NEWS ROUNDUP
Projects held hostage, Republic solidarity, shall we Scrap the Cap…
Thursday, April 18, 2013
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Columbian — Current, former Vancouver mayors urge support for CRC — Vancouver Mayor Tim Leavitt and two of his predecessors this week urged state lawmakers to support the Columbia River Crossing.
► In today’s News Tribune — Transportation agenda is critical in 2013 session (by Rep. Jake Fey) — I have no illusions about the political minefield through which this Connecting Washington proposal must now make its way before the end of session. But no one said it would be easy. There have and will be long hours hammering out compromises in the weeks ahead. That being said, with what is at stake for the future of Washington, this job is simply far too important to kick down the road.
► In today’s News Tribune — Group expects 600,000 in state to qualify for health care credits — Nearly 600,000 Washington residents will be eligible for premium tax credits to help defray the cost of medical care when the the Affordable Care Act goes into effect early next year, according to a new report from the consumer group Families USA.
► From AP — Senators seek changes in pension, medical costs — Under a bill sponsored by six senators, lawmakers would develop a voluntary risk pool for local governments to help manage the medical costs of the retirees in an old pension system called LEOFF-1.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Things get testy with adjournment looming in Olympia — You will be hard-pressed to find a representative, senator or lobbyist not expecting or preparing for a special session when this one concludes April 28.
► In today’s Daily News — Citing health concerns, DeBolt resigns House leadership post — Washington House Minority Leader Richard DeBolt has stepped down from his leadership post because of unspecified health problems but will finish the remainder of his term through 2014.
► At PubliCola — Voters in 48th frowning on Sen. Tom’s re-election — Results from a recent poll shows that voters in the 48th legislative district—the long contested Microsoft suburbs—are leaning to the left, as it has been for the last decade, and that they aren’t very fond of state Sen. Rodney Tom, who joined with the Republicans this year, ousting the Democratic majority, to become the leader of the Majority Coalition Caucus.
► In today’s News Tribune — As special session looms, Sen. Tom suggests statewide budget tour
EDITOR’S NOTE — Maybe his tour will head south, pause due to traffic at the I-5 bridge to Oregon, and just keep going.
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Local garbage drivers honor Allied/Republic picket lines in Ohio
AND in today’s Cleveland Sun News — Garbage strike, work stoppages continue, spread — The work stoppage started Monday at Republic’s hauling yards in Cleveland and Elyria. Workers at those hauling yards stopped working in support of striking workers at Republic’s landfill in Youngstown, who have been on strike since March 27.
► From AP — Washington state’s unemployment rate drops to 7.3% in March — Washington state’s unemployment rate dropped to 7.3 percent in March, the lowest rate in more than four years, but the state still saw a net loss of 5,500 jobs from the prior month.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Why does jobless rate fall even when jobs are lost? (by Jon Talton) — Economists aren’t sure about the reasons. Part of it may be demographic: Older baby boomers are taking early retirements. Then there’s the mismatch between workers and skills, causing many to drop out officially, even though they would still like work.
► In today’s Seattle Times — AARP: Washington boomers ill-prepared for retirement — While most boomers say they’ve tried to cut spending, they simply don’t have enough money coming in; 80 percent of those surveyed said they hadn’t saved enough for retirement because of a “lack of extra money.” Other reasons boomers haven’t saved enough include: the recession/job insecurity; focus on short term; lack of discipline; and medical costs.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Budget boost possible for some Hanford work in 2014 — Work at Hanford’s tank farms and Plutonium Finishing Plant would ramp up under the Obama administration’s proposed budget for fiscal 2014.
IMMIGRATION REFORM
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Labor leaders vow to strengthen, support Senate immigration bill
► In today’s NY Times — Conservatives see a turning tide on immigration — Even some of the right-wing talk show hosts most vehemently opposed to illegal immigration said they were worried that times have changed. They said their listeners seemed less agitated by the prospect that 11 million illegal immigrants might be granted legal status and concede that proponents of the legislation — who now include some conservative radio personalities — are better at promoting their message this time around.
► At Politico — Gang of Eight aims to stop conservative attacks — Republicans’ hope is to define the measure as a workable compromise on a highly complex issue, one that will help broaden the GOP’s reach to Latino and moderate voters.
NATIONAL
► Breaking from AP — Frantic search after deadly blast in Waco — Rescue workers searched the smoldering ruins of a fertilizer plant Thursday for survivors of a monstrous explosion that leveled homes and businesses in every direction across the Texas prairie. As many as 15 people were feared dead and more than 160 others injured.
ALSO at The Stand — Congress broke U.S. Postal Service, and now must fix it
► At Politico — Poll: Most Americans say redistribute wealth — Only 33% of Americans think the current distribution of wealth in this country is fair, according to a new Gallup Poll, while 59% say it is not. Fifty-two percent said the United States should redistribute wealth through heavy taxes on the rich.
► From Reuters — How a student took on eminent economists on debt — and won — When Thomas Herndon, a student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s doctoral program in economics, spotted what he believed were glaring errors made by two eminent Harvard economists in an influential research paper, he called his girlfriend over for a second look. “I almost didn’t believe my eyes when I saw just the basic spreadsheet error,” said Herndon, 28. “I was like, am I just looking at this wrong? There has to be some other explanation. So I asked my girlfriend, ‘Am I seeing this wrong?’ ”
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.