An affordability crisis: Why aren't the people going to shows? Why aren't they going to restaurants? Because the rent, the housing, and the cost of goods are too damn high. Meanwhile, income levelsâwhich can't keep pace with rising living costsâare too damn low. In Seattle, half of renters are paying 30% of their monthly income on rents, and 15% of those renters are spending more than half of their take-home pay to keep the roof over their head. Buying a house is nothing but a pipe dream, even for the wealthy among us, as housing costs continue to skyrocket; "the median single-family home in the Seattle area costs nearly seven times the median household income last year," the Seattle Times reports. And, in case you were considering high-tailing it out of state, this is a reality that's true countrywide.Â
Police accountability? In this country? A jury found Auburn Police Officer Jeffrey Nelson guilty of murder and assault for shooting and killing an unarmed 26-year-old named Jesse Sarey outside a grocery store. Nelson is the first Washington officer "convicted of state charges for an on-duty death" since 1938. It is incredibly hardâalmost, it seems, intentionally hardâto hold police officers accountable for their actions. Initiative 940, which Washington voters passed in 2018, "changed the legal standard used to measure whether police use of deadly force was legal," according to the Seattle Times, by literally removing specific language that made "charging an officer almost impossible." Nelson could face life in prison for the murder charge and up to 25 years for the first-degree assault charge.Â
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