NEWS ROUNDUP
Cash for carbon, city councils act, Wall Street’s black hole…
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Olympian — Polling shows some public support for taxing carbon pollution in Washington — Recent polling for interest groups shows there is some voter support for government actions that reduce carbon-fuel emissions in Washington state in order to combat climate change.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Inslee transportation plan ignores Southwest Washington — Gov. Jay Inslee announced a proposed $12 billion transportation package, with about half already set aside for projects the governor deemed as the “most pressing transportation needs.” But those needs apparently don’t include one considered critical to Cowlitz County.
► In today’s Columbian — Education budget gets varied response from local officials — Local officials’ reaction to the governor’s education budget, which was unveiled this week, ranged from praising his proposal as ambitious to slamming it as insufficient.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma council advances sick leave proposal — The Tacoma City Council voted 8-0 Tuesday to advance a proposal requiring employers to provide paid sick leave to all workers. The proposal would require businesses located in the city to give workers at least three sick days a year. Employees would bank sick time at the rate of one hour per 40 hours worked. They could begin using the time off once it is earned but not before six months on the job.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Spokane council OKs Quality Jobs standards
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Council passes public works project apprentice requirement — Almost 200 people packed the Spokane City Council chambers and Chase Gallery on Monday night for the council’s final meeting of the year. Most of them came to support an ordinance put forth by Council President Ben Stuckart mandating that a certain amount of work on public works construction projects be performed by apprentices. The measure passed in a veto-proof 5-2 vote after hours of testimony. It will “create a more skilled workforce” in Spokane, Stuckart said.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Snohomish County Council works to avoid ‘nightmare’ of possible shutdown — Snohomish County lawmakers are preparing to mull a series of compromises Wednesday to avoid a crisis. Failing to act could earn the county a dubious distinction as the first in Washington to suffer a government shutdown because elected leaders couldn’t agree on a budget.
► In today’s News Tribune — MultiCare, Franciscan Health propose jointly operated psychiatric hospital in Tacoma — Pierce County’s two biggest health-care providers hope to a build a 120-bed psychiatric hospital for $41 million. Leaders say the facility would address a shortage of local psychiatric beds.
► In today’s Daily News — Longview not immune to national shortage of qualified bus drivers — It’s not Rick Lecker’s job to drive school buses. But the Longview School District transportation director is having to fill in often these days because school bus drivers are becoming harder to find.
BOEING
► In today’s P.S. Business Journal — Aerospace companies suck up space, drive construction boom near Everett — Boeing’s plans to build the 777X jetliner in Everett are having a huge impact on the surrounding area. Aerospace suppliers are soaking up available space around Boeing’s facilities there, and developers are building almost as fast as they can.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing 737 factory to move to clean energy — Boeing said Tuesday that it plans to buy renewable energy credits to replace fossil-fuel power at its Renton plant.
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
EDITOR’S NOTE — Maybe if the Exchange offered a public option to consumers, as opposed to just listing private insurance plans, things would run smoother. Just an idea.
► In today’s NY Times — Federal health exchange sees enrollment flurry — The Obama administration said Tuesday that nearly 2.5 million people had selected health insurance plans through the federal marketplace in the first four weeks of open enrollment this fall. More than one million of those selections came in just one week, from Dec. 6 through last Friday.
► In The Hill — ACA fines loom for the uninsured — People without insurance are running out of time to avoid the hefty penalties that the IRS will be handing down in 2016. Consumers face a Feb. 15, 2015, deadline to buy insurance, after which those without coverage could be hit with fines of $325 per adult or 2% of family income, whichever is higher.
NATIONAL
► From AP — Southwest bag workers picketing over flight delays — Saying Southwest Airlines is neglecting workers and its customers, baggage handlers are bringing attention to the company’s slide in on-time performance as they seek a new contract. Workers (TWU Local 555) picketed and handed out leaflets to passengers at Denver and 15 other airports across the country Tuesday (including Sea-Tac).
► At Salon — Andrew Cuomo seeks to kick public employees out of union — An estimated 1,000 New York state government employees received notices Monday that Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration aims to reclassify their jobs as non-union, a move that could weaken a federation that has previously butted heads with the “centrist” Democratic governor. (Quotes added.)
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.