NEWS ROUNDUP
Raise all boats, Triumph tough, shame on Ryan, crank it up…
Friday, June 3, 2016
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — ‘All hands on deck’ for Initiative 1433 this Saturday
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Coal train pits jobs against climate — Anti-coal activists squared off against pro-business interests Thursday as Pasco hosted the third and final hearing on the proposed Millennium Bulk Terminals coal export terminal at Longview.
EDITOR’S NOTE — This is a false choice. We can have BOTH… good jobs while also addressing climate change.
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Bellingham-based Haggen now under Albertsons’ ownership — Northwest grocer Haggen began its first official day under the Albertsons banner on Thursday, June 2, with very few changes at the local stores.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Student protest: SU president says some in faculty also wanted dean to resign
AEROSPACE
ALSO at The Stand — As Triumph dispute drags on, you can help
► In today’s P.S. Business Journal — Boeing monitoring Machinists strike at big supplier, hopes to avoid delivery delays — A strike by 400 union workers at Boeing supplier Triumph Composite Systems in Spokane has entered its fourth week and the two sides are at such loggerheads they can’t agree on whether the company has locked the workers out of the factory. Meanwhile the company, which makes floor panels, ducts and other parts for Boeing airplanes, has put a temporary work force in place. Boeing said it doesn’t anticipate delivery problems as a result of the labor dispute, “but we are closely monitoring the situation in cooperation with Triumph,” says a Boeing spokeswoman.
► From The Onion — Factory robot working on some of its own designs after hours — Saying it had been mulling over the “fun little side project” for a while, an Electroimpact Quadbot reportedly put in some extra work after hours at the Boeing assembly plant in North Charleston, S.C., on Wednesday to try out a few of its own original designs.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s Seattle Times — New Western State CEO up to turning around psychiatric hospital, colleagues say — New Western State Hospital CEO Cheryl Strange is taking over a psychiatric facility at risk of losing its federal funding. Can she turn it around?
► In today’s Olympian — Clean air rule timely but needs vetting (editorial) — Washington needs to put a price on carbon pollution. But it should act on proposals whose costs and benefits are well understood.
TRANS-PACIFIC PARTNERSHIP
For too long, we’ve seen the damage from bad trade agreements. Flawed agreements like NAFTA pushed as many as one million American jobs overseas. That’s why when we consider something as large as the TPP, those of us representing American workers in Congress should be looking out for American workers — and not just the corporate bottom line.
ALSO at The Stand — Attend June 25 rally, festival against TPP in Tacoma
2016 ELECTIONS
► In today’s NY Times — Trump could threaten U.S. rule of law, scholars say — Donald Trump’s blustery attacks on the press, complaints about the judicial system and bold claims of presidential power collectively sketch out a constitutional worldview that shows contempt for the First Amendment, the separation of powers and the rule of law, legal experts across the political spectrum say. Even as much of the Republican political establishment lines up behind its presumptive nominee, many conservative and libertarian legal scholars warn that electing Trump is a recipe for a constitutional crisis.
► From AP — Protesters punch, throw eggs at Trump supporters in San Jose — A group of protesters attacked Donald Trump supporters who were leaving the presidential candidate’s rally in San Jose on Thursday night. A dozen or more people were punched, at least one person was pelted with an egg and Trump hats grabbed from supporters were set on fire on the ground.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Don’t do this.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► In today’s NY Times — A lame response to predatory loans (editorial) — The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau needs to come up with a stronger plan to protect borrowers from the payday lending industry.
NATIONAL
► In today’s NY Times — Sharp fall in hiring saps chance of Fed rate increase in June — In a troubling sign that the economic recovery may have stalled, at least temporarily, the government reported on Friday that employers added just 38,000 workers in May.
► From The Atlantic — The surging cost of basic needs — Low-income families spend more than 80 percent of their budget on things like housing, food, and health care — that’s a lot more than 30 years ago.
T.G.I.F.
► Time hasn’t made this loss any less painful. Now it’s confirmed that Prince was the latest high-profile victim of America’s opioid painkiller epidemic, as he sought to deal with chronic pain from injuries he suffered over the years while performing. So today, the Entire Staff of the Stand wants to celebrate him again. Do yourself a favor and crank up the volume on this falsetto funkfest, Prince’s first successful single, released in 1979. (He later revealed that the song was about his crush on singer Patrice Rushen of “Forget Me Nots” fame.) R.I.P. Prince Rogers Nelson.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.