NEWS ROUNDUP
Sent to Inslee’s office, who’s OK with slavery, Gimme One Reason…
Friday, May 29, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — Senate shows ‘open contempt’ for state workers as shutdown looms
► In today’s Seattle Times — Special session ends with deep divide, no budget deal — Beginning Friday, the state will start sending out notices to state employee unions and contractors warning of temporary layoffs or other effects of a shutdown.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Meanwhile in Oregon…
► In today’s Oregonian — Oregon lawmakers approve bills to help close wage gap, fight wage theft — Two bills touted as strengthening worker protections around retaliation and wage claims are headed to Gov. Kate Brown’s desk following their legislative approval Thursday.
► In today’s Oregonian — Compromise on Oregon paid sick leave bill clears path for Senate action — If approved, Oregon would become the fourth state to require employers to provide workers with paid time off to care for themselves or an ailing family member.
LOCAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — It was Madore who sought a proposition promoting so-called “right-to-work” restrictions in county employee contracts, which would have been illegal and set the county up for a costly legal battle. His idea failed to win support from his fellow councilors, but did prompt a public outcry against Madore.
► In today’s Olympian — Nearly 200 Shelton mill workers seek aid, information at resource fair — The resource fair was created to help workers and others affected by three Shelton-area mill closures.
► From AP — Tacoma $15 minimum wage group needs hundreds more signatures — A group looking to boost Tacoma’s minimum wage to $15 an hour needs less than 500 more signatures to get the initiative on the November ballot.
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma mayor warns minimum wage task force about public information laws — Since Tacoma’s minimum wage task force was created by a resolution of the city council, it’s acting on their behalf and therefore must conduct its work in public.
FAST TRACK
ALSO at The Stand: Reichert blasted for Fast Track Medicare cuts
Larsen backs Fast Track, but will he fight slavery, Medicare cuts?
► From Politico — The dozen Dems who’ll decide Obama’s trade deal — The Senate last week passed Fast Track on a 62-37 vote. But the House is another story: Only 17 Democrats are on record in support, and several dozen Republicans have come out against it, too. Proponents would lose if a vote were taken today. But there are enough undecided lawmakers to make the expected mid-June vote a cliffhanger.
► In the NY Times — On trade, unions open aggressive ad campaign against Democrats — With the fight over Mr. Obama’s trade push shifting to the House, organized labor groups are getting personal with their attacks on the Democrats whose support the president needs to win.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Here is an ad that will soon be running in Rep. Suzan DelBene’s district, as it will in the districts of Reps. Derek Kilmer, Rick Larsen, Denny Heck, and other members of Congress across the country.
NATIONAL
► In the Boston Herald — New report shows over 40% of US workers are ‘contingent’ employees — The number of “contingent” U.S. employees, or workers who don’t have traditionally secure jobs, is growing, according to a new report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Workers considered contingent include agency temps, on-call workers, independent contractors, self-employed workers, and standard part-time employees.
T.G.I.F.
► A couple weeks ago, The Entire Staff of the Stand celebrated the late, great B.B. King, whose influence on popular music will live on forever. Today, we offer a case in point: Tracy Chapman performing some classic 12-bar blues that we’re sure made the King of the Blues proud. Enjoy!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.