NEWS ROUNDUP
ACA clock ticking ● Lame-duck tax giveaway ● ‘No warning’ from GM
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s Olympian — DNR recruiting 550 seasonal firefighters — The state Department of Natural Resources is looking for 550 seasonal workers for the 2019 wildfire season, the agency announced. That season begins about mid-June and lasts until mid-September, although it could extend into October and even November, according to DNR. Some returning firefighters will start in April.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Mixed report on Washington state charter schools’ accountability — The Washington state auditor’s office found “mixed results” when it evaluated the accountability of the state’s charter schools during the 2017-2018 school year.
LOCAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — When public services are privatized, any initial cost savings are lost when public infrastructure to provide those services is dismantled, leaving taxpayers vulnerable to contractors’ price hikes and, as in this case, loss of service when contractors go out of business.
► In today’s Kitsap Sun — Monday marks first day of fast ferry service from Kingston to Seattle — Fast ferry service between Kingston and Seattle officially launched Monday morning, the second of three passenger-only routes Kitsap Transit plans to operate between Kitsap County and Seattle.
► In today’s News Tribune — Carpenter apprentices will have new place for training in DuPont — DuPont’s Northwest Landing continues to grow along with the Northwest Carpenters Institute of Washington. The site will be an additional campus for the institute, which has sites in Kent, Renton, Mount Vernon, Spokane and Kennewick.
► From Crosscut — Sally Bagshaw will not seek re-election to Seattle City Council — With two incumbents already out, the 2019 council race is shaping up to be raucous.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Politico — Shutdown fight over border wall nears — Sources say the White House’s top priority is securing several years worth of wall construction. House Republican leaders are heading to the White House on Tuesday afternoon as GOP leaders try to placate President Donald Trump and avoid a partial government shutdown on Dec. 7.
► Exclusive from The Guardian — Manafort held secret talks with Assange in Ecuadorian embassy — Manafort held secret talks with Julian Assange inside the Ecuadorian embassy in London, and visited around the time he joined Trump’s campaign, the Guardian has been told. It is unclear why Manafort would have wanted to see Assange and what was discussed. But the last apparent meeting is likely to come under scrutiny and could interest Robert Mueller. A well-placed source has told the Guardian that Manafort went to see Assange around March 2016. Months later WikiLeaks released a stash of Democratic emails stolen by Russian intelligence officers.
NATIONAL
ALSO at The Stand — We didn’t bail out GM so it could hoard profits, close plants (a statement from UAW Vice President Terry Dittes)
► In the Detroit Free Press — GM workers say they had ‘no warning’ of closure — As word spread Monday that GM is closing assembly plants, including Detroit-Hamtramck, its roughly 1,500 workers were at home on Thanksgiving break — watching the news roll in like everybody else. “You tell the world before you tell us,” said line worker Dnitra Landon, pulled over in her 2017 Buick Encore before she clocked into the Hamtramck plant Tuesday morning. “The world don’t come in here every morning at 6 o’clock to work for you, so how come we don’t get to know before the world?”
► In today’s Washington Post — GM layoffs are another victory for capital over labor (by Christopher Ingraham) — The combination of unemployed workers and happy investors underscores a key point about the modern American economy: What’s good for corporate profits isn’t necessarily good for workers. In fact, and perhaps now more than ever, the interests of a company’s workers and shareholders are directly at odds. It wasn’t always this way.
► From KUOW — ‘We’re taking a stand’: Google workers protest plans for censored search in China — Several Google employees have gone public with their opposition to the tech giant’s plans for building a search engine tailored to China’s censorship demands. The project, code-named Dragonfly, would block certain websites and search terms determined by the Chinese government — a move that, according to a growing number of workers at Google, is tantamount to enabling “state surveillance.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.