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WA gives $2M towards group's effort to buy Tacoma motel for refugee housing
WA gives $2M towards group's effort to buy Tacoma motel for refugee housing

Yahoo

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

WA gives $2M towards group's effort to buy Tacoma motel for refugee housing

An organization working to assist asylum-seeking refugees will receive $2 million from the Washington State Housing Trust Fund to help purchase a permanent home in Tacoma. However, the organization still is looking to fill a multi-million dollar funding gap over the next couple of years. In September, Thrive International brought nearly 200 refugees to a Quality Inn on Tacoma's South Hosmer Street. On Sept. 24, vans and trucks brought troves of suitcases, strollers and garbage bags full of possessions into the parking lot. The refugee families previously lived in an encampment on a field next to a motel in Kent. Some of them had been living there for months, coming from as far away as Venezuela and Angola to escape economic instability, political unrest, and, for some, violence. Thrive International leased the Quality Inn to serve as temporary shelter for the families while they worked to find permanent housing solutions. Since then, the former Quality Inn has hosted more than 350 refugees and asylum seekers. The organization reported dozens of residents have successfully transitioned into permanent housing in recent months from the Hosmer location. On May 20, Thrive International announced it would receive $2 million from Washington state's budget to help complete a $10.7 million purchase and renovation of the 115-unit hotel, now called Thrive Center Tacoma, to become a permanent transitional housing site. Thrive International executive director Mark Finney told The News Tribune the organization is fund raising to close the roughly $7 million gap needed to purchase the hotel. He said even though they have secured some funding from donors, the organization still has a lot of work to do before they are able to purchase the hotel at the end of their three-year lease. Finney said the hotel will cost roughly $9.8 million to purchase, with an additional $900,000 needed to maintain and renovate the building. During a Jan. 16 House Capitol Budget Committee hearing, Jim CastroLang, director of policy and advocacy for Thrive International, requested $2.1 million from the legislature to purchase and 'stabilize' the Tacoma Thrive Center. 'Our Thrive Center model in hotel-type spaces is the lowest cost, highest impact way to support refugees from surviving to thriving,' he told the committee. At the beginning of 2025, CastroLang said a transitional housing site in Spokane assisted 965 residents into permanent housing since it opened in 2022. Along with providing a safe place for refugee and asylum-seeking families to stay, Thrive International provides wrap-around services. It hosts clinics with lawyers to advise families through the immigration process. Local hospitals provide vaccination clinics. It helps parents build resumes and apply for jobs. Local school districts like Clover Park and Franklin Pierce send buses to transport children staying at the hotel to school. In January, Finney told The News Tribune his organization wants to establish a 'pipeline' for those fleeing their countries for a better life here. Thrive International reported an average stay of six to nine months under the hotel model used in Tacoma and Spokane. Finney told The News Tribune it usually takes a few months before families start to gain momentum. Since the families arrived at Thrive Center Tacoma, the former hotel has hosted more than a dozen weddings, and several babies have been born. 'The people living here are not just passing through — they're becoming part of the fabric of this neighborhood,' said Anna Bondarenko, Director of Thrive Center Tacoma, wrote in a statement. 'We've seen a sense of belonging emerge, not just inside Thrive, but across Hosmer.'

Fire lab scientist says we're not doing enough to prevent more wildfires
Fire lab scientist says we're not doing enough to prevent more wildfires

Yahoo

time12-03-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Fire lab scientist says we're not doing enough to prevent more wildfires

Tucked beneath snow-capped mountains in Montana, the Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory is unlike any other lab in the country. It's where scientists are starting fires to better understand how they burn — and how to manage them. The U.S. Forest Service built the fire sciences lab in 1960, inspired by a forest fire that killed 13 firefighters. The facility includes a 66-foot-high combustion chamber that allows for intense burn tests in controlled conditions. Today, about 80 employees are carrying on that mission of wildfire research, and keep coming back to one controlling principle. "We're definitely part of the problem," said fire scientist and lab leader Mark Finney. Finney believes we still don't implement some of the basics that could limit the flames, like clearing away dead and dry vegetation with more prescribed burns — including near urban areas. In his view, some smaller wildland fires should also be left to burn to eliminate fuels that would feed larger fires. "The harder we fight fire, the harder we try to remove fire, the more the fuels build up in a given actually created conditions that make those fires worse," Finney said. The fire lab allows the uncontrollable to be controlled and studied. Finney took CBS News to a silo where his team assembled dry logs and lit them on fire to simulate wind-fueled flames on the forest floor. What they're learning in the lab has never been more important, following a slew of massive wildfires — including ones that recently destroyed thousands of homes in the Los Angeles area. The California governor's office called the fires "unprecedented," but Finney disagrees. "It's the same fire events over and over again. And yet, decades go by and those lessons and those impacts are often forgotten," Finney said. He hopes what the team learns from studying the flames can change the way we approach wildfires. When asked how to convince a community that lighting a fire near their homes is a good idea, Finney said, "The question is, what risks do you want? To experience the very low risk of having problems with prescribed burning, or do you want to basically roll the dice and just wait until circumstances overwhelm emergency response?" He continued, "We've proven that we can't eliminate fire. The only choices we really have are when to have it and what kind to have." That will require a change in perspective — looking at fire as an ally, not an enemy. Judge blocks deportation of pro-Palestinian activist who helped lead Columbia University protests Wildfire researchers replicate "firenado" and other fire conditions in Montana lab Reporter's Notebook: "Animal spirits" and the stock market

Fire lab scientist says we're not doing enough to prevent more wildfires
Fire lab scientist says we're not doing enough to prevent more wildfires

Yahoo

time12-03-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Fire lab scientist says we're not doing enough to prevent more wildfires

Tucked beneath snow-capped mountains in Montana, the Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory is unlike any other lab in the country. It's where scientists are starting fires to better understand how they burn — and how to manage them. The U.S. Forest Service built the fire sciences lab in 1960, inspired by a forest fire that killed 13 firefighters. The facility includes a 66-foot-high combustion chamber that allows for intense burn tests in controlled conditions. Today, about 80 employees are carrying on that mission of wildfire research, and keep coming back to one controlling principle. "We're definitely part of the problem," said fire scientist and lab leader Mark Finney. Finney believes we still don't implement some of the basics that could limit the flames, like clearing away dead and dry vegetation with more prescribed burns — including near urban areas. In his view, some smaller wildland fires should also be left to burn to eliminate fuels that would feed larger fires. "The harder we fight fire, the harder we try to remove fire, the more the fuels build up in a given actually created conditions that make those fires worse," Finney said. The fire lab allows the uncontrollable to be controlled and studied. Finney took CBS News to a silo where his team assembled dry logs and lit them on fire to simulate wind-fueled flames on the forest floor. What they're learning in the lab has never been more important, following a slew of massive wildfires — including ones that recently destroyed thousands of homes in the Los Angeles area. The California governor's office called the fires "unprecedented," but Finney disagrees. "It's the same fire events over and over again. And yet, decades go by and those lessons and those impacts are often forgotten," Finney said. He hopes what the team learns from studying the flames can change the way we approach wildfires. When asked how to convince a community that lighting a fire near their homes is a good idea, Finney said, "The question is, what risks do you want? To experience the very low risk of having problems with prescribed burning, or do you want to basically roll the dice and just wait until circumstances overwhelm emergency response?" He continued, "We've proven that we can't eliminate fire. The only choices we really have are when to have it and what kind to have." That will require a change in perspective — looking at fire as an ally, not an enemy. Judge blocks deportation of pro-Palestinian activist who helped lead Columbia University protests Wildfire researchers replicate "firenado" and other fire conditions in Montana lab Reporter's Notebook: "Animal spirits" and the stock market

Montana scientists alarmed by wildfires encroaching on US towns
Montana scientists alarmed by wildfires encroaching on US towns

Reuters

time27-02-2025

  • Science
  • Reuters

Montana scientists alarmed by wildfires encroaching on US towns

MISSOULA, Montana, Feb 27 (Reuters) - Scientists at a federal laboratory in Montana that has focused on fire for decades are increasingly concerned about wildfires that spread to population centers as Americans build communities ever closer to forests. Mark Finney, senior scientist at the U.S. Forest Service's Missoula Fire Sciences Laboratory, noted a pattern in January fires in California -- which killed dozens of people and destroyed thousands of homes -- and recent fires elsewhere. "They start in a nearby wildland vegetation, find fuel material where it ignites and spreads very rapidly and under very dry and windy conditions. It spreads quickly from a wildland situation into a more urban situation," he said during a tour for Reuters of his lab in late January. Finney and his team, opens new tab set fires in a controlled environment for study and modeling. What they learn from such experiments about, for example, how far and fast fires can move is shared across the country and the world to help wildland fire managers make decisions when responding to fires. Finney's was one of three labs founded in the years after a 1949 fire in a remote area of the Helena National Forest in Montana killed 13 firefighters. The goal was to better understand how fire behaves to avoid such tragedies. Over the decades, one of the other labs, in California, has shifted focus to soil research and other areas. The third, in Georgia, closed in 1989. "This is really the last lab left devoted to studying wildland fire behavior," Finney said. "It is kind of an irony that we rely more on fire science now than we ever had. We have bigger and bigger questions and more consequences to society, our ecosystems and our communities from fire, and yet we have less and less resources to devote to scientific study of the subject." Work at the lab also has helped researchers identify areas of extreme wildfire risk, opens new tab in California and elsewhere, information the U.S. Forest Service makes available to the public. Communities in areas where wildfire risk is high can apply for funds to use to help brace for disaster under the federal Community Wildfire Defense Grant Program, opens new tab that was part of a $1 trillion, five-year bipartisan infrastructure law President Joe Biden signed in 2021. "I think what's important about those kind of programs is that, you know, some of the larger communities that maybe have the financial resources and the staffing to implement wildfire planning and mitigation work are getting that work done without that additional funding," said Greg Dillon, who directs the Missoula lab's Fire Modeling Institute. "But it's a lot of the rural communities where the wildfire risk is, is really high, but they just simply don't have the local capacity and resources to get that mitigation work done," Dillon added. Since taking office in January, President Donald Trump has halted federal funding for programs to reduce wildfire risk as part of broad cuts to government spending, according to organizations impacted by the moves. The Forest Service said in a February 24 email to Reuters that the Community Wildfire Defense Grant Program's funding has continued and the deadline for applying for the grants has been extended by two weeks until March 14. The Forest Service added that a waiver removing a cost-sharing requirement that had been available to Native American, Alaska Native, Pacific Island and US Virgin Islands communities was limited in February to low-income communities. The Forest Service did not directly respond to a question about whether any Missoula lab staff were among the thousands of federal government workers laid off as part of a Trump effort to reduce the size of the federal government. It instead sent a statement from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, of which the Forest Service is an agency, saying that about 2,000 probationary employees from across the Forest Service had lost their jobs.

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