NEWS ROUNDUP
Private sector efficiency, ILWU lockouts, Boeing silence…
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
NOTE: Coverage of the Republican government shutdown is here.
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
► From AP — WA health exchange website hits snag on first day — The website for Washington state’s new health exchange got off to a rough start Tuesday, going offline for nearly six hours after officials shut it down to assess why it was operating so slowly. A spokesman said at midday Tuesday that the problem was not related to the volume of visitors or to the federal government shutdown. The wahealthplanfinder.org website opened again for business at around 2 p.m.
► In The Hill — A rocky start for Obamacare enrollment — Technical setbacks appeared to be rampant in the new exchanges, hampering users’ ability to enroll. Several of the sites were inaccessible during the day.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Olympian — State, unions reach health care deal that includes wellness — Negotiators for more than two dozen public-sector labor unions and Gov. Jay Inslee struck an agreement late Tuesday that largely maintains current benefits and worker share of health care costs. Both parties say details remain to be worked out on a wellness plan that would steer workers toward more healthful activities and lower costs.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand:
State employee unions reach tentative deal on health benefits
State employee health care deal looks like win-win for both sides (by Brendan Williams)
LOCAL
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Hospital pickets protest cutbacks — Dozens of protesters picketed Deaconess and Valley hospitals on Tuesday, accusing management of staff cuts that affect patient care. Some nurses (SEIU Healthcare 1199NW) worry that shrinking staff has forced them into administrative duties such as answering phones and processing orders rather than caring for patients. (Also see coverage from KHQ TV.)
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Some farmers say coal terminal would benefit agriculture — A number of Mid-Columbia farmers showed support for a proposed Western Washington coal export terminal, saying it would benefit agriculture at a Tuesday hearing in Pasco. About 250 people attended the hearing at the TRAC center to weigh in on an environmental study for the facility, the third of five planned hearings on the Millennium Bulk Terminals project.
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Bellingham Technical College board approves contracts reached during strike — Bellingham Technical College finalized contract agreements late Monday, Sept. 30, with two unions that represent the college’s faculty and classified, clerical, technical, instructional and retail support staff.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Millennium coal terminal review ahead of schedule, officials say — Commissioners approved a new agreement with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Tuesday, acknowledging that the corps will now do its own environmental report on the proposed terminal west of Longview.
► In today’s News Tribune — 16 deputies lose jobs at Pierce County Jail — Sixteen corrections deputies at the Pierce County Jail were laid off effective Wednesday as part of a $3 million budget cut.
AEROSPACE
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing’s economic impact on state estimated at $70B — As a preface to the campaign to win local work on the next Boeing jet, a new report commissioned by advocates for the aerospace industry estimates the jet-maker directly and indirectly injected $70 billion into the local economy last year.
NATIONAL
► In The Hill — House Dems to roll out immigration package — The bill reportedly will be similar to a package passed through the Senate earlier this year that included a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.