NEWS ROUNDUP
Support for family leave, ACA ‘saved the farm,’ Old Man done good…
Friday, January 20, 2017
THIS WASHINGTON
► From KNKX — Paid family leave gains traction with Washington Republicans — The idea of giving workers paid time off to care for a new baby or an elderly parent has long been a priority of the left. But historically, Washington Republicans and their business allies have been wary. But that may be changing. “I think it has begun to change,” House Republican Floor Leader J.T. Wilcox said. “And we’re going to engage in the discussion about paid family leave. I think you’re going to see strong efforts to have a compromise.”
► A related story from the PSBJ — Starbucks expands parental leave in fight to recruit and retain workers — Starbucks has upgraded its paid parental leave plan for U.S. employees to at least 12 weeks of unpaid leave and as much as 18 weeks of fully paid leave. The move comes after amid intense competition to attract and retain employees.
ALSO at The Stand — Boeing cashes in on tax breaks, cuts 11K jobs in Washington
► From Crosscut — Behind closed doors, state GOP seeks school solutions — In interviews this week, a picture emerged of the Senate Republican caucus as faced with reconciling a range of members, from anti-tax hardliners to relatively moderate fiscal conservatives. And the accounts portray a leadership that generally let lawmakers make principled stands in private, often taking extra time to emerge from closed negotiations as a united front.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The sponsors of this House bill (which, so far, has no Senate companion) are Reps. Taylor, Shea, McCaslin, Young, Klippert, J. Walsh, Haler, Short, Manweller, Hargrove, Pike, Holy, Rodne, Buys, Koster, and Schmick.
► In today’s News Tribune — Local hospitals: We’ll take some psychiatric patients off Western State’s hands — The state is looking for places to send the mental health patients it wants to divert from its two large psychiatric hospitals — particularly crowded Western State Hospital in Lakewood. In a twist, community hospitals that have rejected taking such patients in the past are now answering the call, in part because of a possible cash influx from the state.
AEROSPACE
► In the PSBJ — Boeing supplier with hundreds of Puget Sound-area employees to be sold in $10.5B deal — More than 600 Puget Sound aerospace workers will have a much larger employer under a deal announced Thursday as the wave of consolidation continues among Boeing suppliers. Engine maker Safran launched a friendly $10.5 billion takeover bid for Zodiac Aerospace, the struggling airplane seats and cabin interiors supplier. Both companies are based in France.
LOCAL
► In today’s Kitsap Sun — Fast ferry partners Kitsap, King working on deal — Kitsap Transit delivered a draft agreement Wednesday for King County Marine Division to operate its fast ferries. Voters provided two big victories Nov. 8 — $54 billion in mass transit expansions called ST3 and cross-sound passenger-only ferry service from Bremerton, Kingston and Southworth to downtown Seattle.
► In today’s News Tribune — Teamsters school bus drivers approve contract — School bus drivers in Tacoma approved their contract with Durham School Services, an Illinois-based private company that Tacoma Public Schools pays to transport an estimated 6,000 students each day. Employees had previously rejected three earlier contract offers.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Hanford contractor agrees to pay $5.3 million to settle timecard fraud — The U.S. Department of Justice announced Thursday that a contractor has agreed to pay $5.3 million to settle allegations that it knowingly bilked the government through a time-card scheme that lasted for five years at Hanford.
HEALTH CARE
ALSO at The Stand — Don’t destabilize our health care, economy (a letter from dozens of state organizations to Washington’s congressional delegation)
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s NY Times — Trump nominees make clear plans to sweep away Obama policies — There is no doubt that Trump’s nominees collectively will lead an effort to undermine Obama’s legacy on the environment, health care, immigration, civil rights and education.
ALSO at The Stand — Urge our senators to oppose nominees Puzder, DeVos, Price
► FROM Politico — Senate Dems will only allow two Trump nominees to be confirmed on Day One — Senate Democrats are prepared to allow two of Donald Trump’s Cabinet nominees to be confirmed on Day One — retired Marine Gens. James Mattis to lead the Pentagon and John Kelly to be secretary of the Department of Homeland Security — but for them, that’s where the senatorial comity ends.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Senate should take its time, be thorough in vetting Trump nominees (editorial) — The U.S. Senate should not rush to approve Trump cabinet nominees before ethics office has finished its work.
► Case in point, in the NY Times — Steven Mnuchin, Treasury nominee, failed to disclose $100 million in assets — Mnuchin failed to disclose nearly $100 million of his assets on Senate Finance Committee disclosure documents and forgot to mention his role as a director of an investment fund located in a tax haven, an omission that Democrats said made him unfit to serve in one of the government’s most important positions.
Mnuchin failed to disclose $95 million in assets. When a 90-year-old woman underpaid by 27 cents, he took her house. https://t.co/g6uTS1GIlH
— Steven Greenhouse (@greenhousenyt) January 19, 2017
NATIONAL
► From CNN — Uber to pay $20 million for misleading drivers — Uber will pay $20 million to settle a lawsuit with the Federal Trade Commission for misleading drivers about how much they could earn on the platform. Uber claimed its drivers could earn a median income of more than $90,000 per year in New York and more than $74,000 in San Francisco. In reality, the FTC said, less than 10% of drivers earned that.
INTERNATIONAL
T.G.I.F.
► Yesterday, The Entire Staff of The Stand’s daughter sent us a link to this video, simply adding, “Wow.” We agree. And another moment passes when you realize that you must have done something right because your child has great taste in music. In her case, she also appreciates some good acoustic guitar work. Enjoy.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.