NEWS ROUNDUP
Tax break sunshine, Uber vote, history at VW…
Monday, December 7, 2015
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the Columbian — State lawmakers struggle with ‘paramount duty’ of funding education — There’s little progress despite the state Supreme Court mandate to fully fund K-12 education, and $100,000-a-day fine for failing to do so.
► In the Spokesman-Review — McIntire’s tax plan better than Washington state’s present system (editorial) — The state treasurer has proposed an amendment to the state constitution that will cut the business and occupation tax, eliminate the state property tax, roll back the sales tax, and institute a 5% income tax dedicated to funding education.
► In today’s News Tribune — Western State Hospital is broken, needs fixing (editorial) — There aren’t enough professionals to handle all the patients in the 827-bed institution. Staff members tell harrowing stories of assault. Patients aren’t safe enough. Working conditions can be harsh… Fixing the hospital will take additional millions from the Legislature. But not fixing it is already costing the taxpayers millions — and exposing patients and staff members to great harm.
LOCAL
► In the Bellingham Herald — Haggen to sell its remaining stores — Haggen is moving forward with plans to auction off its remaining core stores, including five in Whatcom County. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Gross signed an order on Friday, Dec. 4 approving the bidding procedures for the auction of the Bellingham grocer’s 33 core stores. The auction is scheduled to take place on Friday, Feb. 5, about a month later than the first proposed auction date.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The WSLC has passed a resolution to support local legislation to “ban the box” and “promote public education and community action that reduces unfair barriers to employment of people with records, thereby promoting the values of human dignity and work.”
► In the Bellingham Herald — Energy costs were a concern long before decision to shut down Intalco — Alcoa officials were concerned about the viability of Ferndale’s Intalco Works plant several months before the November layoff announcement that likely will cut jobs for 465 people.
► In the Spokesman-Review — Kaiser’s Trentwood plant continues to reinvent itself — To generations of Spokane residents, the Trentwood rolling mill represented steady, blue-collar employment, with the kind of paychecks that bought homes, put kids through college and paid for family vacations. Landing a union job there is still possible, though it’s a smaller operation than in the past.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Supreme Court to hear voting rights case, which could have implications in Yakima — In Evenwel v. Abbott, the plaintiffs are asking the justices to define the court’s principle of “one person, one vote” in a way that would require most election districts be drawn based on eligible voter population. Most districts, including Yakima’s new council elections system, are drawn based on a nearly equal distribution of total population.
“FREE TRADE”
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Washington Post — Pressure mounts for year-end spending deal — A bipartisan group of negotiators worked through the weekend in hopes of striking a year-end spending deal by the end of Monday so Congress has enough time to pass the legislation before Friday and avert a government shutdown.
► In the Seattle Times — No Child Left Behind education law getting needed reboot (editorial) — A new education law by Sen. Patty Murray promises more local control for school districts while maintaining federal oversight of student outcomes.
► In the Seattle Times — Not using immigrants’ skills, brainpower is just dumb (by Jerry Large) — Washington would benefit if the state helped more immigrants reach their potential.
NATIONAL
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► In the Detroit Free Press — Fight economic inequality with collective bargaining (by Labor Secretary Thomas Perez) — Today, the Detroit Three are back in the black, transforming themselves to become more competitive and efficient… It is a textbook case of shared sacrifice leading to shared prosperity. And it is a triumph of collective bargaining, one of our most powerful forces for upward mobility and economic security.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.