Jake Tapper, Amanda Knox & more: Ideas Festival lineup announced

The "Text Me Back" podcast takes the stage at the Cascade PBS Ideas Festival in 2024

Lindy West, Meagan Hatcher-Mays and Guy Branum on stage at the Cascade PBS Ideas Festival on May 4, 2024. (Christopher Nelson for Cascade PBS)

The Cascade PBS Ideas Festival returns May 31, with a lineup featuring Jake Tapper, Amanda Knox, and a slate of local and nationally recognized journalists, podcasters and lawmakers deconstructing the day’s most pressing issues. The full lineup of speakers was released today.

This year’s festival will include live podcast and television recordings from outlets like CNN, NPR and The Atlantic alongside a mix of community events in downtown Seattle. More information is available here.

More Briefs

Detained WA farmworker denied release over jurisdiction dispute

Alfredo "Lelo" Juarez is seen wearing a black hoodie with the letters "FUJ" -- which stands for Familias Unidas por La Justicia, which he helped found.

Farmworker organizer Alfredo “Lelo” Juarez participates in the Farmworker Tribunal at the State Capitol in January. Juarez, 25, was arrested by immigration officials on March 25. (Jason Redmond for Cascade PBS)

Alfredo “Lelo” Juarez Zeferino, a farmworker and union organizer whose March arrest by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement drew national outcry, will remain in detention after a judge announced Friday that she lacked jurisdiction to release him on bond.

Juarez’s case falls in line with what immigration lawyers have argued is a unique pattern of denying bonds over jurisdiction at the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma. The Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, a Seattle-based immigrant rights group, filed a class-action lawsuit in March to challenge those practices.

“It’s kind of a very complex legal argument, essentially, I don’t think that there’s merit to it,” Juarez’s attorney Larkin VanDerhoef said. “I think it’s very clear. And in fact, the Department of Homeland Security lawyer in the courtroom today also said they agreed there is jurisdiction here. And they’ve been saying that … since the beginning.”

Juarez helped found Familias Unidas por la Justicia, a Burlington-based union representing Indigenous and migrant farmworkers across the state. ICE arrested Juarez in Sedro-Woolley on his way to drop off his partner at work, and later took him to the NWIPC.

Inside the court on Thursday, an attorney for ICE contended Juarez would be a “flight risk.” 

VanDerhoef countered that Juarez has extensive support from community members and elected officials who could testify to his strong community involvement and political advocacy. He has no criminal charges on his record.

Activists called his arrest an act of retaliation for his labor organizing. Familias Unidas political director Edgar Franks said Juarez’s immigration hearing had been set for November until Thursday’s hearing  “sprung out of nowhere.”

Franks said he visited Juarez at the NWIPC a few weeks ago, an experience he described as “stressful” due to concerns he had about Juarez’s mental and physical well-being in ICE detention.

“Lelo still had a good spirit, we were joking around,” he said. “He’s a very caring person, doesn’t yell. … I don’t think I’ve ever even seen him swear.”

Juarez’s hearing also drew a crowd outside of the NWIPC’s gates of supporters and activists from Community to Community Development.

“Alfredo Juarez Zeferino is fearless,” C2C founder Rosalinda Guillen said. “He wouldn’t hide from anything, never have and he never will. So I think that’s the nature of this kind of repression … putting a characteristic to a person based on their color and the work that they do in this community is just blatantly wrong.”

VanDerhoef told Cascade PBS he plans to appeal the decision. 

‘Especially consequential’: Ferguson signs rent cap bill into law

A for rent sign outside a home

A ‘For Rent’ sign on a house in Bellingham’s York neighborhood on Friday, March 7, 2025. (M. Scott Brauer/Cascade PBS)

Caps on yearly rent increases are officially law after Gov. Bob Ferguson signed the contentious bill on Wednesday.

Ferguson, who had remained silent on his position throughout the legislative session, said Wednesday that the new law will be “especially consequential” for Washington residents.  

Under the final version, property owners cannot raise most tenants’ rent by more than 7% plus inflation, not to exceed 10%. For mobile homeowners, increases are capped at 5% every year.

“This is a really positive piece of legislation that will help a really challenging situation for us,” Ferguson said.

Ferguson signed the rent cap bill and nine other housing-related bills at an event at Blake House in Seattle. The other policies included limits to parking minimums, reductions to the permit timeline for new housing and expansions of tax breaks for people who own accessory dwelling units and rent to low-income households.

The rent cap policy passed the House of Representatives 54-44 and the Senate 27-20, with a handful of Democrats voting with Republicans against it. It took a dramatic path through the legislative session, eventually ending up in a version even some of its original backers were hesitant to support. At the start of this session, the policy included a 7% cap on yearly rent increases with no adjustment for inflation.

The bill’s final version includes a host of exemptions for certain types of housing, including dwellings owned by nonprofits, housing that receives federal low-income housing credits, and new construction built in the past 12 years.

Still, supporters say the policy is an important step to help many renters across the state avoid steep unexpected increases. Opponents of the policy say it will stifle new development, which could worsen the state’s housing shortage and increase rents overall.

On Wednesday, Ferguson said that he believes legislators landed on a “balanced approach” with the final version of the policy, adding that it will help keep Washingtonians from being priced out of their homes.

“We’ve got a crisis here in Washington state,” Ferguson said. “Doing things business-as-usual is not going to work.”

Sharing origin stories at Cascade PBS/Daybreak Star Radio event

People gather at a screening for "Origins: The Last Reefenetters"

Cascade PBS and Daybreak Star Radio hosted a screening of Origins: The Last Reefnetters followed by a community roundtable discussion on May 4 at Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center in Discovery Park. (Madeline Happold/Cascade PBS)

Cascade PBS and Daybreak Star Radio hosted a community event Sunday around the Origins: The Last Reefnetters docuseries at the Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center in Discovery Park.  

The event, attended by over 30 participants, included a screening of the first three episodes of Origins: The Last Reefnetters followed by a roundtable discussion to hear from community members. Some attendees shared that the documentary was their first foray into the history of reefnet fishing in Puget Sound, while others shared details of future events and powwows aimed at preserving Indigenous practices. Participants highlighted how history can be shaped based on the different voices, perspectives and backgrounds of the storytellers, and how nuances can be erased by popular narratives. 

When asked their “origins” story — what they would want to share about their families and culture — participants shared stories of joy, perseverance and humor. Some attendees vocalized a desire to see cross-pollination among communities, giving people the opportunity to connect with stories outside their immediate communities.
 

People sit around a pod of tables at the Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center
Participants discussed their "origins" story over frybread at the Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center. (Ryan Famuliner/Cascade PBS)

If you're interested in attending future community events, the Cascade PBS documentary Wolf Land will premiere at the SIFF Film Festival on May 17 at 5:30 p.m. at Shoreline Community College and May 18 at 1:30 p.m. at AMC Pacific Place. United Indians of All Tribes Foundation, which supports Daybreak Star Radio, will host their annual Seafair Powwow at Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center July 18-20. Origins: The Last Reefnetters is available to stream on Cascade PBS.  

We also want to provide our readers with coverage that benefits you. Let us know what issues you want to hear more about and what topics or communities you feel are overlooked by taking our latest reader survey

Mayor Bruce Harrell signed an executive order on Tuesday, April 22, for Seattle to revise its 2013 Climate Action Plan and take new steps to reduce citywide carbon emissions. 

The updated climate plan will include strategies to reach a goal of net-zero emissions by 2050, largely focused on transportation, energy use in buildings and waste. 

The executive order also mandates numerous near- and medium-term changes to cut down on Seattle’s transportation emissions.

Transportation accounts for 58% of Seattle’s total emissions. Harrell’s order outlines several strategies to decrease that number, including installing more electric vehicle charging stations, supporting more pedestrian-focused spaces, and developing three low-pollution neighborhoods by 2028.

“We’re proud that Seattle has been a national and global leader on sustainability and climate action for decades,” Harrell said at an Earth Day press conference announcing the order. “Updating our climate plan at this critical moment gives us a chance to take stock of the progress that we’ve made and to roll up our sleeves and do more.”

The order also aims for 80% of attendees at the 2026 FIFA World Cup to arrive without the use of personal vehicles. 

“We will do this by working with local partners to expand shared micromobility, improving transit options, and creating welcoming, walkable streets near Seattle Center, Pike Place Market, the Chinatown/International District and Pioneer Square,” said interim director of the Seattle Department of Transportation Adiam Emery. 

While, according to a 2022 report, total emissions have declined 12% since 2008, leaders said a more aggressive approach is needed to meet their 2050 goal.

“We don’t need another plan that sits on a shelf,” said Seattle City Council member Alexis Mercedes Rinck. “We need bold action that matches the scale of the crisis ahead of us.”

This latest move comes amid the Trump administration’s sweeping cuts to climate programs nationwide, including an attempt to cancel $14 billion in climate grants approved by the Biden administration. 

“Despite the Trump administration’s disinvestments in and opposition to climate action, Seattle will not back away from the work that needs to be done to protect our environment and adapt our city to the changing climate,” Harrell said.

The executive order requires the Office of Sustainability and Environment to implement the new climate action plan by 2026.

Seattle writer Tessa Hulls wins Pulitzer Prize for best memoir

‘Feeding Ghosts,’ a graphic memoir, traces three generations of Chinese women across time and continents, trauma and resilience.

A spread from "Feeding Ghosts"

A spread from ‘Feeding Ghosts,’ the Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic memoir by Seattle writer/comics illustrator Tessa Hulls. (Macmillan Publishers)

Seattle author and artist Tessa Hulls has won a 2025 Pulitzer Prize for her first book, Feeding Ghosts. Earning the award for best memoir or autobiography, the book blends historical research, personal revelations and comics-style storytelling to paint an emotionally fierce family portrait.

The Pulitzer Prize committee announced this year’s winners May 5, calling Feeding Ghosts “an affecting work of literary art and discovery whose illustrations bring to life three generations of Chinese women — the author, her mother and grandmother, and the experience of trauma handed down with family histories.”

In the book, Hulls explains how her grandmother, Sun Yi, a Shanghai journalist and single mother, was forced by government persecution to flee to Hong Kong in 1949. She brought her daughter Rose (Hulls’ mother) along with her — both hidden in the false bottom of a fishing boat.

Once arrived, Sun Yi penned a bestselling memoir, Eight Years in Red Shanghai: Love, Starvation, Persecution, and used the income to send Rose off to boarding school. Soon after, Sun Yi had a mental breakdown and was never the same.

With drawings that swim between realistic and surreal, Hulls reveals that in her own childhood, she knew Sun Yi only as the “broken ghost” of a grandmother who lived with her and her mother. In Feeding Ghosts — which took Hulls nearly 10 years to complete — the author/illustrator fleshes out her own intergenerational stories of immigration, creative escape and mother/daughter relationships.

While this is Hulls’ first book, she has been an active member of the Seattle art community for decades, as an artist, writer, illustrator, performer and interviewer, including the time she literally camped out at the Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP) to capture and illustrate the stories of the various parties involved.

In addition to winning the Pulitzer Prize, Feeding Ghosts has received many accolades since its publication, including both the Libby Award for Best Graphic Novel and the National Book Critics Circle’s John Leonard Prize, as well as being named a “Best Book of the Year” by Time magazine, NPR, Publishers Weekly and others.

REAL ID starts May 7. Here’s what Washingtonians need to know

A person in a uniform looks at an identification card.

In this April 2017 photo, a TSA officer checks a passenger’s identification at a security checkpoint at Sea-Tac International Airport. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

The article originally was published by The Spokesman-Review.

After decades of delays, the federal government will begin enforcing REAL ID requirements to fly domestically starting May 7 – for real this time.

“Our offices are busier than usual because of the deadline,” said Thomas Charlson, a spokesman for the Washington State Department of Licensing. “We recommend that people get an appointment if they’re coming to visit us.”

Although Washington state is issuing “Enhanced Driver’s Licenses,” Charlson said it’s the same as the REAL ID. He said it confirms your identity and U.S. citizenship, and will be required to board domestic flights.

“You can use this to board domestic flights, you can use it to enter certain federal facilities, and then one of the perks of having an Enhanced Driver’s License is that you can also use it to cross the borders of Canada and Mexico by land or sea,” Charlson said.

To obtain an Enhanced Driver’s License, Charlson said the person must bring the following documents with them – proof of U.S. citizenship, proof of identity, proof of Washington residency and your Social Security number. Documents that show some of that information include a birth certificate, W2 form, vehicle registration and more. A full list of acceptable documents is available at fortress.wa.gov/dol/extdriveses/esp/NoLogon/_/.

The enhanced license total cost is $116 for five years if you are getting your first Enhanced Driver’s License. Or if you are upgrading your current Washington driver’s license to the enhanced version, you can pay $7 per year for the time remaining on your current license.

If travelers do not have a REAL ID or any other TSA-acceptable ID, they will face delays, additional screening and the possibility of not being allowed into the security checkpoint, according to the Transportation Security Administration’s website.

If you don’t get an Enhanced Driver’s License, or aren’t eligible for one, other ID accepted options can be used for travel, Charlson said. These include a U.S. passport, a Permanent Resident card, a green card and an Employment Authorization Card.

He said the Washington State Department of Licensing also has an Enhanced Driver’s License checklist in both English and Spanish for travelers to know if they are eligible and what other documents they may need to obtain this enhanced identification.

“Make sure that you plan ahead,” Charlson said.

Seattle Children’s, Virginia Mason partner to expand in Kitsap

A sign on a landscaped driveway says "Seattle Children's Hospital"

Seattle Children’s Hospital on Jan. 8, 2021. (Dorothy Edwards/Cascade PBS)

This article originally appeared in the Kitsap Sun.

Virginia Mason Franciscan Health has entered a “strategic affiliation” with Seattle Children’s Hospital, the company announced Tuesday, hoping to bring services from the renowned pediatric hospital directly to patients on the Kitsap Peninsula and other areas around Puget Sound. 

Virginia Mason Franciscan operates 10 Puget Sound hospitals, including two on the Kitsap Peninsula. 

Through the affiliation, access to perinatal, neonatal and related specialty services will expand across VMFH Birth Centers, the company says.

Right now, Virginia Mason Franciscan–owned hospitals — which deliver 10% of Washington's births — send 25 vulnerable newborns per day to Seattle Children’s Hospital. Many of these families travel to their North Seattle campus or to a clinic in Federal Way. Embedding Seattle Children’s physicians across the Virginia Mason Network is expected to reduce those barriers. 

“Our goal is to keep every mother and baby together in their home community whenever possible, and any kid with a specialty need that otherwise would have to drive up to Seattle home, by bringing Seattle Children's doctors down physically or using technology into VMFH sites of care,” said Mark Salierno, Children’s senior vice president and chief strategy and business development officer.

The specifics of how physicians will be deployed at VMFH sites and how many staff could be hired are still being worked out, Salierno said. A strategic oversight committee, with representatives from both organizations, will guide the affiliation.  

Tom Kruse, chief strategy officer for Virginia Mason Franciscan who served as chief strategy officer for old Harrison Hospital in Bremerton from 2007 to 2011, said the peninsula has been dealing with limited medical care for a long time, and the partnership will bring needed services to the community.

 “All of this is to help improve the overall health of the community by intervening sooner and bringing a truly world-class children’s hospital to all the members of the peninsula who’ve never had that caliber before,” he said. “It should be a game changer.” 

The Kitsap Sun published a longer version of this article on April 30, 2025. Conor Wilson is a Murrow News fellow, reporting for the Kitsap Sun and Gig Harbor Now, a nonprofit newsroom based in Gig Harbor, through a program managed by Washington State University.

Canada’s Liberal Party holds onto power, Mark Carney remains PM

The American and Canadian flags fly above the Peace Arch at the US-Canada Border in Blaine, Washington.

The American and Canadian flags fly above the Peace Arch at the U.S./Canada Border in Blaine, Wash. (M. Scott Brauer/Cascade PBS)

Canada’s Liberal Party has retained power after Monday’s national election results, but it remains to be seen whether the party will have an outright majority in the House of Commons or need to build a minority government. 

The Liberals, led by Prime Minister Mark Carney, were a few seats away from an outright majority by Tuesday afternoon, but many seats across Canada were still very close as vote counts continued. 

Pierre Poilievre, the leader of the Conservative Party of Canada, lost his seat in the House of Commons, as did New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh.  

Carney has been the prime minister of Canada since March 9, two months after the longtime Prime Minister Justin Trudeau resigned. According to the CBC, Carney and the Liberals came from behind during the course of the 36-day campaign, speaking against U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs and threats to annex Canada as the 51st State. 

Join Cascade PBS & Daybreak Star Radio for a free film screening

Origins Community Event

Photo by Bert W. Huntoon, courtesy Whatcom Museum, Bellingham, Wash. Logo design by Jason LaClair. (Sienum)

Join Cascade PBS and Daybreak Star Radio for a free screening of three episodes of Origins: The Last Reefnetters, a five-part documentary series on the history and culture of reefnet fishing in the Salish Sea, followed by a community discussion with Cascade PBS and Daybreak Star Radio journalists. 

The event will be held on Sunday, May 4 at 3 p.m. at the Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center, 5011 Bernie Whitebear Way in Discovery Park. It will be free and open to the public. RSVP here

The five-part docuseries follows the final 12 captains to hold a reefnet fishing license, of whom only one is an enrolled tribal member. The practice was developed by the Lummi Nation and other Northern Straits Salish tribes thousands of years ago, but following punitive legislation, environmental damage and devastation caused by a budding cannery industry, Indigenous reefnetters were all but removed from the practice. Filmmaker Samuel Wolfe examines the legal, spiritual and cultural subtext that intertwines the Salish Sea’s last reefnetters. 

Permits to purchase guns may soon be required in Washington

Guns hang on a wall

Guns for rent at the Bellevue Indoor Gun Range on Monday, Aug. 22, 2022. (Amanda Snyder/Cascade PBS)

Gun buyers may soon need a permit and safety training to purchase a firearm in Washington.

House Bill 1163 is one step away from becoming a law after passing the Legislature on Tuesday. It now awaits a signature from Gov. Bob Ferguson, who has pushed for gun safety laws in the past.

Under the proposed policy, which would go into effect May 2027, any resident wishing to purchase a gun would be required to first apply for a permit, then pay a fee and show documentation of having completed a safety training program within five years. The training must include live-fire shooting exercises and a demonstration of safely handling a firearm.

The proposal sparked tensions this session between gun safety advocates, who said the legislation would reduce the state’s suicide and homicide rates, and gun rights supporters, who said it would infringe on Second Amendment rights.

The bill passed the House and the Senate along party lines, with only Democrats supporting it.

Bill sponsor Rep. Liz Berry, D-Seattle, said permit-to-purchase programs save lives.

“They make sure guns don’t get into the hands of the wrong people, they make sure that guns aren’t diverted to black markets, and they prevent crime,” she said during a floor debate Tuesday.

But Rep. Jim Walsh, R-Aberdeen, disagreed, calling the bill an unconstitutional “scheme” to test gun owners at their own personal cost.

“It is no guarantee that one murder will be prevented, that one assault will be prevented, that one suicide will be prevented,” Walsh said.

The new system would require the Washington State Patrol to approve permits within 30 days of application, or within 60 days for applicants without valid state ID. The state could not issue a permit to anyone who has been prohibited from purchasing a firearm under state or federal law, awaiting a trial for a felony or with an outstanding warrant.

Law enforcement, members of the military, private investigators, security guards and tribal law officers would all be exempt from the training requirement.

Thirteen other states have laws requiring permits to purchase certain firearms.

The Legislature’s proposal has garnered support from Attorney General Nick Brown, who testified in favor of the policy in a Senate Committee hearing in March.

“Through background checks, training, and other safety steps, we can make meaningful use of the critical time between someone’s choice to purchase a firearm and when they obtain that weapon,” Brown said.

The permit-to-purchase proposal is the only gun safety bill that has made it through both chambers of the Legislature this session. Other policies were proposed to require owners to lock up their guns when in vehicles or homes, limit bulk purchases of guns and ammunition and restrict where gun owners can openly carry their weapons. But none made it through this session.