NEWS ROUNDUP
Port discord, WA on fumes, lovin’ the NLRB…
Monday, January 5, 2015
PORT CONTRACT TALKS
► Wire reports — Dock workers protest port cutbacks — Dock workers at the Los Angeles and Long Beach ports Friday protested a partial work stoppage ordered by a group representing West Coast terminal operators, saying it will slow down the unloading of cargo by several days.
► From the ILWU on Dec. 29 — PMA member carriers needed at negotiating table — The ILWU said that the PMA member carriers sitting on PMA’s Board of Directors need to come to the negotiating table so that direct and constructive dialogue between key decision makers can take place.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Port operations must get back to full speed (editorial) — A slowdown of cargo movement through the ports of Seattle and Tacoma is pushing Washington growers and manufacturers to lose money and cut jobs… It’s time for a mediator to help forge an agreement to get ports functioning at full speed again.
ALSO at The Stand — ILWU frustrated by shippers’ finger-pointing over port delays
LOCAL
► In the Dec. 22 (Everett) Herald — Koster loses job as county’s first ombudsman — The decision on reappointing Koster rested with the County Council. Executive John Lovick had urged them to say no because of Koster’s choice to lend his name to an anti-union fundraising letter for the right-wing Freedom Foundation asking “committed patriots across Washington to support them in taking on the union machine.”
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the News Tribune — Can lawmakers alter class-size mandate to avoid massive budget shortfall? — State legislators return to the Capitol for a 105-day session on Jan. 12, and a major question facing the divided Senate and House is what changes can they make to voter-approved I-1351’s new requirements for class sizes — without offending the state Supreme Court.
EDITOR’S NOTE — That said, offending the court doesn’t appear to be a top concern.
► In the (Everett) Herald — How traffic is hurting Snohomish County businesses — Highway 531 is one of 23 chokepoints throughout the county that have been identified by Snohomish County, the cities, a citizens’ group and businesses as needing improvement. The organization has been working behind the scenes for months along with elected officials to make the case for transportation funding in this next legislative session.
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Insurance companies pleased with Healthplanfinder payment change — Instead of using the exchange’s website, Healthplanfinder, to make payments, consumers will now pay insurance carriers directly.
► In the Washington Post — Republicans in state governments plan juggernaut of conservative legislation — The Republican Party now controls 31 governorships and 68 of 98 partisan legislative chambers across the country. And in 24 states, Republicans have total control of the legislative process. This all but guarantees a new tide of conservative laws… [including] dozens of measures challenging the power of labor unions.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In The Hill — Republicans take the reins — For the first time since 2006, Congress is convening this week under full GOP control, with Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) reaching the pinnacle of Senate majority leader and Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) poised to win a third term as Speaker.
► At Politico — Trade’s big breakout — So while many in Washington are bracing for stalemates on issues as wide-ranging as health care to immigration, the climate could be just right to move the kind of bipartisan trade agreements not seen since NAFTA 20 years ago.
► At Huffington Post — Piketty: Bill Gates told me he doesn’t want to pay more in taxes — The world’s richest man recently told the economics professor that he didn’t want to pay more in taxes, as Gates believes he can spend his money in “more efficient [ways] than the government.”
NATIONAL
► In the Washington Post — Postal Service poised to begin controversial plant closures this week — The U.S. Postal Service next week plans to begin a new round of plant closings and consolidations that will affect dozens of mail-processing centers, despite calls from more than half the members of the outgoing Senate to postpone the changes.
► Today from AP — American Airlines, pilots union reach labor deal — The pilots union at American Airlines has agreed to put up for a vote a five-year contract proposal that would boost pay by more than 26 percent and offer smaller raises in later years.
MINIMUM WAGE
► From Al Jazeera America — Minimum wage increases take hold in 20 states — Low-wage workers in 20 states got a raise on the first day of 2015, when minimum wage increases automatically take hold. According to an analysis by the Economic Policy Institute, that will mean an additional $1.6 billion in wages for the U.S. workforce in the coming year.
► From PBS Newshour — Undisputed facts about the minimum wage — We know minimum wage workers tend to be younger, female and white, often working in notoriously low-paying industries like hospitality and service… The majority (72%) of at-or-below minimum wage workers have at least a high school degree.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.