NEWS ROUNDUP
Conservative tool, $10,500 more, double-dippin’ Doug…
Wednesday, February 1, 2017
SUPREME COURT
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Gorsuch’s record on workers’ rights deeply troubling
► From the Hill — Democrats line up against Trump’s Supreme Court pick — Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) railed against Gorsuch’s record and said she would oppose his nomination. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) described Gorsuch’s positions on corporate personhood, LGBT protections, and women’s healthcare as too extreme.
► From Cantwell.Senate.gov — Sen. Cantwell statement on Gorsuch nomination — “There is too much at stake — from women’s choice and immigration reform to LGBTQ rights and marriage equality to voting rights and campaign finance reform. I have concerns about Judge Gorsuch’s record on a number of important issues.”
LOCAL
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Railroad employee from Spokane Valley killed by train — John P. Schneider, 54, a Union Pacific employee from Spokane Valley was struck and killed by a train early Tuesday while working in a rail yard in Wallula.
► In today’s Daily News — Port of Longview cargo handling surges to three-decade high — About 8.33 million tons of cargo moved through the port’s docks in 2016, the most in at least 30 years, on the strength of record-breaking shipments from the Export Grain Terminal.
► In today’s Columbian — Former fire department employee claim alleges wrongful termination — A former Clark County Fire & Rescue employee alleges she was forced out of the department because she was married to another employee, despite the fact multiple related men have worked at the district without reproach.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Lamb Weston plans job fair as $200M plant takes shape in Richland — The company will hold a job fair from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Feb. 10 at WorkSource Columbia Basin, 815 N. Kellogg St., Kennewick, to fill the 128 positions associated with the project.
AEROSPACE
“Boeing’s over-the-top tactics are falling flat with their employees,” Evans said. “Stunts like this show that it’s more important than ever that Boeing South Carolina workers get union representation.”
EDITOR’S NOTE — Fun fact: According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, full-time union members earn $10,500 more per year on average than full-time nonunion workers. #YouDeserveBetter #SolidarityIAMSC
► From Forbes — Boeing will be organized — Right-to-work law is no barrier, says top South Carolina labor leader — “We can certainly win at Boeing,” said Kenny Riley, president of ILA Local 1422. “But the IAM has to bring out the star power {and} they have to wear the badge of the labor movement. All of labor has to be in it.”
THIS WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — But has he missed a free meal?
► In today’s Seattle Times — Sen. Ericksen, you can’t be two places at one time (editorial) — If Ericksen’s priority is in Olympia, he should be there, full-time. If not, quit the Senate and let a replacement be appointed. That’s not a partisan statement: we would say the same thing if a Clinton administration were plucking lawmakers. Pick a job, Sen. Ericksen.
► In today’s Olympian — Can Trump withhold money from sanctuary cities? Some question legality of order — State and local officials are questioning the legality of President Donald Trump’s attempt to crack down on sanctuary cities that don’t help enforce federal immigration laws.
► In today’s News Tribune — Rep. Jesse Young disputes he mistreated staff — Republican State Rep. Jesse Young has been restricted from dealing with his legislative assistants for at least a year. Young says the claims have no merit.
THAT WASHINGTON
TAKE A STAND — Dial 1-866-829-3298 or CLICK HERE to tell your U.S. Senator to oppose fast-food executive Andrew Puzder for Labor Secretary. His long anti-worker record shows he can’t be trusted to defend working Americans’ rights on the job.
► From KUOW — Washington senators vote against Trump Cabinet nominees — Sen. Patty Murray of Washington delivered a sharp statement against Betsy DeVos, Trump’s nominee as education secretary. After an extended battle over voting procedure, the committee sent the nomination along on a 12-11 party line vote. Meanwhile, Sen. Maria Cantwell was voting against Rep. Ryan Zinke to be the new secretary of the interior.
► From Politico — Why Trump’s firing of Sally Yates should worry you — Her ouster should be cause for alarm to anyone who values the Justice Department’s reputation for independence.
► From The Hill — Poll: One-quarter believe Trump’s voter fraud claims — One quarter of voters in a new poll think President Trump’s claims that millions of illegal votes were cast in the presidential election are true.
► From The Stranger — Confidential to the Democrats (by Dan Savage) — I’m going to lose my f—ing mind if one more Dem says, “We can’t stoop to their level.” Hello?!? They’re winning down there. They’re fighting “at their level” and they’re kicking your f—ing asses. They’re kicking our f—ing asses. And you’re gonna have to fight them where they are — down there, at that level. They stooped, they conquered. Stop waiting for glacial demographic trends to save your asses and ours and get up off your backs and fight. Fight them at their level. You have no choice. Pick up every ax they’ve used — obstruct, block, suppress — and swing them twice as hard. We didn’t send you to Washington to set a good example for the Republicans.
FREEDOM OF RELIGION
EDITOR’S NOTE — And of course, the intent is to keep Muslims out of the United States and give the base’s racism and xenophobia a good stir.
► In today’s Seattle Times — More than 21,000 Washington residents are from countries banned by Trump — More than 21,000 Washington residents were born in one of the seven countries — Somalia, Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Syria, Libya and Yemen — affected by President Trump’s travel ban.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Trumka: Attacking immigrants, refugees hurts us all
► In today’s NY Times — State Dept. dissent cable on Trump’s ban draws 1,000 signatures — The cable, asserting that President Trump’s executive order to temporarily bar citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries would not make the nation safer, traveled like a chain letter — or a viral video… Several diplomats said union rules allowed them to work on dissent memos on the clock. “Policy dissent is in our culture,” said one diplomat.
NATIONAL
ALSO at The Stand — Union membership up again in Washington state
► In today’s Washington Post — Workers at Trump’s Washington hotel vote to join union, casting spotlight on potential conflicts — The vote, the first major unionization effort of Trump-company workers following Trump’s inauguration, again highlights the thorny entanglements facing the businessman-president, who has given corporate management responsibilities to his children but has refused to divest from his business interests.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► From Huffington Post — Water could soon be unaffordable for millions of Americans — Recent analyses have confirmed that water bills have been on the rise in many U.S. communities for a variety of reasons — water utilities’ cost to repair and improve their crumbling infrastructure systems, the added strain of climate change impacts to those systems and declining customer bases in certain urban areas. And a new study has found that those extra costs, when they are passed along by water utilities, are increasingly leaving many Americans struggling to pay for their water service — a trend that appears likely to continue in the coming years.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.