NEWS ROUNDUP
Another Boeing ‘windfall,’ pay to vote, Boss’s b-day…
Friday, September 23, 2016
LOCAL
► In the Skagit Valley Herald — Sakuma Bros. set to become third business in state with union farmworkers — When farmworkers at Sakuma Bros. Farms voted to unionize, they began a process that will make the Skagit County grower the third business in the state to have farmworkers with a collective bargaining agreement.
ALSO at The Stand — Sakuma farmworkers vote to join Familias! (by Jeff Johnson)
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Fire reported at Alcoa Intalco Works smelter near Ferndale — A fire at the Alcoa Intalco Works aluminum smelter led to a major emergency response Thursday afternoon, Sept. 22.
AEROSPACE
ELECTION 2016
► In the Seattle Weekly — Carbon-cutting I-732 would deliver a tax ‘windfall’ to Boeing. Should we care? — Due to a quirk in Washington’s tax code, the aerospace industry — in particular the Boeing Co. — would disproportionately benefit from business tax cuts included in I-732, possibly to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. That could prove a bitter pill for some voters to swallow.
► From Bloomberg — Union women aren’t so pro-Trump the the Rust Belt — In the battleground states of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida, Nevada and Wisconsin, 76 percent of women in the AFL-CIO plan to vote for Clinton, while 62 percent of men do, according to a recent poll by the union. That may be a small club, but it’s viewed by Democrats as a very powerful one — especially in a race being waged on the margins.
► From Politico — Trump received $1.6 million from Secret Service — Donald Trump’s campaign isn’t alone in patronizing his own businesses: taxpayers are indirectly doing so, too. FEC records show that the U.S. Secret Service has paid the Trump campaign about $1.6 million to cover the cost of flying its agents with the candidate on a plane owned and operated by one of his companies.
► In today’s NY Times — The lying game (by Paul Krugman) — In covering the presidential debates, and the campaign, the press needs to stand up for the truth amid Donald Trump’s fairy tales.
► From The Onion — Gary Johnson worried he’s peaking too early after hitting 9% in polls
STATE GOVERNMENT
► From AP — Eyman, committees pay AG $20,000 for investigation delays — State officials say Tim Eyman and his political committees have paid $20,000 in costs connected to delaying an investigation of campaign-finance practices.
► In today’s Oregonian — ‘Flexible scheduling’ shaping up as next big legislative work-place fight — After passing paid sick leave in 2015 and raising Oregon’s minimum wage this spring, top Democrats on Thursday signaled next year’s likely flashpoint on worker rights: a mandate requiring some employers to give employees early notice of scheduling changes.
► From The Atlantic — Predictable schedules are the new $15 minimum wage — While wages and overtime have long driven advocates to gather at the barricades, the issue of erratic scheduling is a concern that has emerged relatively recently, enabled in large part by the rise of scheduling software.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
► From AFP — No EU-US TTIP trade deal before Obama leaves office, say EU officials — A last-gasp push to seal a landmark free trade deal between the European Union and the United States before the end of Barack Obama’s presidency has failed, EU ministers agreed on Friday.
NATIONAL
T.G.I.F.
► Normally, the boss’s birthday means a horrible sheet cake at work. But today, it’s The Boss’s birthday! The Entire Staff of The Stand is celebrating with this classic Bruce Springsteen song that shows why the E Street Band are such legendary performers. It recalls a more innocent time when fans could rush the stage and kiss the rock star before being gently pulled away by a laughing security guard. There are several women out there for whom this video serves as evidence to their grandkids that the stories were true. Enjoy — and happy 67th, Bruce!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.