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Seattle Times Politics

Labor laws largely exclude nannies. Some are banding together to protect themselves
Author: Moriah Balingit and CLAIRE SAVAGE

Nannies, housekeepers, and home care workers are excluded from many federal workplace protections in the United States, and the private, home-based nature of the work means abuse tends to happen behind closed doors.

NYT Politics

How MSNBC’s Leftward Tilt Delivers Ratings, and Complications
Author: Jim Rutenberg and Michael M. Grynbaum
NBC’s leaders have been forced to grapple with how to square its cable news network’s embrace of progressive politics with the company’s straight-news operation.
Seventeen Percent of Voters Blame Biden for the End of Roe
Author: Claire Cain Miller, Ruth Igielnik and Margot Sanger-Katz
The mistaken belief, in a new poll, shows how even as abortion is mobilizing Democrats, confusion over the issue is also a challenge.

Washington State News

Jays getting healthy as they finish abbreviated series vs. O's
(Photo credit: Tommy Gilligan-USA TODAY Sports) The Toronto Blue Jays talked about building momentum after winning the series opener against the Baltimore Orioles. That idea met a temporary roadblock when Tuesday night's game was rained out. So the teams will wrap up what's now a two-game set Wednesday afternoon. The makeup date for the washout will be part of a July 29 doubleheader. The Blue Jays won Monday night by 3
MLB roundup: Phillies' Aaron Nola blanks Mets
(Photo credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports) Aaron Nola retired the first 15 batters he faced on his way to a dominant four-hitter, leading the Philadelphia Phillies to a 4-0 win over the host New York Mets on Tuesday. The Phillies won for the 22nd time in 27 games and became the first team in the majors to reach 30 victories this season. Nola (5-2) struck out eight and walked none en route to his sixth career complete g
Bears tickets for 2024 season to go on sale tonight

Chicago Bears

Bears single-game tickets and suites for 2024 preseason and regular-season games will be available to the general public on Wednesday, May 15 at 8 p.m. CT, following the release of the 2024 NFL regular-season schedule. Fans can watch "Schedule Release '24" on the NFL Network beginning at 7 p.m. CT for a full reveal of the 2024 regular-season schedule.

Season Ticket Holders and fans on the Sea

Alanna Smith pours in 22 as Lynx overtake Storm
(Photo credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports) Alanna Smith added a career-high 22 points in her debut with her new team, Napheesa Collier added 20 points and 12 rebounds and the visiting Minnesota Lynx rallied for an 83-70 victory over the Seattle Storm on Tuesday in a season opener for both teams. Courtney Williams, also in her Lynx debut, produced 14 points, seven assists and five steals, while Kayla McBride and N

Portland Business News

$52 million “love letter” aims to revitalize Oregon economic drivers — arts and culture nonprofits
Author: Oregon Community Foundation
Arts and culture organizations — still reeling from the pandemic — will see a major infusion of funding over the next three years under a plan announced on March 20, 2024, by two of the largest arts grantors in Oregon. The total investment of $52 million will provide flexible funding for arts and culture nonprofits across the entire state, including $20 million from Oregon Community Foundation and $20 million already committed from the James F. and Marion L. Miller Foundation. This follows…
Pedestrian accidents are on the rise in Oregon. Here are top safety tips for your work commute.
Author: SAIF
Pedestrian deaths are on the rise in Oregon. Last year the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) released data that shows pedestrian deaths increased from 70 in 2010 to 132 in 2022. SAIF safety management consultant Siobhan Murphy says it’s a tragic issue that comes up again and again. Often the cause of these injuries and fatalities are distractions on both the part of the pedestrian and the person behind the wheel. “It’s easy to tell yourself that you’ll just glance at your phone for a second,…

The Chronicle - Centralia

Prep boys soccer: Bearcats shut down by Vikings in state opener

POULSBO — On film and attempting to simulate it in training over 24 hours prior to kickoff on the Centralia College turf, Allen Anderson came to a conclusion of North Kitsap’s attack.

“It was impossible,” the W.F. West High School boys soccer head coach said. “Nothing compares to the real thing. Mentally, we defeated ourselves a little bit before we got here.”

It proved to be reality.

The third-seeded Vikings dominated possession and dissected the 14th-seeded Bearcats defense to the nth degree in a 6-0 thrashing in a Class 2A opening round state match on Tuesday night at home.

Scoring within the first and last 10 minutes was the start and finish the Vikings (18-1) used to reach the quarterfinals against either No. 6 Pullman or No. 11 Evergreen (Seattle) this weekend.

“It is a completely different skill set,” senior defender Charles Comisky said. “I can’t be mad at their skill level, it is leagues ahead of ours. I can’t be mad that we lost to a team like that by this much of a margin.”

It was the finality of a season for W.F. West (12-6-1) that featured an outright Evergreen Conference title, two wins in the District 4 tournament and the third trip to state in program history, second in the last three years.

Yet Anderson felt this junior-laden group wasn’t a year ahead of schedule.

“This year was another continuation of what we accomplished two years ago,” he said. “If we played to our potential, we had a good chance of being (at state) this year.”

Still, there were some cracks that started to pop up post-spring break.

The Bearcats defense that was a bonafide strength for much of the season – a school record 10 shutouts – struggled in April and early May. They gave up multiple goals in four matches and after posting a clean sheet against Shelton on April 9, didn’t record a shutout until the opening round of the postseason.

It all unraveled for a moment in the semis against R.A. Long, allowing three straight goals in a 15-minute span of the second half and overtime.

“A lot of people got out of shape,” Comisky said. “We definitely had our fair share of mistakes.”

North Kitsap lit up the scoreboard in the seventh minute on a throw-in that went over W.F. West netminder Josh Madrigal. The Vikings scored another goal off a throw-in in the 37th minute to lead 3-0 at the half.

They added three more in the final 40 minutes to coast to a victory.

“Fell a little short on the execution,” Anderson said.

Chances for the Bearcats were minimal. Moises Sanchez-Hernandez attempted a bicycle kick and Rafael Mendez took a shot on the left side that went wide in the first half. Jeremy Thompson had a run down the sideline and was cut off in the second half.

Sanchez-Hernandez was put at the primary striker spot while Mendez, Thompson, Adrian Jaimes and Uzi Lopez Cruz took up the four midfield spots.

“Just to try to alleviate some of that pressure,” Anderson said. “Our goal was to make (our chances) count. We knew their outside backs would play up trying to exploit that space behind them. We knew we could muster a few chances against them, but we weren’t able to execute.”

Comisky, Madrigal and goalie Cayden Page all shared an embrace afterwards in tears. They walked off the turf together towards the van for the last time as teammates.

“I’m at a loss for words,” Comisky said. “This whole season, we’ve been carrying the underdog story. Gave everything we had. I’m sad to see it go, I wish it went differently. I couldn’t be more proud of these guys (and) what they put in.”

Those three plus Jorge Zamudio-Campos, Tommy Caperon and Thompson will depart as seniors. Anderson will have to replace both goalkeepers and 75 percent of the back line.

“I’m going to go off the same thing that will happen next year, it will be a strength,” Anderson said. “I’m really hopeful that we’re right back here next year.”

Mendez, Lopez Cruz and Jaimes will anchor the attacking unit. Comisky feels W.F. West can return to state and potentially go farther.

In the captain’s eyes, it will come down to one trait.

“They need to put in a lot of work,” Comisky said. “If they get some strong people, they can rebuild like we did. They need to put in the work in the offseason, something we kind of lacked.”

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