NEWS ROUNDUP
Primary results, furloughs cut, CRC revived, ‘open’ AFL-CIO…
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
PRIMARY ELECTION
EDITOR’S NOTE — This result is good news for Schlicher, given the huge name-recognition advantage of veteran politician Angel over newcomer Schlicher, an emergency room physician and first-time legislator. Turnout will be higher in the general election and Schlicher has already gained significant ground from earlier polls. When more working people in the district find out about Rep. Jan Angel, Washington state’s co-chair of the notorious anti-labor ALEC corporate bill mill, Schlicher will continue to gain. What is ALEC’s agenda, you ask?
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Brown has huge lead in State Senate race — Incumbent Sharon Brown led the vote count Tuesday for the 8th Legislative District in the State Senate and appears to be a heavy favorite to win in November. Brown, who was appointed senator earlier this year, lead the three-person race with 59%. Richland City Councilman Phillip Lemley (the WSLC’s endorsed candidate) was in second place with 22%.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Yakima voters pass measure to fund road construction — A measure requiring the city of Yakima to earmark at least $2 million of its general fund annually to repair and rebuild roads passed Tuesday by a huge margin despite little campaigning by proponents.
► In today’s Seattle Times — November showdown looms for Murray, McGinn — Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn survived a hard-fought primary Tuesday and is headed to a November runoff against state Sen. Ed Murray. Murray led the nine-way race with more than 30% of the vote, to McGinn’s 27%.
LOCAL
► From Reuters — Pentagon reduces mandatory furloughs of civilian workers — U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel announced Tuesday that he was slashing the amount of unpaid leave 650,000 civilian employees were ordered to take this year to six days from 11 in an effort to limit the pain from across-the-board budget cuts. The decision means most civilian defense employees, who saw their pay effectively cut by 20 percent, will complete their furloughs next week.
► In today’s Oregonian — In Oregon, talks emerge to salvage the once-left-for-dead Columbia River Crossing — The Columbia River Crossing, declared dead a month ago, is quietly rising from the ashes as proponents scramble to salvage the controversial highway, bridge and light-rail complex. Patricia McCaig, head of CRC intergovernmental affairs and government relations, confirmed Tuesday that Oregon planners are trying to resurrect the $3.4 billion project, thought dead after the Washington Legislature failed to contribute Olympia’s $450 million share.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Port of Seattle OKs bond sale for tunnel project — Port commissioners voted Tuesday to make good on the agency’s pledge four years ago to contribute $231 million toward replacing the old Alaskan Way Viaduct, a total $3.1 billion task, including streets and interchanges.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Spokane city budget proposal adds 25 police officers — A new Spokane police officer costs exactly $100,000 per year, and Mayor David Condon thinks he’s found a way to pay for 25 of them without going to the voters.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Sen. Patty Murray offers progress report on matching vets to jobs — Washington Sen. Patty Murray has tackled the issue through the 2011 VOW to Hire Heroes Act. Its goal is to put veterans back to work by providing job skills training and making certification easier.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From AP — Lawmakers say they’re not delaying school dollars — A group of Democratic lawmakers say they are not trying to push back the deadline for implementing school funding reform.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — The Obama administration has the power to make adjustments to alter unintended ObamaCare consequences, without Congressional approval. In their single-minded quest for total repeal, House Republicans vow not to allow any such “fixes.” So… Obama could make good on his pre-ObamaCare promise to organized labor that union members could keep the health plans they bargained for, if they wanted. The president could fix the glitch in ObamaCare’s interpretation of multi-employer Taft-Hartley trusts, which cover many union members, and allow them to have the same tax subsidies as other qualified health-care providers. Fix it, Mr. President!
► From AP — Rising tax revenue eases pressure for budget cuts — Rising tax receipts are shrinking the federal deficit, and that will shape the budget debate when Congress returns from vacation next month. The big question for lawmakers: Should they renew, end or modify the tens of billions of dollars in “sequester” cuts in government spending that took effect earlier this year?
► From Bloomberg — Public pensions up 12%, get most in 2 years as stocks soar — The funds chalked up an annualized three-year median return of 11.4 percent while their assets surpassed a pre-recession peak to reach $2.9 trillion, according to U.S. Census Bureau figures. “I’d be happy,” said Bob Waid, a managing director at Wilshire Associates. “We’ve had a pretty good three-year run.”
► From NPR — Pentagon cuts workers’ mandated furloughs from 11 to 6 days — Civilian workers for the Department of Defense will have to take six mandatory unpaid furlough days instead of 11 days, the Pentagon confirmed Tuesday.
► In today’s Washington Post — House GOP’s bill feels like abuse to workers (by Joe Davidson) — When the House left town last week for its summer vacation, Republican members left behind a little something so the federal workforce wouldn’t forget them. It’s the Stop Government Abuse Act, but federal workers might be forgiven if they feel abused.
AFL-CIO
Established in 1993, LAANE is the think tank, policy arm, and, on occasion, political organizer for the Los Angeles labor movement. Over the past 20 years, it has become the nation’s most innovative and effective force for raising the incomes of low-wage private-sector workers. No other think tank has come up with more ways to leverage the powers of municipal government to create higher pay for America’s working class. No other community-organizing group has built more effective labor-environmental-neighborhood alliances. No other lobbyist has a better record of persuading elected officials to enact not just progressive legislation but the kind of progressive legislation that no one has ever before enacted.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.