NEWS ROUNDUP
$15 soon, May Day, Mary Yu, big Newton…
Friday, May 2, 2014
MINIMUM WAGE
ALSO TODAY at the Stand — $15 minimum wage plan hailed in Seattle
► In The Stranger — Why labor supports this Seattle minimum wage compromise — So while the phase-in period is complicated — complicated enough to make enforcement really tricky — the movement is in the right direction, and this agreement has buy in from a wide-reaching coalition. Is it fast enough? Maybe not for everybody. But for a movement that was just pounding the pavement a year ago, trying to get reporters to show up outside Subways and Taco Bells and listen to striking workers, this probably feels like hyperspeed.
MAY DAY
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Turnout, enthusiasm low for Yakima’s May Day March — Hundreds turned out for Yakima’s ninth annual march, but attendance was well below the thousands of participants seen in other years. Yakima resident Gerardo Lemus, 46, the son of farm workers, said some supporters lacked the enthusiasm to march because they don’t see any end in sight. “They’re losing hope,” Lemus said. “Every year, Obama or Congress says something will get done. Every year, nothing happens.”
STATE GOVERNMENT
LOCAL
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — First responders honored for work at Oso mudslide — Snohomish County Executive John Lovick read a proclamation declaring Thursday a time to honor first responders “whose sacrifice can never be repaid.” Inside the Oso Fire Hall were medics and firefighters from around the county. The gathering served as a reunion for many of those who worked together after the deadly March 22 mudslide.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — ACA saves former Spokane Symphony director from economic disaster (by Shawn Vestal) — After several years without health insurance, John Hancock — the former director of the Spokane Symphony — signed up for coverage under Obamacare not long before being hit with chest pains announcing that he needed heart-valve surgery. He showed up at a cardiologist’s office March 5 with a brand-new insurance plan. “They said, we’ve got to fix this right away,” Hancock said. One six-day hospital stay later, his heart is all fixed up — with a new valve — and he’s mostly recovered. Crucially, the cost didn’t bankrupt him.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — Meanwhile, amid all this employer-driven nonsense about a shortage of skilled engineers, insufficient H-1B visas and the need for better STEM education, The Boeing Co. is about to lay off thousands of its Puget Sound-area engineers and send their jobs to other states in an effort that even their sycophants at The Seattle Times acknowledge is simply to suppress wages.
► At CNN Money — Subway leads fast food industry in underpaying workers — McDonald’s gets a lot of bad press for its low pay. But there’s an even bigger offender when it comes to fast food companies underpaying their employees: Subway. Individual Subway franchisees have been found in violation of pay and hour rules in more than 1,100 investigations spanning from 2000 to 2013, according to a CNNMoney analysis.
► In The Hill — Oil-rich North Dakota sees highest worker fatality rate — The 2012 rate of 17.7 fatalities per 100,000 employees was a large increase from the 7 deaths per 100,000 in 2007, before the energy boom started.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
T.G.I.F.
► You’ve probably never heard of Newton Faulkner. The Entire Staff of The Stand™ has heard and liked some of his songs, in particular the excellent “Gone in the Morning.” But he has never really caught on in the United States. So, watch as he sends this massive English crowd into an absolute frenzy by playing a song alone on his acoustic guitar. It helps that it’s that song. And the crowd looks pretty drunk. But still…
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.