NEWS ROUNDUP
Strike updates, McCleary talks, 9/11 resilience…
Friday, September 11, 2015
TEACHER STRIKES
► In today’s Seattle Times — Seattle teachers strike continues, no classes Friday — Seattle Public Schools and the city’s teachers union did not meet Thursday, and schools will be closed again Friday.
ALSO at The Stand — Spirit “incredible” on teachers’ picket line
► From AP — Striking teachers say pay gap makes Seattle tough to afford — Teachers in Seattle say they have walked off the job largely because they can’t afford to live in the same city as the children they teach. The educators, who have not received a cost-of-living pay raise in six years, have joined other workers pushing for higher wages that compete with the city’s growing, highly paid tech workers.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Pasco schools to remain closed Sept. 11, union facing fines — Pasco schools will be closed Sept. 11 for an eighth day as a teachers strike continues, even as teachers union officials are due back in court Friday afternoon and could face hundreds of dollars in fines.
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — “Supremes” could force the issue, prompt proper school funding
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Dozens of workers to strike at Sea-Tac Airport Friday over minimum wage — Dozens of baggage handlers, cabin cleaners and others who work for Menzies Aviation at Sea-Tac Airport are expected to walk off their jobs Friday, protesting what they call unfair labor practices and demanding to be paid a $15 minimum wage. Menzies is a contractor for Alaska Airlines, providing ramp agents, baggage handlers, and other such service workers.
► From AP — Workers picket aviation contractor over labor, safety issues — Menzies Aviation employees have walked off the job at Sea-Tac Airport. The workers are picketing on Friday to protest what they say is unfair labor practices — including intimidation, threats, and harassment — by their employer.
► In today’s News Tribune — PLU to host debate on Tacoma’s potential minimum wage increase — Members of the university’s debate team will work with local policy experts to debate the issue Oct. 8.
BOEING
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Boeing CEO Muilenburg to take stage at huge Seattle aerospace engineers’ gathering — Nearly 2,000 aerospace engineers will descend on Seattle Sept. 22-24 for the SAE AeroTech 2015 conference, a biannual event that sets standards for the aerospace industry. The event will bring new Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg to Seattle as keynote speaker, for what will likely be his first major local appearance since he ascended to the cockpit of Boeing two months ago.
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Everett vs. Renton: 777 more likely to suffer in a global recession than 737, analyst says — A global recession in the next five years could dent production of wide-body aircraft, but production of narrow-body jets, such as the 737, should continue unabated, says a Bernstein analyst.
CAMPAIGN 2016
► From MSNBC — AFL-CIO President Trumka on Clinton-Sanders race (video) — New polling shows Hillary Clinton is trailing Bernie Sanders in Iowa. Meanwhile, Democratic officials are reportedly looking for a Plan B, someone like Al Gore, John Kerry, Elizabeth Warren or Joe Biden. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka discusses these developments with Chris Matthews.
NATIONAL
► From The Hill — Labor chief hammers Wall St. over golden parachutes — AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka is calling on Wall Street to end the practice of giving golden parachutes to top executives leaving for government jobs. Trumka sent a letter on Thursday to six top banking executives, calling the policy “a highly controversial and dubious practice” intended to sway banking executives into providing favorable government treatment to their former firms.
► In the Washington Post — These are the schools driving America’s student loan crisis — The surge in defaults was largely concentrated among relatively older, lower-income students who attended for-profit colleges. That’s a group of Americans who, on the whole, were desperately seeking new skills in hopes of finding better-paying jobs through the 2000s — and especially the Great Recession. The data suggest many of those borrowers have found added struggle instead.
► From AP — New York state OKs $15 minimum wage for fast-food workers — New York state will gradually raise the minimum wage for fast-food workers to $15 an hour — the first time any state has set the minimum that high.
► From Reuters — Unions file new Wal-Mart labor complaint related to store closure — Unions filed a second labor board complaint against Wal-Mart related to its temporary closure of a California store, claiming the retailer discriminated against activist workers by not transferring them to nearby stores.
T.G.I.F.
The following year, when Bruce Springsteen released The Rising, one critic called the album “one of the very best examples in recent history of how popular art can evoke a time period and all of its confusing and often contradictory notions, feelings and impulses.” Its songs — including this one — eschewed reactionary patriotism, and instead, laid bare the emotions, the loss, the frustration, the anger, and the impulse to demand “an eye for an eye.”
As we remember and honor those who died 14 years ago, our thoughts are not of revenge, but of resilience. One of many examples, the surviving employees of the Windows of the World, members of UNITE HERE, planted the seeds for a new group — the Restaurant Opportunities Center — which is now a strong voice for powerless immigrants and restaurant workers across the country. That’s the kind of legacy that would make those who died on 9/11 proud.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.