NEWS ROUNDUP
Port rally, Boeing accountability, logrolling, Monsters of Money…
Friday, January 23, 2015
PORT SHOWDOWN
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma longshoremen rally amid West Coast port slowdown — Dean McGrath, president of the International Longshore Workers Union Local 23 in Tacoma, said the protest was to inform the community about what’s been happening with the slowdown and to allow the longshoremen to support each other.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — At ports, ILWU standing up for working people, middle class (by WSLC President Jeff Johnson)
► In today’s Long Beach P-T — Los Angeles, Long Beach longshore workers, community march in solidarity — About 6,000 community members and International Longshore and Warehouse Union workers marched Thursday to support hundreds of Los Angeles and Long Beach dockworkers engaged in contentious contract talks with employers.
► From AP — West Coast seaport talks resuming after hiatus, rallies — Labor strife at seaports along the West Coast prompted thousands of dockworkers to rally against employers they say are trying to exploit a crisis of cargo congestion.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Seattle Times — Possible ballot measure could be bargaining chip in minimum-wage debate — Democrats in Olympia are making one thing clear about a new proposal to raise the minimum wage: If it doesn’t pass this year, be ready for a ballot initiative.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Decision sticks Bertha bill on state — A dispute-review board says Washington state should pay its contractors millions of dollars for dealing with severe groundwater flows at the Highway 99 tunnel machine’s launch pit in Sodo.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Lawmakers want prepaid postage for ballots — SB 5344 would require county auditors to put pre-paid postage on the return envelopes for each ballot. The state would then reimburse the counties for the cost of supplying postage.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — Legal dispute from 2008 campaign lives on — In an 8-to-1 ruling, the state Supreme Court has sent Utter v. Building Industry Association of Washington back to a King County court for more proceedings. The case involves Republican Dino Rossi’s 2008 rematch with Gov. Chris Gregoire, in which the builders’ association was accused of wrongdoing in its campaigning for Rossi. After a state investigation, an arm of BIAW paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in a 2010 settlement. An appeals court found the investigation precluded the lawsuit from going forward, but the Supreme Court reversed that decision.
More than a decade of political logrolling. Congratulations, boys!
■ “Well-Oiled and Well-Funded: A Discussion of the Democratic Machine” featuring former Sen. Rodney Tom and former Senate president pro tempore Tim Sheldon. And speaking of well-oiled…
■ A “Cocktail Reception” sponsored by the Western States Petroleum Association. And speaking of well-funded… which state legislator received more money than any other from oil, gas and coal interests in the last election? Tim Sheldon!
■ “Presentation of the Roanoke ‘Rising Star’ Award – Slade Gorton.” At press time, it wasn’t clear if he was presenting it or receiving it.
► At PubliCola — New poll shows regional voters happy to pay for more light rail — The Sound Transit board released new polling to gauge support for a ballot measure that would give the agency tax authority to raise $15 billion for expanding mass transit in the Puget Sound region.
► In today’s Oregonian — Washington farmworkers hit with drifting pesticides become sick, CDC warns about new mixture on market — Twenty farmworkers picking cherries in Washington became sick from a pesticide mixture in a pear orchard drifting over to their field. The mixture is new on the market, and this is the first reported case of illness due to its use.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Immigration attorney offers insights for ag employers — The Washington Growers League annual meeting attracted about 100 growers and farm managers with presentations on immigration reform, pesticide drift, housing, workers’ compensation, and legislative issues.
NATIONAL
TAKE A STAND! — Keep calling! This week’s National Call-In Day to oppose Fast Track has been extended to a National Call-In Week! If you haven’t already done so, use the AFL-CIO’s toll-free hotline — 1-855-712-8441 — to get connected to your U.S. Representative and urge him or her to vote “No” on Fast Track trade promotion authority because it will allow more of the same failed trade policies that have hurt working families for the last 20 years. Read more.
► At TPM — Could GOP turn Social Security into perennial ‘crisis’ like the debt limit? — By setting up a series of forcing events Republicans would be able to create an ongoing crisis atmosphere around Social Security that would create a pretext for dramatic changes to the 80-year-old program.
► In today’s Washington Post — House Republicans propose shrinking federal workforce, cutting service contracts — House Republicans pitched legislation that would shrink the federal workforce through attrition by 10 percent over the next five years. The measure would also impose a hiring freeze on agencies that exceed a limit of one new hire for every three departing staff members.
► In today’s Washington Post — High court protects federal whistleblowers — Supreme Court backs fired air marshal in case that affects federal employee whistleblowers.
► In the New Yorker — Six weeks paid leave opposed by people with 33 weeks paid leave — Members of the group heard the President’s proposal on Tuesday night, one of the few nights of the year when they are required to report to their workplace.
T.G.I.F.
► Rather than post a music video this week, we couldn’t resist sharing Jon Stewart’s skewering of the World Economic Forum: “It’s the Monsters Of Money! … But of course, the get together is not just a celebration, but a chance for the powerful to reflect on how the world has changed since the devastating financial collapse that many of them caused and/or profited from.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.