Community Issues — Evergreen Growing

What is out of balance where you live?

The same method that uncovered the Evergreen State College story is now open to every issue this community is facing. Listen first. Map the system. Follow the evidence. Your voice helps shape what comes next.

1
Listen in public
Community sessions at Timberland Library
2
Map the system
Iceberg canvas below — add what you see
3
Follow the evidence
Public records, named figures, sourced claims
4
Build the community
Your submission joins others shaping the agenda

See the system beneath the surface

Most of what is broken in Washington is not visible on the surface. The iceberg canvas helps us see deeper — from the events we witness, down to the patterns beneath them, and the root causes below that. Add your observations to the canvas. Every column is an issue category. Every layer goes deeper.

🏠 Affordability
⚖️ Accountability
🚑 Public Safety
🏫 Education
🗳️ Other
Surface — Events we can see What is visibly happening right now?
First-time homebuyers in Washington average 40 years old.
Young people telling parents there's no path to staying here.
Judges retire early; governor appoints replacements who run as incumbents.
People dying on Olympia's streets.
Downtown businesses report feeling unsafe.
Evergreen pool closed June 2026 — the only Olympic-size pool south of Federal Way.
Theatre department cut. Box office now directs to parking payments.
Patterns — What keeps happening Why does this repeat? What are the recurring dynamics?
Budget discussions favour new taxes over hard efficiency choices when one party controls the room.
Boards and commissions stacked with one worldview — dissent treated as obstruction, not information.
Response shaped by ideology rather than evidence of what works.
630+ pages of public records show unverifiable cost figures used to justify decisions already made.
Root causes — What is driving this What structures, incentives, or assumptions make this happen?
When power concentrates, accountability depends on the goodwill of those being overseen.

What would balance look like?

This is the third chapter. Not just what is wrong, but what you want instead. What does a balanced Washington look and feel like on this issue? Pin your vision to the wall.

🏠 Affordability Washington where a 25-year-old can afford to rent near where they grew up and still have money left over.
⚖️ Accountability Boards that reflect the community they serve, not just whoever was in power when the seats were filled.
🚑 Public Safety A homelessness response built on what the evidence says works, not what fits a political story.
🏫 Education Evergreen restored to its founding purpose — a campus that is alive, that trains the next generation of leaders.
🏠 Affordability A budget process where hard choices are actually made, not just deferred to the next tax.
🗳️ Something Else A Washington where the people asking hard questions get real answers.
Add your vision to the wall

Tell us what you are seeing

The iceberg notes and wall are for quick observations. This form is for your full story — what you are experiencing, what patterns you see, what you want Washington to hear. Every submission is reviewed. The issues raised most often shape what Evergreen Growing focuses on next.

All submissions are reviewed before publishing. Anonymous submissions are treated with the same care as named ones. This is not a campaign form — it is a community listening tool.

What happens with your submission

Submissions are reviewed regularly. As patterns emerge across the community, the issues raised most often will shape what Evergreen Growing investigates next — following the same method that produced two published op-eds and 630+ pages of forensic analysis on the Evergreen State College. The Education pillar shows what the method looks like when it has had time to work. Read the Evergreen story →