NEWS ROUNDUP
MLK’s dream, benefit barriers, state bank…
M.L.K. DAY
LOCAL
► In the News Tribune — Concessions may avert layoffs for 200 Tacoma fire fighters, officers — It’s now up to the memberships of each union to approve the concessions. The police union has planned a vote for Monday evening. The fire union has scheduled votes for Jan. 26-27.
► In the Daily News — Longview city employees win cost-of-living raises— The AFSCME contract provides for a 2.7% cost-of-living raise this year and between 2% and 3.5% in 2013 and 2014, depending on the inflation rate. It also increases employees’ share of health insurance premiums.
► In the Tri-City Herald — Hanford workers bite their tongues, assessment says— A significant number of federal and contractor staff on the Hanford vitrification plant project reported they were reluctant to raise safety or quality concerns, according to a new assessment of safety culture at the project released Friday.
► In the Daily News — Groups drop appeals of Longview Fibre’s biomass expansion— The road is now clear to build the plant, which would employ 15 to 20 contract workers and generate 54 megawatts for sale on the open market.
► In the Tri-City Herald — Kennewick council poised to adopt E-Verify— The city council on Tuesday will vote on whether to adopt E-Verify as a condition for employment and for contractors who want to do work for the city.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Kitsap Sun — Loss of five ferry routes is worse case transportation funding scenario— WSF might cut five routes, including Bremerton and Southworth, if legislators can’t pull the trigger on more funding. Transportation Secretary Paula Hammond said only the three top-performing routes — Bainbridge, Edmonds and Mukilteo — and two providing island access — San Juans and Vashon — would be spared.
► In the Tri-City Herald — Bill aims to use students for farm labor— Bipartisan legislation announced Friday would authorize the state Board of Education to allow school districts to adjust the 180-day school year in ways that free students to work in agriculture.
► From AP — Senate Democrats show off savings reform plan— Senate Democrats unveiled a series of reform ideas that won’t bank much money for the state’s immediate budget shortfall but will, they say, save hundreds of millions of dollars in the coming years.
► In the (Everett) Herald — Lawmakers likely to reject prisoners’ early release as a money-saver — Gregoire put forth the idea of releasing inmates early, but lawmakers are giving her proposal a cold shoulder so far this session.
► In the (Everett) Herald — Aerospace students wait for loan funds — Fifty-one students have received low-interest student loans to pay for short-term aerospace job training in Washington, but plenty more are on a waiting list for funding.
► In the PSBJ — Would tax hike help educate the work force? Business groups open-minded but haven’t backed plan
► In the Olympian — Justice Tom Chambers to retire— State Supreme Court justice Tom Chambers will step down at the end of his term this year, opening the door for former Pierce County executive John Ladenburg and at least one rival.
► In the News Tribune — McKenna’s lack of action has allowed lawsuit payouts to increase again (by Rebecca Roe) — McKenna should not abandon the prevention efforts to reduce payouts. We know they work. Our state proved it earlier this decade, but those efforts atrophied on his watch.
NATIONAL
► In today’s LA Times — SAG, AFTRA craft merger plan — Hollywood’s two main actors unions, the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, early Monday morning took a historic step toward combining their two unions. The Group for One Union, which is made up of leaders of SAG and AFTRA, hammered out an agreement to merge the unions after nine days of intensive talks.
► In The Hill — House GOP leaders get heat from rank-and-file ahead of debt vote — House Republicans want to embarrass President Obama with a vote on the debt ceiling this week but they may get some heartburn courtesy of rank-and-file conservatives.
► In The Hill — Business groups push Congress to act quickly to extend tax breaks— But following the bruising December battle over extending the payroll tax cut, sources are far from certain a quick extension of the provisions is within reach
► In The Hill — Trumka: Congress controlled by ‘climate change deniers’ — “It is clear that as long as Congress is effectively controlled by climate change deniers, all of us — investors, companies, workers and the broader public — must take action ourselves,” said AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka.
► At AFL-CIO Now — Illegal procedure? Dallas Cowboys called out on sweatshop conditions — Cowboys owner Jerry Jones spent $1 billion to build a gilded palace that his team plays in eight Sundays a year. But in the gift shops inside Cowboys Stadium and in sports apparel stores around the nation, Cowboys fans are buying gear made by Cambodian workers earning just 29 cents an hour for 10-hour days, six days a week.
PRESIDENTIAL RACE
► From AP — Huntsman to quit presidential race, endorse Romney
► At TPM — Gingrich: Fire federal employees over liberal views
► At Huffington Post — Colbert Super PAC: ‘Romney is a serial killer’
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 9 a.m. These links are functional at the date of posting, but sometimes expire.