NEWS ROUNDUP
Boeing takes the money and runs, Trumpcare would kill jobs, told you so
Thursday, June 15, 2017
BOEING
► How They Do It Everywhere Else… from the Chicago Tribune — Sears cuts 400 jobs, no longer qualifies for state tax breaks — The announcement means Sears’ head count has been cut by more than a third since 2011, when it employed 6,200 people at its headquarters and received a package of tax breaks after threatening to leave Illinois. The state plans to review Sears’ records “to ensure taxpayers are not on the hook for an out-of-compliance agreement.”
THIS WASHINGTON
► In the News Tribune — State Republicans: Quit planning for a shutdown (letter) — I work for the Department of Corrections, and I see every day in Pierce County the trepidation caused by issues such as the growing housing crisis… Senate Republicans need to work with House Democrats on the budget, or they’re not doing their job. It’s that simple.
ALSO at The Stand — Day of Action against state shutdown on June 22
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Light hand needed on tax changes for light rail (editorial) — The problem with providing “relief” from the vehicle tab tax is that it’s only relief in the short-term. It doesn’t change the overall cost of the project, so reducing the amount collected by the MVET increase is likely to delay or significantly change routes for ST3’s light rail trains. If the local tax package for ST3 is significantly reduced, how much later than 2036 should Everett expect to see light rail? And how is that fair to taxpayers here?
LOCAL
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — They talked about ‘income discrimination.’ What does that mean? — Rising rents and landlords who refuse to rent to low-income applicants emerged as key issues in the area’s housing crisis at a meeting Tuesday night.
ALSO at The Stand — Landlords are taking workers’ pay raises (by Jonathan Rosenblum)
TRUMPCARE
► In today’s Seattle Times — Repeal of Obamacare would be big job-killer (by Jon Talton) — According to a new nonpartisan report, repeal could cost nearly a million lost jobs by 2026. It could also cause an economic downturn in nearly every state. The report estimates Washington state would lose 7,800 jobs — including 5,300 in the health sector — as early as next year if repeal succeeds (it has passed the House and a companion repeal bill is being secretly drafted in the Senate)… And none of this gets at the individual misery of people who couldn’t buy insurance or are thrown off Medicaid. It’s a high price to pay to give more tax cuts to people who least need them.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Special counsel is investigating Trump for possible obstruction of justice, officials say — Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel overseeing the investigation into Russia’s role in the 2016 election, is interviewing senior intelligence officials as part of a widening probe that now includes an examination of whether President Trump attempted to obstruct justice, officials said.
► From Reuters — Trump administration amends travel ban date to keep legal battle alive — The Trump administration on Wednesday moved to amend the starting date of its proposed 90-day travel ban on people entering the United States from six Muslim-majority countries in a bid to keep its legal battle alive.
► In today’s NY Times — Regulatory ‘reform’ that is anything but (by William W. Buzbee) — Legislation moving through Congress would sabotage the government’s rule-making process and threaten labor, environmental and consumer protections.
► From The Hill — Poll: CEOs give Trump a failing grade — Half of CEOs and business executives would give President Trump an “F” for his presidency so far, a new poll finds. Another 21 percent of the leaders surveyed at the Yale CEO summit would give Trump’s performance a “D,” and just one percent would give the president an “A,” according to CNN Money.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Washington Post — These are the people who suffered when Kansas’s conservative experiment failed — The combination of deep tax cuts and austere spending that was supposed to ignite economic growth and reduce dependency have hit hard in the southeastern corner of Kansas, where Suzan Emmons lives, a collection of some of the poorest and sickest counties in the state that is sometimes branded the Appalachia of the Midwest.
► From NBC News — Gender wage cap widens to 43 percent by age 45 — It’s no secret that women lag behind men in wages — making about 83 cents to every dollar a man earns. But new research shows that wage gap widens dramatically by the time they reach their 40s.
► From The Onion — Virginia shooting somehow proves what every single American has been saying all along — At press time, every American was dejected at the thought of how soon they would be proven absolutely right once again.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.