NEWS ROUNDUP
Mullet’s poison pill ● Airbus tariffs ● Trump’s immigration crisis
Tuesday, April 9, 2019
THIS WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — That was his plan all along. It’s called a poison-pill amendment. Sen. Lisa Wellman (D-Mercer Is.), the sponsor of the underlying levy-flexibility bill, opposes Mullet’s amendment and said it does not reflect her “values or the values of the Democratic caucus.”
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — Senate panel’s amended bill attacks teachers — If SB 5313 were to go into effect as amended, it would reduce teacher average salaries by more than $5,000 and limit teachers’ ability to negotiate salary increases for increased responsibilities.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Budget for behavioral health promising (editorial) — After a crisis that ranged from the streets to the state’s psychiatric hospital, lawmakers are finally making some headway on a plan that should move the system forward in a compassionate and budget-conscious way.
BOEING
► In today’s Washington Post — In a broadside against Airbus, U.S. pursues aircraft tariffs — The White House office of the U.S. Trade Representative announced that it would pursue tariffs against a broad collection of aircraft and aircraft parts from the European Union. In addition it said it is considering imposing tariffs on products as diverse as swordfish, brandy and brooms from countries in the E.U. The action comes as U.S. aerospace giant Boeing grapples with the fallout from two deadly crashes involving its 737 MAX planes, which have been grounded globally.
► In today’s NY Times — Boeing’s 737 MAX: 1960s design, 1990s computing power and paper manuals — The MAX stretched the 737 design, creating a patchwork plane that left pilots without some safety features that could be important in a crisis — ones that have been offered for years on other planes. It is the only modern Boeing jet without an electronic alert system that explains what is malfunctioning and how to resolve it. Instead pilots have to check a manual. The MAX also required makeshift solutions to keep the plane flying like its ancestors, workarounds that may have compromised safety.
LOCAL
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — Work halted after 42 Hanford workers were contaminated. Now, demolition is to restart — Demolition of the Plutonium Finishing Plant at Hanford could restart Tuesday, more than 15 months after the tear down was halted because of an airborne spread of radioactive contamination. In 2017, 42 workers inhaled or ingested small amounts of radioactive contamination from demolition of the plant. Several workers’ cars were contaminated with radioactive particles, including two that were driven home before the contamination was discovered.
► In today’s Washington Post — In Amazon’s home city, retailer’s rise leaves locals with mixed feelings — Some in Seattle see the online giant as an economic godsend, while others view it as a self-centered behemoth.
IMMIGRATION
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump removes Secret Service director as purge of DHS leadership widens — Trump continued to dismantle the leadership of the nation’s top domestic security agency Monday, as the White House announced the imminent removal of U.S. Secret Service Director Randolph D. “Tex” Alles, the latest in a series of head-spinning departures from the Department of Homeland Security.
► From Politico — Trump’s DHS purge floors Republicans — Even GOP allies of the president are distressed by the chaos unleashed on federal immigration policy.
► In today’s NY Times — At Trump’s Florida resort empire, a quiet effort to eliminate an undocumented work force — Alongside the foreign guest workers and the sizable American staff is another category of employees, mostly those who work on the pair of lush golf courses near Mar-a-Lago. They have been picked up by Trump contractors from groups of undocumented laborers at the side of the road or brought onto the payroll with little apparent scrutiny of their Social Security cards and green cards, some of which are fake.
The American Flag of Faces is a “living” and interactive digital exhibit in the Museum on historic Ellis Island.
► From Vox — Immigration makes America great (by Matthew Yglesias) — Immigration to the United States has not, historically, been an act of kindness toward strangers. It’s been a strategy for national growth and national greatness… The United States is still a country with a mission and a desire for greatness on the world stage. And America’s openness to people who want to move here and make a better life for themselves is fuel for that greatness. Few of our problems can be solved by curtailing immigration. Many could be solved by welcoming more foreigners to our shores.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From CNBC — Trump is targeting Obamacare again. Here’s everything you need to know about where the law stands now. — Trump reignited the fight over Obamacare last month when his administration decided to support a lawsuit challenging the Affordable Care Act’s constitutionality. Signed into law in 2010, the ACA includes provisions that protect people with pre-existing conditions, expand Medicaid in most states and allow children to remain on their parents’ insurance plans until age 26. The law’s individual mandate required almost every American to purchase insurance or face a tax penalty.
ALSO at The Stand — Rep. Derek Kilmer receives ‘Friend of SPEEA’ award
NATIONAL
► In the Chicago Tribune — ‘We have to show them that we’re not going to give up.’ Seven months into strike, Cambria hotel workers fight on. — The Cambria hotel was among 26 Chicago hotels where thousands of workers went on strike late last summer as their union negotiated new contracts. Within five weeks contracts had been ratified and strikes ended at all of the hotels except the 216-room Cambria, where picketing continued as summer turned to fall and then winter and now spring.
► In the Minneapolis Star-Tribune — Adjunct professors unionize at 3 private colleges in Minnesota — Part-time faculty have formed unions on three local campuses — part of rapid national growth that has almost doubled bargaining units at private nonprofit institutions since 2012. Supporters say the effort springs from frustration with modest pay and job insecurity for a group of faculty whose ranks have swelled.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Want a raise — and respect at work? Get 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!
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.