NEWS ROUNDUP
Arm teachers with real raises ● Safety net at stake ● Tick tock
Friday, August 24, 2018
PAY OUR TEACHERS
ALSO at The Stand — With 93% rejecting contract offer, Longview teachers STRIKE
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Will Yakima schools open on Monday? Teachers, district vow to continue contract talks — With a possible strike looming, Yakima School District teachers and administrators will continue contract discussions Friday and into the weekend if necessary, officials said.
► In the Skagit Valley Herald — School districts, teachers continue contract talks
► In the Daily World — Aberdeen School District adds mediator to handle AEA negotiations
► In the Daily World — Hoquiam School District negotiations underway
► Meanwhile, in today’s Washington Post — Arming teachers with federal education money? Are they even thinking? (editorial) — Who would benefit? Not students still imperiled by gun violence. Not parents still fearful for their children. Not teachers, giving up some of their paychecks at Staples this weekend to outfit their classrooms as the school year begins. No, the beneficiaries would be the gun manufacturers and the gun lobby.
LOCAL
► In the Kitsap Sun — Equipment operators and pavers strike halts Kitsap road projects — Work on several Kitsap road construction projects has been put on hold after equipment operators, pavers and other workers went on strike earlier this week.
ALSO at The Stand — Operating Engineers Local 302 on STRIKE in Western Wash.
ALSO see the Community to Community’s Facebook video update on this successful effort.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Program for sick and injured Hanford workers is troubled, audit finds — The Hanford workers’ compensation program has problems, ranging from controls over federal money to a lack of worker trust, according to a new DOE Office of Inspector General audit report. Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell requested the inspector general investigate the program and the IG audit report released Thursday said it found a wide range of problems, including a lack of good communication with ill or injured workers filing compensation claims.
NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS
Founded in 1900 by a consortium of trade unions, the Northwest Labor Press is an independent, labor-supported newspaper. The print edition is mailed out twice a month to more than 50,000 members of 80-plus unions in Oregon and Southwest Washington. (Subscribe!) The online edition, which features daily news postings, offers lots of important news items like these…
EDITOR’S NOTE — Since this story was first written, the Northwest Accountability Project says the Freedom Foundation complained to the company hosting the web site, and the site has been taken down. But they expect it to be back up soon.
► In the NW Labor Press — OPEIU members are voting on whether to cut their own pension – to halt insolvency — About 7,400 current and former members of nine western union locals of OPEIU face a vote on whether to cut their own promised pension benefits by 30 percent — in order to prevent the pension from running out of money altogether in 2036.
► In the NW Labor Press — Bargaining under way for 18,000 Oregon grocery workers
► In the NW Labor Press — Union bakers picket outside Portland home of Nabisco board member
THIS WASHINGTON
► In the Wenatchee World — Wenatchee City Council members assigned districts — The council decided Aug. 9 to adopt a system where five council members would be elected from the districts they live in and two would be elected citywide. Previously, all council members served at-large.
ALSO see the WSLC 2018 Legislative Report — Voters get more ‘Access to Democracy’
ELECTIONS
► From Yahoo News — White House blocks bill that would protect elections — A bipartisan bill that would have significantly bolstered the nation’s defenses against electoral interference has been held up in the Senate at the behest of the White House, which opposed the proposed legislation.
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — GOP plans big Social Security, Medicare cuts (June 20)
► In today’s NY Times — For female candidates, harassment and threats come every day — The abuse already common in many women’s everyday lives can be amplified in political campaigns, especially if the candidate is also a member of a minority group.
► From PennLive — Scott Wagner says he doesn’t want workers knowing what he makes — The Republican gubernatorial candidate said he will not release a tax return because his income is nobody else’s business and he suggested that labor unions will use it to try to organize workers at the non-union waste-hauling business he owns.
► Not from The Onion, from The Hill — Florida GOP congressional candidate: I was abducted by aliens but that doesn’t define me
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Critics fear Trump’s attacks are doing lasting damage to the justice system — President Trump took his criticism of the criminal justice system to new heights Thursday, prompting alarm from national security and law enforcement officials who fear the president is seeking to protect himself from encroaching investigations at the expense of lasting damage to institutions.
► From Politico — It would take exactly one senator to get Trump’s taxes — We still don’t know just what, if anything, Trump owes Russia. The answer may lie inside documents we’ve been talking about for two years: his tax returns. If Trump does have a clear connection to Russians—if he owes them money, or if he has business partnerships with Putin allies—the returns may provide useful clues and would certainly be a worthwhile place to look… according to the rules already on the books, the Senate doesn’t need a new law to see Trump’s returns. Rather, action by a single Senate Republican may be all that is needed to initiate an immediate investigation of Trump’s tax returns and begin the process of discovery.
ATTENTION-SPAN CHECK
NATIONAL
► From Bloomberg — Microsoft bug testers unionized. Then they were dismissed. — Philippe Boucher and his ex-colleagues from the Temporary Workers of America are among a growing population of tech workers, including many Uber drivers, Amazon.com warehouse loaders, and Google software engineers, who lack the rights and perks of those companies’ full-fledged employees.
► From Labor Notes — How New York taxi workers took on Uber and won — This summer, the scrappy union representing 21,000 taxi and for-hire vehicle drivers in New York City scored two groundbreaking victories against the world’s most valuable start-up company.
T.G.I.F.
► Tick Tock… it’s not just a cynical taunt amid what could be the beginning of the end.
It’s a beautiful song about hope and optimism. It is a call to work toward a better world, and to enjoy life while you can. It was recorded by two brothers, guitarist/vocalists Jimmie and Stevie Ray Vaughan, in their only studio collaboration. It would be the very last studio performance of one of the greatest blues guitarists of our generation. About a month before the release of the Vaughan Brothers’ album, Family Style, Stevie Ray was killed in a helicopter crash. Remember… time’s ticking away.
For your listening pleasure, here is another excellent song from that album.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.