NEWS ROUNDUP
Time to vote! ● We are the worst ● Cathy’s shame ● More militancy
Thursday, October 18, 2018
ELECTION
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Ballots hit mailboxes this week. Postage is prepaid.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Union members and their families should check out the list of candidates who have earned the Washington State Labor Council’s endorsement, and see the WSLC’s candidate-comparison flyers explaining why.
► In today’s Seattle Times — King County, Washington state election officials see a surge in voter registration — Midterm elections often draw more voters than off-year elections, but 2018 is seeing many more voter registering online than in 2014.
LOCAL
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Naches Valley School District, teachers reach tentative agreement — The Naches Valley School District and its certified staff union reached a tentative contract agreement late Tuesday night after the union warned the district it would strike if the two sides didn’t reach an agreement by Nov. 5.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Yakima School District classified staff push for pay raise at board
► In the Spokesman-Review — Spokane City Council considering restricting Border Patrol access to Spokane Intermodal Center — The Spokane City Council is expected to vote soon on an ordinance that would bar immigration enforcement agents from accessing nonpublic city property without a criminal warrant unless officers obtain the mayor’s permission.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The Spokane Regional Labor Council was among the organizations that signed a letter to the city last month asking for additional protections for undocumented people on city property.
THIS WASHINGTON
► In the Seattle Times — Report: Washington foster kids sent to Iowa were abused in facility run ‘like a correctional institution’ — Washington state foster youth sent to an Iowa facility were allegedly physically abused and kept largely segregated from the outside world, a possible violation of state and federal laws and their constitutional rights, according to a report released Wednesday… The agency faces a shortage of in-state providers to help high-needs foster youth, according to the statement. DCYF attributed that to inadequate pay rates for companies that would provide those services.
EDITOR’S NOTE — You get what you pay for.
THAT WASHINGTON
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — Unions to McMorris Rodgers: Shame on you (May 25, 2017) — McMorris Rodgers was the only member of Washington’s delegation who voted “yes” on the American Health Care Act. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office analysis of the health care bill confirms the harm the legislation would do: at least 23 million fewer people with insurance over the next decade, steep premium increases for older people and price hikes for many people with pre-existing conditions, and an $834 billion cut in Medicaid to finance $664 billion in tax cuts for corporations and high earners.
► From Reuters — McConnell says Senate Republicans might revisit Obamacare repeal — Republicans could try again to repeal Obamacare if they win enough seats in U.S. elections next month, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said on Wednesday, calling a failed 2017 push to repeal the healthcare law a “disappointment.”
► From Bloomberg — Trump administration taking on overtime pay, franchise liability — The Trump administration plans to tackle two important labor policy issues in the coming months: overtime pay and “joint employer” liability for companies in staffing and franchise relationships.
ALSO at The Stand — State moves to restore overtime pay protections
NATIONAL
► From KWCH — SPEEA members approve 6-year contract with Spirit AeroSystems — SPEEA says nearly 1,000 engineers it represents at Spirit in Wichita, Kan., approved the contract “by a significant margin.” It provides annual raises, increased overtime pay and a $4,000 signing bonus.Employees also agreed to changes to medical plans that phase-in during the contract.
► In the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette — Union reaches tentative deal on new contract with U.S. Steel — After weeks of negotiations in Pittsburgh, the United Steelworkers have reached a tentative agreement for a new four-year labor contract covering about 14,000 workers at U.S. Steel, the union and company announced on Monday.
► In the Atlanta Journal-Constitution — Black senior citizens ordered off Georgia bus taking them to vote — Government officials in an east Georgia county told about 40 African-American senior citizens to get off a bus taking them to vote Monday, leading to complaints of voter suppression.
► From MassLive — Rapper, actor Common crosses picket line of striking Boston Marriott workers — First, it was the New York Yankees. Now, it’s the rapper and actor Common. Striking Marriott workers in Boston are calling out big names who cross picket lines.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
EDITOR’S NOTE — Experience the power of collective action to get higher pay, better benefits, safer workplaces and respect at work. Contact a union organizer today and find out how you and your co-workers can join together to bargain for a fair return on your work.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.