NEWS ROUNDUP
Help on the way | Amazon vs. equal pay | Crowd-sourced strikes
Thursday, March 8, 2018
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — WSLC’s Johnson hails new law protecting Hanford workers
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — On final day, lawmakers look to pass budget, property tax cut — State lawmakers will arrive Thursday for the final day of regular session looking to approve a budget that fully funds public schools and provides temporary property tax relief.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Senate Democrats try to push through property tax break for 2019 — Senate Democrats pushed through a plan to give property tax payers a break in 2019, but Republicans contend it is too meager and unconstitutional.
ALSO at The Stand — Historic equal pay bill heads to governor
► From KNKX — Lawmakers rush to pass compromise police accountability bill — An initiative backed by families of people who’ve been shot by police may not appear on Washington’s November ballot after all. That’s because sponsors of Initiative 940 and police groups have agreed on a new good faith standard for the use of deadly force.
► In today’s Columbian — Analysis shows NRA spending in 17th leads state — Looking at a district-by-district breakdown, the state’s 17th Legislative District in Clark County received more in contributions in the 2016 election than any other. Sen. Lynda Wilson and Reps. Paul Harris and Vicki Kraft received a total of $5,850. All three are Republicans from Vancouver.
LOCAL
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Lucky Friday miners vote against arbitration to end strike — Miners at the Lucky Friday Mine overwhelmingly voted against arbitration to end a strike that has dragged on for nearly a year. Miners at the underground silver property near Mullan, Idaho, have been on strike since March 13, after months of negotiations failed to produce a new contract.
► From The Stranger — 24 International Women’s Day 2018 events in Seattle
TRADE
► From Reuters — Eleven nations, but not U.S., to sign Trans-Pacific trade deal — Eleven countries are expected to sign a landmark trade deal in Santiago on Thursday… The revised TPP agreement eliminates some requirements of the original TPP demanded by U.S. negotiators. Those include rules ramping up intellectual property protection of pharmaceuticals, which governments and activists of other member nations worried would raise the costs of medicine.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From The Hill — Federal court rules transgender people covered by law banning workplace sex bias — The 6th Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday once again held that workplace anti-discrimination laws extend to protections for transgender workers.
► In today’s Washington Post — Democrats to unveil $1 trillion infrastructure plan, seek reversal of GOP tax cuts to finance it — As the White House struggles to finance an ambitious infrastructure plan, Senate Democrats are proposing one alternative — albeit one unlikely to pass muster with President Trump: rolling back the recently passed Republican tax overhaul.
► In today’s Washington Post — Democrats press DHS to speed up DACA renewals — A group of Democratic lawmakers are asking the Trump administration to accelerate the renewal of work permits for young immigrants protected by an Obama-era program that remains the subject of federal court challenges.
► From Politico — Forest Service chief resigns in wake of sexual misconduct allegations — Tony Tooke, chief of the U.S. Forest Service, stepped down from his post on Wednesday following reports of sexual harassment and retaliation at the agency that revealed the Agriculture Department was investigating misconduct allegations against Tooke himself.
► In today’s NY Times — Trump lawyer obtained restraining order to silence Stormy Daniels — President Trump’s lawyer secretly obtained a temporary restraining order last week to prevent a pornographic film star from speaking out about her alleged affair with Trump.
WEST VIRGINIA TEACHER STRIKE
► In today’s NY Times — West Virginia walkouts a lesson in the power of a crowd-sourced strike — With no collective bargaining rights, no contract, and no legal right to strike, the teachers had managed to mount a statewide work stoppage anyway, and make their demands heard, marshal public support, and stick together until they won. And the rank and file, not union leaders, came to call the shots. Experts say the West Virginia teachers may foreshadow the future of organized labor, especially in the public sector, at a time when its power has been eroded in much of the country by anti-union legislation and by court challenges like the Janus case, now before the Supreme Court, which threatens the financial viability of collective bargaining.
► In today’s NY Times — The West Virginia teacher strike was just the start (by Steven Greenhouse) — The statewide teachers’ strike in West Virginia — one of the biggest in the nation in years — could signal the beginning of a new trend: a revolt against austerity policies.
NATIONAL
► From The Guardian — International Women’s Day around the world – in pictures
► In today’s LA Times — Disneyland workers demonstrate at Walt Disney Co. meeting demanding ‘living wages’ — A group of workers from the Disneyland Resort waved signs, chanted and demonstrated outside of Walt Disney Co.’s shareholders meeting in Houston on Thursday, demanding the company provide a “living wage.”
► From KUOW — Airlines recruiting like crazy to address pilot shortage
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.