NEWS ROUNDUP
Tick-tock in Olympia, Bernie polls best, union numbers…
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
THIS WASHINGTON
► From KNKX — Time running out for Washington lawmakers to get budget deal — House Democrats and Senate Republicans have passed very different budgets and school funding plans… Sen. John Braun (R-Centralia) said negotiations can’t even start until House Democrats pass their committee-approved $3 billion tax plan. House Appropriations Committee Chair Timm Ormbsy (D-Spokane) said this is no time for pre-conditions: “This is when people get together as adults and discuss the differences and discuss paths to resolving them.”
ALSO at The Stand — Rival state budgets demonstrate party values
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Restore state funding for park, habitat projects (editorial) — Less than a year after passing legislation to reform the state’s grant program for funding of public lands and parks projects, Republicans on the House capital budget committee again are taking it upon themselves to pick and choose projects, rejecting those they don’t consider important. Those decisions were not intended to be theirs to make.
► In today’s Columbian — Lawmakers’ effort to compromise pays off — This legislative session, Southwest Washington lawmakers were determined to meet regularly, work cohesively and move past personality conflicts, which in previous years hindered what they could deliver for the region. The effort looks like it could be paying off in the Senate and House capital budgets.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Legislators agree on need for bilingual teachers. But can’t agree on a plan. — A Senate bill proposed creating four pilot programs, including one in Pasco, to recruit bilingual teachers in high school. Another bill in the House would create a grant program for school districts to develop their own bilingual recruitment. Behind the scenes, lawmakers appear to be trying to combine the ideas into one program.
► In today’s News Tribune — Tacoma teens get a jump on manufacturing careers with new apprentice program — Fifteen Tacoma Public Schools students will form the first cohort of a new apprenticeship program that will train students to work for local manufacturers. While they learn, they’ll earn money along with high school and college credits.
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — 100-plus immigrants detained in Tacoma on hunger strike, activists say — More than 100 immigrants detained at the Northwest Detention Center on Tacoma’s Tideflats started a hunger strike Monday to protest the conditions at the facility, according to an immigrant rights group.
ALSO at The Stand — Hunger strikers decry conditions at Tacoma detention center
ALSO at The Stand — State, NWIRP offer guidance on federal immigration compliance
HIDE AND SEEK
ALSO at The Stand — Who’s playing hide-and-seek at recess?
► A related story from Investopedia — Goldman Sachs concludes Obamacare added 500,000 jobs — One of the Republicans’ central claims about the Affordable Care Act is that it kills American jobs. But is that accurate? Not according to Goldman Sachs. Researchers at the investment bank found that employment in the healthcare and social assistance sectors saw a marked increase after parts of Obamacare went into effect in 2012… By contrast, the initial bill the Republicans tried to pass in March would result in 24 million fewer insured Americans over a 10-year period, according to a Congressional Budget Office estimate.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Politico — Why Trump’s $1 trillion infrastructure plan could wind up in a ditch — President Donald Trump is counting on his $1 trillion infrastructure proposal to produce the kind of bipartisan legislative victory that has eluded him on health care and pretty much everything else. Instead, he’s running into familiar roadblocks: suspicious Democrats, a divided GOP and questions about the math.
ALSO at The Stand — Time running out for Congress to act on mine workers’ benefits
► From TPM — Social Security advocates sound the alarm about the latest Trump tax plan — Lobbyists aligned with the Trump administration are pushing for the elimination of the 12.4 percent payroll tax, which is the overwhelming source of revenue for the Social Security trust funds. “They will sell it as a tax cut for the middle class, but really this is undermining middle class economic security, and the ability to retire,” said Nancy Altman of Social Security Works.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Patty Murray is 59% approval vs. 29% disapproval, and Maria Cantwell is 56% vs. 27%.
► In today’s Washington Post — The Senate may be developing an electoral college issue (by Philip Bump) — By one metric, lawmakers representing less than half of the country are passing measures in the chamber.
► In today’s NY Times — Kansas House race brings surprise for GOP: competition — A special election in a district held by Republicans for over two decades has suddenly appeared to tighten.
► In the Washington Post — EPA staffer leaves with a bang, blasting agency policies under Trump — When Mike Cox quit, he did so with gusto. After 25 years, the Bainbridge Island, Wash., man retired last week from the Environmental Protection Agency with a tough message for the boss, Administrator Scott Pruitt:
“I, along with many EPA staff, are becoming increasing alarmed about the direction of EPA under your leadership… The policies this Administration is advancing are contrary to what the majority of the American people, who pay our salaries, want EPA to accomplish, which are to ensure the air their children breath is safe; the land they live, play, and hunt on to be free of toxic chemicals; and the water they drink, the lakes they swim in, and the rivers they fish in to be clean.”
NATIONAL
ALSO at The Stand — Union membership is up again in Washington state — An estimated 539,000 Washington state residents belonged to labor unions in 2016, an increase of 39,000 from the previous year. With its 17.4 percent union membership rate, Washington is now the 5th most unionized state in the nation.
► From The Hill — SEIU cutting headquarters staff — The Service Employees International Union is reportedly laying off staff at its headquarters after spending about $60 million on politics and lobbying and $19 million on the Fight for 15 movement in 2016. The union is looking to shed 30 percent of its budget in 2017, SEIU president Mary Kay Henry announced in December, after the results of the 2016 presidential race.
► From AP — Retailers make sharp job cuts as consumers migrate online — Retail stores are cutting jobs at the sharpest pace in more than seven years, with 60,600 jobs eliminated in the past two months.
► In today’s NY Times — Federal judge says Texas Voter ID law intentionally discriminates — The judge ruled that the law was enacted with the intent to discriminate against black and Hispanic voters.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.