NEWS ROUNDUP
Accountability, strong public sector unions, plantation capitalism…
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In the (Everett) Herald — Judge to weigh legality of Eyman’s tax-cut ballot measure — The legality of Tim Eyman’s latest tax-cut ballot measure will be argued in a King County courtroom Tuesday, the first round in a battle the state Supreme Court might ultimately decide. Superior Court Judge William Downing will hear arguments on the validity of Initiative 1366, which slashes the sales tax by a penny in mid-April unless lawmakers put a tax-limiting constitutional amendment on the ballot for November. Attorneys said they anticipate a ruling within a matter of days, after which the losing side would most likely appeal directly to the high court.
► From AP — Proposal to fix Washington school funding gets hearing — Many spoke against Senate Bill 6195 for not saying how the Legislature will reduce its reliance on local school levies to pay for basic education, only making a commitment to try and solve the issue next year.
► In today’s NY Times — Proof that a price on carbon works (editorial) — Canadian provinces and some American states have shown that raising the cost of burning fossil fuels does not damage the economy.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Western State Hospital needs competent management (editorial) — The mess at Western State Hospital is untenable, putting patients, employees and the public in peril.
► In today’s Seattle Times — State lawmaker in Olympia asks teens about their virginity — State Rep. Mary Dye (R-Pomeroy) asked a group of high school students visiting Olympia with Planned Parenthood if they were virgins and suggested one was not.
BOEING
LOCAL
► From Slog — Thousands march on MLK Day in Seattle — Thousands of people marched from the Central District to downtown Seattle today as a part of a peaceful protest in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. A Seattle Police Department spokesperson said there were no arrests.
MORE local MLK Day coverage in the Columbian, (Everett) Herald, News Tribune, Olympian, Spokesman-Review, and the Yakima H-R.
► In today’s Olympian — Report says 1 in 3 Washington households struggle to afford basic life necessities — The United Way has released a comprehensive report with data on Pacific Northwest households that earn more than the federal poverty level, but still struggle to afford basic necessities such as housing and child care. The nonprofit organization refers to these households as ALICE, which stands for “asset limited, income constrained, employed.”
► In the (Everett) Herald — Union, fire chief accused of misconduct have clashed before — The latest controversy over a firefighter’s allegations that fire chief Murray Gordon showed signs of being intoxicated at a fatal fire last month — something Gordon denies — underscores the years of contention between him and IAFF Local 46.
FRIEDRICHS
► MUST-READ in The Atlantic — Why some states want strong public-sector unions (by Charlotte Garden) — Many states want effective and well-resourced unions, even though those unions will be on the other side of the bargaining table. That much is apparent from California’s robust defense of its collective-bargaining law in Friedrichs, as well as the amicus briefs filed by 21 states and the District of Columbia and a list of cities, counties, elected officials, and school districts.
ALSO at The Stand — Bipartisan support for labor in Friedrichs Supreme Court case — The top attorneys for 22 states and the District of Columbia, including Washington State Attorney General Bob Ferguson, have filed a “friend-of-the-court” amicus brief supporting unions in Friedrichs. In addition, three prominent Republican state senators have joined with GOP colleagues from across the country and sided with public workers in the case.
► In today’s NY Times — Case could widen free-speech gap between corporations, unions — The Citizens United decision, which amplified the role of money in American politics, also promised something like a level playing field. Both corporations and unions, it said, could spend what they liked to support their favored candidates. But last week’s arguments in a major challenge to public unions illuminated a gap in the Supreme Court’s treatment of capital and labor. The court has long allowed workers to refuse to finance unions’ political activities. But shareholders have no comparable right to refuse to pay for corporate political speech.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Washington Post — Supreme Court to review Obama’s power on deportation policy — The justices will decide whether the president has the authority to declare that millions of illegal immigrants be allowed to remain and work in the United States without fear of deportation.
► From The Hill — GOP field divided on trade deal — Trump, Cruz, Christie, Fiorina and Huckabee say they oppose the TPP. Bush, Carson and Kasich support it. Rubio and Paul won’t say. And Santorum, apparently, is still running.
NATIONAL
► From AFL-CIO Now — Working people (and the facts) stand up to ‘Right to Work’ push in West Virginia — That didn’t take long. As the West Virginia Legislature opened Wednesday, the first bill out of the gates was “right to work” legislation that does nothing more than attack the rights of working people. As the video above shows, workers weren’t happy about the proposal and flooded the Capitol to express their opposition to the dangerous bill.
► In today’s Washington Post — Not much unites Democrats and Republicans. Anger at Wall Street does. — Eight years after the start of the Great Recession, the anger at major financial institutions has grown in both parties.
► In today’s NY Times — How to protect female farmworkers (by José Padilla and David Bacon) — Immigrants working in the fields endure a nightmare of sexual violence, and it’s rare for their attackers to be prosecuted.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.