NEWS ROUNDUP
Boeing may cut 10% of jobs, adjournment, honest Hillary…
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
BOEING
Jon Holden, District 751 president of the International Association of Machinists (IAM) union, expressed surprise when informed of the potential scale of the job cuts. He said the coming cuts highlight a lack of accountability for the $8.7 billion in aerospace tax breaks extended to Boeing in 2013 to make sure Boeing built the 777X here. Likewise, Ray Goforth, executive director of SPEEA is exasperated that “we’re the only state that’s not attaching accountability requirements” to corporate tax breaks. More than 9,000 Boeing jobs here have been eliminated since the fall of 2012, many of them through transfering engineering work to Boeing sites in other states.
EDITOR’S NOTE — We wonder when The Seattle Times got its hands on this “internal Boeing document.” The timing of this story — posted online within hours of the adjournment of the Legislature’s overtime session — is suspicious. Lawmakers and voters, who were already angry about the previously announced job cuts, would have been furious to learn of this and might have pulled the Aerospace Tax Break Accountability legislation to the floor for a vote.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Olympian — Legislature adjourns with budget that increases spending by $191 million — State lawmakers adjourned late Tuesday after passing a 2016 supplemental budget, following 20 days in overtime struggling to reach an agreement. The compromise budget approved Tuesday leaves significant work for next year to fully fund Washington’s public schools and fix how the state pays for teachers.
► In today’s Seattle Times — More money for homeless, mental health in state budget
► In today’s News Tribune — Legislature approves staffing boost at Western State Hospital — A state budget deal contains enough money to add 51 nurses at Western State Hospital, where thin staffing has factored into unsafe conditions.
States can also take action, since Citizens United and federal law barring foreign money apply with equal force at the state level. States can require entities accepting political contributions from corporations in state and local races to make sure that those corporations are indeed associations of American citizens — and enforce the ban on foreign political spending against those that are not.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — VA audits find stressed, overworked staffs made scheduling mistakes — Schedulers at Department of Veterans Affairs clinics across Washington state were so stressed out by patient growth and low staffing two years ago that they took questionable short-cuts in booking medical appointments, according to a group of audits released this week.
► In the Yakima H-R — Kennewick councilman defends controversial online remarks about Latinos, Yakima — Kennewick Councilman Bob Parks issued an explanation and partial apology Tuesday for a personal Facebook post that insulted Yakima, Pasco and Latinos on Good Friday.
► From the IAM 751 blog — IAM 751 to endow Renton Tech College scholarships — Machinists Union District Lodge 751 announced today that it is establishing a $25,000 scholarship endowment at Renton Technical College to help students there prepare for careers in aerospace manufacturing.
RAISE UP WASHINGTON
“This is the kind of common-sense legislation that unions should be fighting for,” said IAM 751 Legislative Director Larry Brown. “It would raise pay for hundreds of thousands of working people in our state, and would create a sick leave benefit that would lead to healthier families and communities.”
CAMPAIGN 2016
► In today’s Seattle Times — Sanders backers demand state party superdelegates ditch Clinton — Supporters of Bernie Sanders are aggressively demanding Washington’s Democratic superdelegates line up with the state caucus results and abandon support for Hillary Clinton.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Sanders backers urge state’s superdelegates to support him — Democratic U.S. Reps. Rick Larsen and Suzan DelBene, both superdelegates who back Hillary Clinton, are getting hammered on their Facebook pages from those insisting they respect Bernie Sanders’ landslide victory and voters’ wishes.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Democrats’ caucuses aren’t very democratic (by Danny Westneat) — The caucuses held here last weekend were described in media reports as “packed” and “bursting at the seams.” But in reality, only 5.8 percent of the state’s registered voters showed up. That means 94 percent of voters didn’t. Can you call Bernie Sanders’ landslide win a peoples’ revolution with that few people?
► In today’s Washington Post — Clinton, Sanders respond to union questions ignored by GOP hopefuls — Ignoring a group of voters is no way to win their support. But ignoring is what the Republican presidential hopefuls have done to a federal union (IFPTE), and by extension to federal employees, by refusing to answer a campaign questionnaire.
► In today’s Washington Post — All 3 GOP candidates back away from pledge to support eventual nominee — Mogul Donald Trump, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich were each given a chance during a CNN town hall in Milwaukee to definitively state they would support the nominee. All three declined to renew their pledge.
► From Yahoo News — Almost half of Trump’s supporters say black people are violent and lazy — A survey found that 45% of Trump supporters believe the word “violent” describes black people in the United States either extremely well or very well.
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
ALSO at The Stand — Murdering manufacturing ‘strictly business’ under NAFTA (by Leo Gerard, Feb. 24)
SUPREME COURT
► In today’s NY Times — Democrats see split Supreme Court decision as a new tool to fill vacancy — The court’s 4-to-4 tie on an important labor case gave Democrats a rare double win. Not only did they get to celebrate the union win made possible by the outcome, it also provided a high-profile opportunity to remind Americans that the stalemate over the vacancy will limit the court’s ability to act.
► From Politico — The Supreme Court: The nightmare scenario — The real threat that the current situation poses is that the stalemate isn’t time-limited and it isn’t stable. It could last a lot longer than the present election cycle, and if it does, the conflict over Justice Scalia’s successor could escalate far beyond its current dimensions. This is because the Supreme Court’s role in American government rests on a set of conventions for avoiding all-out political conflict — and once those conventions start to crumble, there’s no way to tell how it will end.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Chicago Tribune — Oreos and the American worker caught in the middle (by Richard Trumka and David Durkee) — As part of the relentless killing of American manufacturing, Nabisco plans to cut in half the workforce at its largest domestic bakery, in Chicago, and send some 600 jobs to Mexico, where pay is so low that the minimum wage is measured by the day, not the hour. The daily minimum is about $4. The company has already sent thousands of jobs offshore, by shuttering factories in Pittsburgh, Houston and Philadelphia.
► From NPR — Labor Secretary calls workers’ comp opt-out plans a ‘pathway to poverty’ — Perez confirmed a Labor Department investigation of an opt-out alternative to state-regulated workers’ compensation that has saved employers millions of dollars but that he says is “undermining that basic bargain” for American workers.
► In today’s LA Times — Who wins with a $15 minimum wage in California? — People who stand to benefit most from minimum wage hikes across California are low-income adults, most of them household breadwinners.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
ALSO at The Stand — California workers win ‘tremendous victory’ in fight for $15 (statement by WSLC President Jeff Johnson)
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