NEWS ROUNDUP
Tacoma can do better, nonviable Eyman, holy union busting…
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
LOCAL
TAKE A STAND! If you live in the Tacoma area, show up at tonight’s City Council meeting: Tuesday, Oct. 28 at 5 p.m. at the Tacoma Municipal Building, First Floor, 747 Market St. Tell city leaders, Tacoma can do a lot better than the Mayor Marilyn Strickland’s proposal! See Say It Ain’t So, Mayor Strickland at from Healthy Tacoma for more information.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► At PubliCola — Poll: Eyman minimum wage repeal ‘below usual measure of viability’ — The poll found that Initiative 676 — an initiative to the legislature to prohibit local minimum wages from exceeding the state minimum wage filed by Fernando Neuenschwander with help from Eyman — is at 54 percent. Conventional wisdom says initiative ideas need to start out above 60 percent to weather a tough campaign.
► At KPLU — More than 100 Washington businesses urge state action on climate change — More than 100 Washington businesses are calling for action on climate change and urging others to join them. Companies including Microsoft, Foss Maritime, REI and Virginia Mason Medical Center have signed an open declaration, saying climate change is real and happening and that more action is needed to address it.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Question: Then why do these companies direct their campaign contributions to right-wing candidates who deny climate change is even a thing? Answer: Because paying lower taxes and wages is a bigger corporate priority than addressing climate change. Discuss.
ELECTION
ALSO at The Stand — Find your ballot, fill it out, and mail it in!
► In today’s Olympian — Complaints allege 2 PACs are hiding campaign donors in local races — A campaign finance complaint has been lodged against Working America, a group supporting several Democratic candidates, for failing to register as a political committee in Washington state and for not disclosing its top five contributors in its ads. Meanwhile, two other PDC complaints target Enterprise Washington, a pro-business group, for allegedly shuffling money between two political action committees to avoid disclosing its donors in TV ads opposing Green.
► In today’s Olympian — Twin groups fund ads praising, attacking Tim Sheldon — Does state Sen. Tim Sheldon “protect reproductive freedom?” Or is Sheldon “siding against our reproductive rights” and “trying to come between a woman and her doctor?” Those are the opposing views in fliers mailed to 35th District voters. It would be a typical campaign dispute except for one thing: The mail pieces are funded by groups with the same top leader and the same address. Each mailer appears to target a different segment of voters.
► At Politico — Why Dems are winning on minimum wage (by Timothy Noah) — For Republicans this year, the minimum wage is the wedge issue from hell. Even as Democrats lurch toward a potentially disastrous midterm election, support for raising the federal minimum wage is resonating with voters. In fact, it may be the only issue on which Democrats are winning: A Pew Research Center poll earlier this year found 90 percent of Democrats and 53 percent of Republicans favored raising the federal minimum to $10.10 from its current $7.25, as proposed by President Barack Obama.
NATIONAL
► At Politico — Nurses union takes issue with ’60 Minutes’ Ebola segment — Sunday night’s CBS “60 Minutes” report on the nurses who dealt with the United States’ first Ebola patient overlooked the Texas hospital’s inability to stem the contagion of two nurses, a representative for the National Nurses United union said.
► From Reuters — Saturday Night Live interns settle NBCUniversal wage lawsuit — Thousands of former interns at NBCUniversal, including on the late-night TV show “Saturday Night Live,” have reached a $6.4 million settlement of a class-action lawsuit claiming they should have been paid for their work.
► In today’s NY Times — Living wages, rarity for U.S. fast-food workers, served up in Denmark — On a recent afternoon, Hampus Elofsson ended his 40-hour workweek at a Burger King and prepared for a movie and beer with friends. He had paid his rent and all his bills, stashed away some savings, yet still had money for nights out. That is because he earns the equivalent of $20 an hour — the base wage for fast-food workers throughout Denmark and two and a half times what many fast-food workers earn in the United States. “You can make a decent living here working in fast food,” said Mr. Elofsson, 24. “You don’t have to struggle to get by.”
RELIGION
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.