NEWS ROUNDUP
Inslee works for I-1433, he’s with her, let the man go through…
Friday, June 10, 2016
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — Volunteer petitioners needed for Initiative 1433’s home stretch
► In today’s Seattle Times — Eyman ordered to say why he’s withholding records from state — Two superior courts directed Tim Eyman and others to explain why they haven’t handed over business and financial records to the state Attorney General’s Office. The orders came hours after State AG Bob Ferguson accused the anti-tax activist of withholding documents subject to subpoena as part of an investigation into alleged campaign-disclosure violations.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Justice isn’t free — but we shouldn’t be jailing for legal financial obligations (editorial) — Last week, the ACLU of Washington settled a lawsuit with Benton County, including an agreement that defendants would no longer be locked up in jail solely because they didn’t pay their fines. By one count, 28 percent of defendants at the local jail were incarcerated for lack of payment. Literally, a debtors’ prison.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Forcing lawmakers to act involves big risks (editorial) — (Replicating other states’) attempts to coerce lawmakers would put too much faith in a divided Legislature’s ability to reach decisions in a reasoned and careful fashion that will fully fund education and at the same time correct inequalities in funding among rich and poor districts. Nor does it take into account how different the Legislature’s makeup could be following this fall’s elections.
LOCAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — It appears that a smaller group of workers is continuing to withhold their labor today. See the Familias Facebook page for the latest.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand:
Sakuma berry pickers walk out over low pay
Familias boycott of Driscoll’s berries is gaining momentum (by Dean Shelton)
► From KPLU — Strawberry pickers stop work, demand higher wages — Strawberry season is just beginning in Washington. But the disagreements over wages between berry pickers and Sakuma Brothers Farms go back several years. On Thursday, tensions boiled over again when some workers walked off the fields.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Northshore district teachers union votes to prepare for strike — The union representing teachers in the Northshore School District passed a motion Wednesday to prepare for a strike. The Northshore Education Association, which also represents school nurses and aides, passed the motion with “overwhelming support.” The motion puts the district on notice. The deadline for action is Aug. 31.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Retirees sue Weyerhaeuser over pension cuts — Four former Weyerhaeuser employees have filed a class-action lawsuit against the company in attempt to regain retiree healthcare benefits.
► In today’s Columbian — PeaceHealth doctors to picket later this month — Doctors at Sacred Heart Medical Center at RiverBend, Ore., say they were the first group of U.S. hospitalists to organize by forming a labor union in late 2014. Now, after more than a year of negotiations with hospital owner PeaceHealth and still no contract, the hospital doctors are staging another first: an informational picket on June 23.
ELECTION 2016
► From The Hill — Obama endorses Clinton for president: ‘I’m with her’ — President Obama formally endorsed Hillary Clinton for president in a video released just an hour after he met at the White House on Thursday with her rival, Bernie Sanders. “I know how hard this job can be. That’s why I know Hillary will be so good at it. In fact, I don’t think there’s ever been someone so qualified to hold this office,” Obama said.
► In today’s Washington Post — Hillary will huddle with Elizabeth Warren this morning, fueling VP buzz — This morning’s sit-down at Clinton’s home, coming just hours after the Massachusetts senator formally endorsed the presumptive Democratic nominee, will fuel speculation about her prospects as a potential vice presidential pick.
► From TPM — McConnell concedes Trump ‘doesn’t know a lot about the issues’ — The Senate GOP leader says he hopes Trump selects a vice presidential candidate with a lot of experience to make up for his lack of policy expertise.
ALSO at The Stand — Tax-free Trump says his returns are ‘none of your business’
► From The Onion — Crowd at Trump rally realizes they’ve been chanting ‘We are frightened and helpless’ for last half hour
BOEING
► In the PSBJ — Boeing reorganizes 787 production, Wyse leaves S.C. for Washington — The company announced a reorganization that aims to align production of the 787 Dreamliner in SC and WA. Beverly Wyse will return to Washington from South Carolina, where she was leading 787 production.
► In the Seattle P-I — Boeing patents strange-looking plane that could fly for years — A plane that can fly at a high altitude and be powered only by the sun could stay aloft for years, but one of the key challenges for flying wings or planes powered by solar panels is keeping the sun’s light hitting the panels.
NATIONAL
► From Think Progress — NFL star Richard Sherman: Stop making taxpayers pay for billionaires’ stadiums — The Stanford graduate and Seattle Seahawks cornerback said that if he was elected to the White House, “I’d stop spending billions of taxpayer dollars on stadiums and probably get us out of debt and maybe make the billionaires who actually benefit from the stadiums pay for them.”
► In today’s Seattle Times — Meet the new (non-white) working-class majority (by Jon Talton) — The image of the working class as white is changing fast. Soon people of color will make up this backbone of the economy. But working-class obstacles are growing bigger.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
T.G.I.F.
► Happy birthday to singer-songwriter Mike Doughty, founder and destroyer of Soul Coughing. This experimental rock/jazz/funk fusion band is definitely not everyone’s cup of tea, and in the end, it wasn’t Doughty’s either. After becoming addicted to drugs and alcohol during the band’s modestly successful mid-’90s run, he broke up the band and started playing solo acoustic shows. He eventually re-recorded all of band’s “hits” as he thought they were intended to sound, expressing animosity toward the Soul Coughing versions. But The Entire Staff of The Stand likes this original so… move aside and let the man go through.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.