NEWS ROUNDUP
Jail time for wage theft, port job cuts, wasting taxes…
Monday, September 22, 2014
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Fred Meyer warehouse talks have broken down, Teamsters say (Sept. 10)
► At SeattlePI.com — Seattle contractor who threatened workers with deportation to steal wages sentenced — A Seattle contractor who’d landed more than $1.1 million in government contracts was sentenced Friday to three months in jail for scamming workers out of pay as part of a scheme to underbid his competitors. Dathan Williams’ thefts from his workers were uncovered following an intensive investigation that saw a Seattle police officer trained as a drywall installer and inserted into his company. Williams, 33, bragged about threatening his employees with deportation when they asked to be paid correctly. Williams, 33, appears to have been targeted as part of a larger investigation into claims that Washington subcontractors are abusing workers and ignoring wage laws meant to keep opportunistic contractors from underbidding those paying higher wages.
► From KING 5 TV — Cedarbrook Lodge employees sue over SeaTac wage law
STATE GOVERNMENT
► At WFSE.org — Community colleges reach agreement — The Washington Federation of State Employees’ Community College Coalition representing some 3,000 on 12 college campuses reached tentative agreement on a new two-year contract at 11:12 p.m. Saturday night. It includes a 3% pay increase in 2015; in 2016, employees will receive the greater of 1.8% or 1% plus $20 a month.
AEROSPACE
► In the (Everett) Herald — Ratio of women in aerospace unchanged for 20 years — Women account for 1 in 4 jobs in aerospace, a ratio that has changed little since the 1990s, said Anneliese Vance-Sherman, an Employment Security Department economist based in Everett. The percentage is even lower when focusing on engineers and management.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Worldwide rallies call for action now on climate change — In Seattle, New York and around the world, people took to the streets Sunday, urging policymakers to address conditions they say threaten the survival of future generations. The grass-roots demonstrations came just before the start of the U.N. Climate Summit.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Income inequality, climate change must be tackled together (by KC Golden and Jeff Johnson)
► At Think Progress — The United States has the largest prison population in the world — and it’s growing — Both in raw numbers and by percentage of the population, the United States has the most prisoners of any developed country in the world — and it has the largest total prison population of any nation. That didn’t change in 2013. After several years in which the prison population dropped slightly, the raw number of inmates in United States custody went up again in 2013.
► At Huffington Post — Walmart’s plan to encourage political donations breaks election law, groups claim — The company entices managers, executives, professional workers and shareholders to give to its political action committee by promising to donate twice as much money to a company-run charity for Walmart employees as its workers give to the PAC. This policy violates an FEC rule against companies making campaign donations directly to candidates, parties and political committees, according to a complaint.
► In today’s NY Times — Those lazy jobless (by Paul Krugman) — Last week John Boehner, the speaker of the House, explained to an audience at the American Enterprise Institute what’s holding back employment in America: laziness. People, he said, have “this idea” that “I really don’t have to work. I don’t really want to do this. I think I’d rather just sit around.” Whatever the explanation, Boehner was clearly saying what he and everyone around him really thinks, what they say to each other when they don’t expect others to hear. Some conservatives have been trying to reinvent their image, professing sympathy for the less fortunate. But what their party really believes is that if you’re poor or unemployed, it’s your own fault.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
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