NEWS ROUNDUP
Contracts funded, OT pay for 5M, SCOTUS to revisit ‘fair share’…
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
EDITOR’S NOTE — Wednesday’s Shutdown Rally (thankfully) is CANCELLED!
► In today’s News Tribune — Legislature approves budget that cuts tuition, funds state worker raises — The Legislature on Monday evening approved a new two-year spending plan that would cut college tuition, give teachers cost-of-living raises and help satisfy a court order that the state fully fund public schools.
MORE local budget coverage in the News Tribune/Olympian, Seattle Times, and the Spokesman-Review.
► In today’s Columbian — Transportation in doubt? — The transportation revenue package passed by the Senate in Olympia on Monday would raise $16.1 billion, and lawmakers plan to spend $50 million of that money on overhauling Clark County’s oldest freeway interchange. But some local Republicans (Reps. Pike and Harris) struck a different tone, foreshadowing that the package may not be a foregone conclusion to pass on what should be the last day of the 2015 Legislature.
MORE local transportation coverage in today’s News Tribune, Olympian, and the Seattle Times.
LOCAL
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Union continues prepping for KapStone strike — A strike appeared less imminent Monday, after KapStone and AWPPW officials met for the first time in 10 days. Union officials say they will continue prepping for a strike, but will meet with the company again next week.
► In today’s News Tribune — Chamber mounts ‘educational’ effort against 15 Now Tacoma minimum wage proposal — Amid a public debate about Tacoma’s minimum wage, a window of unlimited campaign spending emerges.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From The Hill — Obama set to expand overtime pay for millions of workers — The long-awaited regulation would make all salaried workers who earn less than $970 per week, roughly $50,440 per year, automatically eligible to earn overtime pay if they work more than 40 hours a week. The cutoff under existing rules is around $23,660 per year. The move could raise pay for nearly 5 million American workers.
► In the Washington Post — Republicans will hate Obama’s new overtime rule, but they can’t do anything about it — The overtime threshold has been raised only once since 1975, when it covered nearly half of U.S. workers; today it stands at less than $24,000, or lower than the poverty level for a family of four.
► A related story inb today’s Oregonian — As Ron Wyden preps for re-election, Oregon Business Association to give him ‘statesman’ award
► From The Hill — Largest federal workers union sues OPM over breach — The American Federation of Government Employees on Monday became the first to sue the Office of Personnel Management in the wake of the massive data breach that has shaken the government. That breach laid bare the security clearance background investigations on upwards of 18 million people.
► In today’s NY Times — State marijuana laws complicate federal job recruitment — Applicants living where marijuana is legal are being warned that federal agencies still will not tolerate its use.
► From the Hill — The clock runs out on Ex-Im — The Export-Import Bank will expire just after midnight Tuesday, and backers of reauthorizing the embattled federal institution have no clear path forward in Congress.
NATIONAL
“The Supreme Court is revisiting decisions that have made it possible for people to stick together for a voice at work and in their communities — decisions that have stood for more than 35 years,” said the statement from the NEA, AFT, AFSCME, SEIU and the California Teachers Association.
► In today’s NY Times — U.S. Chamber of Commerce works globally to fight antismoking measures — From Ukraine to Uruguay, Moldova to the Philippines, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and its foreign affiliates have become the hammer for the tobacco industry, engaging in a worldwide effort to fight antismoking laws of all kinds.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.