NEWS ROUNDUP
Senate’s gamble, Murray’s 61 votes, Wisconsin loses (jobs)…
Tuesday, April 7, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From AP — State Senate passes two-year state budget plan — The $38 billion, two-year budget passed the Republican-controlled chamber on a 26-23 vote. It doesn’t include any new taxes, mostly relying on existing revenue, fund transfers and redirecting tax income from recreational marijuana.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Senate OKs budget plan calling for another class-size vote — It’s a “high-stakes” gamble, said Sen. Jim Hargrove (D-Hoquiam). If voters reject the referendum, legislators would have an immediate hole of $2 billion in the state’s operating budget.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — After lots of trash talk, budget talk will get real in Olympia — After this week’s initial round of meetings, an unpredictable pace will ensue. There are no rules for the frequency of conversations or how quickly the two sides might begin exchanging written offers, let alone reach a tentative agreement.
► In today’s Columbian — Local Republicans say budget good step — Republican senators from Southwest Washington called the two-year operating budget plan passed by the upper chamber Monday a good step.
► From KGMI — Berry pickers hope to block Sakuma Brothers Farm’s use of foreign guest workers — The saga between berry pickers and Sakuma Brothers Farm continues, with workers once again hoping to block the farm from bringing in guest workers.
ALSO at The Stand — Farmworkers aim to block H-2A guestworkers at Sakuma Bros.
► In the Columbian — State must step up game on renewable energy (by Bryce Smith) — The top five states for clean energy jobs for 2014 were Nevada, California, New York, Michigan, and Arizona. Washington was not in the top five. Or the top 10. Or the top 20. In fact, Washington ranked 32nd of 50 states for clean energy jobs announced in 2014. That’s not good enough. For a state that touts itself as technologically savvy, innovative, and green, we’re not living up to our potential — or our reputation — in this modern, high-growth sector.
LOCAL
► From Crosscut — Try again: Minimum wage enforcement job goes begging — April 1 has come and gone and Seattle employees of large companies like Starbucks or McDonald’s should have seen their minimum wages go up to $11 an hour. But, at least for the moment, it’s pretty much up to the the employers to deliver: The city says it’s having little luck in quickly staffing the new Office of Labor Standards to enforce the new wage.
► From Labor Notes — Seattle activists take wage enforcement into their own hands — Decked out in party hats and blowing noisemakers, 200 marchers in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood made the rounds of low-wage workplaces. The parade was a celebration of the city’s new minimum wage — and a serious effort to make sure workers know they’ve got a raise coming.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Yakima commissioners to hear new city voting district boundaries — County commissioners will decide today whether to approve new voting district boundaries for all seven Yakima City Council positions. The move comes in light of a federal judge’s ruling in August that the city’s current voting system violates the federal Voting Rights Act, and ordered new district boundaries as a remedy to the disenfranchising of Latino voters.
BOEING
► In the Charleston Business Journal — Union rates drop in S.C. as Boeing election nears — At a time when state union membership is at its lowest in a decade, a contentious election will be held this month at Boeing South Carolina to determine whether one of the state’s biggest manufacturers will be unionized.
► From AFP — Boeing clings to lead over Airbus in long-haul jets — Boeing is fighting tough efforts by rival Airbus to score big gains in the market for long-haul jets, a segment of the massive aircraft market that the U.S. giant has dominated.
► In today’s NY Times — Boeing, Delta spend millions in fight over Export-Import Bank’s existence — A battle between two aviation heavyweights over an obscure bank masks a political war between opponents of “corporate welfare” and major business groups.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From The Hill — Last-minute lobbying threatens $200B Medicare package — Lawmakers and lobbyists representing children’s insurance advocates, seniors’ healthcare providers and other specialty groups are pressing to amend a $200 billion Medicare package the Senate hopes to send to President Obama’s desk next week.
► From Huffington Post — Senate Democrats getting fed up with SEC’s delay on CEO pay rule — Democrats have been pushing the SEC for nearly five years to move forward with the rule, which Congress required the agency to develop under the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law. The rule would mandate that companies publicly disclose the ratio of their CEO’s pay to the median earnings of workers at the firm.
► From Reuters — Top Senate Democrat joins push for populist campaign agenda — Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has joined a grassroots effort from the progressive wing of the party to encourage presidential candidates to adopt populist policies as they begin their campaigns. He is among more than 5,000 lawmakers and party leaders who have signed on to the Progressive Change Campaign Committee.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Check out which elected officials and leaders from Washington are among the 5,000 (so far) who are “Ready for Boldness.”
► In today’s Washington Post — Declining IRS workforce leaves calls unanswered as Tax Day approaches, union says — Taxpayers across the country are lining up for hours outside walk-in centers and getting just four in 10 calls for information answered by the IRS as April 15 approaches, the union representing IRS employees (NTEU) said.
► In today’s NY Times — Food safety law’s funding is far below estimated requirement — New requirements, which were passed by Congress in 2010, cannot be met without more money, supporters of the overhaul say.
NATIONAL
► At Think Progress — Weeks after rushing ‘right-to-work,’ Wisconsin Republicans prepare next attack on labor — Republicans in Wisconsin now say they have a “better than 50 percent” chance of scrapping state “prevailing wage” laws that ensure construction workers a living wage.
► From Reuters — Machinists withdraw bid to unionize Delta flight attendants — The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers said on Monday it had temporarily withdrawn its application to organize flight attendants at Delta Air Lines.
► In today’s NY Times — Kris Bryant, the baseball players’ union and a lesson for labor (by Noan Scheiber) — Labor might do well to heed baseball, where solidarity between its stars and lesser players has been critical to bargaining success since the mid-’60s.
INTERNATIONAL
► From In These Times — Panama’s dockworkers fight poverty wages — with support from American unionists — In Panama they call longshore pay “hunger wages.” Workers’ families live below the government’s own poverty line, and some families literally go hungry. But this situation has begun to change. A few weeks ago the union signed a new contract with raises totaling more than 27% over the next four years. One factor that made this agreement possible was support from a U.S. union, the ILWU. That agreement will have a big impact on the lives of longshoremen and their families.
► From Bloomberg — Footwear factory strike in Vietnam exposes pension crisis — Vietnam may be forced to water down a new law designed to shore up its pension system after tens of thousands of workers protested against the changes in a strike that lasted nearly a week.
► In the NY Times — The evidence of Mexico’s missing — Little more than six months after 43 students were abducted and presumably killed in Iguala in Guerrero State, photographer Christopher Gregory is wondering about all the other people who have vanished in that region.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.