NEWS ROUNDUP
America’s baby jails ● State revenue up ● Big Boeing order
Wednesday, June 20, 2018
CAGING CHILDREN
► From Reuters — Over 2,300 children separated from parents at U.S.-Mexico border from May 5 to June 9 — There are 100 child-detention sites scattered across 17 states and they can be on the other side of the country from their parents.
► In today’s NY Times — GOP moves to end family separation policy, but can’t agree on how — Congressional Republicans tried to defuse an escalating crisis over President Trump’s policy of separating immigrant children from parents who cross illegally into the United States. But the Senate had one plan, the House another, and Trump remained defiant.
► In today’s NY Times — Trump ally mocks child with Down Syndrome separated from her mother: ‘Womp womp’ — Corey Lewandowski, a former campaign manager for President Trump, mocked the story of a 10-year-old girl with Down syndrome who was separated from her mother in South Texas.
► At Medium — Fact check: Claiming asylum (by Rep. Rick Larsen) — From claims stating there is a “right way” to seek asylum to claims parents broke the law by seeking asylum, many of the statements the administration has made are simply false.
► From Politico — Protesters chant ‘shame’ at DHS secretary at Mexican restaurant
► From Politico — Pope Francis rebukes Trump administration over family separations
► From HuffPost — U.S. Chamber rips Trump over child detention policy
► From Politico — U.S. withdrawing from U.N. Human Rights Council
► MUST-READ in today’s Seattle Times — Breaking up immigrant families is ‘not who we are’? Oh yes it is. (by Danny Westneat) — There’s nothing new about America’s broken immigration system ripping apart families. It shouldn’t be the least surprising that the Trump administration is escalating the cruelty, to the point that children are being torn from their mothers and put in detention pens. Because that’s what he said he was going to do in the campaign… My point is, we voted for this. Maybe you didn’t, but our country wanted it — at least enough of it to put the malevolence into full effect. And it could get worse. Imagine if the so-called “deportation force” Trump at times talked about in the campaign starts rounding up the 11 million undocumented folks who have been living and working in the U.S. for years.
► In today’s NY Times — Microsoft employees protest work with ICE — Microsoft workers objected to the company’s work with immigration authorities, part of a wave of outrage over the Trump administration’s immigration policy.
► From HuffPost — Senate cafeteria worker serves lunch to the very people who want her deported (video)
THIS WASHINGTON
► From AP — Forecast shows increase in state revenues — An updated forecast shows Washington state is expected to see a net increase in revenues of nearly $300 million more than previously thought for the current two-year budget cycle. The state’s Economic and Revenue Forecast Council released its latest projections Tuesday. The forecast showed that collections actually increased by $536 million for the current biennium, but the net increase is $298 million due to various changes the Legislature made earlier this year, including a statewide property tax reduction.
LOCAL
► In today’s Kitsap Sun — South Kitsap raceway backers make pitch for public funds — Circuit of the Northwest LLC has pitched its proposed $35 million motorsports park to the Kitsap Public Facilities District, which taps a state sales tax rebate to fund projects that benefit the region.
► In today’s Columbian — Audit faults juvenile detention facility on overtime pay — Staff overtime and operating costs at the Clark County Juvenile Detention Facility have risen even as the population of detainees has decreased.
THAT WASHINGTON
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — GOP plans big Social Security, Medicare cuts
► In today’s Washington Post — The president seems to be saying more and more things that are not true — The falsehoods have multiplied recently as Trump seeks to create an alternate reality around immigration and other issues.
► In today’s NY Times — A conservative think tank stocks the Trump government — By placing its people throughout the administration, the Heritage Foundation has succeeded in furthering its right-wing agenda.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — High rents, minimum wages and economic alarm bells (by Jon Talton) — One of the biggest housing-affordability headwinds is lagging pay. The economy and stock market are booming but raises have been slow to follow.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.