NEWS ROUNDUP
87% for $15, Doc fail, Mahna Mahna…
Friday, March 21, 2014
MINIMUM WAGE
► In The Nation — An 87 percent vote for $15-an-hour minimum wage — Political insiders and prognosticators at the national level were, barely a year ago, casting doubts on the question of whether proposing a great big hike in the federal minimum wage was smart politics. Polls have since confirmed that Americans from across the political and ideological spectrum are overwhelmingly in favor of a substantial increase in the minimum wage.
Now comes a powerful signal from Chicago. When voters in the city went to the polls to cast ballots in Tuesday’s statewide and local primary elections, thousands of them faced an economic question: Would they support a $15-an-hour minimum wage for large employers in the city? The results were overwhelming: 87 percent of voters were backing the $15-an-hour wage. Just 13 percent voted against the advisory referendum.
LOCAL
► From the Public News Service — New union members for Seattle Community College — SCC has become the fourth community or technical college in the state where employees in a variety of administrative roles have decided to bargain collectively for their wages and benefits. They’ll be part of AFT Washington, after a vote last week to form a union.
ALSO at The Stand — SCC exempt employees unionize with AFT
EDITOR’S NOTE — But alas, all colossal failures must come to an end…
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Hanford river area could get biggest cut — About $71 million would be cut from the budget to perform environmental cleanup work along the Columbia River under the administration’s fiscal 2015 Hanford budget request. Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell and Rep. Doc Hastings said earlier this month that they were concerned that the administration’s proposal to Congress for Hanford funding was low.
► In today’s Seattle Times — One angle in NTSB investigation: how copter pilot balanced 2 jobs — Federal investigators trying to determine the cause of the fatal crash of a Seattle news helicopter said Thursday they will be examining the pilot’s recent history for factors that could contribute to fatigue. Investigators want to understand how pilot Gary Pfitzner, who died in the Tuesday crash, balanced his two jobs — early mornings in the helicopter followed by work as a technical analyst at Boeing.
► In the News Tribune — Anthony Abeyta (1927-2014) — Anthony (Tony) Abeyta, 87, passed away at his home in Bonney Lake on March 6. Tony is survived by his loving wife Judith of 44 years. He worked as a meat cutter for 27 years before becoming President of UFCW Local 81 for 14 years. A memorial service honoring Tony’s life will be held at Sacred Heart Church in Enumclaw on Wednesday, March 26 at 1 p.m.
WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
AEROSPACE
► In today’s LA Times — Newly merged American Airlines faces labor problems — The merger of American Airlines and US Airways was unusual when it was proposed last year because it seemed to have the support of all the major employee unions involved. But one of the biggest unions for US Airways (IAM) is threatening to strike, and the group now has the support of its union brothers and sisters from American Airlines.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — New aerospace manufacturer plans up to 150 jobs in Airway Heights — A sheet metal fabrication company based in Kent, announced that it will bring a new 150,000-square-foot plant to Airway Heights. Exotic Metals Forming Co. could employ up to 150 people once the plant is in operation.
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Boeing cranking out more 737s in Renton (brief) — Boeing said it’s now increased its 737 production rate at its Renton manufacturing facility to 42 planes per month.
IMMIGRATION REFORM
► In today’s News Tribune — Rep. Adam Smith speaks with detainees amid hunger strike at Tacoma immigration center — A Washington congressman visited detainees Thursday who recently took part in a hunger strike to protest conditions at the federal immigration detention center in Tacoma.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s NY Times — Koch group, spending freely, hones attack on government — Americans for Prosperity, backed by the Koch brothers, is using a data-driven approach as it pursues its overarching goal of changing the way voters think about government.
► In today’s NY Times — Suppressing the vote (editorial) — A misguided federal court ruling opens the door to more anti-voting laws.
► In today’s NY Times — The timidity trap (by Paul Krugman) — Policy makers have good ideas in principle for tackling terrible economic conditions, yet they consistently go for half-measures in practice and kill all hope.
NATIONAL
► In today’s NY Times — A livelihood in nuclear waste, under threat — The Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, the nation’s only permanent underground repository for nuclear weapons waste, revived Carlsbad, N.M. But it has been closed since a leak. Rick Fuentes, president of the local USW chapter that represents several hundred employees here, said the longer the facility remained closed, the more people worried.
► At AFL-CIO Now — Hip-hop star Common to perform in support of Nissan workers — He is performing as part of a free show in support of workers who are organizing for a voice on the job at the Nissan plant in Canton, Miss. The workers are pushing for a vote to organize as part of the UAW. Common will be joined on stage by actor Danny Glover and local musicians and leaders.
► In today’s Washington Post — Income inequality isn’t about the rich — it’s about the rest of us (by Catherine Rampell) — Populist rhetoric is leaving U.S. billionaires feeling persecuted, vilified and begrudged their hard-won fortunes. But it’s not the growing wealth of the wealthy that Americans are angry about. It’s the growing wealth of the wealthy set against the stagnation or deterioration of living standards for everyone else.
T.G.I.F.
► In honor of today’s opening of Muppets Most Wanted, the Entire Staff of The Stand presents the Muppets’ classic performance of “Mahna Mahna,” a song that made its first appearance in 1968 in a Swedish film about weird sexual behavior in that country.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.