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Letters to the Editor

LETTER:Delightful experience

If you haven’t made the trek to the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center to see the current exhibition,…

Letters to the Editor

LETTER:Authoritarianism

A recent column by Veronique de Rugy on the issue of rising authoritarianism that recently ran (“A call…

Life

A GROWING CONCERN: Six more weeks of chores in the forecast

WE ARE NOW moving into mid-February, only a month and a few days away from spring. We all,…

W. Ron Allen, right, chairman of the Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe, talks with Brent Simcosky, left, tribal health director, Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2022, in front of the Jamestown Healing Clinic, in Sequim, Wash. The tribe is building a full-service health center to treat both tribal members and other community residents for opioid addictions. Earlier in the week, Native American tribes across the U.S. settled a lawsuit against drug maker Johnson & Johnson and the largest three drug distribution companies in the U.S. for $590 million. The money won't be distributed quickly, but tribal leaders say it will play a part in healing their communities from an epidemic that has disproportionately killed Native Americans. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

News

Tribes: Settlement in opioids case will foster healing

By Felician Fonseca

Poll

Should school bond measures be reduced from 60 percent approval to a simple majority?

Daily poll

Poll

The final day for Simdars project comments is this Thursday. Do you plan to make your voice heard.

poll

Life

ISSUES OF FAITH: Just like the chorus of a love song

Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon son of John, do you love me more than these?”

tsr

News

Concerns remain over tribe’s oyster farm in Dungeness Bay

Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe’s proposal undergoing third-party review

Letters to the Editor

LETTER:War no solution

War is never a solution, but that is especially true now when every country must use every available…

News

Deal seeks to revive last aluminum smelter in Pacific Northwest

FERNDALE — A complex deal is taking shape to revive the Pacific Northwest’s last remaining aluminum smelter.

Letters to the Editor

LETTER:Critical shortage

Thanks for the article “Worker shortages at local hospitals.”

News

State insurance commissioner adopts credit scoring ban

Others say move hurts those with good scores

Poll

Are you concerned about the impact of the oyster farm in Dungeness Bay?

Daily poll

Lauren Davis, pictured at Port Townsend's Imprint Bookstore, has just published her full-length poetry collection, "Home Beneath the Church." Diane Urbani de la Paz/Peninsula Daily News

Opinion

Diane Urbani de la Paz: Poet shares the personal, vulnerable

Lauren Davis’ “Home Beneath the Church” out now

News

Lawsuit accuses COVID-19 testing company of faking results

OLYMPIA — Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson has filed a lawsuit against an Illinois-based COVID-19 testing company,…

Letters to the Editor

LETTER:Enjoys column

Every month, on the first Sunday, a column by Mr. John McNutt appears in the PDN.

Letters to the Editor

LETTER:Protect coyotes

According to the Peninsula Daily News, people walking on or near Ward Bridge over the Dungeness river have…

Letters to the Editor

LETTER:Prayer, not protest

In an article titled “Signs Outside Planned Parenthood Display Convictions,” reporter Ken Park, in some respects I think,…

Poll

Do you play video games?

Daily poll

News

Public hearing set for Carlsborg transfer station, recycling center

An online public hearing regarding a proposed solid waste transfer station and recycling center on Carlsborg Road is…