NEWS ROUNDUP
Legislative training wage, ‘like ethnic cleansing,’ Hanford sequester cuts…
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
STATE GOVERNMENT
► At TVW’s Capitol Record — House Democrats offer up symbolic bill creating ‘training wage’ for legislators — House Democrats plan to introduce legislation that would create a “training wage” for freshman members of the Legislature. The largely symbolic move is a jab at a Republican-backed measure proposed in the Senate that would allow some employers to pay 75% of the minimum wage, or $6.89 and hour, for the employee’s first 680 hours. Under the plan unveiled by four House Democrats, new legislators would earn only 75% of their salary for their first two years in office. Pay would also be withheld when a legislator misses work due to an illness.
ALSO at The Stand — The Tale of Two Chambers — The latest WSLC Legislative Update describing the labor-backed bills that need votes in the Democratic-controlled House and the labor-opposed legislation alive in the republican-controlled Senate.
► At the News Tribune blog — Inslee to House Democrats: A plan is in the works to close tax loopholes to raise money for public schools — The cheering that came from the House Democratic Caucus room Tuesday morning was for Gov. Jay Inslee. He was in talking about his agenda and he indicated he plans to lay out a plan in the next couple of weeks to close tax “loopholes” that he says are obsolete in order to raise money for early childhood education and K-12 schools.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Washington’s ex-governors get into it for TV — “Two-thirds doesn’t make any sense,” said Republicans Dan Evans, the state’s only three-term governor who served from 1965-77. “You can’t let the minority run the government or the state.”
EDITOR’S NOTE — So, let’s see, when organized labor fails to support every single incumbent Democratic legislator — not even supporting Republicans over Democrats, mind you, but supporting certain Democrats over other Democrats — that kind of feels like race-based genocide? Really?! Given what certain “moderate” Democrats in the Senate have proven themselves capable of, given the opportunity, there’s a stronger case than ever to be made for supporting DIME PAC. And as for this column’s pining for Democratic “moderation” — which usually means siding with Republicans and corporate lobbying groups on labor and budget issues — let’s not forget that voters clearly don’t share the Times’ wistful nostalgia for the Roadkill Caucus’s glory days.
SEQUESTER
► From AP — Budget cuts threaten work at leaking Hanford tanks — Washington’s governor prepared to travel to the nation’s most contaminated nuclear site to learn more about leaking radioactive waste tanks there Wednesday, a day after federal officials acknowledged budget cuts may disrupt efforts to empty the aging vessels. The cuts will result in furloughs or layoffs impacting about 2,800 contract workers, the agency said.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Hey, Rep. Doc Hastings… Do your share the opinion of your Republican colleagues who dismiss sequestration cuts as “modest” or “a pittance“?
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — WSU among research universities most vulnerable to sequester — Washington State University researcher Michael Kahn is already reeling from state and federal budget cuts. Now Kahn, the associate director of the university’s Agriculture Research Center, said sequestration may cost the center $500,000.
MORE Congressional news below.
IMMIGRATION REFORM
ALSO at The Stand — 300-plus launch labor’s immigration reform campaign in Seattle
► At Politico — Immigration reform: Senate stuck on lower-skilled workers — Forget the pathway to citizenship. The real hang-up in the high-stakes immigration talks is how senators will satisfy Big Business and powerful labor unions over proposals to attract lower-skilled foreign workers into the country. They are trying to construct a new program that would allow businesses to hire lower-skilled workers once they demonstrate they cannot hire an American to fill an open job.
► At Politico — Immigration talks gain momentum — With the Senate moving full-steam ahead on a comprehensive immigration bill, House Republicans are finding their way on their own strategy meant to position Washington for reform in the 113th Congress.
LOCAL
► At the News Tribune blog — Advocacy group pegs living wage at $16.16 an hour for single person — Two advocacy groups worried about the difficulties faced by low-wage workers have produced a new Job Gap Report for 2012, documenting what they say are “broken bootstraps” that keep many workers from rising out of poverty.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — CH2M Hill to pay $18.5 million for timecard fraud — CH2M Hill Hanford Group has admitted to federal, civil and criminal violations for defrauding the public through years of widespread timecard fraud.
BOEING
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — ANA repaired 3 burnt circuit boards before 787’s grounding — All Nippon Airways Co., the biggest operator of Boeing Co. 787s, repaired three damaged circuit boards last year on Dreamliners, the aircraft that was grounded worldwide this year after lithium-ion batteries caught fire.
CONGRESS
► In today’s Washington Post — House bill would extend federal pay freeze through end of year — Federal employee salary rates would remain frozen through 2013 under a bill the House plans to start considering Wednesday. The bill would replace a temporary funding measure that expires March 27; without new budget authority, a partial government shutdown would go into effect.
► From AP — Bill to avert government shutdown fast-tracked in House — The House on Wednesday will fast-track a bill to keep the government funded through the current fiscal year. It will incorporate the lower funding amounts mandated by sequestration.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Boehner says the fast-tracking is snow-related, but TPM reports it has more to do with quelling the opposition.
► In The Hill — House GOP to shift focus from cuts to consider bill on job-training programs — House Republicans will move off their relentless focus on spending cuts next week to consider a bill aimed at improving and streamlining federal worker training programs. Republican leaders said Tuesday they would bring to the floor the Supporting Knowledge and Investing in Lifelong Skills (SKILLS) Act, which would reauthorize a Clinton-era workforce investment law while consolidating dozens of job-training programs.
NATIONAL
► Newsflash! From AP — Report: We wasted a ton of money in Iraq — Ten years and $60 billion in American taxpayer funds later, Iraq is still so unstable and broken that even its leaders question whether U.S. efforts to rebuild the war-torn nation were worth the cost.
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► From the Onion — Romney blames loss on successfully communicating his message to minorities
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.