NEWS ROUNDUP
Victoria para Familias, Spendy McSpenderson, empathy deficit…
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
LOCAL
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Expanded Community Transit service is planned — Community Transit plans to add bus service and hire 34 new bus drivers next year, the agency announced Monday. The service expansion, less than a fifth what was lost in recent years, is part of the agency’s proposed 2015 budget.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Spend. Yes, spend to rebuild transportation (by Richard Davis) — Some transportation advocates quietly express concern that the McCleary imperative will deplete the oxygen under the dome, making it hard to breathe life into a transportation funding plan… Some lawmakers balk at how the state handles transportation projects. They should hold administrators accountable and press for efficiencies. That’s their job. But don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Such concerns should not stymie efforts to make investments now that will pay off tomorrow.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Future of charter schools rests with state Supreme Court — The debate over money for education was heard at the Washington Supreme Court again Tuesday. But this time it had to do with the state’s new commitment to public charter schools. A coalition of teachers, parents and community groups is suing the state to stop the new charter system from getting off the ground.
ELECTION
► From KUOW — Who’s buying the Washington State Senate? — One race on Seattle’s Eastside has attracted more cash than any other: Republican state Sen. Andy Hill versus Democratic challenger Matt Isenhower. Their campaigns, their political parties and outside interests have pumped $2.4 million into the contest for the 45th legislative district. It works out to $28 for every registered voter in the district to date, with last-minute donations continuing to roll in.
► In today’s Olympian — In this election, it’s Republicans decrying ‘dark money’ — So-called “dark money” is contributing to the expensive fight for control of the Washington state Senate. And the script is flipped from the usual one, where Democrats cry foul about secretive groups — like one tied to Karl Rove that tried unsuccessfully to help Dino Rossi defeat Sen. Patty Murray in 2010. This time, it’s Republicans howling. They are upset about a group purporting to praise state Sen. Tim Sheldon for supporting liberal causes but whose messages appear calculated to make Sheldon’s fellow conservatives hesitate to vote for him.
► In The Hill — U.S. Senate battleground tilts away from Democrats — Democrats’ path to holding their Senate majority has narrowed, with Republicans pulling ahead in critical states and on the cusp of upsets in several others. Even some within the party are starting to say their midterm prognosis isn’t good.
EDITOR’S NOTE — How’s that postponing-immigration-reform election strategy working out for you, Democrats?
► At Think Progress — Court refuses to intervene in case of 40,000 missing voters in Georgia — On Tuesday, Judge Christopher Brasher of the Fulton County Superior Court denied a petition from civil rights advocates to force Georgia’s Secretary of State to process an estimated 40,000 voter registrations that have gone missing from the public database.
► At Politico — Union power on the ballot — The campaign for California superintendent of public instruction is on pace to be the most expensive contest in the state this cycle, with total spending likely to hit $25 million. That’s because more than education policy is at stake: The race has become a highly symbolic fight for the heart and soul of the Democratic Party — and is shaping up to be major test of waning teachers union power.
NATIONAL
► At Think Progress — UPS decides to stop kicking pregnant women out of their jobs — The United Parcel Service announced a change in its policies to allow pregnant workers to stay on the job through their pregnancies in a brief filed late last week in a Supreme Court case brought by one of its former workers.
► At Politico — New leader of NBA union shows she’s got game — For Michele Roberts, the first woman to lead a major U.S. professional sports union, her long-shot election in July was the latest in a long career of pushing back against the challenges she faced as she rose from the South Bronx projects to become one of the nation’s premier trial lawyers.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.