NEWS ROUNDUP
Buy WA, Boeing’s board, Hanford, a million jobs…
Monday, February 4, 2013
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the (Everett) Herald — Buy Washington! Yes, including ferries (by David Groves) — By building these vessels in Washington, we not only get a superior product, we are creating and sustaining good jobs here. Plus we are training local workers to ensure our shipyards have a skilled workforce in the future. That’s a win-win for taxpayers and our economy.
ALSO today at The Stand — Senate bills harm injured workers, families
► In PubliCola — GOP+2 reject Hobbs’ workers’ comp amendment — So much for bipartisanship. By alienating Sen. Hobbs now the Majority Coalition Caucus (which Hobbs, sitting in his office after the vote today, angrily called “the Republican caucus”) risks turning Hobbs into an adversary. “I’m not voting for it!” he added.
► In Sunday’s Seattle Times — In State Senate, Republicans put new muscle behind old pursuits — Much of the Republican agenda reflects suppressed energy. Republicans sat on the sidelines for eight years venting steam while Democrats ran the show. Yet there’s a risk of going too far to the right and portraying the Republican Party as out of step with voters in the central Puget Sound region — voters the GOP needs if it wants to control the Legislature.
► For example, in the Columbia Basin Herald — Manweller offers bill to reduce school construction costs lower school construction workers’ pay — Rep. Matt Manweller (R-Ellensburg) has introduced HB 1255, which would exempt new public school construction projects from prevailing wage requirements.
► In today’s Seattle Times — ‘Battle royale’ on schools expected in Legislature — Three weeks into the legislative session, lawmakers appear divided on the key issue of improving schools. With the Senate focused on reform and the House focused on funding, observers are predicting a “battle royale” of negotiations.
► In the Olympian — Mental health funds sought as help falls short — Momentum does seem to be building for action on mental health. But state lawmakers still haven’t paid the bill from the last time they acted.
BOEING
► In the Seattle Times — Boeing’s 787 problems blamed on outsourcing, lack of oversight — Company engineers blame the 787’s outsourced supply chain, saying that poor quality components are coming from subcontractors that have operated largely out of Boeing’s view.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Many firms plug into 787’s electrical infrastructure — The new plane’s powerful electrical system does more work than those on earlier jets and has an intricate, many-tiered chain of suppliers.
► In today’s NY Times — Japan Airlines says 787 grounding will cost it $7.5 million — In announcing the forecast loss of about $7.5 million, the Japanese carrier joined other Dreamliner operators, like All Nippon Airways and United Airlines, in raising possible compensation demands. That adds to Boeing’s woes as it struggles to find out why a battery aboard a parked 787 burst into flames and another emitted smoke while a plane was in the air last month.
LOCAL
► In the Tri-City Herald — Payout to Hanford, PNNL workers hits $1 billion — The total compensation paid to ill Hanford and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory workers or their survivors has reached $1 billion, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. The program pays $150,000 for workers who likely developed cancer because of radiation exposure or who developed chronic beryllium disease and up to $250,000 for impairment and wage loss for exposure to hazardous chemicals.
► In the Tri-City Herald — Chu, upbeat about Hanford, announces retirement from DOE — Energy Secretary Steven Chu is optimistic that issues plaguing the Hanford vitrification plant soon will be resolved, avoiding hundreds of millions of dollars in additional cost, he said in a memo Friday announcing that he was stepping down.
NATIONAL
► In today’s NY Times — Tax loopholes may be next, Obama says — The president said in a televised interview on Sunday that he could foresee a budget deal in Congress that did not include further increases in tax rates but instead focused on eliminating loopholes and deductions.
► At Huffington Post — Part-time employee health care rare ahead of Obamacare, study finds — Just 8% of part-time workers are enrolled in their company health insurance plans, according to a report released Monday that underscores the reasons for and the challenges created by Obama’s health care reform law.
► At AFL-CIO Now — Longshoremen reach East Coast port deal — The Longshoremen (ILA) and the United States Maritime Alliance have reached a tentative agreement covering some 14,000 workers in 15 East Coast ports, the Federal Mediation Service and Conciliation announced late Friday. The two sides had faced a Feb. 6 strike deadline.
IMMIGRATION
► In The Hill — Voters oppose deportations, but see border as vulnerable — A strong majority of voters (64%) oppose the deportation of people living in the United States illegally, but an equally large share of the electorate thinks that the nation’s borders are not as secure as they should be, according to the results of a new poll for The Hill.
► In Sunday’s Seattle Times — Now is the time for comprehensive immigration reform (editorial) — Prepare for a long and bumpy road to immigration reform. But also recognize the significance of this moment. For once, lawmakers are headed down a bipartisan path together on one of the biggest issues of our time. They must not slow down.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 9 a.m.