NEWS ROUNDUP
Eyman sans business, grain talks, best worst president…
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
ELECTION
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Washington gets reprieve from Eyman initiatives (editorial) — Tim Eyman often refers to Olympia’s “insatiable” desire for tax dollars, but he exaggerates the state’s level of taxation and revenue collection. Because of the Great Recession, the Legislature cut $11 billion over several budget sessions. Lower tax collections also led to large state college tuition increases and a hefty annual fee to visit state parks. From 2001-2011, only seven states limited spending more than Washington, and the tax burden has dropped relative to previous decades. In 1990, state revenue collection was about 7 percent of total personal income. In 2013, it was below 5 percent, according to the State Economic Revenue and Forecast Council.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Congressional forum stokes Tea Party issues — Six of the eight Republicans seeking to replace Doc Hastings in Congress offered plenty of red meat for the staunchly conservative audience at a Yakima candidate forum Tuesday. Protecting gun rights, impeaching Obama, cutting federal agency budgets and strictly interpreting the U.S. Constitution came up again and again throughout the two-hour forum.
STATE GOVERNMENT
LOCAL
► In today’s Oregonian — Federal mediator calls ILWU, grain handlers to Portland area to renew talks — Negotiations between the ILWU and the Pacific Maritime Association, whose members operate West Coast ports, are on a three-day break so the union can negotiate with a group of Northwest grain handlers. The union is bargaining with “grain employers Louis Dreyfus Commodities, Marubeni-Columbia Grain and Mitsui-United Grain,” said a union spokesperson. Relations between the union and the companies have been chilled since longshore workers were locked out by United Grain and Columbia Grain more than a year ago.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In The Hill — Lawmakers hit the gas to save highway fund — A sense of urgency took hold in the Capitol on Tuesday, as lawmakers ramped up work on legislation to prevent states from suffering a 28 percent cut in transportation funding next month. But even with the burst of activity, top tax writers in both the House and the Senate stopped short of saying they had a deal that would avert sidelining thousands of construction workers in the heat of an election year.
► At Think Progress — How corporate tax cheats still get billions in government business — Despite supposed bans on companies that move offshore to avoid paying U.S. taxes getting federal contracts, more than a dozen large offshored companies get more than $1 billion a year from government work, according to a Bloomberg News investigation.
► In today’s NY Times — Obama asks for $3.7 billion to aid border — The request quickly became entangled in the fierce political debate over immigration: Republicans said they could not immediately support Obama’s request, given what they called his administration’s failure to secure the Mexican border after years of illegal crossings. Obama could face resistance from members of his own party as well.
► At Politico — Obama’s warning: ‘Right-size’ immigration expectations — Just after President Barack Obama had finally soothed frustrated immigrant-rights activists by vowing to use his executive power to patch the immigration system, he issued a plea of his own to the group assembled at the White House. “We need to right-size expectations,” Obama said.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Really? Somebody thinks it’s a good idea for the president to use corporate-speak associated with mitigating PR fallout from mass layoffs to temper expectations on immigration reform?! That’s definitely not the “creative breakthrough” in messaging that Obama needs to stay relevant.
► In today’s Washington Post — VA employees testify about retaliation against whistleblowers — Four Department of Veterans Affairs employees on Tuesday night testified before a House panel that supervisors retaliated against them for exposing problems at VA medical centers, saying whistleblower-protection issues deserve as much attention as the agency’s recent scheduling scandal.
NATIONAL
► MUST-READ at Huffington Post — Why collective bargaining is a fundamental human right (by Robert Creamer) — The right to freedom of association — and to collectively bargain wages and working conditions — is a foundational principle of every democratic society on earth. It’s time for us to make the right to join a union and bargain collectively the keystone of the progressive agenda. After all, collective bargaining is the fundamental cure to the growing inequality that threatens to destroy the middle class and eats away at the very foundation of our democratic society.
► In today’s LA Times — Truckers strike briefly shuts 4 terminals at L.A., Long Beach ports — More than a 120 truck drivers launched a strike Monday alleging widespread workplace violations against three harbor-area firms that haul freight from the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports.
► In today’s NY Times — Lessons of a for-profit college collapse (editorial) — A deal reached with Corinthian Colleges in which the company will shut down or sell scores of campuses makes clear that stronger rules are needed to qualify for federal aid.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
EDITOR’S NOTE — This excellent rant reminded me of this excellent rant.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.