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Port of Olympia election offers needed change

Many people don’t realize that the Port of Olympia serves all of Thurston County, that the Port levies property taxes on every property owner, and that everyone in the County can vote for Port Commissioners. Ballots for the 2019 Port election are coming in October. I would like to explain…

2019 Sierra Club South Sound local endorsements

Helen Wheatley, Olympia Port Commissioner, District 1 Helen has served on the Hanford Advisory Board, as a team leader in a U.S. Dept of Energy review process regarding cleanup along the Columbia River, and was Vice Chair of the Columbia River and Plateau Committee. Her priorities are to provide fact-based…

Rethinking everything: Lesson #5

We must reject the assumption that our built environment must become one big computer. We should erect barriers against the spread of “smartness” into all of the spaces of our lives. This proposal will no doubt be met with charges of Luddism. Good: Luddism is a label to embrace. The…

Being Christian in America in a time of crisis

The October 2019 interview on “Glen’s Parallax Perspectives” takes a fresh look at some public policy issues that have been pushed hard from conservative Christian viewpoints, showing that those are not the only voices of Christianity. Glen interviews three retired Christian ministers—Paul Wee, Melody Young, and Paul Lundborg—who share faith-based…

Dispute Resolution Center seeking volunteers

October is Conflict Resolution Month. The Dispute Resolution Center of Thurston County is actively seeking volunteers to help resolve conflict, promote civility and create peace in our community. The DRC is a community-based, volunteer–powered non-profit organization dedicated to conflict resolution and prevention in the South Sound. Volunteers can become trained…

A best friend revered in Vietnam

It was probably 14 meters long and weighed 15 tons, and towing it to land would be a challenge, but Sau and the other fishermen decided to do it anyway. It took them nearly seven hours to bring it to Mui Ne in Phan Thiet town on the south-central coast.…

Myth-busting Mexico

Do you believe Mexico is mainly a country of cartels and violence, corrupt cops and federales? A place of desperate poverty where people yearn to escape to the United States? Dusty villages with men dozing under huge sombreros against cactus trees? Or perhaps you see beautiful resorts with gleaming beaches…

Cuba’s forests thrive under socialist planning

As fires rage across the Amazon in South America, a result of exploitation by agro-capitalists, Cuba has increased the percentage of its country covered by forest in the past year. Around the world, 7.3 million hectares of land is deforested each year. Brazil is among the worst actors. From only…

Then this happened — October 2019

It helps to know people. In April, WIP featured a story on the Green Cove Park Project, a housing development proposed in West Olympia on the site of an illegal hazardous waste dump. Neighbors and environmental advocates urged the city to test the site for buried waste, including wood treatment…

Special events – October 2019

The Women theater.. IWW Organizer training... Labor wars of the Northwest... Nutritional Pest Control.... Freedom Socialist Party National Convention... Olympia Food Coop Elections & Annual Meeting... Olympia Coalition to Abolish Nuclear Weapons... Celebrate 10 Years of DERT... What is Socialism... Olympia Tenants Assembly... Thurston LWV Educatin Fund Luncheon... Womxn of Achievement Celebration...

About this Issue — September 2019

The future is the past in disguise, but it is also constructed from our hopes, wishes, and actions in the present. In other words, as this month’s WIP theme suggests, the future is something we create....

Then this happened…

Trying for another bite of the apple. Last month, WIP reported that the lawyer for the City of Olympia was asking the Growth Management Board to “reconsider” its rejection of the new “Missing Middle” ordinance. The GMHB denied the request, chiding the lawyer for trying to get “a second bite…

Reinventing recycling as “a resource that we offer up”

It’s been 42 years since my husband and I fell in love while starting the first recycling center in the small town of Colville. People liked to do their part and brought us their stuff — from native born “rednecks” or the back to the land “hippies” who recently moved…

Breaking the urban growth boundary

South Thurston County is in danger of being transformed into a slightly smaller version of the Port of Tacoma (POT, Port). The Port is proposing to sell 745 acres of prairie habitat it owns near Maytown to an industrial developer. The developer’s plan is to construct an enormous logistics center (with as much as 6 million square feet of warehousing) where trucks and trains will swap cargo.  Continuous operation will mean traffic, noise and light for twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.