NEWS ROUNDUP
Exchange reward, Hilton contract, our ‘metrosexual black Abe Lincoln’…
HEALTH CARE
ALSO sat wslc.org — Consumers win with Health Exchange
► At Politico — Health care reform: GOP preps plan for ruling on law — If the law is upheld, Republicans will take to the floor to try to tear out its most controversial pieces, such as the individual mandate and requirements that employers provide insurance or face fines. If the law is partially or fully overturned they’ll draw up bills to keep the popular, consumer-friendly portions in place — like allowing adult children to remain on parents’ health care plans until age 26, and forcing insurance companies to provide coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.
LOCAL
► In today’s Columbian — Downtown Vancouver Hilton seals new deal with workers — A new labor agreement has been reached between management and workers at the Hilton Vancouver Washington, although a UNITE HERE Local 9 representative says more improvement is needed. The hotel said the deal covering 116 workers at the hotel “provides for regular wage increases and expands eligibility for health benefits.”
► At Crosscut — Ring the alarm: Hanford’s lack of a nuclear safety culture — An ominous pattern is emerging at the Hanford nuclear reservation. In the last seven months two veteran managers have filed complaints with the U.S. Department of Labor alleging that too many safety shortcuts are being taken in the creation of a complex to deal with Hanford’s nuclear waste. The two join an existing federal lawsuit by a third high-ranking manager.
ALSO at The Stand — House Republicans threaten nuclear workers’ safety
► In today’s Seattle Times — T-Mobile says fewer jobs being cut overall — The layoff happening now involves 900 job cuts nationally. But today the company said it is also planning to add 550 new jobs through the rest of 2012, so the net reduction at year-end will be 350. The Puget Sound region could end up gaining jobs.
► At IAM 751’s blog — Company honors Machinists for safety, excellence — Eleven Machinists Union members who work for Republic Services in Klickitat County were honored recently by their company for excellence on the job.
UNEMPLOYMENT
► In today’s Seattle Times — State unemployment rate falls to 8.1% — The state’s unemployment rate fell even though the state’s economy lost 300 net jobs: The private sector added about 2,000 jobs, but the public sector shed about 2,300. Government has lost 5,600 jobs over the past 12 months, primarily in state government.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Hundreds line up for aerospace job fair — Nearly 300 people showed up during the first hour of a job fair held Wednesday at the Washington Aerospace Training and Research Center near Paine Field.
OREGON NEWS
► In the NW Labor Press — Columbia Pacific Building Trades signs deal for coal terminal — The Columbia Pacific Building Trades Council and Kinder Morgan signed a memorandum of understanding May 4 guaranteeing that a proposed multi-million-dollar coal export terminal at Port Westward Industrial Park will be built with local union labor under a project labor agreement (PLA).
► In the NW Labor Press — One-day strike by TriMet Lift operators leads to agreement — A one-day strike by TriMet Lift drivers on May 9 has resulted in tentative contracts following marathon bargaining sessions May 10-11.
ELECTION
EDITOR’S NOTE — Um… WTF?
► From AP — Kucinich won’t run in Washington, is leaving Congress — In an email to supporters, he wrote that he’s decided “that, at this time, I can best serve from outside the Congress.”
NATIONAL
► In today’s NY Times — JPMorphing (editorial) — Without a strong Volcker Rule, taxpayers — via deposit insurance and bailouts — will continue to be on the hook for risky trades that boost bankers’ pay when things go well but that can wreak havoc on the financial system and broader economy when they blow up.
► In today’s Washington Post — Lawmakers finds bipartisan ground on behalf of federal workforce (Joe Davidson column) — In the Senate, a committee passed legislation allowing same-sex spouses of federal workers to receive employment benefits. In the House, subcommittee members on a panel often riven with partisanship took testimony on the Hatch Act and everyone agreed it needs fixing.
► At AFL-CIO Now — Bank foreclosure settlement money should be used to help homeowners — To be sure, state budgets are under pressure because of the economic recession caused by the Wall Street financial crisis. But a failure to use the settlement money to help struggling homeowners is shortsighted.
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.