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Next Tuesday, Nov. 8, is Election Day in Washington state. Voters may register or update their information in-person, and vote in-person, until 8:00 p.m. on Election Day. Mailed ballots must be postmarked by Nov. 8 or prior, and ballots may be deposited into official drop boxes until 8:00 p.m. on Election Day.
Every Washingtonian registered to vote by Oct. 31 should have received a mailed ballot. Voters may visit VoteWA.gov to review a personalized voter?s guide, request a replacement ballot, locate official drop boxes, and check their ballot status.
Rep. Nicole Macri speaks after Gov. Jay Inslee previewed his 2023 housing and homelessness policy agenda during a Wednesday event at the Civic Hotel in Seattle.
Standing inside Seattle's Civic Hotel on Wednesday, Gov. Jay Inslee previewed his housing and homelessness priorities for the upcoming 2023 legislative session. He said additional homelessness funding will be a top priority,?along with a package of bills aimed at increasing more housing at prices that are more affordable for more people.
Legislators have approved historic investments to reduce homelessness in the past two sessions. These include first-time investments to open up thousands of new units through rapid acquisition projects, and investments in support services such as mental health and chemical dependency treatment. Within the first year, 14 new facilities have already opened, serving approximately 830 residents, and funding has been awarded to open an additional 19 projects in 12 counties that will provide nearly 1,000 units in the next six months.
Inslee and advocates at Wednesday?s press conference say these new strategies are making a difference, and they hope legislators will continue funding in the upcoming budget. In addition to reducing the number of people experiencing homelessness, Inslee said new policies must be adopted to address the state?s housing crisis.
Washington is growing faster than its housing inventory: the state?s population has grown by 25% since 2005 while housing construction has only grown by 22%. The discrepancy is pressuring rents and home prices upwards, contributing to an affordability crisis in many areas of the state.
To accelerate housing construction, Inslee called for transit-oriented development to increase density, streamlined permitting to speed home-building, and tax exemptions aimed at helping first-time buyers.
Read more: Inslee wants Legislature to focus on housing lower-income Washingtonians (Seattle Times)
Gov. Jay Inslee tours The Outpost, a pallet shelter community in Vancouver, WA. operated by Outsiders Inn. The staffed compound houses 25 people in tiny homes and offers wraparound services.
Inslee toured a pair of homelessness reduction and affordable housing projects in Clark County on Monday.
Twenty small pallet shelters comprise The Outpost in Vancouver, a shelter community with sanitation services and 24/7 staffing in service of formerly homeless residents. For residents of The Outpost, shelter is just the first step towards something greater.
?It?s not just the roof,? said Gov. Jay Inslee. ?It?s the mental health support, it?s the chemical addiction issues, it?s the medical-assisted treatment.?
After touring The Outpost, the governor continued to the Fourth Plain Community Commons, a mixed-use development with 106 affordable apartments for low-income tenants. The building also features a public plaza, office and event spaces, and a shared commercial kitchen incubator to support new food-based businesses.
The project benefitted from $6.5 million in state grants and funds from the State Housing Trust Fund and State Connecting Housing to Infrastructure Program, two programs catalyzing transit-oriented housing development statewide.
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