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In a recent survey conducted by the CRA, 70 percent of restaurant operators reported that their customers are more concerned about food safety issues now than they were five years ago. Our region needs better leadership, and the election might start a recovery, but local politicians aren’t a panacea. Jeff has won similar top leadership accolades, such as Northwest Entrepreneur of the Year by Ernst & Young, CEO of the Year by Seattle Business Magazine, and he recently received the Commercial Real Estate Lifetime Achievement Award by the Puget Sound Business Journal. In addition to his role as the Chairman of the Washington State China Relations Council, Marc is a Vice President and Partner at Nyhus Communications. Marc oversees approximately 50% of the company’s overall revenue and works on strategic development. Prior to his move to Seattle in 2013, Marc worked for the National Committee on U.S-China Relations.

Your subscriptions will automatically renew every 12 months and your credit card will be charged through your iTunes account. You can turn off auto-renew at any time from your iTunes account settings. Be the first to know when people in your city accept a new position, join a board, or receive professional recognition. Interested UW students are invited to pitch potentially groundbreaking ideas aiming to change the future of financial technology through the competition. The Olympia Downtown Alliance recently held its 24th Annual Meeting at the Heritage Room, during which the Alliance honored community members with annual awards. Attempting to seize a moment of opportunity within tech and innovation, universities are teaming up with the private sector to build out new districts within, or immediately adjacent to, their campuses.

Citizens of the ultra-progressive city have lost patience with political leaders’ failure to address the homelessness crisis. Last year, interim mayor Burgess took a first step in rebidding city contracts and cutting funding for ineffective organizations like SHARE. Mayor Durkan should build on this success, reforming the system of perverse incentives and instituting accountability for all organizations getting taxpayer funds.

Campus Of The Future: Colleges Are Rethinking, Shrinking Real Estate As Students, Workers Demand More Flexibility

Eye on the news A War of World-Building Bruno Maçães As human life migrates to a new technological domain, powerful states race to write its rules. Eye on the news Gone to Rot Noel Yaxley Free speech in Britain is losing ground to the “right” not to be offended. Eye on the news A Momentous Two Weeks Leor Sapir The national fight over gender identity is escalating.

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At One Workplace, we’ve always believed that it’s the environments where we spend most of our time that ultimately shape us. The site should go live “within weeks,” Thomas says, so readers will soon be able to judge for themselves about the results. The impact of the warning on Teru Sushi’s bottom line is expected to be minor. As with many ethnic foods and customs in Southern California, the popularity of raw seafood has spread into mainstream circles.

For every low-rent apartment that the city builds, another thousand people will be standing in line, in perpetuity. New York has been building “affordable housing” since 1934 and still has a wait list of 270,000 families. What the socialists won’t, or can’t, see is that their agenda cannot solve the homelessness crisis. Sawant’s real passion, it seems, is not to build houses for the poor but to tear down the houses of the rich. When her ideas fail to usher in a socialist utopia, she’ll find new scapegoats—corporations, real-estate developers, tech workers, police—and start over. The second key myth is that the homeless are “our neighbors,” native to Seattle.

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The optics are bad, but if the foundational flaws are not remedied, there is very little local politicians can do to halt this crisis. It is a convenient and targeted solution to a profoundly complex issue. Seattle, Wash. – Kidder Mathews’ Chairman and CEO, Jeff Lyon, has been honored as a Power 100 leader by the Puget Sound Business Journal in the publication’s inaugural Power 100 list. Please note that we at Aspen do not make determinations on who would be eligible for participation in clinical trials and we do not offer tours of our laboratory. At this time, our therapy has not yet been used in humans and clinical trials have not begun. Please sign up to receive news and updates about Aspen Neuroscience and its progress towards delivering a personalized cell therapy for patients with Parkinson disease.

The first order of business must be to clean up public spaces, move people into shelters, and maintain public order. Harm reduction has had notable success in countries like Portugal and Switzerland, but in North America, where national drug policy remains staunchly prohibitionist, cities that practice the policy have become magnets for addiction, crime, and social disorder. During the debate on public-injection sites last year, the addiction evangelists often pointed to Vancouver, which has operated the Insite supervised-consumption facility for over ten years. According to the study, between 2006 and 2016, the number of homeless individuals from outside Vancouver rose from 17 percent to 52 percent of the total homeless population. “Migration into urban regions with a high concentration of services may not necessarily lead to effective pathways to recovery,” the study concludes.

When their policy ideas fail to deliver results, they repackage them, write a proposal using the latest buzzwords, and return for more funding. Homelessness might rise or fall, but the leaders of the homeless-industrial complex always get paid. Record numbers of homeless people are occupying the city’s public spaces, despite massive government spending to fight the problem. The Power 100 leaders have helped define what the Puget Sound region has become.

But no amount of money will make any difference until we correctly diagnose the problem and focus on practical solutions, not utopian dreams. Over the past five years, the Emerald City has seen an explosion of homelessness, crime, and addiction. In its 2017 point-in-time count of the homeless, King County social-services agency All Home found 11,643 people sleeping in tents, cars, and emergency shelters. Property crime has risen to a rate two and a half times higher than Los Angeles’s and four times higher than New York City’s. Cleanup crews pick up tens of thousands of dirty needles from city streets and parks every year.

O’Brien and his supporters have constructed an elaborate political vocabulary about the homeless, elevating three key myths to the status of conventional wisdom. The first is that many of the homeless are holding down jobs but can’t get ahead. “I’ve got thousands of homeless people that actually are working and just can’t afford housing,” O’Brien told the Denver Post. But according to King County’s own survey data, only 7.5 percent of the homeless report working full-time, despite record-low unemployment, record job growth, and a record-high $15 Seattle minimum wage.

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Over the past year, I’ve spent time at city council meetings, political rallies, homeless encampments, and rehabilitation facilities, trying to understand how the government can spend so much money with so little effect. I’ll identify them as the socialists, the compassion brigades, the homeless-industrial complex, and the addiction evangelists. Together, they have dominated the local policy discussion, diverted hundreds of millions of dollars toward favored projects, and converted many well-intentioned voters to the politics of unlimited compassion. If we want to break through the failed status quo on homelessness in places like Seattle—and in Portland, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, too—we must first map the ideological battlefield, identify the flaws in our current policies, and rethink our assumptions.

Rent increases are a real burden for the working poor, but the evidence suggests that higher rents alone don’t push people onto the streets. Patrick Evans is President & CEO of Sound, one of the largest mental health and addiction treatment providers in Washington.As we approach the Aug. 6 primary election, it makes sense to focus our attention — which sometimes resembles ire — on Seattle’s homelessness crisis. I’ve read through many op-ed submissions recently that suggest wholesale changes to the city’s leadership will solve this crisis.

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