NEWS ROUNDUP
Boeing drain, Race to the Test, transient faculty…
Monday, April 14, 2014
BOEING
► In the Seattle Times — Lonely ignored voice predicted Boeing job drain (by Danny Westneat) — Despite being given the largest state tax break in U.S. history, Boeing is shipping jobs out of the state. One guy that nobody listened to predicted it. That’s Andy Nicholas, a fiscal analyst at the Washington State Budget and Policy Center. He wasn’t against giving Boeing tax aid to build the 777X here. With so much taxpayer money at stake, though, the state should have negotiated far better protection for itself.
► In the Seattle Times — Thank you, Boeing! May we have another? (by Ron Judd) — The Lazy B, fresh from its latest round of raping and pillaging in the statehouse, has pulled the rug from beneath 1,000 engineers, informing them that, oh, by the way, your jobs are all moving to California. It’s the very sort of aerospace avarice skeptics warned about when Gov. Jay Inslee and the duct-taped coalition of hapless legislative dupes signed on to another round of massive Boeing tax breaks last year.
LOCAL
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Turnout low in first IAM general election since 1961 — Turnout has been low around metro Puget Sound, but union members who have voted “are voting overwhelmingly for the reform ticket,” said a local union staff member with District Lodge 751. “It’s going to be close,” he said, based on conversations he’s had with union officials across the country. “But it looks like the reform ticket might just win.”
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Alaska Airlines clerks win merger protection in union contract — Alaska Airlines’ union clerical and office employees (IAM) asked for better protection from any possible merger with a bigger airline, and they got it.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Dairy worker rally falls short, but message delivered — On Sunday, United Farm Workers organized an event to bring attention to what they’re calling unsanitary and abusive conditions at several dairy farms that are part of the Darigold cooperative, producing the milk that the company processes.
STATE GOVERNMENT
Most VAM studies find that teachers account for about one percent to 14 percent of the variability in test scores, and that the majority of opportunities for quality improvement are found in the system-level conditions. Ranking teachers by their VAM scores can have unintended consequences that reduce quality.
EDITOR’S NOTE — And yet, newspaper editorials throughout Washington proclaimed that legislators who voted this year against VAM in Washington state were simply capitulating to the teachers’ union, as opposed to taking a principled stand. Blame labor!
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Legislature allocates $22 million ‘down payment’ for Medicaid nursing home funding, but more is needed — In the Legislature’s supplemental budget this year, $22 million in Medicaid dollars was allocated for nursing homes: $9 million to provide more money and benefits to low-wage earners who work in the facilities, and the remainder for direct care services.
► In the Olympian — Ethics board: How much free food to allow? — How much free food and drink is too much for a state lawmaker to accept? That is, in rough terms, the question going before the Legislative Ethics Board, which polices misconduct by state lawmakers and their staffers.
OUR CRUMBLING NATION
► In today’s NY Times — Three expensive milliseconds (by Paul Krugman) — The fact that the Spread Networks tunnel was built to shave three milliseconds — three-thousandths of a second — off communication time for futures traders, while the Hudson River rail tunnel wasn’t built, tells you a lot about what’s wrong with America today. We’re giving huge sums to the financial industry while receiving little or nothing — maybe less than nothing — in return.
NATIONAL
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► From Daily Kos — This excellent new ad supporting Democratic Sen. Mark Begich’s re-election bid in Alaska is how Democrats in red states — or really, Democrats anywhere — should be running on Obamacare:
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.