NEWS ROUNDUP
Voting Rights NOW | Motel 6’s ICE machine | Pleading the 25th
Thursday, January 4, 2018
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand — ‘Important progress can be made’ in 2018 — The Washington State Labor Council has announced its 2018 legislative agenda, which includes passage of the Washington Voting Rights Act.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Infrastructure improvements help lure new business to Spokane Valley — Planned infrastructure improvements – including the possible addition of an overpass at the BNSF railroad tracks at Barker Road – and the announcement of two companies building manufacturing facilities could add hundreds of jobs and potential for new businesses.
EDITOR’S NOTE — And THAT’S how you grow jobs in Washington state: invest in public infrastructure. The Legislature should make passage of the state’s capital construction budget, delayed by partisan political obstruction (that voters have now removed), among its first items of business when they convene on Monday.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Millennium parent company files suit against Inslee, Ecology — Millennium Bulk Terminals’ parent company, Lighthouse Resources, Inc., filed a federal lawsuit against Gov. Jay Inslee Wednesday, claiming the governor’s administration is impeding interstate and foreign commerce by blocking the construction of a $680 million coal dock on the Columbia River.
► From Crosscut — How the 2020 census could alter state politics — The 2020 census will also have a dramatic impact on the composition of the Washington State Legislature and Washington’s congressional delegation. Population growth in Washington state has not been evenly distributed. The booming Puget Sound region has seen the bulk of the state’s growth while many rural areas have remained stagnant.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Eyman isn’t letting a bad 2017 slow him down in the new year — It’s been a pretty lousy 12 months for Mukilteo’s purveyor of initiatives as he saw his causes foiled and his future ability to influence the state’s political class jeopardized.
LOCAL
MORE coverage in today’s Bellingham Herald, Columbian, (Everett) Herald, KUOW, NY Times, The Stranger and Washington Post.
► From KNKX — Tacoma considers limits on immigrant detention center — City officials are considering limits on any future expansion of the Northwest Detention Center, the region’s only detention center for immigrants facing deportation. The detention center is run by a private company under contract with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
► In the Columbia Basin Herald — Takata lays off employees — The Moses Lake community is buzzing with rumors following reports that Takata has laid off a number of employees at its Randolph Road plant. Estimates are ranging between 60 and 65 employees. About 350 people work at the facility.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Investigation underway after contaminants found in Spokane Fire Department air compressors — The discovery, which occurred in mid-November after firefighters noticed a foul smell coming from air canisters during a breathing test, prompted fire department leaders to shut down all three of the department’s air compressors.
► From Bloomberg — Boeing reportedly seeking control of Embraer, with defense safeguards — The U.S. plane maker is arguing that it can operate defense businesses without compromising military plans. The Brazilian government, which originally objected to the deal, is now suggesting it has some flexibility on the control issue.
THAT WASHINGTON
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — AFGE, members of Congress: No more pay cuts for federal workers
► From AP — U.S. to end policy that let legal pot flourish, sources say — Attorney General Jeff Sessions is rescinding the Obama-era policy that had paved the way for legalized marijuana to flourish in states across the country, including Washington state. Sessions will instead let federal prosecutors where pot is legal decide how aggressively to enforce federal marijuana law, sources say.
► From Reuters — Trump push to scale back welfare programs has Republicans on edge — Emboldened by his victory in the passage of the biggest U.S. tax overhaul in decades, President Donald Trump now wants to rein in social welfare programs, including food stamps and housing subsidies, even though some Republicans are wary of tackling the volatile issue in a congressional election year.
► From The Hill — Trump offers new rule going after ACA — Workers would be allowed to band together to buy health insurance under a proposed rule released Thursday by the Department of Labor. Such plans would not be subject to Affordable Care Act coverage rules, so insurers could sell cheaper plans by denying coverage for pre-existing conditions or what the ACA considers “essential health benefits.”
► In today’s NY Times — Trump dissolves his panel investigating 2016 election fraud — President Trump signed an executive order to disband the commission, ending its inquiry into his false claims of voter fraud.
► From The Hill — Trump trying to stop publication of explosive book about his presidency: report — Trump’s attorneys have sent a cease-and-desist letter to the book’s publisher, demanding that it not publish the book, and apologize to the president. In one excerpt, former White House chief strategist Stephen Bannon described the 2016 meeting between Donald Trump Jr. and a group of Russians as “treasonous” and “unpatriotic.” He also said there was “zero” chance that the president was not aware of the meeting.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.