NEWS ROUNDUP
IAM bill of rights, Shea nutter, granting refuge…
Monday, September 19, 2016
TODAY
From The Calendar® at The Stand™ — The Seattle City Council is scheduled to take its final vote on the historic Secure Scheduling ordinance at 2 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 19 at City Hall, 600 4th Ave.
LOCAL
► From KNKX — Legal clinic for workplace issues opens in Columbia City — Employees who think they’re being treated unfairly at work can now find free legal advice in King County. The Fair Work Center in Seattle’s Columbia City neighborhood has opened the county’s first legal clinic specializing in workplace issues like pay, safety or discrimination.
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Whatcom County firefighters are raising money to buy children’s coats — For the fourth year, Bellingham and Whatcom County firefighters (IAFF) are raising money for Operation Warm, a nationwide effort to buy American-made winter coats for children in need.
STATE GOVERNMENT
ALSO at The Stand — It’s up to Republicans to hold Rep. Matt Shea accountable — A Republican legislator from Washington state was assisting rabid anti-government extremists actively engaged in criminal activity in Oregon. But don’t hold your breath awaiting any ethics investigation, discipline or accountability for this embarrassment of a legislator. That is, unless the Republican Party decides to stop turning a blind eye to the crazy, indefensible actions of its own.
ELECTION 2016
► In today’s Seattle Times — Dubious voter-turnout claims in heated race for secretary of state — Washington’s voter-turnout rate, which has lagged in recent years, is playing a major role in the race for secretary of state, with Democratic challenger Tina Podlodowski charging that Republican Secretary of State Kim Wyman has not done enough to make it easier for people to cast a ballot.
► From AFL-CIO Now — How Hillary Clinton stood up for union workers — Dave Falletta, who represented utility workers in upstate New York as business manager of IBEW Local 97, faced tough negotiations with his company. It wanted massive cutbacks and threatened to lock him and his co-workers out if they didn’t agree. But then, Sen. Hillary Clinton stepped in and helped win utility workers a fair contract.
► From The Hill — Supreme Court fight colors battle for the Senate — Senate Democrats say Hillary Clinton should ignore pressure from liberals who want her to make a younger, more progressive pick for the Supreme Court than Merrick Garland, President Obama’s nominee. Democrats facing tough races in the next cycle don’t want Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee, to spend her political capital on a messy fight over the court — and the hot-button social issues under its jurisdiction — during her first 100 days in office.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From AP — Congress struggles to finish Zika aid, prevent shutdown — Congressional negotiators on Monday pressed to wrap up a must-do spending bill to prevent an election-season government shutdown and finally provide money to battle the threat of the Zika virus, but numerous sticking points remain.
NATIONAL
► In the NY Times — Coming soon, economists hope: Big spending on roads, bridges and ports — The presidential candidates’ agreement, combined with growing accord among economists that increased spending on infrastructure could invigorate the American economy and raise overall living standards, has led to a cautious optimism that some sort of big public works push is coming, regardless of who is elected.
► In the NY Times — Some Republicans acknowledge leveraging Voter ID laws for political gain — Deep in a trove of leaked documents made public this week was the latest example of Republican candor over voter ID laws — this time in Wisconsin.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
Meanwhile, in Europe and the U.S., anti-immigrant, xenophobic sentiments are on the rise and opportunistic politicians are exploiting the real pain of working people by scapegoating immigrant families. The labor movement rejects these tactics and calls on our governments to welcome immigrants and refugees while directly addressing both the root causes of displacement and the lack of decent work in origin and destination countries.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.