Uber: Champions of democracy.
Uber's at the airport now. MikeDotta/Shutterstock

Uber and Lyft Now Servicing Sea-Tac Airport: "It's a one-year pilot program approved by the Port of Seattle," KING 5 reports. "Passengers will pay an extra $5 to cover airport fees, on top of the fare."

Another Car Crash in Rainier Valley: This happens all the time. This one caused a natural gas leak, KIRO reports. Maybe Rainier Avenue's "road diet" wasn't enough.

University of Washington Considers Hosting Tent City 3: Campus administrators have proposed several possible locations for the encampment to kick off a community consultation process before making a final decision. "Tent City 3, the organization under consideration in this instance, has a successful track record and a clear code of conduct for residents," UW says.

Must-Listen Interview with the Mother of the Man in Tree: I wrote yesterday about cuts to mental health budgets and about the Lisa Gossett, who is speaking out now about her inability to get her son into treatment for paranoid schizophrenia. Gossett talks at length with KUOW.

TKTK
Tesla's first "affordable" model starts at a price below six figures. Tesla Motors

Tesla Model 3 Revealed: Elon Musk's Tesla finally unveiled the Tesla Model 3, a $35,000 electric car, last night. The company has already raked in $115 million in $1000 deposits for preorders of the new car, which looks like a baby Model S. The car has a range of 215 miles and the full range of Tesla's semi-autonomous parking and driving features. Hundreds of people lined up around Seattle's Tesla showroom in South Lake Union to place their deposits, KIRO reports. Exciting stuff—learn more about the car itself at Jalopnik. It won't hit the streets until next year.

On Rebuilding Africatown: James Williams writes in the South Seattle Emerald about how Africatown is recovering from last week's hate crime attack on its building. "If AfricaTown had been allowed to move back into Horace Mann [building] as originally promised," Williams says, "many of its supporters believe the break in would have never happened." The group was evicted from the Central District schoolhouse in 2013.

Hiphop Artist Acts as a "Griot" for the South End and Central District: Read Reagan Jackson's profile of Draze in the Seattle Globalist.

Family Feud Over Future of 23rd and Union: Kathleen Richards wrote about intriguing development plans for this corner last year. But first, owner Thomas Bangasser, who envisions placing the land in the hands of a community trust, needs to fight off a lawsuit from other members of his family who have a stake in the property. “There’s a lot of history there and that should not just be washed away because an outside buyer comes in, bringing in basically Wall Street money,” Bangasser told Capitol Hill Seattle. “You don’t want to have it so that everything is owned by the white guys and (blacks) are just tenants.”

Fungus That Kills Bats Arrives in Washington: White-nose syndrome has killed more than 6 million bats over the past decade. Hikers recently found a bat with the disease in North Bend. "The U.S. Geological Survey's National Wildlife Health Center verified the disease in a little brown bat found on March 11. It died two days later," KPLU reports.

Hillary Clinton Is So Sick of the Sanders Campaign "Lying": ...about the notion that she receives money from the fossil fuel industry. Huh. About that.

This Week on Blabbermouth: Governor Jay Inslee, a pro-Clinton superdelegate, wouldn't come on the show to explain his support for a candidate the overwhelming majority of Washington caucus-goers voted against. So Eli Sanders talks to Philip Locker of Socialist Alternative about his critique of the superdelegate system. Plus Jen Graves on the whims of wealthy art donors. Listen here.

This post has been updated.