NEWS ROUNDUP
New Seasons unwelcome | The virtue of rest | Republicans: Raise taxes
Thursday, April 26, 2018
LOCAL
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Here’s why Kadlec caregivers are picketing
ALSO at The Stand — Providence urged to keep promises at Kadlec
► From KNKX — Drivers spar with airport taxi company over fleet reduction — Taxi drivers at Sea-Tac Airport are upset over what they’re calling a “pay-to-play scam.” The company they contract with, Eastside For Hire, has asked drivers to subsidize voluntary buyouts to try and reduce the airport fleet. The company sent a notice to drivers earlier this month giving them the option to either leave or stay and pay to compensate those who did leave. The notice said drivers who stayed would be asked to pay up to $9,000 each. The move caused drivers to hold a one-day strike last week, backed by Teamsters Local 117.
ALSO at The Stand — Eastside for Hire airport taxi drivers protest ‘pay-to-work’
EDITOR’S NOTE — New Seasons is expanding operations into Washington state. The company is getting ready to open its first Seattle store on May 9 in Ballard. Save the date, and make plans to join grocery workers and city leaders as they deliver a message to New Seasons that we take workers’ rights seriously here: 10 a.m. on Wednesday, May 9 in front of the new store at 951 NW Ballard Way (right across the street from the Post Office and Fred Meyer).
► From KUOW — For farmworkers’ kids, country air means dust, pesticides and asthma — Most people think of asthma as a city kid problem — but it turns out rural kids are just as likely to have asthma. And the children of the people who grow our food are especially vulnerable. Researchers at the University of Washington and the Yakima Valley Farm Workers’ Clinic are working on a new approach to solving the problem.
► From KNKX — Parents, teachers call for Kent School District superintendent to resign — One mother has started an online petition calling for the resignation of Superintendent Calvin Watts. The Kent School District has been struggling with deficits.
THIS WASHINGTON
► From The Stranger — Police group that agreed to deadly force compromise says it won’t support original ballot measure — Lawyers for the legislature and De-Escalate Washington are appealing Judge Schaller’s ruling that ordered that the original initiative, I-940, go to the voters in November. But one police group that supported the deal, the Washington State Fraternal Order of Police, has also come out and said it would fight I-940 if the appeal doesn’t flip the judge’s decision.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s NY Times — Majority of justices signal support for Trump’s travel ban — By the end of the argument, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority seemed ready to defer to President Trump’s national security judgments and discount his campaign promises to impose a “Muslim ban.”
► In today’s Washington Post — Ronny Jackson withdraws as Trump’s nominee to lead Veterans Affairs — President Trump’s embattled nominee to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs withdrew from consideration Thursday amid mushrooming allegations of professional misconduct that raised questions about the White House vetting process.
► From The Hill — McMorris Rodgers seeks to tamp down unrest — Aides to Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, the No. 4 Republican leader, have reached out to some of the millennial GOP lawmakers who have raised complaints about the conference’s messaging and accused them of anonymously criticizing McMorris Rodgers in the press, these lawmakers said.
NATIONAL
► In the NY Daily News — Columbia University graduate students go on strike over union fight — Graduate students at Columbia University began a one-week strike Tuesday right as finals preparation kicks off. The over 500 graduate students overwhelmingly voted earlier this month to walk off the job to protest the university’s decision against bargaining with the union.
► From The Economist — A study finds nearly half of jobs are vulnerable to automation — A wave of automation anxiety has hit the West. Just try typing “Will machines…” into Google. An algorithm offers to complete the sentence with differing degrees of disquiet: “…take my job?”; “…take all jobs?”; “…replace humans?”; “…take over the world?”
► In today’s Washington Post — ‘They are so underpaid’: School support staff scrape by on meager earnings — Jessica Morales gets to Prairie Queen Elementary in Oklahoma City before the bell rings. In class, she is a lifeline for recent immigrant students, translating lessons they cannot understand. Her job as a teacher assistant is more fulfilling than the one she held at a meatpacking plant, but it pays far less: $12 an hour.
TODAY’S MUST-SEE
► In today’s NY Times — We are Republican teachers striking in Arizona. It’s time to raise taxes. (video)
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.