NEWS ROUNDUP
Debate the TPP, Senate acts, FF fails (again), GOP haters…
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
TAKE A STAND! Please sign the AFL-CIO’s petition opposing Fast Track.
STATE GOVERNMENT
EDITOR’S NOTE — Not just Inslee, but any governor… for 16 years.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Fix fatal flaws in transportation package (by Sen. Pramila Jayapal)
PLUS — WSLC’s Johnson: Lose poison pills, pass ‘clean’ transportation package
MORE local coverage in today’s News Tribune, Spokesman-Review, from AP and KUOW.
► In today’s News Tribune — 2/3-for-taxes rule ruled unconstitutional in state Senate — Lt. Gov. Brad Owen said Monday he won’t enforce a Senate rule making it harder to pass new taxes — ruling it violates the state Constitution.
► At PubliCola — Democrats win a big one, but lose a big one — Score one for the Democrats who prevented a precedent-setting GOP end run around the February 2013 state Supreme Court ruling against the larger two-thirds requirement to raise taxes… (But) the Democrats also lost big today. It’s not just that a conservative transportation package gets to frame the debate now, but the Republicans also get to frame the bigger debate.
► From KUOW — $12 minimum wage vote likely in House — The Washington House is expected to vote this week on a $12 per hour minimum wage. Speaker of the House Frank Chopp telegraphed that upcoming vote in a recent meeting with Capitol reporters.
EDITOR’S NOTE — In fact, according to the House Democratic Caucus, that vote could happen this afternoon.
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Complaint: Right-wing group hid ‘right-to-work’ political activity (Feb. 19)
PLUS — Right-wing Freedom Foundation swept, but still suing away (Oct. 17, 2014)
► In today’s News Tribune — Canadian lumber company completes purchase of Simpson mills — Vancouver, B.C.’s Interfor Corporation began operating the four mills in Tacoma, Longview, Meldrim, Ga.; and Georgetown, S.C. on Monday. Under Interfor, the Tacoma mill will employ about 125 workers.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Sale of Longview Simpson mill to Interfor Corp. finalized — The deal includes Simpson’s Longview mill, where 96 workers are currently employed. Counting all four plants, about 400 former Simpson workers were rehired by Interfor, or about 90 percent of the Simpson workforce.
► From KUOW — Metro transit looking to hire Bathroom Tsar — King County Metro is looking to hire a Comfort Coordinator. This person will be in charge of making sure bus drivers can go to the bathroom when they need to. It’s part of Metro’s response to a fine from the state last year.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Seattle Times — A story from the front line of the Social Security fight (by Gina Owens) — Social Security Disability Insurance is a lifeline that millions of people, including myself, have paid into in order to have financial security if we were to become disabled. I have been on disability due to a car accident that severely damaged my spine and knee… Republicans in Congress have made their intentions to dismantle Social Security, the nation’s most successful and popular anti-poverty program, very clear.
► From the Hill — The terrible, horrible, no good start for the Republicans — The opening weeks of the 114th Congress have been nothing short of a disaster for Republicans, who declared upon taking control of both chambers last fall that the era of governing by crisis and fiscal cliffs was over.
SUPREME COURT
► In today’s Seattle Times — Four words may imperil ACA — It was Thomas M. Christina, an employment benefits lawyer from Greenville, S.C., who found the vulnerability in the sprawling law.
► In today’s NY Times — Will Supreme Court say ‘no’ to gerrymandering? (editorial) — Americans need to have more direct control over the integrity of the electoral process, which has been weakened by, among other things, increasingly sophisticated methods of carving up districts and destroying political competition. Voters in dozens of states have, in fact, skipped over their legislatures to pass scores of laws or amendments setting out electoral rules, from eligibility requirements to redistricting — all of which might be called into question depending on how the court rules.
NATIONAL
► At Think Progress — This city just ensured that workers can get a paid day off if they get sick — Bloomfield, New Jersey became the ninth city in the state and 18th city in the country to pass a paid sick leave law on Monday evening.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.