NEWS ROUNDUP
Budget or else, Belshaw strike, food stamp cuts, ‘Crazy’ solo…
Friday, June 21, 2013
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Layoffs, closed parks, no lottery without budget deal — The governor’s office offered a preview of what might occur if legislators fail to reach budget agreement and a partial government shutdown ensues. State parks will close, the lottery will halt, and most convicted criminals will be monitored less closely outside prison walls if Washington is forced to cease many of its operations July 1. Those are among the hundreds of programs and services which would be halted or scaled back.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Lawmakers say deal on budget close — “We are going to finish on Sunday,” Senate Majority Leader Rodney Tom (D-Medina) predicted. House leaders were less specific about when a deal could be reached, but Speaker Frank Chopp (D-Seattle) said a morning of what he called shuttle diplomacy had produced “a good exchange of offers.”
► In the Yakima H-R — Wait no longer and get budget deal approved (editorial) — Republicans appear willing to drop some of their policy changes, such as workers compensation reform… they shouldn’t stand in the way of a budget agreement at this late juncture.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Tuition hikes squeeze middle-class students — The state’s middle-class college students, whose families make too much money for them to qualify for financial aid, say they’re increasingly feeling the squeeze from years of double-digit tuition increases.
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Support Belshaw strikers in Auburn (June13) — Help striking Belshaw workers win their fight for justice by sending a message to Belshaw Adamatic Bakery Group. Click here to tell them to stop their unfair treatment of Local 79 members and negotiate a fair agreement.
FARM BILL
► At AFL-CIO Now — House extremists: Starve the poor — If anyone still has questions about just exactly how much extremist House Republicans loathe low-income families, they got answers last night when the U.S. House voted down its agriculture spending bill in a 195 to 234 vote.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Ag groups concerned as farm bill defeated — Central Washington agriculture groups expressed disappointment — and frustration — over Thursday’s failure of the 2013 farm bill in the House of Representatives. U.S. Rep. Doc Hastings issued a statement blaming Democrats, saying the minority opposed the bill because it “reformed” food stamps. (Our quotes.)
NATIONAL
► At Huffington Post — Paid sick leave supported by most Americans, poll finds — Seventy-four percent of Americans said that employers should be required to offer paid sick leave, while 18 said they shouldn’t be required to do so, the poll found. Another 9% said they weren’t sure. Unlike in most other developed countries, there is no federal law in the U.S. mandating that employers let workers accrue paid sick leave, although such laws have surfaced on the state and local level in recent years.
ALSO sat The Stand — Tacoma paid sick days campaign kicks off
► In today’s NY Times — Profits without production (by Paul Krugman) — Whether corporations like Apple deserve their privileged status or not, the economy is affected, and not in a good way, when profits increasingly reflect market power rather than production.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
What the Gallup survey makes clear is that the easiest way to make life better in the workplace is the simplest: all those unctuous, self-important, clueless bosses out there could notice the toiling subordinate who’s been taking up space for many years. Fake it, if you have to, just to see what it feels like.
T.G.I.F.
► Last week we shared a performance by America on Burt Sugarman’s “The Midnight Special,” a TV show that aired late Friday nights in the 1970s. Bands would actually perform their hits live on the show rather than lip-synch, as was standard practice back in the day. Well, here’s another clip from that program. The Entire Staff of The Stand presents Seattle’s own Heart performing “Crazy On You” and featuring a terrific extended guitar intro by Nancy Wilson. Enjoy!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.