NEWS ROUNDUP
B-Boys vs. cities, attack on PLAs, GOP eyes Social Security cuts…
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Seattle Times — Lawmaker proposes striking down local minimum-wage laws — Calling higher minimum wages “a disaster for small business owners,” GOP state Sen. Michael Baumgartner Tuesday introduced a bill to strike down local laws like Seattle’s $15-per-hour measure.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Baumgartner’s bill, SB 6578, has just one co-sponsor: Sen. John Braun (R-Centralia). And naturally, these poverty-wage supporting B-Boys are the Chair and Vice Chair of the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee. Why, you ask? Because that’s just how that Grand Ol’ Party rolls.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Yakima Valley educators take teacher shortage concerns to Olympia — Speaking to legislators Tuesday, Yakima School District Superintendent Jack Irion recalled meeting with two high school students worried they wouldn’t score high enough on math placement exams for college courses. Their fear stems from not having a math teacher; their class has been taught by a substitute. “It continues to haunt me,” Irion said.
► In today’s Olympian — Community college pay was shorted in budget (by Timothy Stokes, Amy Morrison Goings, and Eric Murray) — We were pleased that tuition was reduced by 5 percent for our students, and that the state funded compensation increases for our staff (including the first cost of living increase since 2008). However, the final budget didn’t include enough money to pay for the two policies. The community and technical college system was left short by $12.88 million. So, while it looks like our state community and technical colleges received additional support for our students and staff, we in fact are still facing budget cuts.
LOCAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — The Bellingham Herald reports that, if power costs continue to decline, the Alcoa smelter west of Ferndale might stay open.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Crucial vote looms for Group Health acquisition by Kaiser — Members of Seattle’s Group Health Cooperative will begin voting Saturday to decide whether the longtime care and coverage provider should be acquired by California’s Kaiser Permanente.
ALSO at The Stand — SEIU 1199NW nurses at Group Health endorse Kaiser deal
► In today’s Seattle Times — Albertsons shutting Safeway bakery plant in Bellevue — Forty-five employees will lose jobs as the grocery giant, which now owns Safeway, shifts production to Clackamas, Ore.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Hanford guards approve contract with signing bonus — The Hanford Guards Union voted Tuesday to accept a proposed new contract with Mission Support Alliance after three contract extensions during negotiations.
BOEING
► From AP — Boeing’s 2016 outlook disappoints; 777 output-cut announcement expected — Boeing’s fourth-quarter performance beat analysts’ estimates, but the company’s 2016 outlook came in well below Wall Street’s expectations. Boeing is also likely to announce another production rate cut, this time for the 777 program.
► From Reuters — Boeing forecasts 2016 earnings below estimates; shares tumble — Boeing forecast 2016 core earnings below estimates on Wednesday, and said it expected to deliver fewer commercial planes this year, sending its shares down 6.5 percent. The company expects to deliver 740 to 745 planes in 2016, its centenary year, down from 762 in 2015.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
EDITOR’S NOTE — More than 100 Republicans have co-sponsored this bill, but none are from Washington state.
► From The Hill — Dem mayors line up for Obama trade deal — Some Democratic mayors are lining up in favor of President Obama’s Pacific Rim trade deal, which is opposed by most Democrats in Congress and the Democratic presidential field.
tackle entitlement reform cut Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security ahead of the November elections. Republican leaders are facing mounting pressure from conservatives to slow the growth of largely popular programs. Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) has already vowed to pursue major changes to Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
NATIONAL
► From AFL-CIO Now — Pro ‘right-to-work’ politicians in West Virginia attack working people on the State Senate floor — West Virginia state Sen. Robert Karnes (R) doesn’t think too highly of every day working people trying to create a better life and earn wages to sustain a family on. In fact, he called the concerned citizens who attended a recent “Right to Work” bill debate “free riders.”
► From AP — Watchdog: Too few air traffic controllers where needed most — There are too few fully qualified controllers at more than a dozen of the nation’s busiest air traffic facilities stretching from Atlanta to Anchorage, according to report released Tuesday. The 13 airport towers, approach control facilities and en route centers have fewer fully trained controllers than the minimum number established by the FAA specifically for each facility.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.