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An open letter to Patty Murray

Help! I am not an economist. It should not be necessary for all of us in America to be “national debt economists.” This is why we have a—branch government. To oversee our budget—our tax dollars. Unfortunately one of the parties, the supposedly fiscal conservative Republicans, with the help of lobbyists…

Six months ago, in Grays Harbor County

Six months ago, in the February 2019 issue of WIP, Linda Orgel reported on a meeting Congressman Derek Kilmer held to discuss economic development in Grays Harbor County. Orgel’s aim in writing was to question the dominant paradigm imposed on rural areas in the name of economic development. She stated…

“Are you going to just stand by?”

Willem Van Spronsen, 69, was shot and killed around 4 am on July 13 by police officers outside the Northwest Detention Center, a private immigration detainment facility in Tacoma, WA. We are printing his statement, made public after his death, because reading it forces us to think about the way…

Strike while the iron is hot: #divestfromice victories and the movement ahead

Olympia Assembly As the Abolish ICE movement erupts again, private prison corporations that contract with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to detain migrants are feeling the heat. GEO Group and CoreCivic, who together exert near duopolistic power over the private prison sector, have been hit by a wave of bank…

Ending the homeless cycle one life at a time

Stand Up for Kids aims to help Thurston County’s vulnerable youth through a unique approach to support. This entails more than just handing out resources and saying, “God bless you”— not that this isn’t also productive. But much more is needed at this time because the homeless population is under…

Up close and personal with whale Baleen and vertebrae and more at the Estuarium Sound Cruise

This September 15, the Estuarium is celebrating 11 years of its SSEA, the Sound Cruise! Join them for an amazing day on the water, discussing large marine mammals and enjoying tasty treats and a no host bar. Enjoy a day aboard My Girl celebrating our unique and beautiful estuary ecosystem. Expand your…

Lesson #3: Rethinking Everything

Before we can think about “sustaining” the world for the future, we must actively repair the environmental and social damages inflicted by our precursors, from which we have benefitted comprehensively. As designers, planners, and clients of the built environment, we need a more integrated, accountable and proactive approach, one that…

Earth might have a future if we summon one trillion trees and build climate-resilient cities

In decades past, we were taught to save the trees. As it turns out, it is we who need the trees to save us. The most current report from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) recommends adding a billion hectares of additional forests to the earth’s surface to help…

Some Olympians and their overlapping connections

Our roving researcher Any organization can be thought of as a pyramid: the base, the largest area, is made up of low to mid-level employees who go about their jobs, doing whatever the level of managers above them dictates. It is only at the very top of each pyramid, the…

Insights for effective grassroots organizing

None of the positive changes that have improved our nation’s political or social lives were gifts from Congress or big business. Women’s right to vote, labor unions, environmental laws, civil rights advances for many kinds of people, and other accomplishments were won only because of smart, courageous nonviolent grassroots organizing.…

Olympia Leaders’ Letter to Major Selby: The Missing Middle

Dear Mayor Selby and members of the Olympia City Council – We strongly urge you to support and approve the Missing Middle Housing recommendations in their entirety. We represent diverse organizations and interests in Olympia, and are writing to show our shared and common support for the Missing Middle Housing…

The Trump Administration: Regulating farmworkers, deregulating farm businesses

In the July WIP, we reported that the state of Washington had created and funded a new office to ensure that businesses lived up to federal laws prescribing protections for temporary agricultural workers (guest workers) hired under H-2A rules. Agricultural operators are allowed to bring in these temp workers only…

Climate crisis, anyone?

Producing, transporting and liquefying natural gas is acknowledged to produce high levels of carbon, but due to technology and new fields, it’s now possible to produce an abundance of natural gas. Getting it to far away markets means liquefying it. Back in February, WIP reported on plans for new LNG…

Special Events — August 2019

Sasquatch revealed!... Night out for Safety and Liberation... Economic Investment Initiative... Grand Oly Opry... It takes a farm to throw a party!... Stories in the Dark... Sierra Club picnic... Family Movie Night... Ice Cream Social... more...

About this Issue – July 2019

The community we want to build: For all practical purposes we live in a society fixated on increasing the economic value of those who are already wealthy by decreasing the economic value of the other humans. The success of the first project requires the completion of the second: the two states are directly proportional to each other....

Then this happened…

Our June issue was about the huge gap between how much money people have to live on, and the developers’ firm belief in expensive housing. We included a photo of the Rants Group’s planned
luxury condos in downtown Olympia.

Getting wise to the smartgrid, Part one

Somewhat quietly, the next generation of wireless technology, 5G (for 5th Generation), is sprouting up in cities around the globe. At this juncture, communities would ideally be given the opportunity to weigh in on these fundamental questions. Do people want this kind of future? What impact will this technology have…