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August 23, 2023

Should Governments Be Blamed for Climate Change? How One Lawsuit Could Change US Policies

Image of history courthouse building of limestone in park-like setting with American flag

A landmark ruling saying Montana has a constitutional duty to guard residents from the harmful effects of climate change could have wider implications, environmental experts said. In a decision Monday lauded by activists as a potential turning point for the environmental movement, District Court Judge Kathy Seeley sided with young plaintiffs who claimed state policies…


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August 18, 2023

King County Shows Off Salmon Habitat Where Once Stood a Hotel

Image of Duwamish River surrounded by trees, office building and blue skies

The project started as a rundown hotel in a sea of asphalt. Now Chinook Wind is a wetland, a restored salmon habitat and a hook-shaped estuary where waters rise and fall with the tides and native plants blanket the shore. The transformation is almost as extraordinary as the one that turned the Duwamish River from…


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August 14, 2023

A Crisis of Isolation Is Making Heat Waves More Deadly

Image of isolated figure sitting in train station hunched over with head in hands

When Donna Crawford didn’t hear back from her brother Lyle, she began to fear the worst. It was Monday, June 28, 2021, at the tail end of a blistering heat dome that had settled over the Pacific Northwest. Two days prior, daytime temperatures had soared to 108 degrees Fahrenheit in Gresham, Oregon, where Lyle lived…


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August 11, 2023

Forget Banning Books — A Rural WA County May Close Its Library

Image of facade of brick library with white trim.

As libraries throughout the country face increasing calls to ban young adult books that cover race and LGBTQ+ issues, one in a rural district east of Walla Walla faces a challenge to its very existence. The Columbia County Rural Library District could be dissolved by voters after a community member filed a petition to close…


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August 10, 2023

Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities Are Pervasive in the US, Across Most Causes of Death and in Most Counties, New Study Shows

Image shows doctor attending patient in hospital bed with back to camera through partially open doorway

It’s been more than two years since the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention declared racism a public health threat, and a new study gives a stark look at just how pervasive racial and ethnic disparities are in the United States. Researchers tracked US mortality data across nearly two decades, breaking rates down by…


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August 4, 2023

Increasing Power Outages Don’t Hit Everyone Equally

Image of power lines above horizon with grey sky in Seattle.

Multiple rounds of storms tore through parts of Illinois and Missouri in the first week of July, triggering widespread power outages that left tens of thousands of people without electricity—some for days after the storms had passed. It was just one of many such events to hit people around the U.S. this year. Government data…


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August 3, 2023

Access to Culturally Relevant and Healthy Foods Is Critical to Improving Health Equity in Seattle

Table setting of Afghan food in interior in Kabul

For several months, Priyasha Maharjan traveled with a translator to the homes of Seattle Afghan community members. She’d remove her shoes, greet the women who welcomed her into their homes, and then watch them cook dinner. Maharjan ate with families, asked them about their recipes, and listened as they told stories about their search for…


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August 2, 2023

‘Silent Killer’: Experts Warn of Record US Deaths from Extreme Heat

Flood evacuee in stretcher outdoors being treated for heat stroke with IV by two National Guard members in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

The punishing heatwaves that have scorched much of the US could result in a record number of heat-related deaths this year, experts have warned, amid a spike in hospitalizations from collapsing workers. Among those needing hospital treatment are heat-exhausted hikers and even people who have suffered severe burns from touching blistering concrete and asphalt. Heat…


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July 28, 2023

Plans Develop for High-Speed Rail in the PNW

Image of Japanese National Railways 0 series Shinkansen bullet train traveling through countryside running between Mishima and Shinfuji in Japan with Mt. Fuji in background and wheat fields in front

With a growing population in the Pacific Northwest, the call for better public transportation heightens. This March, Washington’s State Legislature signed off on a transportation milestone, allocating $150 million to a high-speed connection between Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia. Though this funding could reduce congestion, cut carbon emissions, and better connect these coastal cities, a…


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July 27, 2023

Signature Biden Program Won’t Fix Racial Gap in Air Quality, Study Suggests

Smoky environment with power lines, factory chimneys and roadway in Cleveland, Ohio 1973

A new analysis has found that the White House’s signature environmental justice program may not shrink racial disparities in who breathes the most polluted air, in part because of efforts to ensure that it could withstand legal challenges. The program, called Justice40, aims to address inequalities by directing 40 percent of the benefits from certain…


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Urban@UW shares stories of urban research, teaching, and engagement by the University of Washington community through original publication and amplification of externally published articles, in order to bring visibility to the great work across the university. For communications inquiries, please email urbanuw@uw.edu

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