Burnaby BC mayor takes pipeline fight to the courts, will Burgerville workers unionize?, Washington company aims to mine asteroids, oldest footprints in North America found in BC, Richard Chiem doesn't want to make eye contact, and an essay on a bus stop incident by Donna Miscolta.
Author: Andrew Engelson
Cascadia Daily: Mar. 28, 2018
A poem, "The Return of the Elwha King" by Paul Nelson, Cascadia challenges Trump on census citizenship question, sketchy real estate practices in PDX, megaquake would send 60-foot tsunami to WA coast, whale watching season in Depoe Bay, and a poem by Andrew Shattuck McBride.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 27, 2018
Can British Columbia meet climate targets and build LNG plants? New film documents loss of mobile homes near Seattle, when an apology isn't enough for crimes against First Nations, returning to Marilyn Robinson's novel Housekeeping years later, and an interview with composer John Luther Adams.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 26, 2018
March for Our Lives protests across Cascadia, courts deny First Nation's bid to stop fish farm transfer, Russian consulate in Seattle closed, land trusts shift focus toward cities, new film based on Portland author Willy Vlautin's novel, and an excerpt from Chelsea Johnson's Stray City.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 23, 2018
Get out hiking in Cascadia this weekend, region prepares for March for Our Lives, protesters arrested at Trans Mountain site, wifi helping improve lives of Seattle's homeless, an immigration jail transformed into artist housing, Portland photographer Austin Granger loves film, & a poem by Alexandra Teague.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 22, 2018
A book review of the theMystery.doc, teens help organize Seattle gun control march this weekend, economic benefits of high speed rail, the blob retreats from coast of Cascadia, Sonic Boom festival showcases Vancouver composers, and an interview with poet and AIDS activist Julene Tripp Weaver.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 20, 2018
A new podcast for Cascadians in Seattle, the Facebook scandal's Cascadia connection, tribes come together to urge ban on fish farms, new groups fighting for affordable housing in Vancity, Oregon lawsuit targets ICE, how Lee Maracle changed Indigenous literature, and a poem by Charlotte Zhang.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 19, 2018
Cascadia leaders come together to find solutions on climate change & opioid crisis, BC funds study for regional high speed rail, shortage of doctors in rural WA, Spokane investigates public broadband system, Emily Strelow's new novel The Wild Birds, and a poem by Portland poet Matthew Dickman.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 16, 2018
Hike a wetlands trail in Washington's Kitsap county, will BC ban salmon farms?, OR requires pharma companies to justify price increases, Vancouver way more vegetarian than rest of Canada, a Vietnamese American filmmaker attacks stereotypes, and following in the wake of explorer Alexander Mackenzie.
Cascadia Daily, Mar. 15, 2018
New poetry from EJ Koh, retrofits could save lives in Cascadia megaquake, can the Salish Sea's orcas be saved?, region's cities search for housing solutions, a Netflix doc on Cascadia's most notorious cult, actor Lillian Lim's late-starting career, and why you should be reading Indigenous BC author Eden Robinson.