NEWS ROUNDUP
UW town hall tonight ● Doug’ll keep dining ● ALEC takes aim
Thursday, December 6, 2018
LOCAL
► From Public News Service — Laid-off UW laundry workers to hold town hall meeting tonight — University of Washington laundry service workers who will be laid off next year are holding a town hall meeting on campus Thursday starting at 6 p.m. at Savery Hall. UW Medicine Consolidated Laundry employees are frustrated with the school’s decision to close their facility in March, which will leave 100 without work. Nearly all are people of color and women.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Washington factory trawler idled for violating the Jones Act gets a waiver signed by Trump — The waiver was granted to the 264-foot America’s Finest — a nearly completed factory trawler built at Dakota Creek Industries of Anacortes to fish off Alaska. The vessel’s owner contracted with DCI, but the construction shipyard ran afoul of the federal Jones Act because its hull steel was cut and bent in Holland.
► From Teamsters 117 — Hertz workers at SeaTac get $32,000 in back pay — This week, Hertz is paying back upwards of $34,000 in retroactive pay to its workers. Wage increases will also take place in 2019 and 2020.
► From Civic Skunk Works — Negative minimum-wage studies are ‘about three times more likely to be published’ than neutral or positive findings — A new paper finds that if you’re in the business of studying the minimum wage, it pays to find a negative impact on business.
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — State regulators shut down $5.3 billion Avista sale to Ontario’s Hydro One — The sale of Avista Corp. to a Canadian utility doesn’t serve the best interests of the Spokane company or its customers, Washington regulators said Wednesday, citing meddling by the province of Ontario in Hydro One Ltd.’s management. The decision appears to have killed Avista’s $5.3 billion sale to Hydro One, which can’t proceed without approval from the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Governing — ALEC outlines 2019 agenda to erode union power — The conservative group of lawmakers recently convened in Washington, D.C., to strategize ways to capitalize on the Supreme Court’s ruling this year that limited unions’ ability to collect fees.
ALSO at The Stand — Opt-out group’s wish list: Pension cuts, layoffs, less benefits
TODAY at The Stand — Postal union leaders decry report calling for service cuts
► From The Hill — GOP senators introduce bill to give Trump $25 billion for border wall
► From HuffPpost — Trump reportedly shrugged off looming debt crisis because ‘I won’t be here’
EDITOR’S NOTE — That legislation, H.R. 7146, was just introduced a couple weeks ago. Feel free to contact your U.S. representative and urge him/her to sign on as co-sponsor of this important measure.
LAME-DUCK POWER GRABS
► In the Milwaukee J-S — Wisconsin lawmakers reject bill to protect pre-existing conditions, scale back Democrats’ power
► In the Kansas City Star — After rejection by Missouri voters, Republican resurfaces right-to-work legislation
► From TPM — Michigan’s GOP legislature guts citizen-initiated minimum wage, paid sick leave laws
► In the Detroit News — Unions: Michigan GOP recertification bill ‘a nightmare’ for workplace
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — Ride the ripple effect! Get raises, retirement security, better benefits, and some respect at work. Contact a union organizer today!
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► In today’s Washington Post — ‘We are in trouble.’ Global carbon emissions reached a record high in 2018. — Global emissions of carbon dioxide are reaching the highest levels on record, scientists projected Wednesday, in the latest evidence of the chasm between international goals for combating climate change and what countries are doing.
► From Politico — Poll: Majority of voters worried about climate change
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.