NEWS ROUNDUP
Closing loopholes, Social Security setup, a Grand Alliance…
Thursday, February 12, 2015
TAX INCENTIVE ACCOUNTABILITY
ALSO at The Stand — We’re being taken for a ride (WSLC Legislative Update)
► A related story in the PSBJ — South Carolina to get even more work as Boeing shifts 777X, 737 Max production there — The new South Carolina plant will work on engine parts for the 777X and an engine covering for the 737 Max. It’s unclear how many employees will be added or shifted as a result of the decision, but Reuters reports Boeing has 7,500 South Carolina employees now.
EDITOR’S NOTE — South Carolina’s aerospace tax incentives, unlike Washington’s, include performance and accountability standards.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Peninsula Daily News — State legislators seek simple-majority threshold for school bond measures — State Reps. Kevin Van De Wege and Steve Tharinger, both Sequim Democrats, are co-sponsoring legislation that would lower the 60 percent majority required for passage of school bond measures to 50 percent plus one vote — a simple majority.
PORT NEGOTIATIONS
► From Reuters — Shippers plan four-day partial shutdown of West Coast ports — Shipping lines will partially shut down 29 West Coast ports for four of the next five days, the companies said on Wednesday, as they postponed the latest round of protracted labor talks with the dockworkers union amid mounting cargo backups at the harbors.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — ILWU: Shippers harming economy for leverage
► In today’s Seattle Times — West Coast ports mostly shut for 4 of next 5 days as longshore dispute drags on
LOCAL
► In today’s Oregonian — Portland Int’l Airport workers seek minimum standards to improve pay, working conditions — Low-wage airport workers and their union allies asked the Port of Portland Commission on Wednesday to enact a set of minimum standards that would address their concerns over wages, high turnover, staffing levels, and safety and equipment concerns. Port commissioners directed staff to move forward with a draft policy statement aimed at gradually improving conditions for more than 1,000 non-port employees who work in concessions and operations at the airport.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Laid-off Weyerhaeuser employees set to return to work — About 180 employees temporarily laid off by Weyerhaeuser Co. last month should all be back on the job Thursday, according to the AWPPW. Weyerhaeuser temporarily cut production at its Longview liquid packaging plant starting Jan. 27. The company cited the West Coast port slowdown for slowing shipment of its products to overseas customers and increased costs for freight and warehousing.
► In today’s News Tribune — Haggen announces schedule for conversions of Safeway, Albertsons stores in South Sound — Haggen has announced when it will convert several South Sound grocery stores to the Haggen brand.
SOCIAL SECURITY
► From TPM — Sen. Warren: GOPers will concoct a crisis to dismantle Social Security — Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) issued a stark warning to supporters: Republicans are willing to create a crisis pitting “America’s seniors against America’s disabled” in order to gut Social Security:
We’ve known for years that Social Security Disability Insurance is set to run low in 2016, and most people assumed that another bipartisan reallocation was coming. But now, thanks to the Republican ideological war on our most important national safety net, disabled Americans could suddenly face a 20% cut in their Social Security checks next year.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s NY Times — Funding is still elusive for Homeland Security — Republicans who have been so disciplined in their opposition to President Obama are now finding themselves badly splintered over how to keep the Department of Homeland Security operating as they struggle to demonstrate they can govern effectively as the party that controls Congress. The split between Senate and House Republicans has become increasingly public, and on Wednesday, the two sides showed little inclination toward compromise.
► From The Hill — For paid sick days legislation, this time may be different (by Eileen Appelbaum) — The Healthy Families Act was introduced in Congress today by Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.). Once again, Congress has the opportunity to pass legislation that will expand access to earned paid sick days to all workers. There is reason to think that this time Congress will act.
► From TPM — Surprise twist in anti-ACA lawsuit before Supreme Court — New revelations raise questions about whether the challengers in the major anti-Obamacare lawsuit before the Supreme have the legal right to sue. Two reports this week by the Wall Street Journal delved into the backgrounds of the challengers and found some evidence that each one of the four plaintiffs may be unharmed by the law.
► In today’s NY Times — An ode to Obamacare (by Gail Collins) — Really, Obamacare is terrific. You can tell by looking at the people who are against it.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Washington Post — Postal unions, advocacy groups join forces to ‘save’ USPS — The coalition of 63 religious coalitions, retiree organizations, educational and postal unions, lawmakers and progressive advocacy groups is calling itself “A Grand Alliance to Save Our Public Postal Service.” The founders’ goal is to save the mail agency from what they describe as unnecessary, draconian responses to the financial losses caused by plummeting mail volume. Five-day delivery; the closing of mail-sorting hubs; reduced hours at neighborhood post offices; Staples counters turning into quasi post offices; the shift to lower service standards — these changes have been enacted and proposed by postal officials in recent years as the agency’s budget problems worsened.
► At Publicola — Public employee unions under fire again — Public-sector workers are under fire again — and not just from Republicans. Three years after Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker curtailed collective bargaining and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie cut pension benefits for public employees in the name of budget austerity, state and local politicians once again are moving to curtail public-sector unions.
► At The Onion — Labor Secretary horrified to learn some Americans working at jobs they do not truly enjoy
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.