NEWS ROUNDUP
Carbon tax ‘doh,’ TPP fantasy, Mitch loses his mind…
Thursday, February 25, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
EDITOR’S NOTE — I-732 supporters told the people that signed petitions that it was “revenue neutral.” Turns out it will require either $900 million in cuts from public schools and other state services over the next four years, or a tax increase of the same same to make up that projected shortfall. Oops.
ALSO at The Stand:
WSLC opposes Initiative 732 carbon tax
OneAmerica opposes I-732 carbon tax. Here’s why. (by Rich Stolz and De’Sean Quinn)
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Senate, House budgets far apart — Senate Republicans released a budget plan that would spend less on schools, mental health or homeless programs than either the House Democrats or Gov. Jay Inslee have proposed.
► From KPLU — Republicans say ‘no’ to dipping into rainy day funds — The stage is set in Olympia for a fight over eliminating tax breaks and whether to dip into the state’s rainy day fund. House Democrats say “yes” to both. Senate Republicans say “no.” The Senate’s chief budget writer, Andy Hill, opposes a Democratic plan to boost beginning teacher pay by closing or curtailing a series of tax exemptions.
► From AP — Senate budget seeks money for mental health, charter schools — The state’s charter school system would get money to stay open under the supplemental budget proposal released by Senate Republicans.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Heads will roll over prison scandal — if there are any left (by Jerry Cornfield) — Are there any heads left to roll — or ones high enough on the agency’s internal totem of power to satisfy the public and assuage the governor’s political critics?
INITIATIVE 1433
► From Huffington Post — Obama has a plan to bring paid leave to 828,000 workers — The proposal, set in motion by an executive order from President Barack Obama in September, would guarantee that workers under federal contracts could accrue up to a week of paid leave per year. Companies that want to maintain their business with the government would be required to offer the leave as a benefit. Says DOL Secretary Tom Perez:
“I’m looking forward to a day when working moms and dads can afford to stay home with their sick kids, when a younger worker can take paid sick leave to care for an ailing grandparent and a husband can use his earned sick time to care for his wife — all without fear of losing a day’s pay or their livelihood. Today, we’re one step closer to making it happen.”
► In the LA Times — Why do conservatives keep saying Seattle’s minimum wage hike has failed — without data? (by Michael Hiltzik) — The problem with using Seattle as an early warning signal for minimum wage increases is that, as yet, there’s almost no good information.
LOCAL
► In the Tri-City Herald — Tyson workers toss union at Wallula beef plant — Workers at the Tyson Fresh Meats plant at Wallula ejected the UFCW Local 1439 after a vote counted last week.
► In today’s Columbian — Union sets up resume-writing clinic for B.G. teachers — The Battle Ground Education Association has organized a resume writing workshop for Battle Ground Public Schools teachers from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday at the Battle Ground Senior Center, 116 N.E. Third Ave., Battle Ground.
BOEING
► In today’s P.S. Business Journal — How a more labor-friendly Boeing could cool South Carolina unionization campaign — Several analysts said less-heated rhetoric from Boeing headquarters in Chicago may be dialing back the polarization between management and the unions. A bad relationship between workers and management can sometimes be enough to drive employees to join a union.
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
► From The Hill — Obama officials weighing ‘appropriate time’ for trade bill push — Several top White House officials on Wednesday said they are working with Congress to pass a sweeping Asia-Pacific trade agreement as quickly as possible, arguing that delaying the deal will damage the U.S. economy.
► From Huffington Post — The WTO just ruled against India’s booming solar program (by Ben Beachy) — On the heels of the recent global summit in Paris to tackle climate disruption, the World Trade Organization (WTO) has ruled against an important piece of the climate solution puzzle: India’s ambitious program to create homegrown solar energy. The ruling shows that decades-old, over-reaching trade rules are out of sync with the global challenge to transition to 100 percent clean energy.
SUPREME COURT
ALSO at The Stand — Tell Senate GOP: Do your job, work to fill Court vacancy
NATIONAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — CBO sees more inequality ahead (by Jon Talton) — According to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, the big growth in income over the next decade will be among the richest — those making above the Social Security tax cap — while low- and middle-wage workers will fall further behind… The share of labor compensation as a share of GDP is at its lowest level since this record-keeping began in the late 1940s. It has fallen precipitously since 2001. And the CBO seems to believe the situation can only get worse.
► In today’s NY Times — Trump taps foreign workers for his in Florida club — Since 2010, nearly 300 U.S. residents have applied or been referred for jobs as waiters, waitresses, cooks and housekeepers at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, which describes itself as “one of the most highly regarded private clubs in the world,” But only 17 have been hired. In all but a handful of cases, Mar-a-Lago sought to fill the jobs with hundreds of foreign guest workers from Romania and other countries.
► In the Denver Business Journal — Colorado Senate OKs bill turning state into right-to-work territory — Republicans in the Colorado Senate approved a bill Monday that would turn the state into a right-to-work state, though the measure is extremely unlikely to make it through the House.
► From AFL-CIO Now — It’s time to reform sentencing law in the U.S. (by Lee Anderson) — The AFL-CIO is joining with its allies — in labor and beyond — to end mass incarceration in the United States. Decades of evidence and experience tell us that mass incarceration and current sentencing laws have done more harm than good.
► In today’s NY Times — Private prisons are cashing in on refugees’ desperation (by Antony Loewenstein) — From Australia to Austria to America, governments are relying on for-profit contractors to warehouse detainees. It’s bad policy.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.