NEWS ROUNDUP
Teeth for Boeing tax breaks, Cathy contradicts, higher ed ‘Union Yes’…
Thursday, April 14, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
LOCAL
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — New Ferndale smelter energy deal made to benefit both BPA, Alcoa — The new power agreement proposal could extend the smelter operations through at least Feb. 14, 2018, and possibly through the end of the energy contract in September 2022.
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Potential Cherry Point coal terminal customer files for bankruptcy — Peabody Energy, a major supporter and potential customer of the proposed Gateway Pacific Terminal, filed for bankruptcy protection Wednesday. Coal opponents lauded the bankruptcy filing as a “final nail in the coffin for the troubled Gateway Pacific Terminal proposal.”
ALSO at The Stand — AFSCME, IBT decry right-wing funding by Wells Fargo exec (Feb. 17, 2016)
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Head of key Boeing supplier linked to anti-mosque mailings — One of the key players opposing plans for construction of a mosque in Mukilteo is Peter Zieve, president and owner of Electroimpact Inc.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Latino leaders call off boycott of Columbia Center over Bob Parks’ Facebook postings — Latino Civic Leaders called off a planned boycott of Kennewick’s Columbia Center mall after the city made tentative plans to create a diversity commission to address issues raised when Councilman Bob Parks’ Facebook posts inflamed the community.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Seattle Times — Sen. Patty Murray meets with Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland — Murray said they discussed privacy, campaign-finance laws and the politicization of the courts. She said the nation deserves to hear Garland’s thoughts on those and other subjects and renewed calls for Senate Republicans to grant a public hearing and vote.
► From The Nation — Hundreds of people were just arrested outside Congress — The opening day of “Democracy Spring,” which is aimed at eliminating the impact of big money on politics and lowering barriers to voting, was one of the biggest single-day acts of mass civil disobedience ever to occur inside Washington, though it received relatively fleeting mainstream-media attention.
► From Huffington Post — This study shows how low Corporate America’s taxes really are — Every year from 2006 to 2012, some two-thirds of U.S. corporations did not pay federal income tax, according to a GAO study released Wednesday. In 2012 alone, 42.5 percent of businesses that the GAO defines as large did not pay federal taxes, including 19.5 percent of big corporations that posted a profit.
“FREE TRADE”
► From Huffington Post — Panama Papers offer more evidence that free trade isn’t really free — Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch: “The Panama Papers just show once again how entirely cynical and meaningless are American presidents’ and corporate boosters’ lavish promises of economic benefits and policy reforms from trade agreements… [I]nvestor protections and official U.S. stamp of approval made it safer to send dirty money to Panama.”
► From the Washington Fair Trade Coalition:
NATIONAL
► From Think Progress — Meet the workers walking off the job today in the biggest low-wage strike yet — On Thursday, low-wage workers across a number of industries walked off the job in a record 320 cities as part of the latest action from the Fight for 15 movement demanding a $15 minimum wage and the right to form unions.
ALSO at The Stand — “Raise the Alarm” for workers Thursday in Seattle, statewide
TAKE A STAND — Click here to sign a petition telling CEO Lowell McAdam that you stand with Verizon workers.
► In today’s Washington Post — Two-cent price cut could mean $2 billion headache for Postal Service — While the two-cent cut won’t save individuals much money, APWU President Mark Dimondstein said “ultimately, it will undermine service and weaken a great national treasure.”
UNION YES!
EDITOR’S NOTE — Contact a union organizer today!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.