NEWS ROUNDUP
Senate out of sync, unions = better living, failed Kansas…
Thursday, April 9, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — Senate GOP changes rules to block raises for state workers — Republican leaders changed procedural rules to require a 30-vote supermajority, so an amendment to fund the state employee contracts failed even though 29 senators — including all Democrats and several Republicans — voted for it and just 20 Republicans voted “no.”
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Balance of power between GOP and Dems should bode well in the Legislature (by Jerry Cornfield) — Six Senate Republicans joined the 23 minority Democrats to support the revision (funding state employee contracts) but, because of the rule, it failed 29-20. You can bet House Democrats will remind their Senate counterparts of this philosophical majority on this critical matter (during budget reconciliation).
► From PubliCola — Poll: Voters don’t like Senate’s decision to ignore state employee contracts (scroll down to #3) — One of the strongest findings in a recent Elway Poll — 58 percent of voters were “opposed” or found it “unacceptable” — was rejection of cutting state salaries. On that score, the Senate GOP budget is not in sync with public opinion. The Republican proposal rejects the state’s collective bargaining agreements and as an alternative propose to provide a flat $1,000 wage increase for all workers in each of the fiscal years. The Senate budget also eliminates health benefits for the spouses of state employees if they have employer offered benefits, and reduces health benefits for retired workers who receive Medicare.
► In the Columbian — Find middle ground (editorial) — The Senate plan would spend about $500 million less than the House on state-worker wages and benefits, ignoring some agreements that were negotiated last year… In their quest to cling to “no new taxes,” Senate Republicans are employing smoke-and-mirrors budgeting techniques.
► From PubliCola — GOP budget create McCleary collision course — About $800 million of the $1.3 billion that Senate Republicans are supposedly adding into the general fund to help pay for K–12 education comes from harsh cuts elsewhere.
► From Crosscut — Tax reform is the only way to ensure seniors get the care they deserve (by Roger Moore) — The way the state pays for long-term care and a host of other services no longer works. Year after year, the state has made wholesale cuts in budgets because leaders have created a tax structure that is out of whack.
BOEING
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — Report blasts Tacoma’s MultiCare for ‘traumatic’ and ‘aggressive’ billing and collections — The report focuses on two aspects of MultiCare’s collections: “traumatic” point-of-service billing — collecting payment from patients while they’re still in the hospital for treatment — and of “aggressively” garnishing wages and charging unreasonably high interest on medical debt.
ALSO at The Stand — Report: Non-profit MultiCare prioritizing profits, collections
► In today’s Oregonian — Port of Portland Commission approves initiative to improve conditions for contractor workers — Approval of the so-called PDX Workplace Initiative capped a months-long effort to develop broad guidelines aimed at improving working conditions and job security for baggage handlers, airplane cabin cleaners and wheelchair attendants, as well as food and retail shop employees at the airport.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Farm workers advance case against Mercer Canyons — A federal judge has granted class-action status to a group of farm workers who claim that Mercer Canyons illegally denied employment to domestic workers in favor of imported guest workers under the federal H-2A program.
IMMIGRATION
► In the NY Times — Judge refuses to let Obama’s executive actions on immigration proceed — A federal judge in Texas refused to halt an injunction he had placed on the president’s immigration actions, saying they would be harmful.
► From AP — White House criticizes ruling on Obama’s executive action — A federal judge has wrongly prevented “common-sense policies” from taking effect by blocking President Barack Obama’s executive action that seeks to shield millions of immigrants from deportation, and the federal government plans to continue its fight in a higher court, the White House said Wednesday.
NATIONAL
► From Daily Kos — Federal contractors now banned from discriminating against LGBT workers — It now doesn’t matter what state you run a business out of, and what its laws say (or don’t say) about discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity: If you want a contract with the federal government, you can’t discriminate.
► In today’s Washington Post — NLRB hits Postal Service over response to cyber breach — An NLRB complaint says the Postal Service should have negotiated an appropriate timeline for alerting workers to a cyber breach last year.
► From Think Progress — Obamacare opponents are making racial inequality worse By refusing to expand Medicaid, they’re denying health care to millions of low-income people of color.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.