NEWS ROUNDUP
Unconscionable on trade, more Haggen layoffs, your slaves…
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
The new evidence from trade suggests American policy makers cannot continue to impose all the pain on the nation’s blue-collar workers if they are not going to provide a stronger safety net. That might have been justified if the distributional costs of trade were indeed small and short-lived. But now that we know they are big and persistent, it looks unconscionable.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Of course, The Seattle Times and the rest of Washington’s media establishment have not only failed to understand this, they continue to be patronizing and dismissive of the real, legitimate damage done by free-trade deals like the TPP. Instead, they keep regurgitating the “Washington is a trade-dependent state” talking points like it’s still 1992.
ALSO at The Stand — Murdering manufacturing is ‘strictly business’ (by Leo W. Gerard)
► From The Hill — Anti-TPP Republicans press Trump advantage — Noting the vehemence of opposition to the trade deal in Michigan, they argue their party would face a backlash by seeking to move it.
EDITOR’S NOTE — We changed this headline from “anti-trade” to “anti-TPP” because, although it’s commonly used by the media establishment, the former is just plain inaccurate.
LOCAL
► In the Bellingham Herald — Haggen name to remain on 15 sold stores
► In the Bellingham Herald — Albertsons was the only qualified bidder for Haggen core stores
► In the P.S. Business Journal — Group Health members vote to support Kaiser Permanente acquisition — Group Health voting members agreed Saturday to the $1.8 billion acquisition by Oakland, California-based Kaiser Permanente that was announced in December. Of the about 27,000 members of Group Health who were eligible to vote, 8,824 voted in support and 1,586 voted against the deal.
ALSO at The Stand — SEIU 1199NW nurses at Group Health endorse Kaiser deal
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Former KapStone workers fired after strike await judge’s decision — Six months after mill workers walked out, a federal judge is considering whether KapStone acted legally when it fired four striking union pickets. A hearing into the cases ended last Tuesday in Portland, but an administrative law judge isn’t expected to rule for another two months.
ALSO at The Stand — AFSCME, IBT decry right-wing funding by Wells Fargo exec
► In the Seattle Times — Maurice Caldwell (1932-2016) — Maurice Caldwell, a longtime resident of Seattle and a former president of the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace (SPEEA) at Boeing, died Feb. 25 after a brief illness.
STATE GOVERNMENT
TAKE A STAND! — Join the Raise Up Washington campaign to allow all workers to earn paid sick leave and raise the minimum wage in Washington state. Volunteer to collect signatures for Initiative 1433!
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From The Hill — White House close to finalizing new overtime rules — The Labor Department sent the long-awaited overtime rule to the White House’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs on Tuesday for final approval. Once the White House signs off, the Labor Department will issue the final rule.
► From The Hill — Final preparations for court war — President Obama and his Republican opponents are making the final preparations for a public relations war over the vacancy on the Supreme Court. It is likely to be one of the most heated confirmation fights in recent memory, with both sides expected to unleash television ads, opposition research and grassroots organizing.
► From TPM — GOPer On SCOTUS nom: ‘I’ll consider’ but ‘decision has already been made’ — Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) showed some uneasiness with GOP leadership’s decision to blockade President Obama’s Supreme Court nomination, saying that the “decision has already been made” to not give the nominee a hearing or even a meeting.
NATIONAL
► From Eater — Taco Bell must pay workers $500,000 for unpaid lunch breaks — A court case against Taco Bell that dragged on for almost a decade is finally over: A California jury has determined that Taco Bell workers in California are owed nearly $500,000 after finding the chain had underpaid the employees for their meal breaks.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
If you’ve never thought about the slave labor that could have been used to make those cool shoes on your feet, click on SlaveryFootprint.org. The website is run by a nonprofit working to rid the world of slave labor and human trafficking. By answering just a few questions, the website will tell you “how many slaves work for you.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.