NEWS ROUNDUP
You must speak out ● Why teachers strike ● Tork > Stills
Friday, February 22, 2019
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Is state ready for another massive transportation package? — Sen. Steve Hobbs (D-Lake Stevens) filed legislation Thursday for a 10-year, $16.6 billion package of transportation improvements largely paid for with a 6-cent hike in the gas tax and new fees on carbon emissions and development.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Politico — House to vote Tuesday to block Trump’s emergency declaration — The House plans to vote Tuesday on legislation to block Trump’s attempt to circumvent Congress to fund his border wall, Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday. The privileged resolution targeting the emergency declaration is expected to easily pass the House. It will then be guaranteed a vote in the Senate within 18 days.
► In today’s Columbian — Herrera Beutler running in 2020 — She will be seeking re-election in 2020 despite rumors that she’s going to retire. She also says she supports the border wall, but opposes Trump’s emergency declaration.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Both Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-5th) and Dan Newhouse have said they “have concerns” about Trump’s emergency declaration. We’ll see if they’re concerned enough to actually vote against it.
► From The Hill — White House braces for Mueller report — The White House is bracing for Robert Mueller’s report, which the special counsel investigating Trump’s campaign and Russia could submit to the Department of Justice as early as next week.
► In today’s NY Times — New election ordered in North Carolina race at center of fraud inquiry — North Carolina officials on Thursday ordered a new contest in the Ninth Congressional District after the Republican candidate, confronted by evidence that his campaign had financed an illegal voter-turnout effort, called for a new election.
► In today’s Washington Post — Yes, Social Security needs some fixing — but it’s not broken (editorial) — Social Security mostly accomplishes the purposes for which it was established and which make it politically popular: guaranteeing income security for the elderly and for disabled workers.
NATIONAL
► From NPR — Oakland, Los Angeles and more to come: Why teachers keep going on strike — Teachers earn less than other workers with comparable experience and education — a gap that’s widened in recent years. More than a million teachers aren’t covered by Social Security. An NPR/Ipsos poll conducted last April found that 59 percent of teachers have worked a second job, and 86 percent say they’ve spent their own money on classroom supplies.
► In today’s Washington Post — With fewer undocumented workers to hire, U.S. farmers are fueling a surge in the number of legal guest workers — By the 2000s, more than half of American farmworkers were undocumented, according to the Labor Department. But now — due to to border enforcement, the surging cost of smugglers and changes in migration patterns — the number of people crossing into the United States illegally is nearing the lowest level in decades. To fill those positions, employers have turned to temporary visa programs that recruit workers in Mexico and Central America. Since 2016, the number of U.S. agricultural visas has grown from 165,000 to 242,000, a record high.
T.G.I.F.
► Peter Tork, best known as the goofy Ringo-like member of the 1960’s TV band The Monkees, died yesterday at 77. When producers decided in 1965 to create a Beatles-like band for television, Tork’s friend and fellow folk singer/guitarist, Stephen Stills, later of Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills & Nash (& Young), auditioned. But Stills didn’t get the part, purportedly because of his already receding hairline and bad teeth. Stills then recommended Tork to the producers and convinced him to audition, and the rest is history. Here is Tork, wearing a red Hefty bag that’s a couple sizes too big — David Byrne-style, we suppose — and performing one of the band’s biggest hits. R.I.P., Peter.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.