NEWS ROUNDUP
Internet revenue, Vancouver project, ‘safe’ death traps…
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Transportation tax package clears first hurdle — Democrats steered an $8.4 billion transportation package out of the House Transportation Committee on Monday. The proposal relies mostly on higher car tab fees and a 10-cent gas tax hike to pay for roads, bridges, ferries and transit services throughout the state.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Pollution rules delayed after Boeing talks — Entering her final year in office, former Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire found herself in a difficult spot. Indian tribes, powerful supporters of the governor, wanted stricter water pollution rules. Meanwhile, her powerful supporters in the aerospace industry – spearheaded by Boeing Co. – were dead set against tightening the rules. Aerospace won.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — The false promise of education reform (by Brendan Williams) — In addition to unfunded reforms imposed upon an underfunded system, last year’s ballot brought an unfunded charter school initiative. Let’s fund our existing obligations before creating new ones. Let’s also learn from the Rhee debacle in D.C. before we create pressures to pad test scores and further reduce young learners to mere letters. Kids like mine should not be guinea pigs for social science experiments.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune – Winners of Tacoma longshore lottery announced — The long-awaited list of the 226 people chosen in an April 8 lottery drawing to be available for entry-level Tacoma Longshore Union work is now available at the websites of the Pacific Maritime Association and ILWU Local 23.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Teachers union says they’ve been shut out of merger talks — Longview’s teachers had a clear message Monday for school board members considering closing Mark Morris High School: Scrap the plan and start over.
► In today’s Seattle Times — In historic vote, Bellevue approves light-rail route — The Bellevue City Council endorses a route for Link light-rail trains, more than four years after voters approved higher sales taxes to build three suburban lines.
BOEING
► From AP — Testing of malfunctioning 787 batteries by NTSB continues — As airlines prepare to resume flying Boeing’s beleaguered 787 Dreamliners, federal investigators looked Tuesday at how regulators and the company tested and approved the plane’s cutting-edge battery system, and whether the government cedes too much safety-testing authority to aircraft makers.
NATIONAL
ALSO at The Stand — End death traps: Hear Sumi’s story about Bangladesh garment factories — Forums TODAY (Tuesday) at 9 a.m. in the Columbia Room of the Legislative Building in Olympia and at 6 p.m. in Room 260 of the University of Washington’s Savery Hall. Action TOMORROW at 10 a.m. outside Renton’s Walmart.
► A related story from Reuters — Walmart CEO’s pay jumps 14.7% to $20.7 million — Wal-Mart Stores Inc said on Monday that members of its board’s audit committee were paid more for the latest year due to extra work they had to take on to handle an ongoing investigation into alleged foreign bribery.
EDITOR’S NOTE — You just can’t make this shit up.
► In today’s NY Times — Flights delayed amid furloughs of air traffic controllers — Flights were delayed by up to two hours across the country on Monday, the first weekday that the nation’s air traffic control system operated with 10 percent fewer controllers. Pilots, gate agents and others were quick to blame furloughs caused by mandatory across-the-board budget cuts, but the FAA said it was too soon to tell.
ALSO see the press release from the coalition flight attendant unions.
► At Huffington Post — Texas fertilizer plant’s hazards eluded regulators for nearly 30 years — No institution sounded the alarm, even as fertilizer piled up inside the plant, creating a potentially deadly tinderbox in close proximity to the town. No one effectively prepared for the emergency that eventually materialized, leaving this community uniquely vulnerable to the tragedy that unfolded last week when the plant caught fire and exploded, killing 14 people and ripping apart an apartment building, a school and dozens of homes.
► In The Hill — National security concerns in wake of bombing may delay immigration bill — Leading Republicans say the bill falls short in the area of national security, an argument that has gained political momentum in the aftermath of the bombing in Boston.
► In today’s Washington Post — Sen. Max Baucus to retire in 2014 — Adds Huffington Post: Voted Against DREAM Act, Background Checks… Sided With Banks… Backed Bush Tax Cuts… Linked To Lobbyists… ‘The Max Baucus Health Care Lobbyist Complex’… Recommended Girlfriend For Federal Job… Delayed Health Care Reform, Ditched Public Option Supporters, Negotiated BIG PHARMA Deal
TODAY’S MUST-READ
UPDATE — Westboro didn’t show up, but hundreds of Teamsters and their families did. See the video.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.