DAILY NEWS
Expanding OT pay, Sanders surge, hot hemisphere…
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — Tefere Gebre to headline WSLC Convention
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From The Hill — Congressional Dems back Obama on overtime rules — Well over half the Democrats in both chambers signed on to a letter backing the new proposed rules, which the White House rolled out last month. The letter, drafted by Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) and Rep. Bobby Scott (D-Va.), urges Obama not to back down in front of GOP opposition to the overtime rules, and to finalize regulations as soon as possible.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Other members of Congress from Washington who signed Murray’s letter: Sen. Maria Cantwell and Reps. Suzan DelBene, Derek Kilmer, Rick Larsen, Jim McDermott, and Adam Smith.
► From Metro — Sen. Warren’s schedule bill aims to carve out consistency in work schedule chaos — “Too many hardworking Americans face difficult situations due to erratic employer scheduling, especially women and low-wage workers,” said AFL-CIO Secretary Treasurer Liz Shuler. “By prioritizing fair scheduling as a key component of economic stability, (Sen. Warren’s) Schedules that Work bill will protect the rights and wages of working people.”
► In today’s NY Times — A Senate bill that makes roads and railroads less safe (editorial) — Legislation that could be considered this week would allow younger interstate truckers and undermine safety on roads and rails in numerous other ways.
CAMPAIGN 2016
► From Politico — Trumka: I’m not trying to slow the Sanders surge — The AFL-CIO leader says his memo last month was a simple reminder that there’s only one endorsement from the group: “The memo just said, before they got out of hand, you know, debate back and forth, talk up a storm. But remember: There’s only one endorsement in a presidential election, and it comes from the national.”
► In today’s NY Times — Scott Walker proposes shutting Wisconsin Ethics Board — The Government Accountability Board unanimously approved the 2012 election to recall the governor and later authorized an investigation into his recall campaign.
► In the National Journal — Jeb Bush wants to cut automatic raises for federal employees — Jeb Bush on Monday outlined how he would overhaul the federal civil service if he is elected president, including a proposal to transform the pay-raise system for federal employees.
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Gravity Payments CEO, who set $70K minimum pay, sued by brother — Lucas Price, co-founder and director of Gravity Payments, accuses his brother, co-founder and CEO Dan Price, of violating Lucas’ rights as minority shareholder and breaching duties and contracts, according to court records.
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma, Seattle port container cargoes up 14 percent last month — Shippers diverted more cargo to Northwest Port Alliance docks in June because of less congestion than rival West Coast ports.
NATIONAL
GLOBAL
► From Think Progress — NOAA: Hottest first half of year in Northern Hemisphere by stunning 0.36°F — NOAA’s latest monthly climate report confirms that 2015 will crush previous global temperature records. That’s especially true up here in the northern hemisphere, where the first half of 2015 is a remarkable 0.36°F warmer than the first half of any year since records started being kept 135 years ago.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.