Viva La Cola!

Founded in January 2009, PubliCola is a blog about Seattle written by journalists who are dedicated to non-partisan, original daily reporting that prioritizes a balanced approach to news. Started by longtime local editor and award-winning reporter Josh Feit, PubliCola is the first online-only news site in state history to get media credentials to cover the state capitol.

PubliCola was off and running. In June 2009, PubliCola hired another award-winning journalist, super-sourced Seattle city hall reporter Erica C. Barnett.

People were afraid that blogging would change journalism. Instead, we believe journalism can change blogging. Twenty-first century journalism may look and feel different, and yes Erica isn't afraid to get cranky, but we're committed to making sure online news still delivers independent, reliable, even-keeled coverage. And most of all, we're committed to making sure the coverage sparks honest civic debate.

Bringing you cola for the people, PubliCola is named after Publius Valerius PubliCola, the alias for the authors of the Federalist Papers—the original bloggers.

The first online-only news site in state history to get media credentials to cover the state capitol and Seattle city hall, PubliCola has been called a “must-read” by the Seattle Post Intelligencer and a hot “New Media Mover and Shaker” by Seattle Magazine—which also cited our own Erica C. Barnett as the city's No. 1 news nerd.

$67 Million Loophole

1. Protesters will be gathering outside the Chase Bank at 2nd and Union in downtown Seattle today at 11 to protest the $67 million state tax loophole that big banks get on mortgage loans.

As the legislature begins its special session today to reach a budget compromise over whether they should raise the sales tax or find more tax loopholes to close, the break for banks—which the House wants to end and the Senate does not—is taking center stage.

2. Also on the protest docket this week, Real Change is asking people to come to City Hall to testify against council member Tim Burgess’ anti-panhandling legislation at Wednesday morning’s Public Safety & Education Committee meeting.

Erica has written about the ordinance extensively. Some of her recent reports are here (anti-ordinance), here (anti-ordinance), and here (pro-ish.)

3. On Saturday afternoon, one of Seattle’s rock’n'roll legends, Christopher “Slats” Harvey, died after what friends are calling a difficult bout with cancer.

Several months ago, Slats, who was best known for his time in the early 80s Seattle punk band Silly Killers, broke his hip and almost had his leg amputated. Friends threw a benefit concert in his honor back in December to help raise money to help him recover. Few people knew that he was actually battling cancer at the same time.

R.I.P. Slats.

4. PubliCola is happy to report that we’ve hired New York Times writer and Wired magazine freelancer Kristina Shevory to fill out our 21st Century biz coverage. Kristina, who also covered eastside business news for the Seattle Times back in the early 2000′s, joins Cola tech pundit Glenn Fleishman and gadet guru Sam Machkovech on our biz reporting team.


  • srsly

    I'll do it for you — Full disclosure: Sandeep Kaushik is pushing the “protest” that you made into your No. 1 item.

  • Josh Feit

    That's true.

    Here's the full disclosure: Sandeep Kaushik has zero editorial say @ PubliCola. He helped found PubliCola over a year ago.

    As for the $67 million loophole, it's one of the top issues that bogged down the budget negotiations that helped push the legislature into a special session. It was all the buzz in the hallways in Olympia last week, which is why I wrote about it (see link in story above) last week.

    I would be remiss not to cover this issue simply because Sandeep is working for the coalition that is protesting this morning.

  • http://twitter.com/fattailed fattailed

    biz reporting = tech reporting?