Features

City of Olympia to Host Cooling Center During Heatwave

City of Olympia to Host Cooling Center During Heatwave

This weekend is going to be hot hot hot! Together with Thurston County, the City of Olympia, and Partners in Prevention Education, Interfaith Works is hosting a cooling center Saturday, Sunday and Monday from noon to 6 p.m. at the Old Fire City Hall 108 State Ave. in downtown Olympia.  Please check the InterFaith website for more information about volunteering, donating, and details: https://www.iwshelter.org/code-red.html Donations are needed Bottled water, other cold treats for immediate distribution (no freezer unfortunately), cup o' soups, granola bars, tea, coffee, decaf coffee, creamer, sugar, pastries, sandwiches, fruit, cereal, milk, etc.  Individually packaged sunscreen packets, individual aloe…
Read More
Olympia Equity and Justice Commission Begins Work

Olympia Equity and Justice Commission Begins Work

Quick. Answer this question: What can the city of Olympia start, stop and continue doing in order to be an inclusive, equitable place for all community members to live, work and thrive? The answer is, there’s no quick answer. But there are dozens of opinions. “Racial justice work is unlike anything we have ever done as a City organization,” Olivia de Breaux, the city’s equity and inclusion coordinator said in a recent blog post on the city’s Diversity, Equity & Inclusion webpage. She did not respond to The Tribune’s request for an interview. “We took on this task understanding and feeling…
Read More
Oly Council Races Locked In & On-Track for Record $$$

Oly Council Races Locked In & On-Track for Record $$$

The field is set... And the campaign contributions are flowing. Fourteen people, including four incumbents, are diving into Olympia’s 2021 political arena, seeking election to a City Council that continues to wrestle with the incredibly thorny issues of police reform; public safety; incorporating equity and diversity and inclusion into how the city does its daily business; homelessness and housing; and pandemic-related difficulties experienced by small businesses and their employees, workers at a high risk due to COVID 19, landlords and renters, and others.  Council members are elected to four-year terms, unless they are filling the remainder of a term for…
Read More
Five Candidates File for Olympia Port Commission

Five Candidates File for Olympia Port Commission

Two open seats on the Olympia Port Commission drew five candidates by the end of the filing period last week. One race will have a primary election contest that already is racking up a slew of campaign contributions. Melissa Denton, Amy Evans and Joel Hansen will face off in the August 3 primary for the District 3 seat being vacated by E.J. Zita. Bob Iyall and Jesse Simmons are vying for the District 2 seat being vacated by incumbent Bill McGregor. In the primary, candidates for Port Commission run by district; they run countywide in the Nov. 2 general election.…
Read More
A Healthy Democracy Requires Transparency; Then Why Do Lawmakers Seek to Limit the Powers of the Public Disclosure Commission?

A Healthy Democracy Requires Transparency; Then Why Do Lawmakers Seek to Limit the Powers of the Public Disclosure Commission?

In 1972 the Washington state Public Disclosure Commission (PDC) was created by the dogged determination of a small group of citizens with the radical notion that transparency and disclosure are essential for a healthy and vibrant democracy. With I-276, (you didn’t really think the legislature would create it did you?) the voters passed the measure, by a phenomenal 72% to 28% margin, voting to require financial disclosures about political campaigns, lobbying contributions, and expenditures, and for a prohibition against use of public facilities in electoral politics.  It is especially helpful, and informative, after the passage of time, and with the resulting experience, to…
Read More
Microhomes On Their Way to Downtown Mitigation Site

Microhomes On Their Way to Downtown Mitigation Site

"Two down! Eight to go!" Those triumphant words rang out across a tent-filled asphalt parking lot in downtown Olympia on a recent sunny spring morning as the first of 10 new homes made its way there by forklift from the Port of Olympia warehouse where it was built. The brightly painted structures were settled in with precision, and safely and carefully leveled on the uneven pavement in an area near the Intercity Transit station. Known as “mitigation site,” it has been home to about 80 people living in tents since the city set it up in December 2018. When the…
Read More
Movement To Flip Olympia City Council Picks Up Steam

Movement To Flip Olympia City Council Picks Up Steam

Is it a slate? A collaboration? Cooperation? Just what is it? Whatever it is, Olympia City Council candidate Candy Mercer says she’s leading the charge to “flip” the council. Mercer, a frequent, vocal, and acerbic critic of the city’s response to the community’s growing homelessness crisis (more on that here). Mercer is adamant that she has only one goal. “I will continue working on both my campaign and to get like minded candidates elected. My goal is to funnel volunteers and donors to the various campaigns I see as viable alternatives to the current council. In essence, I am running against…
Read More
YWCA Olympia Statement for the Derek Chauvin Verdict

YWCA Olympia Statement for the Derek Chauvin Verdict

To Our Beloved Community: A few days ago we witnessed the conviction of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in the murder of George Floyd. The world watched as Floyd’s life was stolen by Chauvin, caught on video by brave teen bystander Darnella Frazier. Throughout Chauvin’s trial we have watched again, in vigilance and anticipation, to see if our judicial system would recognize what we all saw in that video: that police are a constant, deadly threat to Black and Brown lives.  We celebrate with communities across the globe, overwhelmed by a victory that feels so tremendous and yet so small. We share…
Read More
RELEASE: Local Issues, Local Answers

RELEASE: Local Issues, Local Answers

Thurston communities work with local government League of Women Voters and Thurston Community Media Host Dialogue 6:30pm on Wednesday, April 28 Olympia, WA April 23, 2021:  The Thurston County League of Women Voters and Thurston Community Media are sponsoring an evening for local activism.  Participants have the opportunity to ask their elected representatives about the issues that most affect local people. Attendees can receive direct answers to their questions, in real time, via Zoom, Wednesday evening, April 28th. Elected leaders from Thurston County, Lacey, Olympia, and Tumwater will take questions from the audience and discuss how to be most effective in influencing…
Read More
Got Police Chief?

Got Police Chief?

Not yet. And not for a while. The city of Olympia announced Monday afternoon it will not resume its search for a new police chief until late this year.  It gave no timeline for the actual hiring of a new chief for the city’s Police Department, which has been operating under an interim chief since late 2019 and has been beleaguered by allegations of racism, mismanagement of multiple protests in the city over the past year, and unequal treatment of those involved in them. Olympia City Manager Jay Burney, who will select the police chief, said the search will resume…
Read More