NEWS ROUNDUP
TSA sounds the alarm ● Strike looms in Tri-Cities ● Lee Carter’s fight
Wednesday, January 9, 2019
TRUMP’S SHUTDOWN
► In the LA Daily Post — AFL-CIO: Veterans among hardest hit with shutdown — “It is disgraceful that an estimated 248,400 veterans across the country are not receiving paychecks because of dysfunction in Washington, D.C.,” said AFL-CIO Union Veterans Council Executive Director Will Attig. “Our veterans who continue to serve by protecting our borders, guarding prisoners and stopping terrorist attacks at airport do not deserve to be used as political pawns.”
FROM THE CALENDAR at The Stand — Federal employees and their supporters will Rally to Stop the Shutdown on Friday, Jan. 11 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Sea-Tac International Airport Flag Pavilion. Stay tuned for more details.
► From the Hill — Air traffic control association leader: Shutdown ‘ripple effect’ may last years — NATCA’s Andrew LeBovidge: “We are already in a critically staffed situation, and with the shutdown, the (FAA) training pipeline has been cut short and there is no relief in sight. Training has stopped… and we will feel the ripple effects of the lack of personnel for months if not years to come.”
► In the Detroit News — Shutdown shows America’s devalued workforce (by Michigan AFL-CIO President Ron Bieber) — The partial shutdown of the federal government has impacted roughly 800,000 federal employees. None of these workers are receiving the paycheck their families depend on at this time. Worse yet, more than half of them are expected to not only continue working, but in many cases work mandatory overtime. Those who are required to work without pay are on the frontlines of public safety, performing jobs as correctional officers, Border Patrol and ICE agents, and transportation security officers. They are putting themselves in harm’s way to protect our nation, and not getting paid for it.
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — End the government shutdown: Call your U.S. senators now! — Putting people back to work must be the highest and only priority of the Senate. Each day this manufactured crisis continues, real families with real bills are hurt and millions of people are denied the vital government services we deserve. Politicians need to do their job and allow us to do ours. Please take a moment to call your senator and urge them to reopen the federal government now.
► In today’s NY Times — Trump escalates border wall fight in speech to the nation
► In today’s Washington Post — Fact-checking President Trump’s Oval Office address on immigration — Over the course of his nine-minute speech, Trump painted a misleading and bleak picture of the situation at the U.S.-Mexico border. He pumped up some numbers, exaggerated the public safety risks of immigration and repeated false claims regarding how to fund a border wall.
► From HuffPost — Zero lawmakers from border districts support Trump’s wall
EDITOR’S NOTE — Washington’s Republican members of Congress — Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Jaime Herrera Beutler, and Dan Newhouse — have all supported Trump’s effort to maintain the shutdown until he gets $5.6 billion for a border wall. They all voted NO on appropriations bills to reopen the government. All seven Washington Democrats in the House voted YES to reopening the federal government.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Federal shutdown could delay Paine Field passenger flights — The FAA says furloughs at the agency might postpone the final decision on Everett airline service.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — How the shutdown affects WSU, Mount Rainier, wheat farmers and more— The effects could be felt beyond the roughly 6,100 federal employees who live and work in the Spokane metro area and North Idaho.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Dear newspaper editorial boards:
The government has been partially shut down for nearly three weeks dramatically affecting your readers who work for the federal government and your readers who rely on their essential services. And yet, our state’s newspapers have been conspicuously silent on this major issue. Why? Seems like something you might want to weigh in on.
Sincerely,
The Entire Staff of The Stand
LOCAL
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing hits a new jet delivery record, just missing its 2018 target — Boeing Commercial built and delivered 806 airplanes last year, up from the previous record of 763 jets a year earlier. And the jet maker won net new orders for 893 airplanes.
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — Inslee backs ‘public option’ for health care
► In today’s Tri-City Herald– Feds are downplaying the dangers of Hanford radioactive waste, says Inslee — The state of Washington says a new Department of Energy plan would not protect the Columbia River from radioactive waste at Hanford. Washington state’s stand, which was announced by Gov. Jay Inslee, is in opposition to the support by two key Tri-City-area groups for DOE’s proposal. It follows a similar announcement by the state of Oregon opposing it.
► In today’s News Tribune — Randall wins tight state Senate race, plans to focus on education and health care — Following a manual recount, first-time candidate and Democrat Emily Randall won the state Senate election for the 26th District. Randall’s margin of victory was 101 votes, or 0.14 percent, over Republican Marty McClendon.
► In today’s Peninsula Daily News — Chapman: Bond supermajority requirement unlikely to change — Don’t expect the 60 percent supermajority required for voter approval of school bond measures to change to a lower threshold anytime soon. The problem is, bonds are funded by property taxes, Rep. Mike Chapman (D-Port Angeles) said. “There is property tax fatigue in the Legislature. It’s a heavy lift.”
► In today’s Yakima H-R — 12 county commissioners to pick new 13th LD lawmaker — Commissioners from Lincoln, Yakima, Grant and Kittitas counties will meet Monday in Ephrata to select a new 13th District state representative to replace Rep. Matt Manweller (R-Ellensburg), who plans to step down on Monday, the first day of the legislative session.
THAT WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — We’ll let you know tomorrow how every member of Washington’s congressional delegation voted on this.
► From Politico — New Pentagon chief under scrutiny over perceived Boeing bias — Concerns about Patrick Shanahan’s Boeing ties have re-emerged since Trump said he may be running the Pentagon “for a long time.“
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump threatens to cut off FEMA aid to California for forest fires — The president claimed without evidence that California would not need the funds if it practiced “proper” forest management.
► In the LA Daily News — Congressman to introduce bill requiring air conditioning in all Postal Service mail trucks — Six months after a mail carrier died in her truck on a searing day in the San Fernando Valley, Rep. Tony Cárdenas (D-Calif.) said he plans to introduce a bill in the coming weeks that if successful would ensure that all USPS delivery vehicles have air-conditioning.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — Didn’t get a raise? Get a union! Get more information about how you can join together with co-workers and negotiate a fair return for your hard work. Or go ahead and contact a union organizer today!
► From ABC — Pilots worry national shortage puts passengers in danger — Airlines around the world are scrambling to fill vacant pilot seats, but are they willing to sacrifice safety to do that? That’s the debate raging right now in the airline industry.
► In the Orlando Sentinel — ‘A day of celebration’ in Florida as 1.4 million ex-felons have voting rights restored — The right to vote was restored to more than 1.4 million former felons across the state Tuesday thanks to Amendment 4’s victory at the ballot box in November, leading to emotional scenes as tears flowed, confetti was thrown and U.S. flags were waved.
► From The Onion — Trump supporter has few backup scapegoats ready to go in case crackdown on immigrants doesn’t fix everything
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.