NEWS ROUNDUP
McCleary report card, KapStone vote, TPP reform…
Monday, July 20, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From AP — State Supreme Court to review education lawsuit progress — The new state budget makes a $1.3 billion down payment toward fully paying the cost of basic education in Washington. But even the lawmakers who crafted the budget do not expect the Supreme Court to be satisfied with their progress toward fulfilling the court’s order on dollars for K-12 schools.
► In Sunday’s Seattle Times — Inslee, the ‘greenest’ governor — not so much — Gov. Jay Inslee has long advocated reducing greenhouse-gas emissions. But the state Legislature adjourned this month without taking the kind of major climate action desired by Inslee and his environmentalist allies.
► In the Columbian — Analysis: Interpersonal frictions leave transportation bill unsatisfactory — Some hailed the package as a compromise that will benefit the entire state. Others blasted it, saying Clark County drivers will be footing the bill to fund projects in other parts of the state. What is clear is, transportation has become one of the most divisive political issues in Southwest Washington. It’s a source of partisan bickering and gamesmanship. Some Southwest Washington lawmakers have earned a reputation for sending mixed messages. And the result, some believe, is that the region doesn’t benefit as much as it could when money is being doled out.
LOCAL
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Union to vote on new KapStone offer — Just two days after KapStone mill workers authorized an unfair labor practice strike, union leaders Friday said they will bring another company contract offer to a membership vote. Voting will take Monday through Wednesday, according to a letter sent to mill workers by the AWPPE bargaining board. The letter did not describe how the latest company offer differs from two others that members have already rejected.
► In the Peninsula Daily News — Arbitrator sides with union in dispute with Clallam County — A union representing Clallam County employees has won a grievance against the county and a significant award in arbitration. County officials say they won’t honor the award to Teamsters Local 589 because it is illegal to pay hourly employees for time they did not work and that if forced to do so, layoffs are possible.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In the People’s World — GOP funding bill would force the NLRB to lay off one-third of its staff — The Obama administration is blasting a Republican-authored money bill for the National Labor Relations Board, the Labor Department and other agencies, saying the cuts would force the NLRB to lay off one-third of its staff.
► From Politico — Battle lines drawn over Ex-Im renewal — The battle over Ex-Im could upend a must-pass highway bill that lawmakers are scrambling to pass before the end of the month.
NATIONAL
► From AP — Medicaid enrollment surges, stirs worry about state budgets — More than a dozen states that opted to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act have seen enrollments surge way beyond projections, raising concerns that the added costs will strain their budgets when federal aid is scaled back starting in two years.
HORRIBLE BOSSES: 2016 CAMPAIGN EDITION
► The latest video from AFSCME takes a look at the Republican presidential candidates and uses their own words to decide what type of bosses they would be.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.