NEWS ROUNDUP
Heartbroken and mad, Kapstone imposition, teacher shortage…
Monday, August 10, 2015
SATURDAY’S RALLY
ALSO TODAY at The Stand:
Combating institutional racism can’t wait (by Lynne Dodson)
4,000-plus hear about importance of Social Security, Medicare
► From Facebook — Y’all, I’m so mad (by Ijeoma Oluo) — For the billionth time today I’ve seen white people try to tell black people to quiet down, to stop disrupting. I’m listening to White Seattle shake their heads and lament at how black people are just “hurting their own cause” by disrupting Bernie Sanders’ event. “Can’t they see he’s their best bet?” Fuck all of that. Every single bit.
LOCAL
► From Boycott Sakuma Berries — Valley Pride workers walk out demanding better wages and decent living, working conditions — Thirty-five workers walked out this morning, August 8th, from the Valley Pride Sales Inc, produce and berry farm demanding $4.75 per box of picked berries and better working and living conditions in the labor camp.
► In the PSBJ — Washington poised to become leader in oil train safety ahead of massive increase in traffic — Washington state is quickly becoming a leader in crude oil train safety standards. That’s good because the state is gearing up to become a high-traffic zone for the controversial trains.
► In the Oregonian — Precision Castparts sold to Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway for $37 billion — Berkshire Hathaway confirmed Monday it’s buying Oregon’s second-biggest company, Precision Castparts, in the biggest deal in the history of the state. Precision Castparts has more than 30,000 employees, including 3,000 in Oregon.
► From KPLU — Why Bobby Kennedy went after the Teamsters, including Seattle’s Dave Beck — Seattle had a starring role in the corruption scandal that engulfed the Teamsters union in the late 1950s. That’s when it became clear that Dave Beck, the Seattle-based Teamster president, was stealing money from the organization.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From AP — State agencies allow babies at work — During his four months of going to work with his mom at the state Department of Health in Tumwater, Gavin VanHoozer became known as the office baby. At 8 weeks old, Gavin was part of a pilot project allowing parents to bring their newborn to work, a baby-friendly policy that Health Secretary John Wiesman made permanent at the agency last month. Now, at least one other state agency is testing a similar policy of allowing parents to bring infants to the office.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — Pictured at right are a few teachers who walked off the job in Seattle over their frustrations about, among other things, not getting a raise for seven years. Perhaps if we need more and better teachers, we should listen to them and treat them with a little more respect. Just a thought.
► From AP — Push for higher minimum wage ignites worry about enforcement — As a campaign to raise the minimum wage as high as $15 has achieved victories in such places as Seattle, Los Angeles and New York, it has bumped up against a harsh reality: Plenty of scofflaw businesses don’t pay the legal minimum now and probably won’t pay the new, higher wages either.
► From Bloomberg — Athletes’ Hail-Mary bid for union tests U.S. meaning of employee — The NLRB is poised to decide two closely watched cases that have the potential to reshape labor laws by allowing college football players to unionize and forcing companies to take more responsibility for contractors.
► In the NY Times — Capitalists, arise! We need to deal with income inequality (by Peter Georgescu) — If inequality is not addressed, the income gap will most likely be resolved in one of two ways: by major social unrest or through oppressive taxes… We business leaders know what to do. But do we have the will to do it? Are we willing to control the excessive greed so prevalent in our culture today and divert resources to better education and the creation of more opportunity?
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► In today’s Seattle Times — Hundreds rally on Capitol Hill to mark Ferguson anniversary
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.