NEWS ROUNDUP
Trump walks away ● Fund our colleges ● Madam Speaker
Thursday, January 10, 2019
TRUMP’S SHUTDOWN
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — STOP THE SHUTDOWN: Here’s what you can do to help
► In today’s NY Times — Trump heading to Texas town to press his case for a border wall — As the government shutdown neared the end of its third week, Trump was scheduled to board Air Force One with no additional negotiations scheduled with congressional leaders.
► From The Hill — GOP senators challenge Trump on shutdown strategy — Several Senate Republicans on Wednesday challenged Trump on his strategy for ending a 19-day shutdown during a closed-door meeting where they expressed specific concerns over the harm it is causing to federal workers and the economy.
► In today’s Washington Post — ‘He’s a gut politician’: Trump’s go-to negotiating tactics aren’t working in shutdown standoff — Trump has long said that keeping opponents off balance is the best way to win a negotiation. But nearly three weeks into a partial government shutdown, his usual playbook doesn’t seem to be working.
► From HuffPost — FDA postponing some food inspections as shutdown drags on — The FDA oversees about 80 percent of America’s food supply and many overseas imports, and helps counter food-borne diseases that send about 128,000 people to the hospital each year, according to figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
► From the AP — Federal shutdown delays some state road, bridge contracts
► In today’s Seattle Times — Skiers, brewers and rain gauges: Here are some Seattle-area effects of the government shutdown — The partial federal government shutdown, now 19 days and counting, has sent bureaucrats federal employees in Washington state scrambling to keep programs afloat for as long as they can, but those officials warn that the acute impacts of the national impasse will manifest in the coming weeks, threatening some people’s lives and livelihoods, and annoying others.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Shutdown delays final decision on Growlers — The partial federal government shutdown is delaying the secretary of the Navy’s final decision regarding EA-18G Growler aircraft at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island.
► From HuffPost — Democrats introduce bill to shield unpaid federal workers from lenders, landlords — They couldn’t go after government workers or contractors who can’t pay rent or loans because of the shutdown.
LOCAL
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — City of Seattle, UNITE HERE 8 to appeal court ruling against I-124
► In today’s Seattle Times — Airbus matches Boeing in 2018 jet production, but Boeing pulls in more dollars — Despite a very difficult year for Airbus, its purchase of a majority stake in Bombardier’s CSeries jets meant the European manufacturer ended 2018 with commercial airplane production close to — and even arguably greater than — Boeing’s record output.
► From Crosscut — For city workers, Viadoom paves the way for flexible scheduling — The mayor has directed all departments to allow more flexible work days, something many workers say has been a long time coming.
► In the News Tribune — Tacoma’s MultiCare Allenmore Hospital expanding its emergency department
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — WSLC announces legislative agenda for 2019 — It includes INVESTING IN POST-HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION — As the backbone of our workforce development system, our state’s community and technical colleges connect K-12 students with career opportunities. After decades of defunding, we must invest in our CTCs to prepare students to thrive and achieve economic security as our state’s need for skilled and knowledgeable residents increases.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Passage of the Long-Term Care Trust Act is also part of the WSLC’s 2019 legislative agenda.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Eyman initiative could wipe out funding source for Yakima’s North First Street projects — A proposal that would cap annual car tab fees at $30 would slam the brakes on a $15.5 million project to improve North First Street in Yakima and hamper funding for future transportation projects, city officials say.
► From KNKX — State commission to hold hearing over unfair labor practice complaint against KUOW — The state Public Employment Relations Commission is holding a hearing this week about an unfair labor practice complaint filed by union members at the public radio station KUOW.
► From the AP — Sen. Ranker steps down from leadership amid investigation — Sen. Kevin Ranker (D-Bellingham), who is the subject of an investigation into allegations of improper conduct, has stepped down from his leadership positions on two Senate committees.
► In today’s Seattle Times — State senator proposes bill to block any downtown Seattle tolling plan — State Sen. Tim Sheldon (D R-Potlatch) unveiled a bill Tuesday that would block any city from implementing tolls without permission from the Legislature. He acknowledges the bill is unlikely to pass in a Legislature controlled by Democrats.
► From Crosscut — Exotic dancers face workplace hazards. Could the Legislature help? — It’s a business model that some Washington legislators think could be unfair and they might want to change it, for both the economic well-being and the safety of the dancers.
► From Crosscut — Poll: WA voters unsure of President Inslee, but like him as governor
NATIONAL
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.