News

Portland Business News

PCC's $4M barn will enhance its veterinary services programs
Author: Andy Giegerich
The facility is billed as a jobs creator, as veterinary tech services positions are increasingly hard to fill.

Washington State News

Buffalo Bills' opponents for 2024 season finalized

by Patrick Warren & Chris Jenkins

The NFL schedule is set to be announced at 8 pm on Wednesday, May 15 on NFL Network. The Buffalo Bills will release their customized schedule release video and more schedule release analysis on Bills social media platforms and the Bills App Wednesday.

Among the top games to watch for, the Bills will host the defending Super Bowl champions Kansas City and will travel to pla

NYT Politics

New York Travel Disruptions Loom As Air Traffic Controllers Balk at Move
Author: Kate Kelly
The F.A.A. is clashing with workers over efforts to relocate them from New York to Philadelphia. Senator Chuck Schumer has denounced the plan.

Seattle Times Politics

WA road deaths jump 10%, reaching 33-year high. What are we doing wrong?
Author: Nicholas Deshais

About half of the state's fatalities involved a driver impaired by drugs or alcohol. The upward trend in road deaths bucks national behavior.
5 years after fatal encounter, jury to hear murder case against Auburn cop
Author: Mike Carter

Jurors will finally decide whether Auburn Police Officer Jeffrey Nelson murdered Jesse Sarey while trying to arrest him or whether he acted in self-defense.
Congress is sending less child care help, so states like WA are stepping in
Author: Daniel Beekman, Moriah Balingit, SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN and DYLAN LOVAN

Recognizing that a federal solution is unlikely to materialize, policymakers in Washington and other states have come up with local plans to help families find and pay for child care.

DemocracyNow!

"Unbuild Walls": Detention Watch's Silky Shah on Debunking Immigration Myths & Embracing Abolition
Author: webdev@democracynow.org (Democracy Now!)

Amid an intensifying crackdown on asylum seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border, we speak to the author of the new book Unbuild Walls: Why Immigrant Justice Needs Abolition about U.S. immigration policy under the Biden administration. Author Silky Shah is the executive director of Detention Watch Network and a longtime immigration rights advocate whose new book aims to “debunk the idea that immigration is a public safety issue,” in the face of narratives, from both the Republican and Democrat political establishments, of criminality and deterrence. Despite Biden’s campaign promises to reform the immigration system, his administration has “ceded more and more ground to the Republicans and moved the whole conversation to the right,” Shah says. “Legalization isn’t even on the table.” Shah discusses how the immigrant rights’ movement uses the language of abolition to build connections with other social movements fighting oppression, from mass incarceration to police brutality. “These systems aren’t separate. … We have to call for abolition of the whole system and understand those things together.”

Columbia-Affiliated Union Theological Seminary Votes to Divest from Israel's War on Gaza
Author: webdev@democracynow.org (Democracy Now!)

As student protests around the world call for their educational institutions to divest from companies with ties to Israel, we speak to the Reverend Dr. Serene Jones, the president of Union Theological Seminary, an ecumenical seminary affiliated with Columbia University that is one of the first schools to begin divesting from companies that “profit from war in Palestine/Israel.” Jones says divestment is an extension of Union’s “long policy of trying our best to bring our values, our core mission and our conscience to bear on how we invest our money,” and credits student activists with pushing the administration to action. Jones criticizes Columbia’s decision to arrest student protesters with a “police takeover” and “violent decampment,” in contrast to Union’s approach to student political expression. “We support students learning what it means to find their voice and speak out for justice and freedom,” she says.

"Displacement Has Been Weaponized": Gaza Reporter Akram al-Satarri on Israeli Attack & Fleeing Rafah
Author: webdev@democracynow.org (Democracy Now!)

Over 450,000 Palestinians, many already internally displaced, have fled Rafah in the past week alone since Israel launched an offensive on the city. Another 100,000 have been forced to flee homes in the north of Gaza amid escalated bombing and ground attacks. Among the recently redisplaced is our guest, the Gaza-based journalist Akram al-Satarri, who joins us from a crowded shelter outside the Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza. “Displacement has been weaponized,” al-Satarri says, citing the experiences of families who have been displaced as many as eight times since the start of Israel’s assault. “People are suffering. They are deprived of everything,” al-Satarri adds, due to Israel’s seizure and closure of the Rafah border crossing, preventing food, water, supplies or aid from reaching the famine-stricken population. “They are trying to prepare the Palestinians for full subjugation,” he continues. Life in Gaza is “unimaginable; however, Gazans are living it.”

The Chronicle - Centralia

The Chronicle - May 14, 2024

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