clatsop Community College for prioritizing Chinook citizens and respecting the nation’s sovereignty. 

“Clatsop Community College has made a significant commitment to honoring our place within the community, reaffirming our status as an active tribe, and supporting our members as they work to cultivate better futures for themselves,” said Rachel Cushman, secretary/treasurer of the Chinook Indian Nation Tribal Council. She called the college’s decision a move toward building economic security for her people. 

The Chinook Indian Nation hopes that other higher-education institutions in Washington and Oregon will follow the lead of the University of Oregon (which offers a similar program) and Clatsop Community College to treat them with the same respect and offer the same opportunities as federally recognized nations. 

This morning, the Seattle City Council took an early step toward limiting the circumstances under which gig companies can deactivate workers’ accounts on their platforms.

During the Public Safety and Human Services Committee meeting, Council staff gave a presentation on draft legislation that would set parameters for when and why workers could have their accounts deactivated and create an appeals process, among other things. 

The bill states that companies’ deactivation policies must be “reasonable and be reasonably related to the network company’s safe and efficient operations.” Unreasonable policies include deactivations related to number of hours worked, acceptance or rejection of work offers, and low ratings by customers, among others.

The policy would require companies to give 14 days of notice before deactivation; provide documentation substantiating the deactivation; and allow workers to appeal their deactivation to a person with authority to reverse the decision.

In instances where companies suspect workers of engaging in “egregious misconduct,” the companies will be able to deactivate accounts immediately rather than waiting until the end of the 14-day investigation period. Egregious misconduct includes assault, sexual assault, unlawful harassment, theft, fraud, DUI and a number of other criminal actions.

Councilmembers Lisa Herbold and Andrew Lewis are leading the Council’s work on a suite of policies, called the PayUp Legislation, meant to improve working conditions for independent contractors on gig apps. Last year Seattle passed a minimum wage for gig workers. Earlier this year they created a gig-worker paid sick and safe time law.

According to Council staff, gig workers have raised deactivation as a key concern during the city’s stakeholder meetings with gig workers and app-company representatives. Workers expressed frustration with a lack of transparency around why they’re being deactivated and a lack of recourse.

At this morning’s Council meeting, speaking through a translator, food delivery worker Georgina Rojas said she was deactivated from DoorDash last year without explanation and the company did not respond to her appeals. Without her source of income, she started to fall behind on bills, and after three weeks she decided she had no choice but to switch to working for a different app company.

Representatives from Instacart and DoorDash also testified at the meeting, expressing concern with the policy, especially around limits to their ability to quickly deactivate workers and the disclosure of certain private information. 

As draft legislation, the policy is in its earliest stages. The next step is for Councilmember Herbold to officially introduce the bill for consideration and potential amendment by the rest of the Public Safety and Human Services Committee.

Gov. Inslee signs bill to help survivors of sex trafficking in WA

The legislation will fund healing and transition services for people who have experienced sex trafficking. 

 

Gov. Jay Inslee recently signed a bill intended to help survivors of sex trafficking access housing, health services and more in Washington. 

“This is important because many survivors don’t know that services exist and there are people available to support them through their journey to healing,” said Jeri Moomaw, executive director of Innovations Human Trafficking Collaborative and co-founder of Washington Against Sexual Exploitation (WASE Forward), in a news release.

Signed on May 4, Substitute Senate Bill 5114 was written by and for survivors of adult sex trafficking, according to the WASE coalition of 34 agencies working to prevent commercial sexual exploitation of vulnerable people.

The coalition hopes the money will be spent on culturally responsive programs and services tailored toward those disproportionately affected by human trafficking, including communities of color.

The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Claire Wilson, D-Auburn, and Rep. Tina Orwall, D-Des Moines, will fund services like legal advocacy, safety planning, substance-use disorder treatment, housing, health services and education.  

Different factors make Washington particularly vulnerable to human trafficking, according to the Attorney General’s Office, including its border with Canada, rural landscape and “abundance of ports.” 

King County's trailhead shuttle for hikers will return May 13

King County’s Trailhead Direct service returns for its fifth year to shuttle hikers between Seattle and North Bend trailheads through Sept. 4. 

King County’s Trailhead Direct service returns for its fifth year this weekend to shuttle car-free hikers between Seattle and North Bend trailheads on weekends and holidays through Sept. 4. 

The county invested in a shuttle service in 2017 amid concerns about both climate change and recreation access. It opened some of the region’s most popular hiking trails to those who either don’t use cars or who don’t want to deal with the traffic congestion that plagues these trails during peak hours. Cyclists, rejoice: Each shuttle includes bike racks with space for two to three bikes. 

The route starts at the Capitol Hill light-rail station every half hour, but users can also board at the Downtown light-rail station and the Eastgate freeway station. Stops include the North Bend Park & Ride and the trailheads for Little Si, Mt. Si and Mt. Tenerife. The longest ride takes one hour between Capitol Hill and Mt. Tenerife. 

Users can walk or roll onto shuttles and pay as they would for bus and light-rail rides. The one-way $2.75 fee can be paid using cash, an ORCA card or the Transit GO app. Users 18 and under ride for free.

As Washingtonians continue to suffer the fatal effects of fentanyl, three local advocates took to the stage at the Crosscut Ideas Festival on Saturday and spoke about how to support people experiencing substance-use disorder.

"Overdose does not have to be fatal,” said Brad Finegood, strategic adviser at Public Health – Seattle & King County. 

Finegood’s brother died of a drug overdose, something he believes could have been prevented if the person who had been with his brother at the time of his death knew what an overdose looked like. 

He and his co-panelists — Julian Saucier, a drug policy advocate currently in recovery from substance-use disorder, and Darcy Jaffe, senior vice president of safety and quality at the Washington State Hospital Association — agreed on what’s not working: criminalizing people who are experiencing addiction; shaming and judging; stigmatizing substance-use disorder. 

Seattle, like many other cities throughout the country, has seen an increase in deaths related to fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 times more potent than heroin. Panelists noted fentanyl has impacted communities of color in particular, and rural areas as well.

The three emphasized different ways to confront the crisis, like educating youth and making naloxone — which can reverse the effects of a drug overdose — more accessible.

Three lessons about tackling the biodiversity crisis

Experts say biodiversity loss is a trend just as threatening as climate change to keeping the Earth habitable.

More than a third of U.S. species are imperiled or at elevated risk of going extinct, and more than 150 species already have. Experts say biodiversity loss is a trend just as threatening as climate change to keeping the Earth habitable.

How to increase the public’s understanding of the biodiversity crisis — and how people can act on both that challenge and on climate change — were the two main topics of a Crosscut Ideas Festival panel on Thursday about the biodiversity crisis.

Here are three takeaways from the session, which featured author and magazine editor Michelle Nijhuis; Paula Sweeden, who works on wildlife and natural resource management policy for Conservation Northwest; and Bruce Stein, who works on species extinction and biodiversity for the National Wildlife Federation: 

  1. Biodiversity loss is about way more than saving the whales. It also involves the malfunction of a system of interconnected species at varying levels of individual vulnerability. “When a species starts to go extinct, it’s usually going to take something else with it,” Sweeden said. To save species, we need to think even the most common ones before they’re in harm’s way. Stein noted that biodiversity is also about genetic variation, which helps species and ecosystems adapt. 
  2. Biodiversity is threatened by many things — including our own individual actions. For Sweeden, one of the biggest factors is that people aren’t usually very good at connecting how our individual and communal decisions affect biodiversity loss. That lack of awareness can make it hard to push policy changes
  3. There are biodiversity wins happening in Washington state. Restoring natural ecosystems to their best, most biodiverse selves can be a result of climate action, Sweeden said. Millions of dollars from Washington’s Climate Commitment Act, the state’s new cap and invest system, is devoted to natural climate solutions that protect older forests that heavily remove carbon.

A preview of Friday's sessions

It’s the last day of virtual sessions for the 2023 Crosscut Ideas Festival, and Friday night’s VIP event kicks off our in-person sessions with … slime? 

It’s the last day of virtual sessions for the 2023 Crosscut Ideas Festival, and Friday night’s VIP event kicks off our in-person sessions with … slime? 

You might want to bring your poncho.

If you haven’t bought tickets but are interested in attending, you still have a chance — the Festival will culminate in an all-day Saturday in-person event including art installations, workshops and keynote speakers at the Amazon Meeting Center, 2031 Seventh Ave. Find a full list of speakers, sessions and ticket prices at crosscut.com/festival

Here are today’s remaining virtual sessions: 

  • The New Abortion Underground: After the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, abortion access has become increasingly restricted in many states. The landscape harkens back to before Roe, when grassroot groups like "the Janes" created underground networks to provide access. Judith Arcana, a former “Jane” whose Chicago arrest and mugshot became representative of the movement, joins us to discuss her experience living in the pre- and post-Roe era. Arcana is joined by Kelsea McLain, an abortion rights activist and deputy director of Yellowhammer Fund, which works to ensure access to stigma-free and inclusive sexual-health education. The session starts at 9 a.m.
     
  • Spiritual Rx for Mental Health: While yoga is on the rise as the popular new workout, Deepak Chopra's new book, Living in the Light, argues the exercise is also a holistic approach to well-being that includes the body, mind, and spirit. Chopra, a clinical professor of family medicine and public health at the University of California, San Diego, is a pioneer in integrative medicine and personal transformation. He is also the author of more than 90 books translated into 43 languages, including numerous New York Times bestsellers. Amna Nawaz, the co-anchor of PBS NewsHour, will moderate. The session starts at 11 a.m. 
     
  • KCTS 9 presents "Your Last Meal" live podcast taping: "Double Dare" host Marc Summers!: Friday’s VIP event includes a live taping of Your Last Meal, the James Beard Award finalist for Best Podcast and the #1 food podcast on Apple Podcasts. Seattle-based host Rachel Belle is joined by Marc Summers, known best as the host of the Nickelodeon game show Double Dare. Find out what he would choose for his last meal, then follow along as Summers and Belle dig into the dish’s history, culture and science. The event includes catered food, drinks and some light morbid humor. 

The event starts at 7 p.m. at the Amazon Meeting Center, 2031 Seventh Ave. Don’t have a VIP ticket? You can use code SLIME to get 50% at checkout.

 

The Crosscut Ideas Festival is back for day three. 

In case you missed it — the Crosscut Ideas Festival is a gathering for newsmakers, changemakers and innovators to come together and discuss current events and the issues of our time. Along with virtual sessions running through Friday, the Crosscut Ideas Festival will culminate in an all-day Saturday in-person event including art installations, workshops and keynote speakers.

Each day, we’ll offer a synopsis of what’s to come. Here are today’s virtual sessions: 

  • Building the Education-to-Work Pipeline: The education-to-work pipeline is a system designed to help students transition to the workforce, involving mentorship programs, alternative options to traditional education and coordination with outside employers. While the system is good in theory, it is a bit more difficult in practice. Speakers include Kelvin Dankwa, a mentoring program coordinator at Seattle Public Schools; Rebecca Wallace, assistant superintendent of Secondary Education and Pathway Preparation; Angie Mason-Smith, senior program officer at Washington STEM; and Dr. Angela Jones, director of the Washington State Initiative at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The session starts at 9 a.m.
     
  • Crosscut Reports live podcast taping: What happened in Olympia?: After the end of the Washington Legislative session, Crosscut Reports reviews which bills passed, which failed and which didn’t quite make it to the finish line. Host Sara Bernard is joined by Crosscut reporter Joseph O’Sullivan and Axios reporter Melissa Santos to discuss the new laws and political dynamics that have emerged, including the possibility of new gun regulations and moves on housing and education funding. The session starts at 11 a.m. 
     
  • Our Biodiversity Crisis: Climate change isn’t the only environmental issue plaguing our planet. America’s wildlife is in crisis — last summer, 60 experts who co-authored a study published in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment said that biodiversity loss was equally as critical. The issue can be reversed, though, if we look to solutions within reach. Speakers include Bruce A. Stein, chief scientist at National Wildlife Federation; Paula Sweeden, policy director at Conservation Northwest; and Michelle Nijhuis, author and journalist at High Country News. The session starts at 2 p.m. 

Interested in attending? Tickets are still on sale for Thursday’s and Friday’s virtual events and Saturday’s in-person sessions at the Amazon Meeting Center, 2031 Seventh Ave. Find a full list of speakers, sessions and ticket prices at crosscut.com/festival

Crosscut Reports’ live taping asks, ‘What Happened in Olympia?’

The Washington Legislature delivered a number of major headlines this past session, from new gun laws to protections for transgender youth and, of course, the state’s official dinosaur.

The Washington Legislature delivered a number of major headlines this past session, from new gun laws to protections for transgender youth and, of course, the state’s official dinosaur. Then there were the headlines for things that didn’t get done, including major housing legislation pushed hard by the governor and a drug-sentencing bill that is likely to get a second chance during a special session in the near future.

Lawmakers gave us a lot to discuss and explain, which is what the Crosscut Reports podcast is great at doing. For this year’s Crosscut Ideas Festival we have invited Crosscut politics reporter Joseph O’Sullivan and Axios Seattle reporter, and former Crosscutter, Melissa Santos to a live taping of the weekly podcast. Host Sara Bernard will be asking what these two longtime Olympia watchers saw at this year’s legislative session and how new laws are likely to impact the lives of Washingtonians and inform the national debate.

Here are five stories to help you get up to speed before the 11 a.m. session.

With assault weapons ban, Washington enters a new era of gun reform by Joseph O'Sullivan, Crosscut

WA Senate passes "missing middle" bill to increase housing density by Joseph O'Sullivan, Crosscut

Washington enacts abortion protections to counteract red state laws by Melissa Santos, Axios

WA transgender youth bill targeted in national culture war by Joseph O'Sulllivan

With Washington state set to decriminalize drugs, cities may step in by Melissa Santos, Axios

Three thoughts on Ukraine and China from Rep. Adam Smith

The Congressman suggested negotiations with Russia could happen as early as October.

Hours before Rep. Adam Smith took the virtual stage at the Crosscut Ideas Festival to talk about foreign policy, reports of explosions at the Kremlin provided a reminder of the ever-evolving state of the conflict over Ukraine.

Smith, who for four years chaired the House Armed Services Committee and is currently the Democrats’ ranking member on the committee, spent the session discussing developments in the war in Ukraine, as well as ongoing tensions between China and the U.S.

Rep. Smith cast doubt on Russian claims that Ukraine was behind the attack, noting that he has not been fully briefed on the matter. “Things are not going well for Russia in Ukraine,” he said. “[Putin] needs something to get the Russian people to get behind him — the burning of the Reichstag, if you will."

Here are three other takeaways from the session:

1. Strategic ambiguity is necessary when it comes to Taiwan. Rep. Smith noted that some in Congress have responded to growing tensions between China and Taiwan by calling for the U.S. to state clearly its support for the island’s independence. Smith said that is the wrong tack. He voiced support for the continuation of the so-called “One China” policy, which recognizes the People’s Republic of China as the “sole government of China” while also allowing the U.S. to support Taiwan’s right to self-determination. Smith also called for greater military support for Taiwan, suggesting that the U.S. could help turn Taiwan into a “porcupine.”

2. Investment abroad does not equal disinvestment at home. The Congressman said he does not believe Ukraine has distracted Congress from the domestic issues he finds most pressing, such as income inequity, threats to democracy and climate change. He pointed to $7 trillion in additional spending, including the CHIPS and Science Act and infrastructure investments, as evidence that the federal government can get things done while also sinking resources into international affairs. “It’s not like if we weren’t engaged in Ukraine, everything would be fine here,” he said.

3. There is a path to a negotiated peace with Russia, soon. Rep. Smith pointed to a possible Ukrainian counter-offensive that he believes could push Russian forces back to near the February 2022 border and threaten Russia’s hold on the disputed Crimean peninsula. “That forces him to the table.” Smith suggested negotiations could happen as early as October and said he would like to see a “One Ukraine” policy in which Crimea is a part of Ukraine, "but we're not going to quibble about the details" in how that is done.

Watch a replay of the session here. Or subscribe to the Crosscut Talks podcast to hear this and other Crosscut Ideas Festival sessions in the coming weeks. New episodes will publish every Tuesday and Thursday on Apple PodcastsSpotifyStitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts.