NEWS ROUNDUP
Inslee waves veto pen, slow clap for Walmart, work ’til you die…
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From KPLU — Another resignation, demotions, reprimands follow early release of inmates — Another former Department of Corrections official has resigned over the accidental early release of nearly 3,000 prison inmates. Four other employees have been disciplined.
► From AFL-CIO Now — Oregon Legislature approves unemployment extension for locked-out workers — Oregon lawmakers approved an unemployment insurance extension for locked-out workers, and the bill now goes to the governor for final approval. The legislation was introduced after Allegheny Technologies Inc. locked out members of the United Steelworkers in August of last year. Last week, the lockout ended when USW and ATI ratified a new contract.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Some of us remember the 20-month Kaiser Aluminum lockout in Spokane and Tacoma in 1999-2000. During the 2000 legislative session, the Democratic-controlled Senate passed a similar bill to grant locked-out Kaiser workers extended unemployment benefits. But the bill died in the House — which was tied 49-49, with each committee having co-chairs from each party — because the Republican co-chair of the labor committee refused to allow a hearing or vote.
► From Daily Kos — ‘School choice’ is not the hot issue that Republicans claim — According to a recent poll, the privatization of public education through charter schools that operate with little transparency or public oversight isn’t so popular.
LOCAL
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — County Council ratifies 4-year contract with AFSCME — A new four-year contract covering Snohomish County’s largest public sector union was ratified unanimously Monday by the County Council.
The approval was widely anticipated after union members overwhelmingly voted to accept the deal last week. The previous AFSCME contract expired at the end of 2014. The new agreement gives employees a 2 percent retroactive raise for 2015 and a raise of the same amount in 2016. It includes a 2.5 percent pay bump in 2017 and 2018.
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Albertsons to close its Bellingham store May 7 — Albertsons has worked out an agreement with the union UFCW 21 to move the store’s 66 employees to Safeway stores in the area and keep their seniority, said a union spokesman. Albertsons has two Safeway stores in Whatcom County that it acquired last year.
► From KPLU — Tacoma City Council to consider streamlining regulations for Uber drivers — On Tuesday, Tacoma’s City Council will consider a measure to streamline its licensing process as a way to reduce the burden for city staff.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Walmart to give 1,800 workers in Snohomish County pay raises — The retail giant is increasing most of its associates’ pay to $10 an hour starting with Thursday’s paycheck. In Washington, 19,200 Walmart employees will receive pay raises.
EDITOR’S NOTE — That’s great. But even a rare full-time Walmart worker at $10/hour makes barely more than $20,000/year before taxes are taken out. (Many Walmart employees are involuntarily part-time and don’t get the consistent hours they want.) At $10/hour, Walmart workers still live in poverty. That means they must rely on public assistance for food, housing, health care, and other basic needs. Bottom line: as taxpayers, we are subsidizing the biggest corporation and wealthiest family on the planet because they insist on paying poverty wages.
CAMPAIGN 2016
► From The Hill — Five things to watch on Tuesday — Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are positioning themselves for big victories Tuesday in Michigan’s primary, where they will attempt to stunt their challengers’ momentum. Both have led polls in Michigan for some time and are heavy favorites, but they also have rivals seeking to close the gap.
► In today’s Washington Post — Seeing Trump as vulnerable, GOP elites now eye a contested convention — There is an emerging consensus among Republican leaders and donors that Trump is vulnerable and that a continued blitz of attacks could puncture the billionaire mogul’s support and leave him limping onto the convention floor.
► In today’s NY Times — Will Trump send working-class whites to the Democrats? (by Andrew Levison) — Some voters turned off by his divisive rhetoric might respond to progressive populism.
► In today’s NY Times — More Latinos seek citizenship to vote against Trump — Over all, naturalization applications increased by 11 percent in the 2015 fiscal year over the year before, and jumped 14 percent during the six months ending in January, according to federal figures. The pace is picking up by the week, advocates say, and they estimate applications could approach one million in 2016, about 200,000 more than the average in recent years.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The Washington State Labor Council, OneAmerica, and other organizations will sponsor the next Citizenship Day on April 23 at Yakima Valley Community College. Volunteer immigration attorneys, paralegals and interpreters will offer FREE assistance with citizenship applications. Stay tuned for details.
NATIONAL
► From Think Progress — Bobby Jindal’s anti-tax fervor may have destroyed Louisiana — The basic services a government provides — watchdogs to guard abused and abandoned children, emergency rooms and hospitals, scholarships and safety-net stipends to lift families out of poverty — will barely be able to keep the lights on unless politicians can find $3 billion in new revenue in the coming days.
► In From Daily Kos — Boston students walk out to protest school budget cuts — Boston Public Schools students protested planned budget cuts Monday, with more than 1,000 walking out of classes and marching to the Boston Common.
► From Bloomberg — How Amazon shames warehouse workers for alleged theft — While waiting to clock in each morning, workers at some Amazon.com warehouses get a steady stream of company-provided reading: the stories of co-workers fired for theft.
► From Reuters — Penn. governor raises minimum wage for state workers, contractors — Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf raised the minimum wage for state workers and employees of some contractors by 40 percent to $10.15 an hour on Monday.
► From Reuters — Delayed McDonald’s NLRB joint employment trial slated to start March 10
EDITOR’S NOTE — As Gawker reminds us, these are all public companies, so shareholders are paying for these private jet flights on personal trips by America’s overpaid corporate elite. (BTW… Boeing ranked #8, paying for $868,850 worth of personal trips for its execs.)
TODAY’S MUST-READ
EDITOR’S NOTE — Tech workers: Find out how to get organized!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.