Democrat elitists sue voters who voted for Initiative Measure No. 976 ($30 car tabs)
The city of
Seattle, King
County, and the Port
of Seattle filed a
lawsuit in the King
County Superior
Court arguing
against voter
Initiative 976, the
voter-approved $30
car tab measure.
They claim the
initiative violated
the state
Constitution by –
among other
allegations –
misleading voters.
The irony of Dow
Constantine – who
sits on the
unelected Sound
Transit board of
directors –
attacking a
voter-approved
measure for
misleading the
public should not be
lost. Democrats to
the public: If you
vote for tax relief,
we
will sue you.
Study shows mass transit will not reduce traffic congestion in the Puget Sound
A new study backed
by the Washington
Policy Center found
that Seattle’s
transit heavy
approach to solving
transportation
congestion will not
“improve people’s
access to employment
nor their quality of
life in the
long-term.”
Specially, the study
found that mass
transit – at any
cost – does not have
the potential to
“reduce driving or
to reduce traffic
congestion in
the Puget Sound.”
Among other
considerations, the
study took into
account the Puget
Sound’s distribution
of both job and
residential
locations.
Charter schools outperform public schools in latest test scores
Washington students on NAEP test drop again
The results for the
2019 National
Assessment of
Educational Progress
(NAEP) – a national
Test administered to
students every two
years – are now
available.
Washington state
scores dropped for
fourth and eighth
grade math and
reading
scores when compared
to 2017.
Superintendent Chris
Reykdal pointed to
poverty as the cause
of low test scores.
However,
Washington’s nine
charter
schools – where 60
percent of students
are low-income,
minority children –
far outperformed
public schools.
Charter schools did
not experience a
downward trend in
test scores.
State Supreme Court upholds Seattle’s “first come, first served” law for renters
After a King County
judge struck down
Seattle’s law which
requires landlords
to accept
the first qualified
tenant to apply for
a rental, the state
Supreme Court has
overturned that
order.
Separately,
the court placed a prohibition
on landlords which
prevents them from
doing criminal
background checks on
applicants. This decision is arrogant, monumental stupidity.
These
decisions are all
but certain to have
a detrimental impact
on the long-term
rental market
because they take
away important
rights of landlords
over their private
property.
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