NEWS ROUNDUP
Insult to injury, Inslee steps up, Boeing profits, SOTU redux…
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
► At Think Progress — States have lost $1.76 billion after long-term unemployment benefits lapsed — The loss of benefits is now impacting 1.6 million people who have been out of work for about six months or longer and used to rely on the subsidy to get by. It also impacts the 2.3 million children living with a parent who has been out of work for 26 weeks or longer. The economy as a whole is also expected to take a big hit if the benefits aren’t restored, losing as many as 240,000 jobs and 0.2 to 0.4 percent of GDP growth.
► In the Washington Post — Democrats plan another push on unemployment insurance –Senate Democrats are eying a new proposal for a three month extension of unemployment insurance, to be paid for by a provision that Republicans previously supported.
► At Salon — ‘We’re gonna lose everything:’ One family’s urgent unemployment insurance story — “I can skip meals all the time,” unemployed secretary Kerstin Foster told Salon two weeks after losing unemployment benefits. “I just have a problem with my son skipping meals.”
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Seattle Times — Obamacare enrollment continues to climb in Washington state — More than 320,000 people have signed up for insurance or newly enrolled in Medicaid through Washington’s online health insurance exchange. Of that number, more than 86,000 are now covered by private insurance purchased through the exchange. The rest are new participants in Medicaid.
► In the P.S. Business Journal — State senator suggests abolishing Office of Insurance Commissioner — Republican state Sen. Randi Becker introduced a bill Monday that would eliminate Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler’s position as an elected official and place power over the state’s insurance industry in the hands of a board that would be largely selected by the Legislature. Kreidler says a Legislature-driven board would be more likely to “kowtow” to the insurance industry and less likely to protect consumers.
There’s a bill in the Legislature to raise the wage to $12, by dollar increments over three years. Crucially, it would apply to everyone equally, government and private, all at the same time. No, it wouldn’t solve income inequality. It wouldn’t thrill the socialists or the capitalists. But what it would be is something missing so far from this debate: fair.
ALSO at The Stand — Labor backs bill to raise state minimum wage
BOEING
► From Reuters — Boeing profits jump 26% — Boeing reported net profit that beat expectations for the fourth quarter on Wednesday, and said it expected deliveries of commercial airplanes to surge in 2014. It said net income in the quarter rose to $1.23 billion, or $1.61 a share, from $978 million, or $1.28 a share, a year earlier.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma council likes new nonunion pay hike plan — Tacoma City Council members voiced approval for giving pay raises to the city’s nonunion workforce for the first time in five years. A final decision could happen next week.
► In the Bellingham Herald — Bellingham scrutinizes tax exemptions for PeaceHealth, St. Joseph hospital — PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center is willing to consider making payments totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars per year to the city, but the hospital hopes to keep its longstanding business and occupation tax exemption intact.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Oh, thank you so much! This Catholic-affiliated “nonprofit,” which has operations indistinguishable from every other for-profit hospital in the nation is “willing to consider” paying some of the taxes that all other businesses pay. How magnanimous! For more information…
STATE OF THE UNION
► In today’s NY Times — Obama vows to act alone on U.S. economy — After five years of fractious political combat, President Obama declared independence from Congress on Tuesday as he vowed to tackle economic disparity with a series of limited initiatives on jobs, wages and retirement that he will enact without legislative approval.
► At AFL-CIO Now — The AFL-CIO’s reaction to the State of the Union — Trumka tweets: Best #SOTU to date for @BarackObama. All the right points to lift up middle class but one: collective bargaining.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Sigh. Obama said “union” twice, once referring the U.S. and once to the Soviets. Is it too much to ask for our Democratic president — and certain other Democratic leaders — to embrace organized labor as more than just an ATM? If not now, when their attention has finally turned to income inequality, then when?
► In today’s NY Times — Executive order may be only option, but it comes with limits — With some notable exceptions, only so much can be delivered through the president’s pen if he is not using it to sign legislation. He cannot raise the minimum wage for most workers, overhaul the Social Security system, grant legal status to millions of undocumented immigrants, reorder spending and taxes, or even make necessary fixes to the health care law.
► In The Hill — See you in court, says GOP — Congressional Republicans are taking President Obama to court over his use of executive power to sidestep Congress.
► In today’s NY Times — The diminished State of the Union (editorial) — With no cooperation from Congress for enacting good policy, President Obama is being forced to govern by executive order.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — McMorris Rodgers delivers calculated rebuttal to State of the Union — President Barack Obama had a case of a person helped by health care reform. Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers had a case of someone hurt by it.
► In The Onion — Dad delivers State of the Union rebuttal directly into TV screen
TODAY’S MUST-READ
EDITOR’S NOTE — Who wants to organize the Huskies and Cougs?
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.