curated by Vee Hua 華婷婷
The Washington State House of Representatives passed HB-1324 on the evening of March 6, which makes updates to Washington's sentencing systems, so that adults cannot be punished twice for crimes they committed as children. Among the goals of the bill are to promote rehabilitation and reintegration, to bring Washington State in line with other states which do not consider prior juvenile offenses when sentencing adults, and to "recognize how grave disproportionality within the juvenile legal system may subsequently impact sentencing ranges in adult court."
According to a press release from the ACLU, "This change would bring Washington in line with most other states regarding the scoring of prior juvenile offenses. Eliminating the use of juvenile records to automatically give people longer sentences will reduce racial disparities, account for discoveries in developmental brain science, and stop punishing people twice by no longer counting juvenile points in adult sentencing calculations."
Throughout the month of March, a collaborative fundraising effort led by Southeast Seattle Schools Fundraising Alliance, hopes to raise $500,000 for approximately 7,000 students in 17 elementary, K—8 and middle schools in Seattle Public Schools' District 7. The fundraiser is a collaboration of 17 PTA and family-teacher groups — which began in 2021 and are now in their second year of fundraising together — in acknowledgment that not all schools have the capacity to fundraise equally.
Similar to last year, which raised $400,000, this year's fundraiser will also use a move-a-thon — with events mostly between March 6 to 17 — which will encourage dancing, navigating obstacle courses, and other fun activities. PTAs at individual schools may also plan one-off events of their own, including pep rallies, weekend family gatherings, and more.
Participating schools include:
One change from the previous year is the addition of two new schools and an update in the way that funds are divided between schools, taking into account the student populations in each.
Students are encouraged to get others to sponsor them as they complete various events related to the move-a-thon. Visit the Southeast Seattle Schools Fundraising Alliance website to donate, become a sponsor and participate in the move-a-thon. Or Text D7Moves to 44-321.
The Seattle Public Library's short story dispensers have returned to the Central Library (1000 4th Ave.) and Beacon Hill coffee shop, The Station (1600 S Roberto Maestas Festival St.), to provide a new slate of short stories written by Seattle-area authors. The collection has been curated by Short Edition, a French publishing company, which has more than 300 dispensers installed worldwide.
When one visits each of these locations, they can select "Local Writers" from the dispensers, and choose between one-minute or three-minute stories. Stories will be printed on a long stip of paper. According to a press release from The Seattle Public Library, "Since the installation of story dispensers in January 2020, more than 14,000 short stories have been printed." The ones installed by The Seattle Public Library are the first and only in Washington State, according to Short Edition's website.
The Seattle Public Library plans to expand the dispensers to other locations later this year.
Writers can submit stories for consideration on Short Edition's website at Short-Edition.com/en.
The following works by local authors will be featured in the short story dispensers:
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Before you move on to the next story …
The South Seattle Emerald™ is brought to you by Rainmakers. Rainmakers give recurring gifts at any amount. With around 1,000 Rainmakers, the Emerald™ is truly community-driven local media. Help us keep BIPOC-led media free and accessible.
If just half of our readers signed up to give $6 a month, we wouldn’t have to fundraise for the rest of the year. Small amounts make a difference.
We cannot do this work without you. Become a Rainmaker today!