Features

Olympia City Manager “still considering the options” on Next Police Chief

Olympia City Manager “still considering the options” on Next Police Chief

Burney expects to make a decision in the next few weeks on how to proceed A week after “pausing” a botched search for a new city of Olympia police chief, the Olympia City Manager Jay Burney has not decided when the search will resume. He has determined that when it does, the firm that failed to find at least one finalist’s disciplinary record will not be involved. “The City Manager is still considering the options for continuing the search process. We do know that, when we proceed, we will be moving forward with another search firm,” Kellie Purce Braseth, a…
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“This feels like a warm hug”

“This feels like a warm hug”

Frame, glue, foam, staple, glue, frame, staple, squish, repeat. Inside a 10,000-plus square foot Port of Olympia warehouse, that’s the rhythm of assembly line-style work on 60 8-by-8 foot homes whose final destination is the downtown Olympia tent city known as the “mitigation site”.  Sometime in mid-April, these new dwellings will begin to replace troublesome tents at the site, which the city of Olympia opened in December 2018 as a temporary space for more than 100 people who were visibly camping in various downtown locations, just a mile from and within view of the State Capitol building. “I believe all people…
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The Unbearable Insecurity of our Leaders

The Unbearable Insecurity of our Leaders

 That many politicians are walking paradoxes of narcissism and arrogance mixed with emotional fragility and insecurity is certainly no epiphany. Our former President offers textbook writers the perfect model for the havoc that a man-child with power can wreak.  Like many traits/foibles/idiosyncrasies, however, there are far more similarities than we might like to admit about many in power – notwithstanding their political ideologies.  The Governor of Washington state has earned accolades for his management of a once-in-a-lifetime (hopefully) crisis with his handling of the Pandemic. He is also considered a national leader on the existential crisis of our time, climate…
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Olympia Pauses Search for New Police Chief

Olympia Pauses Search for New Police Chief

Less than 24 hours after he announced the four finalists for Olympia Police Chief and praised them for their “vision for policing and their readiness to take on the unique challenges and opportunities facing the city of Olympia,” City Manager Jay Burney has “paused” the search for a new chief. Friday morning, Burney announced that one of the four candidates withdrew after The Olympia Tribune drew Burney’s attention to a past use of force incident involving the candidate.  After Burney announced the finalists late Thursday afternoon, a quick internet search by The Tribune found that finalist Derrick Turner, who manages…
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A Statement from the Olympia City Council Condemning Anti-Asian Hate

A Statement from the Olympia City Council Condemning Anti-Asian Hate

(March 23, 2021) Our hearts are with the victims and survivors of the recent shooting spree in Georgia, which led to the deaths of Hyun Jung Grant, Xiaojie Tan, Delaina Ashley Yaun, Paul Michels, Yong Ae Yue, Suncha Kim, Soon Chung Park, and Daoyou Feng. Elcias Hernandez-Ortiz survived his injuries. These actions are intolerable and reveal to us yet again the presence of racism, misogyny, and xenophobia that persists in our society. We send our deepest condolences to the family and friends of the victims. The murders of these eight people in Georgia, six of whom are Asian women, sheds light…
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OPINION: In Support of West Bay Yards

OPINION: In Support of West Bay Yards

“A five-alarm blaze ripped through a lumber mill on the west side of Olympia early yesterday, causing an estimated $25 million to $50 million in damage and igniting piles of plywood that burned for hours.” A 1996 Seattle Times article paints a vivid picture of what would be the end of the Hardel Mutual Plywood Corporation’s mill at 1210 West Bay Drive.  And now, after twenty-five years of blight, this formerly contaminated industrial site has the potential to provide much needed multi-family housing, complete a public waterfront trail system, and be a part of a shoreline restoration envisioned collaboratively by…
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It’s Not Getting Better Out There

It’s Not Getting Better Out There

Early numbers show more people unsheltered, houseless in Thurston County 1,145 That’s the preliminary count of Thurston County residents who are living unsheltered or staying in shelters or transitional housing of some kind. The number, released Tuesday by Thurston County Public Health and Social Services, is information gathered during the Point-in-Time Homeless Census count on the night of January 28, 2021. More than half of those counted were unsheltered. The count found:  169 people stayed in transitional housing.337 people stayed in emergency shelters.639 people (56%) stayed in sanctioned and unsanctioned encampments, RVs, or other vehicles and in small structures, doorways,…
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The Surprising Economics Behind Going All-Electric (hint, the numbers are pretty good)

The Surprising Economics Behind Going All-Electric (hint, the numbers are pretty good)

By Deepa Sivarajan Washington and Oregon have some of the lowest-cost electricity in the nation—ensuring homeowners and utility rate payers can access as much of that cheap, clean energy as possible to heat and power our buildings, while also promoting clean energy job growth, is another double-win from all-electric buildings.   The most cost-effective way to achieve our GHG goals   Washington is committed by law to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 95% below 1990 levels by the year 2050; Oregon Governor Kate Brown issued an executive order in 2020 that directed Oregon agencies to reduce emissions by at least 80% below 1990 levels by 2050. Washington State’s Deep…
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Thurston County Nonprofits Call on Elected Leaders to Align with Racial Justice Policies

Thurston County Nonprofits Call on Elected Leaders to Align with Racial Justice Policies

Thurston County, Wash. – In response to the movement and demand for justice for Black Lives, more than a dozen Thurston County nonprofits and nonprofit leaders have signed onto a collective letter indicating their intentions to align with Racial Justice and a local race equity-focused policy agenda, and they are calling on Thurston County elected leaders to do the same. The letter states, “Our nonprofits hold collective power in this community and have a responsibility to use that power wisely and for justice. We know that until we dismantle systemic supremacy none of us can meet our missions for the wellbeing of people and our planet.” The nonprofits and nonprofit leaders that that signed onto this collective letter aim to act in solidarity with the changes that Black Leaders and Communities of Color are calling for. Communities of Color are most impacted by systemic oppression and are therefore the experts at knowing which solutions are needed. With advisement from BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) Communities, the nonprofit group has outlined several policy priorities that they are asking local elected and appointed leaders to research and to swiftly put into action. The nonprofit partners who signed onto this call to action said, “It is clear that there have been good intentions and that several local jurisdictions have taken important steps to address issues of inequality and yet, these efforts have fallen short of what is needed. The caliber and direction of our work together must be amplified to address the significant harm, stress, fear and pain BIPOC communities are facing every day. This set of policy priorities acknowledges the gravity and pace of change that is needed to address these harms.” The group said they are looking forward to working with elected and appointed leaders in the coming months. Thurston County Elected and Appointed Leaders are being asked to: Declare racism as a public health emergencyInstall community-led public safety accountability bodies to direct a fundamental shift in how our local criminal justice system operates; significantly reduce the scope and power of these systemsReallocate funds from criminal justice system to community-based services; Install sanctioned (with decision making power) community-led, participatory budgeting processes to determine where the reallocated funds are investedRedesign and reinvest current school resource officer contracts into student supports and school counselorsAdopt and align with the federal Justice in Policing Act of 2020 and Washington State Initiative 940Denounce white supremacist hate groups and armed vigilante groups and take tangible steps to prevent them from inciting violenceEnsure Human Rights Commissions are led by People of Color and…
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Lucky 13? Three more candidates To Seek Olympia City Council Seats

Lucky 13? Three more candidates To Seek Olympia City Council Seats

Wendy D. Carlson recently filed to run as the second challenger for incumbent Lisa Parshley, forcing a primary election. Community activist Talauna Reed also is in that race. Carlson is a former community corrections officer for the Department of Corrections, a PTA and football booster volunteer, and sports coach. Her campaign website lists her top issues as homelessness; public safety/civil safety and affordable housing. Tyrone Brown is running for Position 7 against incumbent Jim Cooper. He has no apparent online presence as of publication, though you can email him at tyrone4council@gmail.com. Entering the race for the council seat left open by Renata…
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