NEWS ROUNDUP
Dump Fast Track, D.C.’s revolving door, Walmart coercion…
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
FAST TRACK
ALSO at The Stand:
Will Washington state’s delegation put Fast Track over the top?
McDermott, Larsen oppose Reichert’s Medicare cuts; will others?
► From The Hill — Fast-track holdouts in House play ‘let’s make a deal’ — Last-second bargains have a long history in tight trade votes, and longtime antagonists in Washington’s trade wars say they’d be surprised if some deals aren’t made on the floor, maybe even while the final votes are being cast.
EDITOR’S NOTE — “Will do, Mr. McNerney, sir. Will do.”
LOCAL
► In the Peninsula Daily News — West End’s last production lumber mill to close when Allen Logging Co. ends its 60-year run — Allen Logging Co., the last production lumber mill on the North Olympic Peninsula’s West End, expects to cease operating by mid-July. The closure will idle 45 workers, including drivers, millwrights, mechanics and log yard laborers.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Oil-drilling rig will create jobs, but not so many year-round ones — The Port said mooring Shell Oil’s rigs at Terminal 5 would create several hundred jobs. But nearly half involve Shell workers who will head to Alaska or people already working for Shell, the local contractor or the Port.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Jesse Jackson to press for more inclusion in Amazon workplace — The civil-rights leader will address the online retail giant’s annual meeting Wednesday, pushing the company to improve its hiring of women and minorities.
► From Bookings — The hottest 15 metros for advanced industries — Seattle ranks No. 2.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Olympian — Teachers rally for smaller class sizes on Capitol Campus — Teachers and parents gathered Tuesday afternoon at the sundial on the Capitol Campus as part of a week of planned demonstrations on state education funding issues.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Section of U.S. 195 splits as Spokane sees record heat — The heat wave shattering temperature records across Eastern Washington was so intense that it caused a stretch of U.S. Highway 195 to rupture Monday.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From AP — Clinton, Democrats meeting labor leaders on 2016 bids — Hillary Rodham Clinton and her Democratic presidential rivals are holding private meetings with labor leaders in hopes of landing union endorsements that would bring organizational muscle and money to their 2016 campaigns.
► In today’s News Tribune — Warning came too late for millions of hacked workers (editorial) — The government’s technological infrastructure apparently is as badly out of date as the nation’s physical infrastructure.
► From Gawker — Making banks safer will make banks less safe, warns evil plutocrat — Steven Schwarzman, the private equity billionaire and human PR disaster who once compared raising taxes on the rich to Hitler’s invasion of Poland, has some thoughts on how to prevent the next financial crisis. What would you guess they are? If you guessed “reverse any regulations put in place to make the banking system safer after the last financial crisis,” then my friend, you are one savvy reader of Gawker.com.
NATIONAL
► From Bloomberg — Some for-profit hospitals charging 10 times as much as Medicare rates — Community Health Systems Inc. and HCA Holdings Inc. accounted for about half of the 50 hospitals with list prices higher than anywhere else in the U.S., when compared with what they’re allowed under Medicare.
► In the Washington Post — Why labor groups genuinely believe they can unionize McDonald’s one day — SEIU is building the kind of worker power that it thinks will force fast food chains to the bargaining table of their own accord.
► From In These Times — Applebee’s is trying to limit workers’ ability to sue the company when their wages are stolen — A legal fight led by the restaurant chain Applebee’s against the NLRB is aiming to further limit workers’ ability to sue the company over disputes on the job.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.