NEWS ROUNDUP
Give us a break vote! ● Coverage, not cost ● Dems vs. Bernie 2
Tuesday, April 16, 2019
THIS WASHINGTON
TAKE A STAND! — SHB 1155 passed the House, 63-34. Since then, the unions that represent frontline health-care workers have accepted changes sought by hospitals, but after passing two Senate committees, has been languishing in the Rules Committee for nearly two weeks. Call the Legislative Hotline NOW at 1-800-542-0904 and leave a message for your state senator to bring this critical patient and workplace safety bill to a vote, and to vote YES! Also, you can visit BreaksAreALifesaver.org to send your senator a message to support the bill.
► From KING TV — Washington school districts preparing for layoffs, higher class sizes — Some school districts said they are facing budget deficits due to a change in the way the state funds education. “We’re facing a devastating reduction without any help from the legislature,” said Tacoma Public Schools spokesperson Dan Voelpel. “What we’re really advocating people do is contact their legislators and let them know we want that local levy funding restored.”
LOCAL
► In today’s Wenatchee World — Police chief sues union for defamation — East Wenatchee Police Chief Randy Harrison and Assistant Chief Ray Coble have filed a defamation lawsuit against union representative David Simmons and Teamsters Local 760.
► In today’s Columbian — Lucky 21 employees out 3 weeks’ pay — The April 8 closure of the Lucky 21 Casino in Woodland — also known as the Oak Tree Casino — left most of the business’s 115 employees not only suddenly unemployed, but also unpaid for their final three weeks of work.
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump says he has no regrets about sharing Ilhan Omar video
EDITOR’S NOTE — Reporter: Rep. Omar says your tweet has led to death threats… any second thoughts? Trump: “No, not at all.”
► From The Onion — Ilhan Omar disrespectfully refers to America as ‘a place’
DÉJÀ VU
► In today’s NY Times — ‘Stop Sanders’ Democrats are agonizing over his momentum — From canapé-filled fund-raisers on the coasts to the cloakrooms of Washington, some mainstream Democrats are beginning to ask how do they thwart a 70-something candidate from outside the party structure who is immune to intimidation or incentive and wields support from an unwavering base, without simply reinforcing his “the establishment is out to get me’’ message — the same grievance Trump used to great effect? But stopping Sanders, or at least preventing a contentious convention, could prove difficult for Democrats.
NATIONAL
► In today’s CT Post — Stop & Shop strike enters 6th day; talks continue — The Stop & Shop workers’ strike enters its sixth day Tuesday with both sides still unable to agree on a new contract. Negotiations, however, will continue Tuesday morning. “While talks continued with the company Monday through the federal mediator, Stop & Shop is still demanding major concessions that could severely impact your ability to provide for yourselves and your families,” UFCW Local 919 said in a statement.
► From the AFL-CIO — Support Stop & Shop workers — Stand with our brothers and sisters today and sign UFCW’s petition demanding that executives agree to a fair contract that reflects the true value of their workers.
► From the AP — GOP states discover a tax hike they have to like: for roads — After passing waves of tax cuts in recent years, some lawmakers in several Republican-dominated states have decided it’s time to make a big exception and are pushing for tax increases to fix roads that are crumbling from years of neglect.
► From NBC News — Ohio couple made laxative cookies for striking school workers — Police say a couple made laxative-laced cookies for striking school employees because they were tired of the noise from the picket line near their home.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.