NEWS ROUNDUP
Scrutinizing TPP, selling Haggen, redefining ‘strikes’…
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
From AFL-CIO Now — TPP deal is rushed through; working families respond — AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka: “The (Obama) Administration had a hard time reaching this deal for good reasons: it appears that many problematic concessions were made in order to finalize the deal.”
► From The Hill — Obama’s trade deal faces stiff headwinds — The White House’s announcement Monday of an international trade deal covering 40 percent of the world’s economy sets the stage for a bruising, months-long congressional battle that is already spilling into the 2016 presidential race.
► From The Hill — Trade deal looms large for 2016 — The 2016 presidential field is all over the map when it comes to the TPP. Hillary Clinton did not offer an immediate response to the finalized accord Monday. Bernie Sanders issued a fresh statement calling the “disastrous” deal a win for Wall Street and big corporations. On the Republican side, reactions have been mixed.
► From Reuters — White House says ‘more work to be done’ on European trade deal — A White House spokesman Josh Earnest said conversations with European countries around the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) are not as advanced as those that led to the agreement with Pacific nations.
LOCAL
► From PubliCola — Council backs O’Brien ordinance allowing rideshare drivers to unionize — The proposed legislation unanimously passed the council’s Finance and Culture committee last Friday. Despite the unanimous vote, its sponsor, council member Mike O’Brien, says that he doesn’t anticipate the ordinance to go to full council anytime soon due to the likely legal challenge from rideshare companies.
ALSO at The Stand — Support for-hire drivers’ rights in Seattle
► In today’s Oregonian — Haggen hopes to sell its stores to the highest bidder — The Haggen grocery chain is seeking court approval to auction off 127 of its 164 stores. It hopes to sell the stores by the end of the year.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Haggen to close Liberty Lake store as part of bankruptcy — The Haggen grocery chain will close its Liberty Lake store just months after entering the Eastern Washington market.
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Kelso School Board approves new teacher contract
► In the USA Today — Alaska Airlines CEO admits his own airline lost his bag — Alaska Airlines CEO Brad Tilden said his own airline misplaced his luggage as he traveled last week to an industry summit in Washington, D.C.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Takko is Democrats’ top pick for Senate seat — Democratic PCOs nominated three people to replace former state Sen. Brian Hatfield, who announced Sept. 1 that he resigned to take a job in Gov. Jay Inslee’s office. The officers’ first choice was hardly a surprise: Rep. Dean Takko (D-Longview).
► In today’s News Tribune — State AG wins case against Pierce County firm that provided bogus training to care workers — A Pierce County judge has ordered the owners of Adult Family Home Service Center, a business that provided bogus training programs to adult family care workers, to pay $27,000 in restitution.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.