NEWS ROUNDUP
May Day! | Jobs, jobs, jobs | T-Sprint good or bad? | Wolf slayed
Tuesday, May 1, 2018
MAY DAY!
ALSO at The Stand — Get ready to celebrate MayWorks 2018 — Find out what’s happening TODAY in Everett, Tacoma and Yakima. Reminder: In Seattle, a labor contingent participating in the May Day march will meet at the WSLC office, 321 16th Ave. South, at 2:30 p.m. for sign-making and will join the march as it passes by the office shortly after 3:30 p.m.
► In today’s Seattle Times — May Day: Here’s what to expect for today’s events in Seattle — Whether you’re mapping out your commutes or planning to join the gatherings — ranging from a march for immigrant and labor rights to an event by a far-right men’s group — here’s what you should know.
► In today’s Olympian — Olympia prepares for May Day protest after last year’s violence and destruction — Officials in Olympia say they are prepared for Tuesday’s May Day demonstrations after protesters last year broke storefront windows, threw rocks at police and fought with onlookers in downtown.
► From AP — Workers, activists mark May Day with defiant rallies — Workers and activists marked May Day on Tuesday with rallies to demand their government address labor issues. International Workers’ Day is a public holiday in many countries, though activities are restricted in some places, sometimes leading to confrontations.
LOCAL
► From KING 5 — Railroads offering up to $25,000 in signing bonuses for new hires — Railroads are having trouble filling job openings, so they’re offering massive incentives to lure people in, including offering huge bonuses. According to multiple reports, Union Pacific is offering up to $25,000 in signing bonuses for certain positions while BNSF Railway is offering similar bonuses.
► In today’s Skagit Valley Herald — Andeavor Anacortes Refinery set for change in ownership — The Andeavor Anacortes Refinery is set for a change in ownership after Marathon Petroleum Corporation reached a deal to acquire the refinery’s parent company, according to a Monday news release from Andeavor. It’s too early to tell if there will be any changes for the Andeavor facilities, a spokesperson said.
► From Bloomberg — Boeing buys plane parts supplier KLX in $4.25 billion deal — The deal is the largest struck so far by CEO Dennis Muilenburg, who has been scouting acquisitions that would more than triple sales at Boeing’s services business to $50 billion within a decade.
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Is state funding schools sufficiently? Maybe, say plaintiffs –State lawmakers think they’ve complied with school funding mandates in the McCleary case but the attorney for the families that sued told the Supreme Court on Monday it is too soon to reach that conclusion.
► From KNKX — State shuts down care provider for disabled adults, now families face tough decisions — In an unprecedented move, the state is shutting down SL Start & Associates, a major provider of in-home care for developmentally disabled adults in King, Spokane and Yakima counties, because of repeated serious violations of care standards.
T-SPRINT
EDITOR’S NOTE — The Communications Workers of America union has yet to post anything about position on the proposed merger, but when the deal was proposed last October the union said it “will result in the loss of at least 20,000 U.S. jobs and will harm consumers by reducing competition and rewarding two companies that illegally have ‘crammed and slammed’ millions of customers.
► In today’s Washington Post — What the T-Mobile and Sprint merger means for you — The reduction in competition could lead to higher prices, said Blair Levin, a policy adviser for New Street Research. “The general view on Wall Street is that as a result of this deal, there are likely to be job cuts and prices are likely to rise,” he said.
► From the NY Times — The implausible promises of a T-Mobile-Sprint merger (editorial) — If the FCC and the Department of Justice approve the deal, T-Mobile and Sprint say, the company won’t raise prices and it will hire more people, rather than reduce the work force, which is more often the case in such mergers. And they say all this will be done while costs are cut by $6 billion a year and profits rise substantially. All that’s missing from this list of promises is permanently blue skies.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s NY Times — Mueller has dozens of inquiries for Trump in broad quest on Russia ties and obstruction — Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel investigating Russia’s election interference, has at least four dozen questions on an exhaustive array of subjects he wants to ask President Trump to learn more about his ties to Russia and determine whether he obstructed the inquiry itself, according to a list of the questions obtained by The New York Times.
► From Rolling Stone — Michelle Wolf slays useless White House correspondents’ dinner (by Matt Taibbi) — The White House Correspondents’ dinner has always been a bad aristocratic joke, the punch line obvious to everyone but the participants. “Make a joke – but not a real one” has been its unofficial motto since forever… Everything that is revolting about the D.C. press corps was on display in this incident. On the one hand, who cares – it’s just a party, right? On the other hand, why are we partying with the people we’re supposed to be covering? There haven’t been too many positive developments of the Trump years, but the end of black tie lovefests and the charade of buddy-buddy press-pol relations might be one.
NATIONAL
ALSO at The Stand — UW Postdocs’ UAW union election begins (April 23)
— 96% of UW’s Academic Student Employees (UAW 4121) vote to OK strike (April 27)
► From Reuters — ‘Teachers’ Spring’ forcing lawmakers to find money for schools — Encouraged by progressive resistance to President Donald Trump and the #MeToo movement, the protests by the nation’s teachers, more than three-quarters of whom are women, mark the first statewide walkouts since the 1990s. The movement has already prompted lawmakers to allocate pay increases for teachers and more money for schools in West Virginia, Oklahoma and Colorado, while Arizona’s legislature is also trying to hammer out a deal.
► In today’s NY Times — A taxi driver took his own life. his family blames Uber. — A series of suicides in New York has drawn attention to the economic desperation of drivers competing with ride-hailing apps.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.