NEWS ROUNDUP
‘Suggestion’ boxed, Boeing accountability, TPP not about me…
Monday, April 13, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — Public Service Matters events across state Saturday, April 18
► In the Seattle Times — GOP: Inslee making unreasonable demands for taxes, state pay — As Republicans and Democrats prepare to negotiate a new state budget, GOP lawmakers accuse Gov. Jay Inslee of making unreasonable demands in recent closed-door meetings… Inslee said he expected lawmakers to fully fund state worker and teacher pay raises and that he wouldn’t accept borrowing from the state capital budget, vague “efficiency” savings, nor sign any tax cut until his other requirements were met.
► In the Peninsula Daily News — Sen. Hargrove says contempt sanctions for Legislature from high court are a possibility — Neither the state Senate nor the House budget eliminates the need for local levies to support schools, which the court insists is the state’s responsibility. They also haven’t met the court’s demand for a permanent revenue stream that doesn’t depend on local property tax initiatives. “That is an 80 to 89 percent possibility,” state Sen. Jim Hargrove of Hoquiam said Friday about contempt sanctions.
► In the Seattle Times — The party that wants to put ‘public’ back into public education (by Danny Westneat) — Republicans have transmogrified into the higher-education party. The budget they passed through the Senate boosts spending on the state’s flagship school, the UW, by an enormous 34 percent compared with the last two-year budget. What’s new is that almost all of that would go to students in an unprecedented slashing of tuition. The socialistic bent of all this took people by surprise, especially Democrats…. What’s not clear is how Republicans would pay for all this.
BOEING
► In the (Everett) Herald — Holding Boeing accountable (editorial) — The state needs to better track not just the jobs involved in the aerospace tax incentives but also the other economic benefits they are supposed to provide. When Boeing prepares its next update of one of its airliners and seeks another extension of tax preferences, state legislators and officials need to be clear about what they expect in terms of accountability, whether that’s the number of jobs or Boeing’s work statement.
► In the (Everett) Herald — 4 suppliers cited after fatal accident at Boeing plant — The state Department of Labor and Industries has cited four Boeing suppliers for workplace safety violations discovered during the department’s investigation into a fatal accident at the airplane maker’s Paine Field plant in 2014.
► In the Int’l Business Times — In Boeing union election, Machinists face heavy opposition from South Carolina elected officials — As union elections near, elected officials can generally say things that employers cannot communicate without risking labor law violations.
LOCAL
► From AP — UW increases student worker wage to $11 an hour — The University of Washington says it is increasing the minimum pay for its student workers to $11 an hour. The pay raise will affect about 2,600 students and will be retroactive to April 1.
PORTS
► In the Oregonian — Container-terminal loss at Port of Portland felt deeply upriver — The Port of Portland faced another round of trouble last week: Shipping line Hapag-Lloyd officially announced that no more ships would be visiting the city’s container terminal. That might’ve surprised some in Portland, but it the lentil farmers more than 400 miles up the Columbia River already knew.
► In the Oregonian — Solving Port of Portland problems requires union cooperation (editorial) — Terminal operator ICTSI Oregon Inc., with more than 20 years left on a 25 year contract, isn’t going anywhere. And dockworkers will continue to be represented by the ILWU, which has its own contract with the Pacific Maritime Association. Until ICTSI and the ILWU can end their feud, importers and exporters likely will have to find alternatives to the Port’s Terminal 6. And the Oregon economy will suffer.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From AFP — Clinton takes White House bid on the road — Hillary Clinton was on a campaign road trip deep into the U.S. heartland Monday after launching her bid to become the first woman to win the White House with a pledge to champion “everyday Americans.”
NATIONAL
► From AP — N.Y. attorney general questions work practices of 13 retailers — New York’s attorney general has launched an inquiry into 13 retailers, questioning whether they require workers remain on-call for short-notice shifts and pay for less than four hours when employees report for work, a practice not legal in New York.
► From Salon — McMugging the middle class: How corporate welfare conquered the American economy (by Christopher Dale) — While the tangible, physical recipients of government subsidies are the working poor, the true benefactors are big businesses, who are only rewarded for — and therefore encouraged to — pay their employees unlivable wages. Let’s call this what it is: legalized robbery. The middle class is subsidizing slave wages. And hopefully, we’re getting tired of doing so.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.