NEWS ROUNDUP
Fast Track bull, budget deal tee’d up, jailing the poor…
Monday, June 8, 2015
FAST TRACK
► From Politico — Big Pharma seeks special trade deal — The pharmaceutical industry has been pressing the Obama administration to insist that the Trans-Pacific Partnership include 12 years of monopoly pricing power for the makers of costly drugs. But critics and international relief organizations warn that the deal would lock in higher costs and mean that far fewer people in developing countries would be able to afford life-saving medication.
► From AP — Obama’s trade quest trails him across Atlantic — President Barack Obama’s politically fraught trade quest in Washington trailed him across the Atlantic Sunday, as he met with world leaders anxiously watching a debate on Capitol Hill that could impact the status of economic pacts with the Asia-Pacific and Europe.
► From Huffington Post — Obama’s Fast Track attack on women (by Martha Burk) — The so-called partnership is an insult to all U.S. workers, with many provisions that will hurt women the most. The CWA says it will steal majority-female jobs from low wage workplaces like call centers, as well as higher wage sectors such as human resources. And according to Doctors Without Borders, the agreement may well cut off access to generic drugs for people living with HIV/AIDS — now predominately women and kids.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Seattle Times — Budget writers in Olympia have tentative spending agreement — State budget writers have tentatively agreed on a spending level for the state’s 2015-17 operating budget, according to the OFM director. If lawmakers in both parties green-light the agreement, then negotiators can begin line-by-line bargaining. That’s when lawmakers will determine exactly how much to spend on education, mental-health programs, prisons and other needs.
► In the Seattle Times — Lawmakers get penalty stroke at Chambers Bay (editorial) — If Pierce County officials really have nothing to hide, they should allow reporters into meetings with state legislators during the upcoming U.S. Open.
► From AP — Lawmakers claim $180K in payments for special session — The price of running the Legislature for an extra month included more than $180,000 in daily expense payments to lawmakers. Those $120-a-day per diem payments and mileage reimbursements will continue to add up as lawmakers continue to negotiate a state budget in a second special session.
► In today’s NY Times — States confront wide budget gaps even after years of recovery — Though the national economy is in its sixth year of recovery from the recession, many states are still facing major funding gaps that have locked legislatures in protracted battles with governors. In some states, lawmakers have gone into overtime with unresolved budgets, special sessions and threats of widespread government layoffs.
LOCAL
► From AP — Proposal to raise minimum wage qualifies for Tacoma ballot — A citizen’s initiative to raise Tacoma’s minimum wage to $15 an hour has qualified for the November ballot. The Pierce County auditor’s staff has verified that petitions submitted by the 15 Now group contained 3,231 valid signatures of registered Tacoma voters, exceeding the requirement is 3,160 to get on the ballot.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From Politico — Obama poised to hike wages for millions — The Obama administration is on the verge of possibly doubling the salary levels that would require employers to pay overtime in the most ambitious government intervention on wages in a decade. And it doesn’t need Congress’s permission.
► From The Hill — Report: Data breach not limited to federal employees — The recent hack on a database with the personal information of 4 million current and former government employees may have also yielded data on people that never worked in government, according to a report by ABC News.
NATIONAL
► From AFL-CIO Now — Workers head to Walmart shareholders meeting to demand $15/hour, full-time schedules — Workers and Our Walmart activists are headed to the Walmart shareholders’ meeting in Bentonville, Ark., to demand that the company raise its minimum salary to $15 per hour and provide consistent, full-time jobs for workers who want them at the retail giant. The workers also will protest the layoffs of workers who have raised their voice and demanded more from the country’s largest private employer.
► From KUOW — Men named John, Robert, William or James outnumber women on corporate boards — More men named John, Robert, William or James run the boards of America’s largest companies than women do. And in the Pacific Northwest, the numbers are worse than the national average.
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► From Last Night Tonight — John Oliver explains why America’s system of bail is a way to lock up the poor and the frequency and cost of bail is on the rise. So poor people are regularly choosing to admit guilt, even when they are not, just to get out of jail, which restricts what jobs are available to them, keeping them poor. But Washington, D.C. is leading the way toward a solution.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.