NEWS ROUNDUP
Deal done ‘in principle’ ● Hungover nurses ● Union Strong(er)
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
NO MORE SHUTDOWNS!
► From the AP — Budget deal allows far less money than Trump wanted for wall — Republicans tentatively agreed Monday night to far less money for Trump’s border wall than the White House’s $5.7 billion wish list, settling for a figure of nearly $1.4 billion, according to congressional aides.
► From The Hill — Trump on spending deal: ‘We’re building the wall anyway’ — Trump on Monday said he would build his long-desired wall along the southern border regardless of whether Congress approves funding for it.
► From The Hill — Flight attendant union calls for general strike if government shuts down again — The president of a union representing nearly 50,000 flight attendants is renewing calls for a general strike if lawmakers aren’t able to reach a funding deal on Friday to keep the government open.
► In today’s Washington Post — Come on, lawmakers. Not another shutdown. (editorial) — The lives of hundreds of thousands of federal workers would again be upended in the event of another shutdown, following the record five-week closure that ended Jan. 25. Americans’ already meager respect for their government would diminish further. The image and prestige of the United States itself would be further battered as people around the world took in the spectacle of a nation incapable of fulfilling basic functions of governance.
LOCAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — Many school districts across Washington state have levy and bond elections on their ballots, which must be turned in or postmarked by today (Tuesday, Feb. 12). Please remember to vote and support your public schools!
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand — Take action to protect nurses, patient safety — See the latest update on state legislation guaranteeing uninterrupted rest and meal breaks for nurses and healthcare workers in Washington.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Why immigration detention beds became a new issue in Trump border wall fight — Democrats opposing President Trump’s push for a border wall used this week’s budget negotiations to launch an attempt to rein in his administration’s deportation efforts, proposing to reduce the number of detention beds available for immigration arrests inside the United States.
► In today’s NY Times — Trump repeats false claim about El Paso crime, this time in El Paso — At a rally in Texas, President Trump insisted that crime had fallen in El Paso because of a border wall. The data and the city’s Republican mayor disagree with him.
► From The Independent — Trump supporter ‘violently attacks’ BBC cameraman at rally after president whips up anger over media
► From HuffPost — Don Jr. gets an ‘F’ on Twitter after slamming ‘loser teachers’ at campaign event — Donald Trump Jr. took a shot at “loser teachers,” who he claimed are indoctrinating children into socialism from the moment they’re born.
NATIONAL
► In the NY Times — Denver teachers once hailed performance-based pay. Now they’re on strike over it. — English teacher Amber Wilson was once an evangelist for performance-based pay systems for teachers, but more than a decade after the city adopted such a system, she says it has morphed into “a monster of unintended consequences.” Pay-for-performance models like Denver’s offer teachers bonuses for raising student achievement and for taking on tougher assignments, such as in schools with many students from low-income families. Wilson and many of her fellow educators across the country say that this model — once hailed as a way to motivate teachers — has delivered erratic bonuses while their base salaries stagnate amid rising living costs.
► In today’s L.A. Times — More than 1,000 L.A. construction workers were cheated out of millions in pay, labor officials say — In the largest wage-theft case ever brought by the state of California against a private company, the labor commissioner has cited a City of Industry drywall subcontractor for cheating more than 1,000 workers out of minimum wage, overtime and rest breaks on 35 construction sites across the Los Angeles region.
INTERNATIONAL
► From AP — Mexican union declares victory in strike at 48 border plants — A union declared total victory in a mass strike by about 25,000 workers at 48 assembly plants in a Mexican border city, but the movement spawned a storm of wildcat walkouts Monday at other businesses.
► From the AFL-CIO — U.S. unions bring solidarity to striking Mexican workers — A delegation of union leaders from the national AFL-CIO, the Texas AFL-CIO, the UAW and the United Steelworkers (USW) traveled to Matamoros, Mexico, last week to support tens of thousands of factory workers who have launched a wave of strikes to demand wage increases and democratic control of their unions.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.