NEWS ROUNDUP
Hasegawa’s in, ILWU’s port talks, the end of Medicaid…
Tuesday, May 9, 2017
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s Seattle Times — Another challenger emerges as rumors persist that Seattle Mayor Ed Murray will leave race — The flurry of news in the city’s once-sleepy race came a month after Murray was sued and a week before the period during which candidates must officially file.
► In today’s News Tribune — $65 million on the line with latest Western State review — Inspectors are looking for improvements in safety and quality of care problems that put the hospital at risk of losing federal money. The 800-bed psychiatric facility in Lakewood has struggled with the issues for years.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — State Patrol agrees to pay veteran employees $13 million in back wages — The Washington State Patrol has agreed to pay up to $13 million in back wages to military veterans in their employ who didn’t receive credit for their service in hiring and promotional decisions.
► From KUOW — Washington’s first tech apprenticeship connects employers to workers — Apprenticeships are common in sectors like building and manufacturing, but now Washington state is trying to apply the model to the tech industry. The first cohort of 41 apprentices were pinned by Governor Jay Inslee in a ceremony Friday honoring the state’s only registered tech apprenticeship program called Apprenti.
LOCAL
► From AP — Northwest Immigrant Rights Project sues Justice Department to keep giving legal help — The U.S. Justice Department has ordered a Seattle-based immigrant rights group to halt a large part of the work it does to advise immigrants of their legal rights and help them fill out paperwork – a demand that the organization says would force thousands of people to go without legal help in deportation cases.
ALSO at The Stand — Immigrant rights group sues DOJ after move to block legal aid
► In today’s Kitsap Sun — Superintendents’ letter on education funding riles unions — The letter from Olympic Educational Service District 114 spells out a platform calling (in part) for limits on collective bargaining for some non-classroom teaching activities that the superintendents say should be considered part of basic education. Kirstin Nicholson, president of the Central Kitsap Education Association, said her members are opposed to limiting collective bargaining rights in any way. She found the letter “alarming.”
► In today’s Peninsula Daily News — Port Angeles paraeducators calling for pay increase — Port Angeles School District paraeducators have been at a standstill with the district throughout the school year over what their wage should be. Paraeducators, who have a base pay of $14.87 per hour, have been without a contract since the end of August, said Theresa Rothweiler, president of the Port Angeles Paraeducators Association.
► In the NW Labor Press — Cafeteria workers unionize at Lewis & Clark College — Bon Appétit Management Company, the contractor that runs the cafeteria at Lewis & Clark College in Southwest Portland, voluntarily agreed to recognize Seattle-headquartered UNITE HERE Local 8 there after a majority of workers signed union cards.
► In today’s News Tribune — At 92, nation’s oldest nurse still working in Tacoma General Hospital — Florence “SeeSee” Rigney, the country’s oldest working registered nurse, turned 92 Monday. She celebrated by going to work at Tacoma General Hospital.
TRUMPCARE
ALSO at The Stand — Unions to McMorris Rodgers: Shame on you
► In today’s Washington Post — Iowa congressman walks out of a TV interview and into an angry town hall meeting — Rep. Rod Blum, a member of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, struggled to explain his vote to support the American Health Care Act to a pre-screened audience.
► In today’s Columbian — Rep. Herrera Beutler to hold telephone town hall Tuesday — It will be 6 p.m. Tuesday. Call 1-877-229-8493, pass number 116365.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Be sure to thank her for her principled vote against the AHCA, but call her out on her vote to end the 40-hour workweek.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In the Minneapolis Star-Tribune — Trump welcomes some unions over others at the White House — Trump has put out the welcome mat for the nation’s construction trades, with whom he’s had relationships during decades of building office towers and hotels. Also invited in have been auto, steel and coal workers who backed him during the 2016 election. But there’s been no White House invitation for other unions.
EDITOR’S NOTE — As officials from Trump’s campaign were communicating with the Russians amid their intervention in the U.S. election, here’s what Michael Flynn was saying…
Lock him up.
► In today’s Washington Post — U.S. is poised to ramp up military in Afghanistan — The Trump administration is considering a major shift in strategy in Afghanistan, including an increase of at least 3,000 troops, that would effectively put the United States back on a war footing with the Taliban.
► In today’s NY Times — The business case for the Paris Climate Accord (by George Shultz and Ted Halsted) — Remaining in the treaty would spur new investment, strengthen American competitiveness, create jobs and ensure access to global markets.
► In today’s NY Times — Kushner family stands to gain from visa rules in Trump’s first major law — A marketing campaign by Kushner Companies, tied to a visa program recently renewed by the president, has raised more ethical quandaries in Washington.
► Also in today’s NY Times — The Kushners and their Golden Visas (editorial) — The president’s in-laws promise Chinese investors green cards. The real scandal is that it’s legal.
► In today’s NY Times — He wanted to close the Export-Import Bank. Now he may run it. — Less than two years ago, Scott Garrett, then a Republican congressman from New Jersey, took to the House floor and laced into his colleagues for resurrecting an institution that “embodies the corruption of the free enterprise system.” The institution he derided was the Export-Import Bank. He could soon be running it.
► And this shocker from Politico — Who has Trump’s ear? Often rich, white, Republican men.
NATIONAL
► In today’s LA Times — Hollywood guilds flex their muscle as union influence declines nationwide — Hollywood remains a bastion of organized labor, with unions controlling nearly every aspect of production, including the director who calls “action” and the truck drivers who transport equipment to and from sets. Their power can bring the film and TV industry to a standstill.
► From NPR — Restaurants with low Yelp ratings suffer under higher minimum wages — Minimum wage increases in the San Francisco Bay Area have had an impact on the local restaurant industry, according to a study released by Harvard Business School. Restaurants with low or middling Yelp reviews have become more likely to go out of business.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
Sinclair appears unique among broadcasters for what some analysts see as a political slant to its programming — from news coverage and must-runs sent by headquarters critical of Democrats to last month’s hiring of Boris Epshteyn, a former Trump White House official, as Sinclair’s chief political analyst. In Seattle, where Sinclair owns KOMO-TV, some newsroom staffers complained to their union that the must-run spot interfered with their jobs as journalists.
“The must-runs look like they are part of the news,” David Twedell, business manager of a local camera workers’ union in Seattle, said. “And they’re clearly not.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.