NEWS ROUNDUP
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Monday, October 8, 2018
ELECTION
► In today’s Bellingham Herald — Whatcom sees a surge in voter registrations ahead of mid-term elections, here’s how — Whatcom County voter registrations have surged over the past several months in advance of the Nov. 6 mid-term election.
LOCAL
► In the NW Labor Press — Tense bargaining with Kaiser Permanente ends with national deal and pledge to work on relationship — A coalition of 22 unions reached tentative agreement with Kaiser Permanente Sept. 23 on a new union contract covering 47,000 workers in eight states. The deal followed months of the tensest negotiations Kaiser workers have seen in many years.
► In the (Aberdeen) Daily World — Hoquiam teachers, school district reach tentative contract agreement — A tentative agreement has been reached in contract negotiations between the Hoquiam School District and the Hoquiam Teachers Association.
► In the Olympian — Port of Olympia emails: Longshore worker line-handling fees appear to be at root of cruise ship cancellation — Despite that, the port is still largely in the dark about the reasons behind the cancellation because she thought the issue of longshore-related fees had been settled.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Kavanaugh sworn in as Supreme Court justice after divided Senate votes for confirmation — As a throng of angry demonstrators stood on the steps of the Capitol, the Senate finalized on a near party-line vote of 50 to 48 what will certainly be one of President Trump’s most enduring legacies: two Supreme Court justices in two years in an increasingly polarized nation.
ALSO at The Stand — Sen. Murray to survivors: ‘Your voices do matter. It makes a difference.’ — “Thank you, Patty Murray. We see your light in that dark room.”
EDITOR’S NOTE — And yet, it is the peaceful protesters of Kavanaugh who have been characterized by President Trump and his congressional sycophants as an “angry mob.”
NATIONAL
► In the Seattle Times — Aerospace hiring heats up as defense, aircraft programs take off — The increased U.S. defense budget, record commercial aircraft orders and the launch of new programs have companies scrambling to hire engineers and others. Sometimes they are competing against tech companies for employees experienced in software or artificial intelligence.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.