Democracy in action today

thanks to Mike C.

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Tragic displacement in the West Bank

Thanks to Mike C.

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Listen in, call in & stay involved!

Commentary from a college classmate of Mary Jane F.

A town hall with our local House of Representatives member, Rick Larson* appeared on my phone yesterday and I decided to listen in. Larson, a Democrat, has represented this region of Washington for 24 years and is now in charge of the transportation subcommittee. There were 400 questions in queue, and 13,000 of us listening.

Some good points:

1. Contact. Contact. Call your representatives in Congress with your concerns. Call representatives and senators whose actions you do not like, call the White House. And then call again the next day. He says these numbers make a difference. The White House is feeling the pressure. If you don’t want to call, send emails. Write letters. Keep the pressure up.

2. A woman asked about working across the aisle. He said that there is no concession with what the Trump team is trying to do. However, in committee they do work across the aisle and are able to come up with effective legislation.

3. He believes that the reason Trump team is doing so much that is outrageous so fast is — they are throwing everything at the wall and seeing what sticks. The more we are outraged and make that known as they throw these things at the wall the fewer they will get away with.

4. I can’t list the different many things that were mentioned that he says can actually not be changed by executive order but it was comforting to hear. A lot of the government is continuing to function fairly normally.

5. Support your attorneys general, support them with letters, emails etc. That is where the real battlefield of this crisis is.

6. The ACLU, Southern Poverty Law Center and other nonprofits need to be supported in whatever ways you can. They are doing good work.

There was more but that’s enough for now. We need to work with the good people who are representing us.

*Rick Larsen is the representative from Washington’s 2nd Congressional District

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Recycle right: misconceptions, and what not to do

Not everything is destined for the recycle bin. Jay Simmons, packaging product development manager from North Pacific Paper Company, says it's important to know what can and can't be processed by the company. Keep the Christmas lights out. (Courtesy of NORPAC)
1 of 6 | Not everything is destined for the recycle bin. Jay Simmons, packaging product development manager from North Pacific Paper Company, says it’s important to know what can and can’t be processed by the company. Keep the Christmas… (Courtesy of NORPAC)More 

By Bree Coven in the Seattle Times (thanks to Marilyn W.)

You dutifully toss your soda cans and last week’s newspaper in the bin and wheel it out to the curb every other week. But are you recycling right?

Seattle has some of the highest recycling rates in the U.S., with Seattle Public Utilities (SPU)’s program recycling nearly three-quarters of all recyclable packaging and paper products discarded by residents, Susan Fife-Ferris, director of SPU’s solid waste planning and program management, told The Seattle Times in November. Local organizations and businesses, community events and Ridwell’s subscription service all help reduce waste, too.

Yet questions remain. Fortunately, the answers — and many solutions for the things you don’t want or can’t use anymore — are out there.

“Climate anxiety seems to be at an all-time high,” says Kyleigh Turk-Polifko, owner of PUBLIC, a sustainable goods and refill shop in West Seattle with low-waste home and personal care options. “Instead of letting that take us to a place of paralysis, we keep encouraging our community to look for ways to make an impact locally. Recycling correctly is one way you can make an individual difference.”

Everything in its place

Seattle Public Utilities asks residents to focus on the top five types of recyclables: paper, cardboard, plastic, glass and metal. SPU spells out best practices on its website. First, make sure each item is actually recyclable. SPU’s online Where Does It Go Tool lists thousands of items (searchable by name and item category) and is available in 14 languages.

Gotta keep it separated

One of the biggest recycling misconceptions is assuming the recycling facility can easily separate items placed in the bin, says Jay Simmons, packaging product development manager from North Pacific Paper Company (NORPAC) in Longview, Wash. (norpacpaper.com).

“For example, someone might put a strand of broken Christmas lights into their recycling bin, expecting that the recycling facility is capable of separating the bulbs, insulation and copper/aluminum wiring for processing to make new products,” Simmons says. “In reality, there is no technology that can do this and those strands of Christmas lights will degrade the separation efficiency of other products.”

Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs) process 200 to 500 tons per day with highly automated equipment, Simmons says. Anything that interferes with that hands-free process creates inefficiencies downstream. 

Another misconception, he says, is some consumers think items put into a recycling bin are just being transferred to the solid waste dump. They’re not.

Keep it clean

If you’re going to recycle, recycle right, Turk-Polifko says.

“It’s so important to make sure your items are clean and dry before putting them in your bin,” she says. “That is the standard for all recycling programs (including our in-shop beauty recycling program) so other recyclables aren’t contaminated.”

One water- and timesaving strategy her shoppers use is to keep a tub under the sink for recyclables that need cleaning and wash them all at once when it’s full.

No bags allowed

Place recyclables loose into the container. Do not bag them. Plastic bags have not been accepted in the recycling cart since 2019 and actually damage the machinery at the recycling centers. Heather Trim, executive director of Zero Waste Washington, which is working to make trash obsolete through policy, on-the-ground projects and research, says plastic bags, plastic wrap, flexible film and candy wrappers cause major problems. They wrap around and clog the equipment of the recycling facility. “For every eight-hour shift, they have to close it down for an hour to cut the plastic off the metal rollers,” she says.

Instead, bring plastic grocery bags to take-back bins in local grocery stores like Fred Meyer, QFC, Safeway, Haggen and Albertsons, where they are collected and often sent NexTrex, which mixes them with sawdust to create plastic lumber decking and benches. (continued)

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Congresswoman Jayapal at Town Hall

Thanks to Mary Jane F.

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There is no question that it has been a difficult start to this year and the new Trump administration — from funding freezes to executive orders that have caused chaos across the country. We must come together as a community to fight back, which is why I’d like to invite you to my Community Forum on Tuesday, February 18th. This is an opportunity to hear directly what I’m doing to fight back in Congress, learn from other local leaders in a panel discussion on where we go from here and get answers to your biggest questions. Join us to gather in community and chart our path forward under this new administration. 
WHAT: Community Forum with Congresswoman Jayapal: Coming Together, Building Resilience, & Uniting for Change

WHEN: Tuesday, February 18, 2025 from 6:00-7:30 PM, doors open at 5:30 PM

WHERE: Town Hall Seattle, 1119 8th Ave, Seattle, WA 98101

RSVP here: Image   Be sure to arrive early to visit various booths from community partners on the front lines serving our district.

I hope to see you there! Space is limited and registration is required, so please RSVP today.

Talk soon,  Image     
Pramila Jayapal
U.S. Representative (WA-07) Did you find this update helpful? Yes No Other (please specify)   Let me know
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Crossing a line

Thanks to Pam P.

Borders between one kind of life and another. A moving piece by Timothy Snyder, one of our most well-informed advocates for democracy and Ukraine and author of the 2017 book On Tyranny.   I hope he is as safe travelling close to Russian occupied parts of Ukraine as he says he is.

TIMOTHY SNYDER FEB 12

I am on a night train from Kyiv, bound for Zaporizhzhia, a city in the southeast of Ukraine which is about twenty miles from the front. Russian missiles take about thirty-five seconds to hit the city, and the take civilian lives. Since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Russia has occupied part of the Zaporizhzhia region. In September of 2022 the Russian parliament proclaimed the annexation of the region as a whole.

That front is a line that runs through Zaporizhzhia region, and indeed across the east and south of Ukraine. My train rushes southeast, towards that line. Its passengers, civilians and soldiers alike, know what lies on the other side.

Given the nature of Russian occupation, Ukrainians are fighting not only for their lives, but for a certain idea of life in freedom. In the parts of Ukraine controlled by Russia, anyone who showed any initiative or was elected to any position is killed or subjected to torture. Any expression of a political opinion or any gathering or anything that seems like opposition to Russian authorities will lead to a long prison sentence in awful conditions. Just having Ukrainian material on your phone is enough to be sent to prison. Ukrainian citizens in the occupied zones have to accept Russian citizenship in order to have access to basic services, such as schools. Children are kidnapped and sent to Russian families for adoption. They will be raised to hate the land of their birth. Perhaps still worse, they will be raised in a country where the government lies about everything all the time, where the media lies about everything all the time, and this is thought to be normal.

These basic facts create a different kind of existence, on that side of the line.

Ukraine is not a perfect country, and of course war itself makes people less free. The number of killed and wounded, though far lower than on the Russian side, grows every day. Ukrainian men have to serve in the armed forces, whether they want to or not. Even in the unoccupied majority of Ukrainian territory, Russian missile and drone attacks are not only lethal but exhausting. It is worse close to the front, as in Zaporizhzhia, where I arrive tomorrow morning, or Kharkiv, which I visited last September, because there is no time to take shelter from the missiles. But everywhere in the country nights are interrupted and people are at risk. I spent part of last night in a bomb shelter in Kyiv, awakened by the siren right after I went to sleep. For me this is an irritation. But for Ukrainians, three years of sleep deprivation takes a toll. The train tonight departed right at the time of the curfew, when people have to go home. This, too, is a certain deprivation of freedom.

And, yet, on this, the Ukrainian side of the line, people lead completely different lives than under Russian occupation or in Russia. Ukrainians say what they want, including about the war and about politics. Journalists cover the war and write about politics. There is fear, although less than you might think; but it is fear of bombs and missiles and violence from Russia, not of denunciations or oppression or of one’s own government. I have the strange feeling, this week in Kyiv, that Ukrainians are living freer lives now than Americans. At a book store where I was talking to a Ukrainian philosopher about freedom, a young woman put her hand on my arm and said “sorry about the U.S.”

There are lines that matter. If I made some sort of mistake, and somehow found myself on the Russian side of the line in the Zaporizhzhia region, I would probably disappear for good. Russian authorities have made clear what they think of me, sanctioning me not once but twice. (And, to be clear, it is a terrible idea for any American to go to Russia now; you will just be kidnapped, and held for some possible exchange for a Russian criminal.) If I crossed that line, it is unlikely that I would come back. (continued)

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Opening in 3 weeks!

Info from Mike C. – checkout this twin tower just east of Skyline: https://museumhouseseattle.com/

Sky Bridge Amenity Space

The Sky Bridge offers one of the best views in the building — perhaps one of the best views in Seattle. The design philosophy centers around framing the brilliant views with natural elements and a rich palette of earth tones.

The Nautical Gauges placed on the Sky Bridge reflect the nautical inspired interior details of the project in the amenity overlooking Seattle’s waterfront. The gauges selected are historic pilot navigation tools in black to match the blackened steel staircases leading to the second level.

Fitness Center Curated by House Concepts

Located on level 32, the indoor and outdoor fitness center will be equipped with cardio equipment as well as free weights and lifting equipment. The outdoor space will be home to a full size boxing ring. Residents will also have access to a range of fitness classes curated by House Concepts, and private training.

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What does a scientist look like? Children are drawing women more than ever before

Thanks to Pam P. – in Science Advisor

When asked to draw a scientist, school-age kids in the United States are increasingly sketching women. That’s the main conclusion of a new study that compiled information about 20,860 pictures drawn by students age 5 to 18 over 5 decades.

In the 1960s and 1970s, less than 1% of students depicted scientists as female. But the percentage of women in the “draw a scientist” sketches—like the one pictured, drawn by a third grade girl in San Antonio, Texas—has increased over time, reaching an estimated 34% by 2016. And the numbers are even more stark when looking at drawings penned by girls: About 1% drew women in the first 2 decades—but in the past decade more than half have drawn women, researchers report in Child Development.

The trend in how children perceive scientists parallels an uptick in the actual number of female scientists. Over roughly the same time period—from 1960 to 2013—the percentage of women holding science jobs rose from 28% to 49% in biological science, from 8% to 35% in chemistry, and from 3% to 11% in physics and astronomy.

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Make your voice heard.

Ed note: Please consider joining this group: https://5calls.org/. It connects you with issues of concern and gives you the number/persons to call. You can also subscribe to their newsletter. It’s a chance for your voice to be heard.


Calling your congressperson is the most effective way to influence policy.

Learn more about why calling works.

We’ve made 5,254,024 calls so far. Join us.

Pick an issue from the list, or read our guide to getting started.

Get updates on the latest issues.

Subscribe to our newsletter. One email per week at most, no spam.

Also you can contact the White House?

Phone number

1-202-456-1111 (comments)

1-202-456-1414 (switchboard)

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Marching together toward ….

Thanks to Mike C.

S
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Beyond having a smart phone

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The moon surrenders to dawn

Thanks to Kathy M.

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Understanding RFK Jr.

Ed note: Since the time of Pasteur, Lister, Koch and Semmelweis we’ve all (but for a few) accepted the germ theory of disease. One of those few who does not accept established science is RFK Jr. Yet, he’s about to try to take our public health and research system (the envy of the world) back a few centuries. Even physician Republicans like Senator Cassidy (up for election in 2026) in going to vote for him. Institutions are only as good and ethical as the people running them. This is a very sad chapter highlighting the follies of politics and a disinformed public.

by Paul Offit (thanks to Ed M.)

If you want to know why RFK Jr. believes so many weird things, just read his book, The Real Anthony Fauci. Four pages explain everything.

RFK Jr. believes many weird things about the causes, treatment, and prevention of infectious diseases. These false beliefs might seem disparate and unrelated, but they’re not. They’re all rooted in a single belief described on pages 285-288 of his book, The Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health. In short, RFK Jr. doesn’t believe in the germ theory. He believes in something called the miasma theory.

The miasma theory is a long-abandoned medical theory that holds that diseases are caused by poisonous vapors (i.e., miasmata) that are generated by rotting organic matter, such as trash sitting out on the street. According to the miasmists, diseases aren’t passed from one person to another; rather, they are the product of poor hygiene and sanitation.

In 1876, Robert Koch proved that a specific bacterium (Bacillus anthracis) caused anthrax. The germ theory was born. Understanding that specific bacteria and viruses caused specific diseases led to treatments like antibiotics and preventives like vaccines, which has caused us to live 40 years longer than we did in the late-1800s.

Nonetheless, in a section in his book titled “Miasma vs. Germ Theory,” RFK Jr. continues to embrace the miasma theory, writing the following statements:

The ubiquity of pasteurization and vaccinations are only two of the many indicators of the dominating ascendancy of germ theory as the cornerstone of contemporary public health policy. A $1 trillion pharmaceutical industry pushing patented pills, powders, pricks, potions, and poisons and the powerful professions of virology and vaccinologyThe miasmist approach to public health is to boost individual immune responses.” If you want to avoid infection, according to RFK Jr., all you need to do is maintain a healthy immune system. This explains why he has said that no vaccine is beneficial, that the polio vaccine killed more people than it saved, that young parents shouldn’t vaccinate their children, that HIV does not cause AIDS, that HIV is not spread from one person to another, and that the anti-AIDS drug AZT was an example of “mass murder”. It also explains why he drinks raw, unpasteurized milk.

Anthony Fauci [said that] vaccines have already saved millions and millions of lives. Most Americans accept the claim as dogma. It will therefore come as a surprise to learn that it is simply untrue.” This explains why RFK Jr. has claimed that improvements in sanitation, as promoted by miasmists, not vaccines, have accounted for a decrease in infections. In the late 1970s, when I was a pediatric resident, every year a bacterium called Haemophilus influenzae type b (HiB) accounted for about 25,000 cases of bloodstream infections, pneumonia, meningitis, epiglottitis, and cellulitis in young children. A vaccine to prevent HiB, which was introduced in 1987, has virtually eliminated the disease in the United States. Hib wasn’t eliminated because of a dramatic improvement in sanitation. It was eliminated because of the Hib vaccine.

When a starving African child succumbs to measles, the miasmist attributes the death to malnutrition; germ theory proponents (aka virologists) blame the virus.” This explains why, when RFK Jr. visited Samoa, which was in the midst of a measles outbreak that caused 5,600 cases and 83 deaths, primarily in young children, he urged vitamin A treatments, not a measles vaccine. Indeed, he said that the outbreak wasn’t caused by measles virus, which would have meant he would have had to embrace the germ theory. He made this claim well after a wild-type measles virus strain had been identified as the cause of the outbreak.

Imperialist ideologues find natural affinity with the germ theory.” This explains why he has said that scientists who promote vaccines, like Anthony Fauci, should be put in jail.

This is not a man who should be leading the largest public health agency in the United States.

Posted in Government, Health, History, Politics | Leave a comment

Hasn’t happened in the Bistro–yet!

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Thousands of Danes sign petition to buy California from U.S.

 Travis Schlepp in KTLA5 Morning News (thanks to Bob P.)

In response to President Donald Trump’s continued musing about the U.S. acquiring Greenland from Denmark, Danish citizens have launched their own effort to purchase America’s most economically prosperous state.

An online petition seeking the “Denmarkification” of California has seemingly garnered nearly 200,000 signatures, with a pitch to Danish citizens that purchasing the Golden State would provide them with more sunshine, dominance in the tech industry, limitless avocado toast and easy access to Disneyland — which organizers say would be renamed to honor fairytale author and poet Hans Christian Andersen.

“Have you ever looked at a map and thought, ‘You know what Denmark needs? More sunshine, palm trees, and roller skates.’ Well, we have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make that dream a reality,” petition organizers write on the online page.

Danes who sign the petition are encouraged to chip in for the fundraising goal of $1 trillion (give or take), which organizers say would cost every citizen of the Scandinavian nation approximately 200,000 DKK — or roughly $28,000.

Executives from LEGO and the cast of Danish political drama “Borgen” would negotiate the deal on behalf of the Scandinavian nation, and organizers said they would throw in a lifetime supply of Danish pastries to sweeten the deal. Greenland’s leader says his people don’t want to be Americans

The petition is a tongue-in-cheek rebuttal to Trump’s fixation on acquiring Greenland, a Danish territory, which he says is critical to America’s national security interests. Republican legislators have also highlighted Greenland’s access to natural resources like oil, gas and minerals as reasons the U.S. should prioritize acquiring the territory.

FILE - Homes are illuminated after the sunset in Tasiilaq, Greenland, Friday Aug. 16, 2019. A group of 143 Greenlandic women have sued the Danish state for having been fitted with coils in the 1960s and 1970s, and demand a total compensation of nearly 43 million kroner ($6.3 million), Danish broadcaster DR reported Monday, March 4, 2024.(AP Photo/Felipe Dana, File)
FILE – Homes are illuminated after the sunset in Tasiilaq, Greenland, Friday Aug. 16, 2019.(AP Photo/Felipe Dana, File)

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen called Trump’s desire to obtain Greenland “absurd,” which led to the president cancelling a trip to visit Copenhagen during his first presidency. Greenland’s own leader, Múte Egede, echoed the statement, saying it is not for sale. (continued)

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Your Parents Deserve More From Their Nursing Home

Ed note: Please see the following post about the need for regulations in this growing, yet underfunded and understaffed industry charged with taking care of an elderly vulnerable population. We must be informed and strong advocates for good care.

By Norma B. Coe and Rachel M. Werner in the NYT

Dr. Coe is the director of research and Dr. Werner is the executive director at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania.

For anyone who lives in a nursing home, the adequacy of the nursing staff is a life-or-death issue. That’s why the Biden administration issued federal rules last year setting minimum standards for staffing. By our estimate, they will save 13,000 lives a year. But those rules are now under attack.

The Trump White House should defend them, not reverse or weaken them as part of its larger effort to roll back regulations across government.

The rules, which were finalized last April, represent some of the most significant reforms in nursing home care in decades. They will also cost most nursing facilities more to operate by increasing staffing, and that is why the rules are now in grave danger. But it will be money well spent on the industry’s core mission: caring for residents.

President Trump’s choice to head the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., told lawmakers at a confirmation hearing last week that although the rules “were well intentioned,” they would be a “disaster,” especially for nursing homes in rural areas. Twenty Republican state attorneys general have gone to federal court to quash the rules. So have nursing home industry groups.

This amounts to an assault on some of our most vulnerable Americans, the roughly 1.3 million people who live in nursing homes, where understaffing and turnover are major problems. The rules, which are being phased in over the next several years, require a registered nurse to be on site 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and mandate a minimum of 3.48 hours of nursing care per resident per day, mostly from nursing aides.

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That may not sound like a lot, but most nursing homes in the United States don’t meet those basic minimums. Staffing levels at 83 percent of nursing homes fell below the new requirements in the first half of 2023, according to our analysis.

As researchers who have studied nursing homes for decades, we know how crucial nursing home staff members are — and why efforts to roll back the new minimum staffing rules pose such a threat to the residents and their families who rely on these staffers.

This will be especially true in coming years. The fastest growing age group in the United States already is people age 65 and older. Roughly one in six Americans fall into that age group, representing 17 percent of the population. That percentage is expected to rise to 22 percent by 2040.

If we were to provide advice on choosing a facility for a loved one, we’d cite the number of nurses and their aides as one of the most important factors. In homes with more nurses and aides, residents experience fewer bedsores and urinary tract infections. They stay more active and live longer. But U.S. nursing homes suffer from significant staffing shortages.

What impact will the new regulations have? We reviewed estimates of the relationship between total nurse staffing hours and mortality from published research. What we found surprised us: Achieving the minimum staffing levels would save the lives of about 13,000 people per year in U.S. nursing homes, about the same number killed in drunken driving accidents. And that doesn’t include the infections and other severe medical issues that would be prevented.

It’s true that hiring and retaining staff members in nursing homes is challenging, particularly since the pandemic. But nursing homes outside rural areas have until 2026 to meet the new standards, with rural facilities getting even more time. Facilities are eligible for exemptions if they cannot reasonably meet the standards, and the federal government is providing $75 million in programs such as scholarships and tuition reimbursement to train the next generation of caregivers.

The Biden administration estimated the new rules would cost about $4.3 billion a year. One major industry group says that number is $6.5 billion a year.

The industry is opaque about how nursing homes spend their funds. While reported profit margins are thin, facilities regularly funnel their revenue into related firms that do business at inflated prices, effectively hiding profits. A recent analysis by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that over two-thirds of profits are hidden this way. Artificially low profits shouldn’t be used as justification to eliminate important standards, putting profits over the residents themselves. But that seems to be what the industry wants.

Interestingly, a 2023 analysis of the rules’ impact by KFF, formerly the Kaiser Family Foundation, found that 90 percent of for-profit nursing facilities would need to hire more registered nurses or nurse aides compared with 60 percent of government and nonprofit facilities to comply with the proposed staffing minimums.

Many nursing homes may need to make only minimal changes to comply. While just about 20 percent of nursing homes now meet these standards, our analysis found that an additional 14 percent are out of compliance by only a small amount, or for only a few months of the year. The rules also include hardship exemptions for facilities that truly can’t meet the requirements, minimizing the burden on the most vulnerable institutions.

The truth is, nursing homes can meet these standards. The for-profit nursing home industry diverts hundreds of millions in profits to executives and shareholders — money that could be redirected toward hiring more nurses. California, where increasing minimum staffing requirements have existed for over two decades, has seen a net increase in the number of nursing homes, while at the same time there has been lower mortalitybetter nurse retention and higher quality of care.

The federal government’s minimum staffing requirements offer an opportunity to provide better care for older Americans and prolong their lives. We shouldn’t let that slip away.

Posted in CCRC Info, Health | Leave a comment

Continuing Care Oversight Bill needs support

Hello Skyline WACCRA Members, (thanks to Tom S.)

THIS ONE HAS A SHORT FUSE!—And supports the effort initially announced in the WACCRA Residents News-Mail, February 6, 2025 (attached).

WACCRA’s  legislative work has resulted in the introduction of Senate Bill 5691 in the Washington State Senate Health and Long Term Care committee!  It is now time to for CCRC residents to express their support of the bill.  The committee is holding a hearing on the bill on Friday, February 14th. Here’s a link to the bill.

Between now and Thursday, February 13th, we need you to log into the legislative portal and express your support and here is how you do that:

Start at the committee’s “homepage” by clicking this link:         CSI,

Or cut and paste this address into your browser: https://app.leg.wa.gov/csi/Senate?selectedCommittee=28241&selectedMeeting=32791

Choose the SB 5691 Continuing care oversight button.

Then select: ”I would my position noted for the legislative record” – this is where you can indicate by clicking on Position that you are PRO the bill.

What we need now are as many residents as possible to sign in as supporting the bill.  Additional opportunities will be available after the first hearing on February 14th to provide written testimony if you are interested in doing so.  Urge your fellow Skyline residents, WACCRA members or not, to support this bill by signing in.

WACCRA is also supporting SB 5606 which addresses additional funding for the Long-term care ombuds program which supports resident concerns in assisted living and skilled nursing.  If you would like to indicate your support of that bill, you can log back in and do so by selecting SB 5606 and following the same process.

Thank you for your support – let’s show our legislators that this bill is important to us!

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A sidelined Congress and Republicans are largely mum about the seizure of their power.

Heather Cox Richardson Feb 10

On Friday, President Donald Trump issued an executive order “protecting Second Amendment rights.” The order calls for Attorney General Pam Bondi to examine all gun regulations in the U.S. to make sure they don’t infringe on any citizen’s right to bear arms. The executive order says that the Second Amendment “is foundational to maintaining all other rights held by Americans.”

In fact, it is the right to vote for the lawmakers who make up our government that is foundational to maintaining all other rights held by Americans.

The United States Constitution that establishes the framework for our democratic government sets out how the American people will write the laws that govern us. We elect members to a Congress, which consists of the House of Representatives and the Senate. That congress of our representatives holds “all legislative powers”; that is, Congress alone has the right to make laws. It alone has the power to levy taxes on the American people, borrow money, regulate commerce, coin money, declare war, “to make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper.”

After Congress writes, debates, and passes a measure, the Constitution establishes that it goes to the president, who is also elected, through “electors,” by the people. The president can either sign a measure into law or veto it, returning it to Congress where members can either repass it over his veto or rewrite it. But once a law is on the books, the president must enforce it. The men who framed the Constitution wrote that the president “shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.” When President Richard Nixon tried to alter laws passed by Congress by withholding the funding Congress had appropriated to put them into effect, Congress shut that down quickly, passing a law explicitly making such “impoundment” illegal.

Since the Supreme Court’s 1803 Marbury v. Madison decision, the federal courts have taken on the duty of “judicial review,” the process of determining whether a law falls within the rules of the Constitution.

Right now, the Republicans hold control of the House of Representatives, the Senate, the presidency, and the Supreme Court. They have the power to change any laws they want to change according to the formula Americans have used since 1789 when the Constitution went into effect. (continued)

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The Yellow Rose of Texas!? Can it be? Beautiful roses blooming in our chilly Seattle weather!

Somehow, out on our patio in the Cascade Tower some roses are still in bloom. An explanation escapes me. Let’s just go with a miracle of nature (or climate change). At any rate, the two yellows and the Drop Dead Red are still giving us joy. But beware, in March all roses must be pruned in order to give us new life for 2025. Thanks to Ann M. for the picture!

Posted in Gardening | 2 Comments

My Sweet Babboo!

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How, when and why Seattle started to shift into a bike-friendlier city

By Tom Fucoloro in the Seattle Times

My note: Our first home (rental) in 1969 was near those railroad tracks and Matthew’s Beach. Sandy Wood and Jim Todd lived near us and we would gather the neighborhood to discuss world events. Being frustrated and wanting something more tangible, our group came up with the idea of a trail replacing the tracks. We can thank Sandy, Jim and that neighborhood group for getting the attention of Mayor Wes Ullman and King County Executive John Spellman.

The Time’s Editor’s note: The following is an edited excerpt from Chapter 4 of “Biking Uphill in the Rain: The Story of Seattle from Behind the Handlebars,” a 2024 Washington State Book Award finalist written by Tom Fucoloro (University of Washington Press, 2023; released in paperback this month).

Tom Fucoloro, author of “Biking Uphill in the Rain: The Story of Seattle from Behind the Handlebars,” is the founder and editor of the Seattle Bike Blog. (Geoff Brown)
1 of 2 | Tom Fucoloro, author of “Biking Uphill in the Rain: The Story of Seattle from Behind the Handlebars,” is the founder and editor of the Seattle Bike Blog. (Geoff Brown)

Seattle experienced a resurgence in bicycle use in the 1970s, thanks to the availability of better, cheaper bikes; a Boeing Bust and recession that encouraged less expensive forms of transportation — and research into a forgotten story about two men who created a railroad that helped save Seattle.

THE RAILROAD LINE through northeast Seattle had not always been as quiet as it was in the 1960s, with only a few train runs a month. Neighbors at that time got used to walking along the rails without much concern that a locomotive might come barreling down on them. Most rail traffic had been routed to other lines with more capacity and faster routes to major port terminals. But without those rails, Seattle as we know it today might not even exist.

Much of the early white settler investment in Seattle had a major prize in mind: the port terminus of Northern Pacific’s Transcontinental Railroad. Northern Pacific had indicated that it intended to terminate its transcontinental line in Tacoma instead of Seattle, so settlers gathered resources to build Seattle’s first railroad in an attempt to connect the line to the south of the city.

But the narrow-gauge Seattle and Walla Walla Railroad never made it anywhere close to Walla Walla, as the name suggested. Instead, it barely made it beyond Seattle city limits, reaching Renton and Newcastle to the south and east of Lake Washington. Though much of the route eventually would become a major rail corridor, at the time it was not enough to change Northern Pacific’s decision to make Tacoma its primary terminus and run only branchline service to Seattle.

So Thomas Burke and Daniel Gilman launched a rather desperate plan to take their city’s future into their own hands. Rather than try to hopelessly lobby Northern Pacific to change its terminus plan, these men founded the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern Railway in 1885 to force Northern Pacific’s hand or go broke trying. They immediately got to work investing a significant amount of their own money, gathering contributions from other area settlers and raising investment funds from people back East.

The plan was to build a railroad north from the downtown waterfront to the nearby industrial town of Ballard, then head east across the city and around the north end of Lake Washington. From there, the line would split into two directions. One line was supposed to head north to Canada via the town of Snohomish, while the other would head east to Snoqualmie Pass via the town of Gilman (now known as Issaquah). Seattle provided space along the waterfront for the railroad, then the boosters worked to convince settler landowners along the planned path to donate the land needed for the railway. (continued)

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Those odd keepsakes

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Freeway Park Volunteers Needed

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  Volunteers Needed! Join us at our annual Winter Neighborhood Clean-Up on Saturday, February 15th from 10-11:30am.   Meet us right in Seneca Plaza to help pick up litter around the First Hill neighborhood and Freeway Park. Come for the entire time or just fill up one bag of litter. Supplies, tools and refreshments will be provided.   Feel free to RSVP HERE to let us know if you will be attending!   Winter Programs in the Park Cozy Corner Tuesdays & Thursdays Located in Seneca Plaza Noon-2pm (weather dependent)   Join us around the fire with coffee, tea and more. Browse our book selections and enjoy a midday in the park that is sure to be cozy.   Your support continues to help fund our programming as well as the work of the Friends of the Seattle Public Library. *All titles are $2-$4. Buskers Tuesdays & Thursdays Located in Seneca Plaza Noon-2pm (weather dependent)   Stop by to discover and enjoy a range of instrumentalists, songwriters and more in the park through the Winter months!   Learn the history of busking and how to get involved with the Seattle Busking Program in the heart of the city.  
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I Ran U.S.A.I.D. Killing It Is a Win for Autocrats Everywhere.

By Samantha Power in the NYT (Thanks to Diana C.)

Ms. Power was the administrator of the United States Agency for International Development in the Biden administration.

We are witnessing one of the worst and most costly foreign policy blunders in U.S. history. Less than three weeks into Donald Trump’s second term, he, Elon Musk and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have halted the U.S. Agency for International Development’s aid programs around the world. In so doing, they have imperiled millions of lives, thousands of American jobs and billions of dollars of investment in American small businesses and farms while severely undermining our national security and global influence — all while authoritarians and extremists celebrate their luck.

I am shocked by the gleeful assault perpetrated by our own government against U.S.A.I.D.’s programs and the public servants who work on them. But after running the agency for four years, I am not surprised that the attacks are being cheered by Moscow and Beijing. They understand what those seeking to dismantle the agency are desperate to hide from the American people: U.S.A.I.D. has become America’s superpower in a world defined by threats that cross borders and amid growing strategic competition.

The assistance provided by U.S.A.I.D. comes in many forms, and with a budget of less than 1 percent of the U.S. government’s overall annual spending, it, alone, is no panacea for the world’s major challenges. Like all government agencies, it could be more efficient, and making it so was an effort I spearheaded during my tenure. Yet for much of the world population, the investments and work of U.S.A.I.D. make up the primary (and often only) contact with the United States.

Some investments save lives almost immediately — like the medicines dispensed to 500,000 children with H.I.V., or the nutrient-rich food manufactured in states like Rhode Island and Georgia that pulls starving children from the brink of death. Out of the $38 billion that U.S.A.I.D. spent in fiscal year 2023, nearly $20 billion was for health programs (such as those that combat malaria, tuberculosis, H.I.V./AIDS and infectious disease outbreaks) and humanitarian assistance to respond to emergencies and help stabilize war-torn regions. Other U.S.A.I.D. investments are less visible but pay dividends in the longer term, such as giving girls a chance to get an education and enter the work force, or growing local economies. (continued)

Posted in Essays, Ethics, Food, Government, Health, Justice, Kindness, Morality, Philanthropy, Poverty, Social justice | Leave a comment

Adventures with CARE-MEDICO and the Peace Corps in Afghanistan in the 1960’s

I’ve been asked if we could share our slides from the recent talk at Skyline that Lourdes and I gave. Unfortunately the talk wasn’t recorded, but here are the slides if interested.

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