NEWS ROUNDUP
Holy unionization, Jesse’s fits, ICE cold, missing Prince…
Friday, April 21, 2017
LOCAL
► In today’s Olympian — Second faculty group votes to unionize at Saint Martin’s University — Tenured and tenure-track faculty members and librarians at Saint Martin’s University in Lacey have voted to form a union. They are the second group at the private Catholic university to unionize. Last June, Saint Martin’s adjunct and contingent faculty members also voted to join the SEIU… A spokesperson said university officials were “saddened to learn that SEIU unilaterally decided to hold a secret election during Holy Week, one of the most sacred periods of the Catholic religious calendar.”
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — 800-plus at Kadlec Medical Center organize with SEIU 1199NW
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — Union membership is up again in Washington state (Jan. 27, 2017)
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — DOE invests in Hanford infrastructure to support decades more cleanup work — With environmental cleanup work expected to continue for decades, workers have completed replacing five miles of water lines. Most of the piping that was replaced dated from World War II, when Hanford workers were installing infrastructure to support the race to produce plutonium for the the atomic bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, to help end the war.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Parties in Hanford tank vapor lawsuit begin mediation
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s Olympian — Politicians in Olympia are accusing each other of having fake budgets, for very different reasons — The dispute highlights the wide gulf between House Democrats and GOP Senate leaders as they work to agree on a new two-year budget.
► From AP — Legislatures passes, sends governor REAL ID measure — State lawmakers on Thursday gave final legislative approval to a two-tiered licensing system that seeks to bring Washington state into compliance with federal identification requirements… The compromise language approved Thursday makes the cost of the enhanced license $78 and also keeps changes made by House Democrats, including prohibiting the marked licenses from being used to determine or infer citizenship or immigration status or to spark an investigation or arrest that otherwise would not have occurred.
► In today’s Seattle Times — As part of McCleary fix, lawmakers may end disparities in pay for school administrators — When it comes to school administrator salaries in Washington, there’s no rhyme or reason to how much the state provides each district. But that all may change as the Legislature tries to resolve the landmark McCleary school-funding case.
TOWN HALL
THAT WASHINGTON
► From KUOW — Staff cuts under way at EPA — The Trump administration has lifted its hiring freeze for the federal government. But the Environmental Protection Agency remains frozen, according to internal documents obtained by KUOW. The Trump administration has proposed cutting EPA’s budget by 31 percent, more than at any major federal agency, and scrapping 56 programs there, including funding for Puget Sound restoration.
► In today’s Washington Post — White House turns up heat on Congress to revise the Affordable Care Act — President Trump is pushing Congress toward another dramatic showdown over the Affordable Care Act, despite big outstanding obstacles to a beleaguered revision plan and a high-stakes deadline next week to keep the government running.
► In today’s Washington Post — The GOP’s latest health-care plan is comically bad (by Eugene Robinson) — Under their latest plan, there would no longer be a prohibition, however, against charging “high-risk” individuals more — so much more, in fact, that they would potentially be priced out of the market. We would go back to the pre-ACA situation in which serious illness could mean losing a home or filing for bankruptcy. This may satisfy GOP ideological imperatives, but it is atrocious policy, even if you put aside considerations such as compassion and community.
► In today’s NY Times — Trump roars again on trade, reviewing steel and chiding Canada — His outburst in the Oval Office toward a friendly neighbor punctuated a week when tough talk on trade took center stage in a White House deeply divided over how aggressively to erect the trade barriers that Trump promised during his campaign.
EDITOR’S NOTE — In this photo, USW President Leo W. Gerard (at Trump’s immediate left) does a masterful job maintaining a straight face as Trump goes off script. (Gerard was there is support of an executive order intended to boost domestic steel production.) The forlorn looks from the rest of them are priceless.
► In today’s NY Times — IRS enlists debt collectors to recover overdue taxes — In a program that consumer advocates fear has the potential for abuse, private firms are poised to begin calling taxpayers who owe money to Uncle Sam.
► From Yahoo News — Rep. Chaffetz floats the idea he may resign before term ends
NATIONAL
► From The Nation — Back at the Carrier plant, workers are still fighting on their own — All in all, some 850 jobs will disappear from this square mile over the next few months, and with them 850 union members from the rolls of USW Local 1999 — with more likely to follow. As the city braces for the shock, the workers are facing this fate largely on their own… Trump’s tax break was not enough. Truly addressing the plight of the American working class means confronting the problems of global capitalism.
T.G.I.F.
► One year ago today, we lost one of The Entire Staff of The Stand’s favorite artists, Prince Rogers Nelson. In his honor, we present his 1989 performance on the 15th anniversary special for Saturday Night Live. From the Batman movie soundtrack, “Electric Chair” is not one of his greatest songs and somebody went a little heavy on the stage smoke, but we always loved this because it included all the hallmarks of a great ’80s-era Prince performance: funky beat, shredding guitar work, great dance moves (including choreographed ones with the band), and plenty of Susanna Hoffs-style sideways glances.
This excellent Prince tribute by David Schmader from a year ago in The Seattle Times said it best: “He blended disparate cultures (black and white, R&B and rock, queer and Christian) en route to that rarest peak — a one-of-a-kind musical genius who also becomes a pop superstar. It happened with the Beatles and Bob Dylan, it happened with Prince, and it’s the best the pop world can offer: fearless innovators with enough people-pleasing instincts that their inventions hit the world like destiny.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.