News 2024: Photos of the year Yakima Valley hop farms, Ukrainian refugees and fishermen stranded on ships — Cascade PBS’s photo editor reflects on the year through images. by Genna Martin & Cascade PBS Visuals Staff / December 18, 2024
News 2023: Photos of the year Babies in prison, Starbucks unions, and Seattle cycling. Crosscut photographers captured a year of growth and change across Washington state. by Genna Martin & Cascade PBS Visuals Staff / December 15, 2023
News 2022: The year in photos Pickleball mania, vaccinated tigers, Ukrainian art and the fall of 'Roe.' These images taken across Washington state made us think, feel and laugh. by Genna Martin & Cascade PBS Visuals Staff / December 16, 2022
News 2021: The year in photos in Washington state Reflections on the year and the photos that resonated most. by Cascade PBS Visuals Staff / December 28, 2021
News 2020: A year in photos across Washington state Our visual journalists reflect on the photos that resonated most in a difficult year by Cascade PBS Visuals Staff / December 25, 2020
News Crosscut Documentaries: Living with a Pandemic Washingtonians try to make sense out of a year of stress, unrest and uncertainty. by Cascade PBS Visuals Staff / October 7, 2020
News Pandemic pushes WA foster care group homes into lose-lose dilemmas With one group home losing a state contract after turning away infected youth, operators at other homes fear state retaliation. by Rachel Nielsen & Robert McClure InvestigateWest / August 14, 2020 / Updated at 5:53 p.m. Aug. 14
News Framed: Photos of life in Seattle during COVID-19 The city is adapting as we enter the second month of Washington’s ‘Stay Home, Stay Healthy’ order. by Cascade PBS Visuals Staff / May 1, 2020
Environment Should King County renew its lease with one of the region’s largest emitters of pollution? Ardagh Group’s glass recycling plant is located near two Seattle neighborhoods where residents live sicker and die younger than in other areas in the city. by Robert McClure & Sergio Olmos Investigate West / October 1, 2019 / Updated at 9:53 p.m.