NEWS ROUNDUP
A better Burien, Dave ♥s corporate tax cuts, Cathy vs. her state
Monday, November 13, 2017
ELECTION REDUX
ALSO at The Stand — Manka Dhingra and Teresa Mosqueda win! (UPDATED) — Jimmy Matta and Pedro Olguin are both union members and Olguin attended the WSLC/AFL-CIO’s Path to Power candidate training program.
► In today’s News Tribune — Legislators to introduce bill that would limit donations to all port campaigns — Two Democratic state lawmakers plan to introduce a bill that would cap campaign donations for port races after the Port of Vancouver commissioner campaigns collected $650,000 in contributions from two organizations.
► In the Seattle Times — Seattle’s next mayor, Jenny Durkan, names full transition team, deputy mayors — The transition team includes David Rolf, Kenny Stuart, Diane Sosne and Behnaz Nelson who are, respectively, the heads of unions representing nursing-home workers, firefighters, hospital workers and white-collar city employees.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Also on the team are Leonard Smith of Teamsters 117 and Nicole Grant of the M.L. King County Labor Council. And serving as Transition Team Communications Director for the Office of the Mayor-elect is the Kamaria Hightower of the MLKCLC (and formerly of the WSLC). Congratulations, Kamaria!
BOEING
EDITOR’S NOTE — Here’s a thought. Eliminating pensions may have boosted its short-term bottom line, but it has also made this Chicago-based company a less desirable place to work over the long term.
► In the News Tribune — Dubai Air Show opens with Emirates’ $15.1B Boeing buy — The biennial Dubai Air Show has opened with hometown long-haul carrier Emirates making a $15.1 billion buy of Boeing 787-10 Dreamliners.
► In the (Everett) Herald — Boeing workers help pay for vans, grants to local nonprofits — The Employees Community Fund of Boeing Puget Sound this year provided the Work Force Development Center’s apprenticeship program with a new 15-passenger van to transport students to and from the program, job fairs and potential employers.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — State’s innovative aerospace apprenticeship program touted in national report
LOCAL
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Judge: KapStone illegally disciplined employee — In a win for the AWPPW, a federal judge ruled this week that a KapStone Paper and Packaging supervisor discriminated against a Longview employee based on his union organizing and that the supervisor illegally attempted to interfere or restrain union activity.
ALSO at The Stand — Right-wing Freedom Foundation swept, but still suing away (Oct. 17, 2014)
► From The Stranger — King County needs more resources to address labor trafficking, report finds — A new study finds that, while the county has made strides to address sex trafficking, very few resources exist for survivors of labor trafficking in other industries and the crime is rarely prosecuted.
THIS WASHINGTON
► In the News Tribune — Carbon tax plan offers fair deal for Tacomans (by Kirk Kirkland) — Washington voters could lead the way and make our state a model by approving a proposed carbon tax initiative that is socially equitable. The Alliance for Jobs and Clean Energy is proposing a policy initiative designed so that workers in locations like Tacoma don’t have to lose manufacturing jobs or shut down local smoke stacks. In Tacoma this week, people can review the details of the carbon tax initiative at a campaign kick-off at 7 p.m. Thursday (Nov. 16) at Washington Shiloh Baptist Church, 1211 South I St.
ALSO at The Stand — Inslee urges Alliance forward; more kickoff events scheduled
CORPORATE TAX CUTS
EDITOR’S NOTE — Lame duck Rep. Dave Reichert (R-8th) voted for this tax giveaway to corporations and the wealthy that will RAISE taxes for many of his middle-class constituents. Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-1st) voted “no.” The House Rules Committee is scheduled to meet Wednesday to set up floor debate, indicating an expected Thursday vote of the full House.
ALSO at The Stand — Desperate GOP advancing Trump tax bill
► From Bloomberg — McConnell joins Ryan in walking back false promise on tax bill — Like Ryan, the Senate Majority Leader has now acknowledged he erred when he said that “nobody in the middle class is going to get a tax increase.” There are millions of people who would face higher tax bills from the loss of deductions like the one for state and local taxes, which is rolled back in the House bill and eliminated entirely in the Senate bill.
► In the (Everett) Herald — Slap-dash tax reform goes all in for corporations — (Under the bill) individuals will no longer be able to deduct state and local taxes on their federal tax returns, while corporations can deduct the same taxes on businesses purchases. Republicans are adamant that the reduction in corporate tax rates is necessary to spur investment by businesses that will result in more employment. But that trickle-down theory was disproved in the laboratory of Kansas where, after growth lagged and deficits ballooned following major tax cuts, the Republican-led Legislature restored taxes to earlier levels, even overriding its governor’s veto.
► Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Al Franken explain what corporate executives, in their own words, have said they will do with $1.5 trillion in tax cuts. (Hint: It’s not hire more workers or pay them better.)
► In the Washington Post — More than 400 millionaires tell Congress: Don’t cut our taxes — The wealthy Americans — including doctors, lawyers, entrepreneurs and chief executives — say the GOP is making a mistake by reducing taxes on the richest families at a time when the nation’s debt is high and inequality is back at the worst level since the 1920s.
► In the Guardian — Trump ally Robert Kraft revealed as longtime owner of offshore firm — The New England Patriots’ billionaire boss is among several major U.S. sports team owners who appear in the Paradise Papers.
EDITOR’S NOTE — As if you needed another reason to hate the Patriots.
THAT WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — A voluntary paid leave program is what we already have in America. McMorris Rodgers’ bill simply caps what states and cities can do to help working people, like the voter-approved I-1433 here in Washington. Once again, shame on you, Cathy!
► From TPM — Trump nominates former Pharma exec to run HHS — Trump unveiled his pick to run the Department of Health and Human Services, which has been leaderless since Secretary Tom Price resigned in late September over his use of private jets on the taxpayer’s dime: Alex Azar, a former executive at the pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly and Co.
► In the NY Times — Puerto Rico’s second-class treatment on food aid (editorial) — Of all Puerto Rico’s continuing miseries seven weeks after Hurricane Maria’s devastation, the most blatantly unjust is that islanders have been denied the more generous and swifter food relief distributed to storm victims this year in Texas and Florida under the emergency food stamp program.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — Are YOU interested in joining with your co-workers to negotiate better wages and working conditions. Find out how today!
► In the NY Times — Chinese-owned factory in Ohio fights off unionization plan — A Chinese glassmaker beat back a unionization bid at a plant in Ohio on Thursday, winning a key victory in an important test of the way Chinese companies handle employee relations as they increase their holdings in the United States.
► From the BBC — Uber loses court appeal against drivers’ rights — Last year a tribunal ruled drivers James Farrar and Yaseen Aslam were Uber staff and entitled to holiday pay, paid rest breaks and the minimum wage. Uber appealed, arguing its drivers were self employed and were under no obligation to use its booking app. The firm said it would appeal against this latest ruling, too.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.