Environment
When Seattle cared more about coal than climate change
Today we fight it, but generations ago the city thrived on it.
Today we fight it, but generations ago the city thrived on it.
On the Nisqually River, middle school students are studying a changing ecosystem and advising the grown-ups with power to address it.
‘It’s kind of like a death in the family in a way.’
A Rainier Beach fraternal organization fights for survival amid the city’s depressing trend of African-American flight.
In the years after World War II, civic boosters undertook an effort to put Seattle on the map. They called