NEWS ROUNDUP
More teachers ready to walk ● GOP’s shameful Matts ● Trump’s real wall
Thursday, August 23, 2018
PAY OUR TEACHERS!
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Longview teachers go on strike — Longview teachers will go on strike Thursday morning after decisively rejecting the district’s offer for a 6.9 percent average pay raise. About 93 percent of union members present voted to strike during a Wednesday evening meeting at which union leaders reviewed the district’s offer.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Longview teachers reject contract, STRIKE
► In today’s Columbian — Battle Ground teachers vote overwhelmingly to strike
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Richland teachers accept 22 percent pay raise over 3 years. Still no deal in Pasco
► In the Wenatchee World — New contract allows for teacher pay increases, class load limits
► In the Daily World — Aberdeen School District adds mediator to handle AEA negotiations
► In the Daily World — Hoquiam School District negotiations underway
► In today’s Columbian — Are teacher strikes illegal? Depends on who you ask — Teacher strikes are illegal in Washington state, but they still happen. And the reality is, while strikes may be illegal, there’s no law setting penalties against public employees who do strike.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Teachers union says it’s ‘on solid ground’ with strike — Yakima Education Association President Steve McKenna said the union isn’t worried that strikes by public employees aren’t technically legal under Washington state law.
THIS WASHINGTON
MORE coverage in from KUOW and the Columbia Basin Herald and Ellensburg Daily Record.
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — It’s up to Republicans to hold Rep. Matt Shea accountable (March 2016) — Now that there are reports that Rep. Matt Shea aided and abetted domestic terrorists, one wonders if any Republicans in Washington will muster the courage to call him out.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Yesterday, the Associated Press office in Los Angeles went into lockdown after some nutbag called and threatened: “At some point we’re just gonna start shooting you fucking assholes.” A couple of months ago a gunman blasted his way into the Capital Gazette newsroom in Annapolis, Md., and killed five employees. Irresponsible hate speech targeted at anyone, including journalists, can have life-or-death consequences.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — State to fight Trump’s coal plant plan — Washington state plans to sue the Trump administration over its proposal to dismantle pollution rules that would have increased federal regulation of emissions from coal-fired power plants, Gov. Jay Inslee said Wednesday.
► In today’s News Tribune — We’re all breathing smoke, but climate change hits some people harder than others (by Matt Driscoll) — As a report from the University of Washington and Front and Centered details, factors like where you live, where you work and your access to health care will greatly influence your ability to cope with the impacts with man-made climate change.
ALSO at The Stand — Report: Vulnerable communities face greater climate change risks
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — White House grapples with Cohen, Manafort convictions — Inside President Trump’s orbit, there is a debate: Some confidants see this week — in which two of his former aides were convicted in federal courts — as an unsettling inflection point. Others just see yet another round of problems that are not a danger to Trump.
► In today’s NY Times — Congress, do your job (editorial) — Congress remains crouched and trembling in a dark corner, hoping this is all a bad dream. It’s not. Republican lawmakers need to buck up, remind themselves of their constitutional responsibilities and erect some basic guardrails to ensure that — in a fit of rage, panic or mere pique — this president does not wake up one morning and decide to drive American democracy off a cliff.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Instead of daring to criticize the president, Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers has invited his biggest (and perhaps most truth-challenged) defender, Kellyanne Conway, to appear at her private fundraiser in Spokane on Friday. Meanwhile, in Tri-Cities, Rep. Dan Newhouse does his part as another brick in Trump’s real wall, refusing to comment because he “hadn’t got a chance to read about the developments” a full 24 hours after the convictions of two close Trump associates and the implication of the president himself in a felony.
► In today’s Washington Post — Not just misleading. Not merely false. A lie. — One of the distinguishing characteristics of Donald Trump’s presidency has been his loose relationship with facts. As of the beginning of this month, The Washington Post’s Fact Checker had documented 4,229 false or misleading claims from the president — an average of nearly 7.6 a day. But the Fact Checker has been hesitant to call them “lies,” as it is difficult to document whether the president knows he is not telling the truth. Until now. This week’s guilty plea by Cohen offers indisputable evidence that Trump and his allies have been deliberately dishonest at every turn in their statements regarding payments to porn star Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal.
NATIONAL
GET PAID! — Union wages average 25% higher than nonunion. What are you waiting for? Click here to contact a union organizer today!
► From The 74 — Teachers unions claim they are beating back Janus threat, but it may take more than a year to really know — To hear the unions tell it, the Janus decision has brought about an upsurge in membership. Last month, New York State United Teachers President Andrew Pallotta claimed 9,000 members recommitted to the union the first two weeks after the decision was announced, and only nine dropped out. United Teachers Los Angeles President Alex Caputo-Pearl told a gathering of union activists that the number of non-members had been cut in half. Frank Flynn, president of the Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and Healthcare Professionals, said “well over 90 percent″ of his members have recommitted.
► In the San Jose Mercury News — California’s proposed ban on mandatory arbitration moves ahead with state Senate vote — A #MeToo-driven bill that would ban California employers from requiring workers to sign arbitration agreements forcing them to negotiate with companies over mistreatment rather than haul them into court has taken its last step before hitting the governor’s desk for a signature or veto.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.