NEWS ROUNDUP
Union numbers up, E-Verify opposition, austerity fail…
LIVE BETTER, WORK UNION!
EDITOR’S NOTE — With 19% of all workers in the state being union members, Washington State remains the 4th most heavily unionized, trailing New York, Alaska and Hawaii.
► At IAM 751’s blog — Union members earn $11,000 a year more — Union workers in 2011 earned on average nearly $11,000 a year more than their non-union counterparts, according to new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Overall, union workers were paid 29% more than their non-union counterparts last year. “We often say it pays to be union, and this report shows that it’s literally true,” said Machinists Union District Lodge 751 President Tom Wroblewski. “That’s the union advantage.”
EDITOR’S NOTE — Live better, work union!
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Seattle Times — Surplused profits should be factored into insurance-rate decisions (editorial) — SB 5247, sponsored by Sen. Steve Conway (D-Tacoma), would empower the insurance commissioner to take into account a category of retained profit when approving rate increases. We believe the state should have that authority.
► In the Columbian — CRC tolls on table in Olympia — Sen. Craig Pridemore says that, however unpopular, having users help pay for the new bridge beats the other options.
► In the Tri-City Herald — Sen. Benton wants English to be official state language
ELECTION
► In today’s Seattle Times — Newcomer Baumgartner aims high for Cantwell’s seat— After a year as a Washington state senator, Michael Baumgartner, 35, is looking for his next job: the U.S. Senate seat held by Democrat Maria Cantwell. He’s the only Republican running so far, but the GOP has yet to fully embrace him.
LOCAL
► In the News Tribune — Tacoma fire union OKs concessions to avoid layoffs— After two days of voting, IAFF Local 31 agrees to delay pay raises as part of $1.6 million in proposed concessions to help spare 44 firefighters from a first wave of layoffs amid the city’s budget crisis.
► In the Columbia Basin Herald — Katana hiring workers in Ephrata— Wind tower manufacturer Katana Summit is hiring about 120 employees to work on an upcoming job.
FROM THE GOOD OL’ DAYS — Union-buster Howard Schultz is state’s highest-paid CEO (June 22, 2010)
NATIONAL
► In The Hill — No benefit from tax holiday, say majority of voters — Fifty-four percent said the tax holiday has not helped them financially, while only 25% said it had been a help. President Obama and congressional Democrats have made the temporary extension of the payroll-tax cut — which dropped the tax rate from 6.2% to 4.2% — a top priority.
► At Columbus Record-Courier — Kasich: Wrong time to tackle ‘right-to-work’ — Gov. John Kasich says that he doesn’t think Ohio is ready to tackle a right-to-work issue. Instead, he said backers of such proposals should educate the public about the need for it before placing the issue on an election ballot.
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.