NEWS ROUNDUP
Quiet raises, Time vs. teachers, poor FedEx…
Monday, October 27, 2014
STATE GOVERNMENT
LOCAL
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Community groups needed for $15 enforcement, report finds
► In the P.S. Business Journal — The world’s largest building — the Boeing plant in Everett — is about to get even bigger — It’s already the world’s largest building by volume, and a 200,000-square-foot addition will add 22.68 million cubic feet of space.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Sacred Heart to lay off 90 as Inland assumes X-ray, scanning services — About 90 employees of Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center will lose their jobs after radiology provider Inland Imaging announced it will take over X-ray and scanning services at the area’s largest hospital.
ELECTION
► In today’s Seattle Times — Eastside race one that could determine state Senate control — The race between Republican freshman Sen. Andy Hill and democratic challenger Matt Isenhower is one of a handful that could determine which party controls the state Senate, and has become this year’s most expensive legislative contest, with over $1 million raised between the two candidates.
► In today’s News Tribune — Republicans lead in Senate spending as money gravitates to battlegrounds — Republicans and their allies are outspending their rivals in the contest to control the Washington state Senate. Democrats may have the most generous ally, California billionaire Tom Steyer, but the other side has kept up with help from hundreds of thousands of dollars each from real estate agents, homebuilders and a national GOP group.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Washington earns praise for political engagement — SmartAsset, a financial services group, lauding Washington for being one of the 10 most “politically engaged” states in the nation, according to its metrics. This comes at a time when the hard data suggests that Washington voters may be thinking about breaking off that engagement.
► At ThinkProgress — Poll workers are already seeing fallout from Texas’ strict Voter ID law — A 93-year-old veteran who was turned away was a registered voter, but his driver’s license had been expired for a few years. Although he had “all sorts” of other identification cards with his picture on it, they weren’t valid under the law — so he was told he had to leave and renew his license. “He just felt real bad, you know, because he’s voted all his life,” said the judge.
► In the Daily Beast — The only way for Democrats to win (by Jonathan Alter) — The voters Democrats are in trouble with are white non-college educated blue-collar workers who are often unemployed, and whose friends have crappy jobs in the service sector or mid-level positions in office parks. These mostly male voters — the ones poised to turn the Senate Republican by rejecting anyone with a “D” after their name — don’t care much about the minimum wage, but many of them sure would like a new job.
NATIONAL
► In the Washington Post — A Time magazine cover enrages teachers — again — Time magazine has done it again: It published a cover that has enraged teachers around the country, triggering protesting e-mails and tweets, a petition demanding an apology, and a call for a boycott.
► In today’s NY Times — Is the Affordable Care Act working? — After a year fully in place, the Affordable Care Act has largely succeeded in delivering on President Obama’s main promises, an analysis by a team of reporters and data researchers shows. But it has also fallen short in some ways and given rise to a powerful conservative backlash.
► At ThinkProgress — South Dakota’s minimum wage workers are eating at soup kitchens — but they could get a raise soon — Two weeks before South Dakotans vote on a proposal to increase the state’s minimum wage from $7.25 to $8.50, low-wage workers eating at The Banquet, a downtown Sioux Falls soup kitchen, told ThinkProgress that the additional $1.25 per hour will go a long way, especially given the state’s fairly low cost of living.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Amazon workers in Germany on strike again — For more than a year, the union has pushed for higher pay, arguing Amazon workers receive lower wages. Amazon says its distribution warehouses in Germany are “logistics centers” and employees earn relatively high wages for that industry.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
Now, however, judges and regulators are starting to look more critically at these relationships. In the fast-food world, the National Labor Relations Board’s general counsel has determined that some big companies share responsibility with their franchisees for labor violations. The Labor Department has been aggressively pursuing companies that it says misclassify employees as independent contractors. In FedEx’s case, courts in several states, including California and Massachusetts, have told the company that its strategy of treating drivers as independent contractors doesn’t fly, prompting the shift to the independent service provider model. Now, at least one court has questioned whether even this new model passes muster.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.