Crosscut.com

Matassa only stayed with Crosscut for three months, leaving in December to join the administration of new Seattle mayor Mike McGinn.

[4] He was replaced by his sister, former Times journalist Michele Matassa-Flores, and former P-I columnist Joe Copeland.

On November 17, 2008, Brewster announced that a switch to nonprofit status was being explored by Crosscut LLC, which necessitated temporary staff cuts.

On December 2, 2015, it was announced that KCTS-TV, a local PBS member television station based in Seattle, would merge with Crosscut and another website to form Cascade Public Media.

[12] KCTS-TV and Crosscut unified under the Cascade PBS name on March 1, 2024,[13] coinciding with their move in January to a new facility on First Hill that formerly served as the longtime home of Childhaven.

Former logo as Crosscut.com