NEWS ROUNDUP
Pay our teachers! ● I-1000 to nix I-200 ● ‘We are totally happy’
Wednesday, August 29, 2018
PAY OUR TEACHERS!
► In today’s Columbian — Tempers flare as teacher walkouts spread — An emergency meeting of the Vancouver Public Schools board of directors erupted into shouting and boos from a packed audience Tuesday. It was the flashpoint in a chaotic day of teacher strikes and demonstrations, as Vancouver teachers prepare to go to the picket lines Wednesday. Battle Ground, Ridgefield and Hockinson school districts will picket at their respective campuses, while strikes continue in Evergreen and Washougal.
► This morning’s update from The Columbian — Vancouver, Battle Ground, Hockinson, Ridgefield teachers on pickets lines
► In today’s Olympian — Tumwater teachers authorize a strike as contract talks come down to the wire — With a week to go before the first day of school, Tumwater teachers have voted to authorize a strike amid contentious contract negotiations.
► In today’s Skagit Valley Herald — Two Skagit teachers unions vote to strike
► In today’s News Tribune — Will Tacoma teachers strike? What about Puyallup? Odds are increasing
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Here’s what’s happening at Whatcom schools — School will start as scheduled in Whatcom County with no teacher contract negotiations leading to threats of strike in Bellingham, Ferndale, Lynden, Blaine, Median, Mount Baker or Nooksack Valley schools.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Teacher contracts update: Who has settled and who has not — The week before school starts, here’s an accounting of where things stand in Snohomish County.
► In today’s Peninsula Daily News — Port Angeles teacher-district talks continue this evening
EDITOR’S NOTE — Many school districts like Everett’s have stepped up and negotiated new contracts giving teachers significant double-digit wage increases, as intended by state legislators. For example, Bellevue teachers will get an average increase of 17.3 percent, Sedro Woolley 17.7 percent, Toppenish 18.3 percent, and in Skykomish 28.7 percent. See the Washington Education Association’s PAY RAISE MAP for more. Here’s today’s news about more of them..
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Spokane teachers and school board reach salary deal — After weeks of talks and four days of mediated negotiations, Spokane Public Schools and the Spokane Education Association reached a tentative agreement Tuesday night on a new contract. Details won’t be revealed until the SEA holds a meeting, probably on Thursday.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Pasco teachers to vote on new contract. Will it match Kennewick and Richland? — Pasco teachers will decide Thursday night whether to adopt a new two-year contract. Pasco is the last Tri-City school district without a ratified teacher contract for the new school year.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Kalama teachers about to get 16.4 percent pay raise — Kalama’s teachers union Monday approved a tentative contract that calls for a 16.4 percent raise.
► In today’s Skagit Valley Herald — Burlington-Edison teachers approve contract — The contract calls for teachers in the district to receive a 16 percent increase in salary.
► In today’s Skagit Valley Herald — La Conner teachers approve contract — That means school will start Wednesday as planned, and it makes them the best paid teachers in Skagit County.
► In the Washington Post — 2 in 3 Americans say public school teachers are underpaid — Most Americans say public-school teachers are underpaid and say they would support them if they went on strike for better wages, a new poll shows, offering backup for newly assertive educators.
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — Operating Engineers Local 302 on strike in Western Wash. — UPDATE: The IUOE 302 strike continues today. Daren Konopaski, International VP & Business Manager of IUOE 302, posted the following statement on Tuesday: “We met today with the Employers for the second time since the strike began. Unfortunately, there was no change from the Employer’s position yesterday. This is a serious situation and we are committed to coming to a resolution that will be approved by the membership. To that end, we remain ready and available day or night.”
► In today’s Peninsula Daily News — Strike creates one-week delay for new elementary school in Port Townsend — The 480 students anticipating the first day of classes at the new Salish Coast Elementary School will have to wait until Sept. 11, one week later than students in the rest of Port Townsend School District because of an ongoing labor dispute.
► In today’s Seattle Times — In breakthrough, Seattle’s police union and city reach tentative agreement on a new contract — After more than 3 1/2 years without a contract, the Seattle Police Officers’ Guild (SPOG) and the city of Seattle have reached a tentative deal. The union’s board unanimously voted Tuesday to send the agreement to its membership of more than 1,300 officers and sergeants for a ratification vote.
STATE GOVERNMENT
► In today’s News Tribune — Western State Hospital patient stomps on staff member’s head 8 times during assault, police say — A Western State Hospital patient stomped on the head of a staff member multiple times during an assault Sunday at the Lakewood mental health facility, according to Pierce County prosecutors. The 19-year-old man was charged Tuesday in Pierce County Superior Court with first-degree assault and third-degree assault.
ELECTION
ALSO at The Stand — “Reflecting Back… Marching Forward” — A broad coalition commemorates the 55th anniversary of the March on Washington by recommitting to the struggle for racial and economic justice.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Bloomberg — Americans are making less money despite Trump’s promises — President Trump heads into a midterm referendum on his presidency showing no real progress on a core promise: to raise the wages of America’s “forgotten man and woman.” Once the impact of inflation is included, ordinary Americans’ hourly earnings are lower than they were a year ago.
ALSO at The Stand — ‘NAFTA without Canada’ deal incomplete (by WFTC’s Hillary Haden) — Trump promised trade deals that are good for U.S. workers. This one isn’t — yet.
NATIONAL
► In the Star Tribune — Target employees at store in New York to vote on union — Target employees at a store in New York will take a union vote next week after getting the green light from the NLRB. The action is rare among front-line workers at Target Corp., where none of the retailer’s more than 1,800 stores are unionized.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.