NEWS ROUNDUP
Right-to-chair, federal surprises, TPP blackout, broke Millennials…
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Gov. Jay Inslee to seek $1 billion in tax hikes in two-year budget — Gov. Jay Inslee’s budget proposal for the next two years will include a request for $1 billion or more in higher taxes along with some program cuts, a delay of some new school spending approved by voters and raises for state employees. Inslee will unveil the details of his budget plans for the second half of his term over four days next week.
EDITOR’S NOTE — That’s right. Republicans have chosen the only state legislator in either house, in either party, who has sponsored union-busting legislation to make Washington a so-called “right-to-work” state to be in charge of the committee addressing all labor-related bills. The facade of bipartisanship has been torn down now that Republicans have an actual majority, however small.
► In today’s Seattle Times — State’s first charter school in disarray — Since it opened in September, the state’s first charter school has lost its special-education coordinator, principal, board president and half the rest of its board. By Wednesday, it must prove to a state board that it can solve problems in four major areas.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — State may lodge drug offenders at empty Yakima jail — The state Department of Corrections wants to house drug offenders at Yakima County’s idle jail on Pacific Avenue, a move that would put the facility in full operation. But funding to house those inmates here may be hard to come by.
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Boeing pushes back as state auditors call for clarity on aerospace tax breaks — While Washington state aerospace companies will be relieved from paying $500 million in taxes between 2015 and 2017, nobody knows if the payback is worth the loss in tax revenue. Tax breaks may have helped persuade Boeing to manufacture the 787 and 777X in Washington, but lawmakers say they need real numbers to know whether those should be extended moving forward.
BOEING
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Boeing plans to move some 777X engineering to Philadelphia — Boeing plans to put a small, but important set of 777X engineering work in Philadelphia rather than metro Puget Sound, where similar work is done on the 787. The work will move but not the people doing the work, according to a SPEEA official.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma council to move forward with sick leave policy — The Tacoma City Council will move forward with a paid sick leave policy next week that would require businesses to provide at least three paid days off per year. A final vote could come in January. The city would require employers to give workers one hour of sick leave per 40 hours worked up to three sick days a year. Mayor Marilyn Strickland said the number came from a San Francisco report that said workers on average used three days of paid sick leave per year.
ALSO at The Stand — Establish Seattle Public Bank; learn more at Dec. 10 forum
► At Huffington Post — Justice Clarence Thomas suggests Amazon warehouse workers should unionize — Addressing the workers’ arguments, the court’s opinion, delivered by conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, included this curious line: “These arguments are properly presented to the employer at the bargaining table… not to a court in an FLSA claim.”
EDITOR’S NOTE — Well, you heard the man. Form a union!
► In today’s Peninsula Daily News — 21 to 28 layoffs expected at Port Angeles’ Nippon mill — The indefinite shutdown of one of two Nippon Paper Industries USA paper-making machines will lead to the layoff of 21 to 28 hourly employees, a union official said.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From AP — Lawmakers reach agreement on $1.1 trillion spending bill — Republicans and Democrats agreed Tuesday on a $1.1 trillion spending bill to avoid a government shutdown and delay a politically-charged struggle over President Obama’s new immigration policy until the new year. In an unexpected move, lawmakers also agreed on legislation expected to be incorporated into the spending measure that will permit a reduction in benefits to current retirees at economically distressed multiemployer pension plans. Supporters said it was part of an effort to prevent a slow-motion collapse of a system that provides retirement income to millions, but critics objected vehemently.
► In The Hill — Spending deal opens spigot of campaign cash — A surprise provision included in the massive spending bill released by Congress on Tuesday evening would give the parties new ways to raise campaign cash. On page 1,599 of the 1,603-page document — under a heading entitled “Other Matters” — is a provision increasing the amount a person can contribute to a national political party from $32,400 to $324,000. It would allow a couple to give almost $1.3 million in a two-year cycle.
► At Politico — Senate Ethics Committee loses top staffer to Boeing — John Sassaman, the top staffer for Senate Ethics, has been appointed as ethics director for Boeing’s Government Operations program.
NATIONAL
► In the National Journal — The app that gives control back to shift workers — WellStar Health System, a health care network with more than 12,000 employees in Marietta, Ga., has a new online scheduling system, called Smart Square, which allows nurses to pick their own work days… The system has built-in parameters that ensure its nurses work their required holiday and weekend shifts. Managers also have the ultimate say over how the final schedule looks. The biggest difference is in the attitude the system creates as a collaborative way for workers and their managers to make the schedule. Shifts are not decreed from the top down.
► At AFL-CIO Now — Bike-share employees reject Walmart model, vote to unionize — Workers at a bike-share venture in Boston voted to unionize with the Transport Workers in an election conducted by the NLRB.
► From AP — UAW reaches top tier of VW labor policy at U.S. unit — The United Auto Workers on Monday qualified for the top tier of a new labor policy at the Volkswagen plant in Tennessee, giving the union its first formal role within a foreign-owned auto plant in the southern U.S.
ENTER AND WIN!
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.