NEWS ROUNDUP
McKenna slips us a Mickey, Ohio’s deciders, ‘on your own’ delusion…
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
STATE ELECTIONS
► More bad news for Rob McKenna, in today’s Seattle Times — King County ballots pouring in ahead of schedule — King County is projecting 87% voter turnout. That’s substantially higher than the statewide projection of 81% turnout by Secretary of State Sam Reed, and higher than other nearby counties. So far, county officials’ high turnout prediction is holding up based on the votes arriving by mail.
► In today’s Kitsap Sun — Inslee, fellow Democrats urge faithful to keep working through Election Day — Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jay Inslee, following an earlier joke about getting stuck behind a backward moving McKenna campaign bus on the way in to Bremerton, said he would move the state forward to create jobs.
YESTERDAY at The Stand — Referendum 74: Equality and justice for all families (by Lee Newgent and Sarah Cherin)
► In today’s Seattle Times — Another week, another million for charter schools initiative— As the election nears, the campaign to bring charter schools to Washington state reported another $1.5 million in donations from Paul Allen.
INITIATIVE 502
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Even if I-502 passes, pot use could cost your job — A state Supreme Court ruling last year said that Washington’s existing medical marijuana law doesn’t prevent an employer from firing an employee for a positive drug test. Backers of Initiative 502, which would legalize purchase, possession and use of an ounce or less of marijuana by anyone 21 years or older, say there’s nothing in this initiative that would protect workers from being fired for marijuana use, even if it’s used off-site.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Washington State Labor Council delegates representing unions throughout the state voted to endorse I-502 not because they thought it would protect marijuana users from losing their jobs, but because the criminalization of pot is a costly, ineffective policy. Regulation and taxation of marijuana through I-502 will not only save precious criminal justice resources, it will generate desperately needed revenue.
► In today’s Seattle Times — I-502 brings marijuana trade out of the shadows (editorial endorsement) — In recreational marijuana there are no licenses, no rules about ID, no limits and no state revenue — and all the money goes to criminals. It’s time to try a new approach.
BOEING
► At SPEEA.org — Members show support at negotiations team Solidarity Walks & Talks— Frustration at The Boeing Company’s mixed signals to our negotiation teams spilled into the workplace Tuesday as hundreds of SPEEA members participated in Solidarity Walk & Talks to show support for our Prof & Tech Negotiation Teams. Negotiations are scheduled to resume today.
LOCAL
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Semiahmoo Hotel shutdown to end 200 jobs — Blaine City Manager Gary Tomsic described the shutdown of the city’s largest employer as “on the Richter scale, probably about an eight” for Blaine’s people, and for city tax revenues.
► In today’s Columbian — Vancouver works to save fire, police jobs — In an attempt to save 13 grant-funded firefighter positions after the grant expires next year, the city of Vancouver reached out to Clark County Fire District 5 on Tuesday to see if it will pay for the positions in 2014.
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
► In today’s Washington Post — Storm provides Obama with a commander-in-chief moment — In a campaign notable mostly for its negativity, the historic storm provided Obama with a commander-in-chief moment a week before Election Day. The president gained a rare moment of bipartisan praise, with Democratic and Republican governors alike commending the performance of the federal government.
► In today’s NY Times — Ohio working class may offer key to Obama’s re-election — The presidential contest has become an intense state-by-state fight, with the climate in Ohio shaped by months of efforts by the Obama campaign to portray Romney as a job killer who opposed the president’s decision to bail out the auto industry. Obama, who has a 50% to 45% edge here, also appears to be benefiting from an economic recovery in Ohio that is running ahead of the national recovery.
NATIONAL
► At AFL-CIO Now — Union members hard at work during Hurricane Sandy — Working people up and down the East Coast are pitching in to alert people about the clean up efforts for Hurricane Sandy and provide information for transportation, shelter and other resources. Firefighters, public employees, utility workers, letter carriers, nurses, grocery store employees, hotel workers and others continued to work through the storm to make sure everyone is taken care of.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
This reality isn’t at odds with Americans’ historic love of autonomy and self-reliance. At our best, we endeavor together. At our best, we always have. More than seven decades after the New Deal, Americans are still the hardest-working people in the world. Private, public and non-profit sectors work together.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 9 a.m.