NEWS ROUNDUP
Transportation 2, AIM in IAM, our fast-food fight, class airfare…
Thursday, August 8, 2013
STATE GOVERNMENT
EDITOR’S NOTE — It’s about time.
► In today’s Columbian — CRC supporters send governors their plan to revive project — The letter, signed by a group of nearly 80 business leaders and other CRC supporters, asked the two governors to salvage at least part of the $3.4 billion plan, declared dead a month ago after Washington lawmakers failed to commit funding. To bring it back to life, supporters want Oregon to take the lead on the project. They hope to use money already lined up to build a new I-5 Bridge between Vancouver and Portland — with light rail — but without approval from the Washington Legislature.
EDITOR’S NOTE: State and Clark County government employee Don Benton reacts: “This is a clear indication that government is totally out of control.”
► In today’s Olympian — Time for retire-rehire to end in state (editorial) — If state law allows collecting a public pension and a publicly funded salary at the same time, no one can blame the employee for taking advantage. It’s the law that has to change.
► In today’s News Tribune — Port work doesn’t deserve Gov. Inslee’s obstruction (by UTU’s Herb Krohn) — The state of Washington has an opportunity to expand our ports and to secure the region’s position as a global trade leader for decades. But Gov. Jay Inslee’s request a comprehensive review (read delay) of the effects the items being exported have on the world’s climate caters to those who want to not just delay, but kill these projects and deny thousands of people construction employment as well as the many hundreds of permanent good middle-class working class jobs they will create.
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Workers at AIM Aerospace vote to join Machinists union — Workers at AIM Aerospace in Sumner have voted to join the Machinists District 751. The vote covers more than 250 workers at the AIM plant. The company designs and manufactures a variety of airplane interior components such as lavatories and stow-bins.
ALSO see coverage at IAM 751’s website.
► From Reuters — ILWU sues Port of Portland for $200,000 records search — The ILWU claims the port violated the Oregon Public Records Act by charging the union $200,000 for public records searches. The union submitted public records requests in June, September and December 2012. It said it was charged “arbitrary and excessive” fees to find the records and told further fees would be assessed for lawyers to review and segregate the records before release.
► In today’s Oregonian — Union-supported Oregon group files another flurry of proposed tax initiatives — Our Oregon, the political group supported by unions and several other liberal organizations, has filed four more potential tax initiatives — including two that would raise personal income taxes on the well-to-do.
FAST-FOOD WORKERS
► In The Atlantic — More than a quarter of fast-food workers are raising a child — According to recent census data almost 40% of fast food workers are 25 or older; more than 30% have at least some college experience; and more than a quarter are parents.
► Last night on “The Colbert Show” — SEIU President Mary Kay Henry explains why her union’s members support the fast-food strikes:
NATIONAL
► In today’s St. Louis Post-Dispatch — Legislators head to Chicago for ALEC retreat — The group is a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit that promotes free-market and conservative proposals. In addition to mostly Republican legislators, its members include representatives from major corporations. Its model legislation that has made its way to capitals across the country.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Know of legislators from Washington state who are attending this event? Let us know!
► In The Hill — AFL-CIO leader blasts Obama’s tax plan — While he did not mention Obama’s tax plan or the president by name, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said it was wrong to offer a tax plan that wouldn’t amount to a hike on corporations and argued that any tax reform should generate revenue for the government.
ALSO at The Stand — Trumka calls for ‘revenue positive’ corporate tax reform
► From AP — SF bus union says deal reached; no strike — Drivers, dispatchers and other workers for a San Francisco Bay Area bus system reached a tentative agreement with their employer late Tuesday, avoiding a strike that threatened to affect hundreds of thousands of commuters. On Wednesday, a special board is scheduled to hear testimony about a separate labor dispute involving Bay Area Rapid Transit that resulted in a 4 1/2-day strike last month and is threatening another one that could strand many of BART’s estimated 400,000 daily riders.
► At TPM — How immigration reform can still pass Congress — Despite the long odds, Democrats see a narrow road through which comprehensive immigration reform could still pass both houses of Congress and become law. But the road is murky and full of landmines.
► A related story in The Hill — Poll: Congress doesn’t deserve a break — More than eight in 10 voters say Congress should not be spending a month away from Washington.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.