NEWS ROUNDUP
Injunction junction ● Whole Foods union ● Never settled ● Marriott strike
Thursday, September 6, 2018
PAY OUR TEACHERS
ALSO at The Stand — WSLC grants strike sanction in Tacoma teachers strike
MORE coverage of the Tacoma strike from KNKX and the Seattle Times.
► In today’s News Tribune — Angry over Tacoma and Puyallup teacher strikes? Economic insecurity might play a part in that (by Matt Driscoll) — The anger that teachers in Tacoma, Puyallup and elsewhere will face likely has little to do with them or their demands. It has much more to do with the economic insecurity too many of us face.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Longview district seeks injunction against teachers’ strike — Longview schools will remain closed on Thursday, but the district says it will go to court to force striking teachers back to their classrooms. Students Thursday will miss their sixth day of classes, even though some progress was reported in the latest round of contract talks. Superintendent Dan Zorn met with union negotiators face-to-face, though he did not actually engage in bargaining.
► From The Olympian — Tumwater will go to court to try to get striking teachers back to work — The Tumwater School District will go to court Friday to try to get its teachers back to work. Teachers have been on strike since Saturday, when their contract expired. The two sides have been unable to reach a deal on a new contract, with issues of teacher pay, class sizes and safety all on the table, according to the union.
► In today’s Olympian — Rainier schools to open Thursday, but Tumwater, Centralia still out — Schools in Rainier will start Thursday after the Rainier School District reached a tentative contract agreement with the Rainier Education Association.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — School canceled for third day in Stanwood-Camano district — Bargaining teams planned to work into Wednesday night to find a resolution.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Some Yakima Valley teachers’ contracts remain unsettled — At least five Yakima Valley school districts reached settlements with their teachers unions in the past week, leaving at least four others still in negotiations.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Tentative deal reached in Central Valley School District teachers’ contract negotiations
FOR THE LATEST on which school districts are on strike and which have reached contract settlements, visit the Washington Education Association’s website or check out their interactive map.
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — King County Council approves $135 million in taxpayer funds for Mariners ballpark — The Metropolitan King County Council voted 5-4 Wednesday to approve $135 million in taxpayer funds for repairs at the Seattle Mariners ballpark. A Mariners executive said after the vote that the team should now be able to sign a new long-term lease to keep the club at the ballpark for the next 25 years.
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — ICE arrests 16 in Whatcom County during ‘criminal investigation’ — Agents from the U.S. Immigration and Custom Enforcement arrested 16 people in Whatcom County last week in an “ongoing criminal investigation,” according to an ICE spokesperson.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Mayor recommends cuts, including 13 jobs, and fee increases — Everett faces a $13 million budget deficit. No reduction of police officers or firefighters is planned.
THAT WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — Kinda like when the conservatives on the Supreme Court decided that the unanimous Abood decision and more than 40 years of subsequent legal precedent was not “settled law” when they imposed so-called right-to-work restrictions on public employees nationwide with Janus. Apparently, these right-wing activist justices consider no issue settled when they personally disagree with it.
► From TPM — Judiciary Dems say they’ll risk punishment to release withheld Kavanaugh docs — During a round of remarks before the questioning kicked off, Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) said he was going to release an email titled “racial profiling,” which the senator referenced Wednesday, that had been designated committee confidential.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Watch as Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) threatens to expel or dismiss senators who release Kavanaugh documents that republicans want to keep confidential, Booker looks him dead in the eye and says, “Bring it.”
► From Politico — ‘It’s open season on the president’: Op-ed unleashes West Wing meltdown — One senior administration official described a White House in “total meltdown” by Wednesday evening, after the president went on television to directly attack the author and the New York Times.
NATIONAL
ALSO at The Stand — Labor Day protesters to Marriott: One job should be enough!
► In today’s Seattle Times — Minimum wage increases in six cities working as intended, Berkeley study of food-service jobs finds — The minimum wage increases that started four years ago are spreading across the country, but economists continue to debate the impact of the policies. The latest look at increased wage floors in six U.S. cities, including Seattle, finds that food-service workers saw increases in pay and no widespread job losses.
ALSO at The Stand — No job loss from higher minimum wages
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.