Washington OKs 1st statewide missing Indigenous people alert | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source infotel.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from infotel.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
News Release U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) Bill Text | One Pager | Endorsement List Yesterday, on the National Day of Remembrance for U.S. Indian
Tribes would get final say in Washington proposal to ban Native mascots at schools
Tulalip tribal chair hopes for meaningful dialogue between tribes and districts about the use of Native American imagery. Author: Eric Wilkinson Updated: 5:41 PM PST March 5, 2021
MARYSVILLE, Wash. The people of the Tulalip Tribe can trace their history back at least 15,000 years. The artifacts in their cultural center tell stories that evoke a great sense of pride.
Ryan Miller, the tribe s director of treaty rights and governmental affairs, says appropriation of tribal culture cuts very deep. He supports HB 1356, currently making its way through the state legislature would ban the use of Native American symbols and imagery as school mascots.
5:49 pm UTC Jan. 19, 2021
EVERETT, Wash. – Hundreds were ill and six had died in China when a 35-year-old man touched down in Seattle after a three-month trip to visit family in Wuhan. He got sick the next day, a Thursday, saw a doctor Sunday and was admitted to the hospital Monday.
He traveled alone. He lived alone. He went into isolation. Alone.
At Providence Regional Medical Center, he spoke to doctors on the other side of the glass window through a telehealth robot and asked for a phone to call family.
It was Jan. 20, 2020, and the United States first known case of the novel coronavirus had been reported in Snohomish County, an area of fewer than a million residents north of Seattle, flanked by the Puget Sound on the west and the Cascade Mountains on the east.