NEWS ROUNDUP
Teachers to walk, Fast Track silence, words still matter…
Monday, April 20, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — Message to Olympia: Public Service Matters!
► In today’s Olympian — Teachers unions staging strikes to oppose education proposals in the Legislature — Teachers unions throughout the state are staging one-day strikes to protest proposed changes to the class-size initiative voters passed last fall, as well as other education proposals floated by the Republican-controlled state Senate.
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Teacher protest will cancel classes in Bellingham, Blaine, Ferndale schools on April 24 — Bellingham, Ferndale and Blaine schools have canceled classes for Friday, April 24, because teachers are joining a protest of the state Legislature’s failure to provide ample funding for K-12 education.
► In today’s Seattle Times — In Olympia, not much talking in state budget talks — and the clock is ticking — With just a week before the legislative session officially ends April 26, talks have broken down over how to bridge the gaps between Democratic and GOP budget proposals.
► In the Peninsula Daily News — Sen. Hargrove aims at education funding; he’d hike capital gains tax by 1/10 of 1 percent — He introduced SB 6103 to raise the capital gains tax by one-tenth of 1 percent on the state’s 7,500 wealthiest residents, he said, and to grant some relief to people who pay property taxes. The Senate’s majority Republicans countered with a proposal to fund education by raising property taxes.
ALSO at The Stand — Gov. Inslee wary of expanding investor rights in trade deals — (Dec. 16, 2014)
FAST TRACK
► From KGMI — Demonstrations in Ferndale and around the world take aim at trade deals — Labor and environmental groups see them as corporate giveaways that will weaken labor, environmental and consumer protections.
“Like a vote for the Iraq War or statements of support for the Social Security-cutting Bowles-Simpson plan, a vote for fast track and the TPP [Trans-Pacific Partnership] will never be forgotten and will haunt members of Congress for years to come,” said Jim Dean, chair of Democracy for America.
LOCAL
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Rainier family illustrates challenges of making do on minimum-wage income — Jeremy and Kristin Hurring are barely scraping by on his minimum wage salary. The Rainier couple doesn’t have the money to replace the brakes on their car. They can’t afford disposable diapers for their 1-year-old daughter, Sarah. They don’t eat out. They can’t afford new clothes for themselves or Sarah. And just the gas to drive to the Woodland tulip festival was a splurge.
► In today’s News Tribune — Lives of Bonney Lake family killed by falling concrete to be celebrated Monday — EastPointe Pastor James Ludlow said the celebration of the Ellises’ lives will begin at 6 p.m. Monday (April 20) at the Puyallup Foursquare Church, 601 Ninth Ave. SE. (Josh Ellis, a member of PTE Local 17, worked as a Licensing Services Representative at the Kent office of the Department of Licensing.)
BOEING
► In the PSBJ — Boeing Machinists call off vote after union organizers threatened at gunpoint in S.C. — International Association of Machinists & Aerospace Workers said in a statement Friday that union members faced dangerous and violent confrontations with homeowners while they were canvassing for votes. Two organizers were threatened at gunpoint, the union said.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s — Republican alternative to Obamacare is… Obamacare? — If the U.S. Supreme Court blows up the tax subsidies at the heart of Obamacare in June, Republicans hope to deliver on their promise to offer an alternative healthcare plan. But key parts of it may resemble the one Obama delivered five years ago in the Affordable Care Act, partly reflecting Republican concerns that they could pay a political price if insurance subsidies are yanked from millions of Americans later this year.
NATIONAL
► In the NY Times — Laid-off Walmart workers head to NLRB — A group representing Walmart workers laid off after the abrupt closing of five stores last week planned to seek an injunction on Monday from the National Labor Relations Board that would require the retailer to rehire all 2,200 affected workers.
► From The Hill — Why do blue-collar workers vote against their economic interests? (by David Russell) — It seems evident to the outsider that Republicans feel completely comfortable in voting against the interests of their constituents because they know they have either short memories or no memory at all.
► In the NY Times — Why Americans don’t want to soak the rich (by Neil Irwin) — With rising income inequality in the United States, you might expect more and more people to conclude that it’s time to soak the rich. Here’s a puzzle, though: Over the last several decades, close to the opposite has happened. New research offers a bit more evidence on what may be occurring. It doesn’t disprove either the conventional liberal or conservative argument. But it does show some of the ways that Americans’ attitudes toward redistribution are more complex than either would suggest.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
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