Staff Results

All Results

  • This Place on Earth 1996

    Part personal history, part regional history, This Place on Earth is a must-read for anyone who’s interested in the politics of staying put, the Pacific Northwest, or the environmental and social consequences of mobility.
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  • Approval Voting Is a Risky Prospect for Seattle

    Editor’s note: In two subsequent articles, Durning argues that approval voting would start no sooner than ranked choice voting in Seattle, if voters chose it in November, and shares a voting-rights law firm’s evaluation of the two options’ legality.  Seattle voters will decide in November whether to adopt approval voting, ranked choice voting, or no change to their primary election ballots. What do the research literature and practical experience say...
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  • Weekend Reading 10/30/15

    Alan An exposé in two parts on the history, manufacture, and environmental toll of the global color industry, with a focus on Cascadia’s Spokane River. There, a state-of-the-art paper recycling plant—clean and green in itself—proved a contaminator of the first order, because of the viciously toxic materials used in the colored inks in the paper it recycled. The web grows outward from there. Along the way, intriguing observations such as:...
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  • Weekend Reading 11-18-11

    Clark: Reusable bag humor. Graphs: It’s taking longer and longer to replace jobs after a recession. The world’s sexiest programmable thermostat. AHH! Maybe neutrinos CAN move faster than light. Anna: Here’s polling that shows—yet again—that American values differ from those of Western Europeans. Most notably, and no big surprise, at the same time we’re more religious, and more likely to think our country is superior (49% of us), we’re more...
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  • Weekend Reading 3/25/11

    Clark: Mostly demographics this week, folks. The share of people in the labor force (working or looking for work) is declining—not just because of recession, but mostly because we’re aging. Surprising: wealth inequality isn’t nearly as stark, nor increasing as fast, as income inequality. The wealth data series ends in 2000, though, so I’m not sure what’s happened since… According to census data, the coasts continue to grow, while the...
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  • This vs. That

    We face sustainability choices every day: paper or plastic? Drive or take the bus? Fresh or frozen fish? It seems like one week a new study comes out claiming X is better than Y, and a week later Y is better than X. How are we to know what to believe? And more importantly, which choices are the ones that really matter? For years, Sightline has sought to clear the...
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  • Transformers

    My 1994 Oregon-made Burley bike trailer-stroller (above) is still dear to my heart, but innovations in newer Burleys and in other companies’ offerings show that tools for human-powered urban mobility are developing at a rapid clip. The 31-year-old Eugene company Burley and four manufacturers outside the Northwest offer bike trailer-stroller-cart-jogger hybrids that convert into so many mobility tools they are like something out of Transformers. Almost every Burley model is...
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  • Introducing the Bike Tree

    A couple years ago, I mentioned that secure bike parking is important to creating affordable, green transportation. Personally, I’m well provided. Here’s the backyard bike shed I built with my father in-law. Here’s the bike storage room in Sightline’s building in downtown Seattle. (Pretty nice!) And here’s what bike storage looks like in one bike-happy Japanese community, courtesy of video from the Guardian in the United Kingdom. Read about it...
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  • Walk Score Hits the Big Time

    Walk Score lands in the NYT: Last summer, a trio of Seattle software developers started walkscore.com, which calculates the number of potential destinations within walking distance of any given address and then produces a rating. If your neighborhood scores 90 or above, you can easily live there without a car; if it scores under 25, you’ll be driving to the backyard. More than a million addresses were searched in the...
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  • Sightline on TV!

    A belated heads-up: You have *two* opportunities to see Sightline researchers/bloggers on TV today. This afternoon at 3pm, Alan “car-less” Durning will be on KOMO’s Northwest Afternoon show (Channel 4 in Seattle), telling the story of how a neighborhood like his has made his family’s year-long experiment to live without a car possible. And tonight at 7pm, on Seattle Channel’s “City Inside/Out,” Clark Williams-Derry engages in a lively debate with...
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