NEWS ROUNDUP
Spokane surges, MTV Mansplained, reject Andy…
Monday, February 13, 2017
LOCAL
► In the Spokesman-Review — Former staff and inmates raise concern about medical care provided by private contractor at Spokane County Jail — There are concerns about treatment delays at the jail, which has a constitutional duty to provide adequate medical care to inmates — many of whom are poor, drug-addicted, mentally ill or physically disabled.
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Millennium appeals state’s denial of coal dock sublease — The coal project in Longview may not be dead yet. Millennium Bulk Terminals and Northwest Alloys are challenging a decision by the state Department of Natural Resources to deny an aquatic lands lease for the project.
► In the Bellingham Herald — Seven taken to hospital after acid leak at Phillips refinery near Ferndale — Seven workers were taken to St. Joseph hospital Friday night after hydrofluoric acid was released from the Phillips 66 refinery.
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand — WSLC urges renewal of film tax incentive creating jobs in state
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — New analysis shows GOP school-funding plan would lower taxes in Spokane, raise them in Seattle — The average homeowner in the Spokane area could see property taxes go down in 2019 under the Senate Republican school plan. But it’s just one of several proposals to improve public schools and the way the state pays for them.
► In the Seattle Times — $500K later, McCleary task force still doesn’t have plan to fix state’s education — The legislative task force tasked with recommending solutions for Washington’s K-12 school-funding crisis spent more than $500,000 on the work without ever approving a formal proposal. Meanwhile, lawmakers assigned to the task force claimed roughly $11,300 in expenses while doing the work.
BOEING
► From Reuters — Boeing, machinists face off over union at South Carolina plant — The Boeing Co. faces its first union vote on Wednesday at its aircraft factory in South Carolina, a high-profile test for organized labor in the nation’s most strongly anti-union state. The world’s largest planemaker is running a hardball campaign against the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, which is trying to organize about 3,000 workers at one of two plants where Boeing makes 787s.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Nearly 3,000 Boeing workers at the North Charleston facilities will have the opportunity to vote yes for the IAM this Wednesday, Feb. 15. But workers and their families are facing a barrage of television and radio ads urging them against joining the IAM. Voice your support on the Boeing Workers at South Carolina – BSC Facebook page.
► In the Seattle Times — Falsified papers, sloppy work led FAA to fine Boeing — Documents show a disquieting pattern of falsified paperwork and ignored procedures that created quality issues on the production lines of Boeing and its suppliers. The FAA found that Boeing repeatedly failed to follow protocols designed to guard against production errors that put safety at risk.
IMMIGRATION
► From AP — Immigrants wait in fear after raids; Trump takes credit — For days, fear and confusion have gripped immigrant communities after word spread that federal agents were rounding up hundreds of immigrants in cities across the country. The scope of the operation remains unclear.
ALSO at The Stand — What immigrants should know amid stepped-up ICE raids
► In today’s NY Times — Immigration agents arrest 600 people across U.S. in one week — The raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement contributed to confusion over whether enforcement is escalating under President Trump.
► In the NY Times — Immigration raids set off protests (video)
► In the (Longview) Daily News — ‘Darkness’ for undocumented immigrants — The fear of deportation is so strong, those who work with the population in Cowlitz County say many have considered options to find U.S. citizens — close friends or relatives — to adopt their kids in case they are forced to leave. Deportation has been a discussion at local church services, and a pastor here says more Hispanic children are struggling with mental health problems.
THAT WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand — Sen. Murray says Puzder ‘uniquely unqualified’ for Labor post
► From Slate — The Cabinet nominee all Republicans should reject — Puzder will almost certainly face unified Democratic opposition; Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has already called on Trump to withdraw Puzder’s nomination. That means Puzder will be toast if he loses as few as three Republican votes. While Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell appears to be pushing hard to save Trump’s nominee, several Republicans look like they could be persuaded to vote him down. That would be the right call.
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump undertakes most ambitious regulatory rollback since Reagan — As the administration targets dozens of Obama-era policies, business leaders are thrilled. But the campaign has alarmed labor unions, safety advocates and environmental activists as the fallout ripples across the country.
► From The Atlantic — There’s superficial agreement in Congress on paid family leave — While it seems that there’s consensus that something should be done, there is still concern over how, exactly, paid leave policies should be implemented. For those hoping that federal regulation will catch up to states and companies leading the charge on paid leave, it could be a while before any bill, especially one that is substantial enough to herald progress, gets passed.
► In today’s Washington Post — As Flynn faces growing pressure over Russia contacts, Trump remains silent — “The knives are out” for President Trump’s national security adviser, an administration official said after reports that Michael Flynn misled administration officials about his discussions with the Russian ambassador.
► In today’s NY Times — A rare Republican call to climate action (editorial) — A carbon tax proposal from party elders offers an opportunity to change the conversation on global warming.
NATIONAL
► In the Seattle Times — College athletes hoping to unionize receive big boost from NLRB — The NLRB’s chief counsel issued a memo saying football players at 17 private colleges are employees and can seek better working conditions.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.