NEWS ROUNDUP
I-1000 is a milestone ● Peaceful May Day ● Barr spins
Thursday, May 2, 2019
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO TODAY at The Stand — I-1000’s passage is a victory for the people (by Cherika Carter)
► From Crosscut — ‘This is a civil rights moment’: Behind the Legislature’s decision to reverse WA’s affirmative action ban — A new class of lawmakers in Olympia made I-1000 a priority. Bluffing, brinkmanship and good timing helped get it passed.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Despite more state money, Spokane Public Schools plans to lay off employees — Even that added revenue would likely not save many of the 182 certificated employees who were given layoff notifications on April 11. Classified staff will receive layoff notices on Thursday.
► From The Stranger — Washington state passed a bunch of good health care bills this year. Here’s a look. — This year the Legislature passed bills that will lower the cost of health care for people on Obamacare, increase transparency in drug pricing, ensure equal reproductive health care access to LGBTQ people, create a new long-term care system, and possibly put the state on the path to developing a single-payer system.
LOCAL
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — Spokane’s May Day March takes stand against local agencies working with border patrol
► In today’s Yakima H-R — May Day march in Yakima encourages civil participation among all local immigrants
BOEING
► From Bloomberg — Boeing wants to move crash lawsuits from Chicago to Indonesia — The plaintiffs say shifting the cases 10,000 miles away would lessen the company’s financial liability.
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Rep. Larsen’s subcommittee plans hearing on Boeing 737 MAX — The House Subcommittee on Aviation will examine the status of the plane since its March grounding.
► In today’s Columbian — Boeing’s woes could ground state’s economy (editorial) — In attempting to re-establish their company as the global leader in aviation, Boeing officials must effectively address these issues rather than hope they go away. Failing to successfully navigate the crisis could help ground the economy throughout Washington.
OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE
► In today’s Washington Post — Barr is a no-show at House hearing on Mueller report as Democrats warn of threat to democracy — Attorney General William P. Barr was a no-show Thursday for the House Judiciary Committee hearing on his handling of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s report, angering House Democrats who moved closer to holding him in contempt of Congress.
► In today’s NY Times — How Trump co-opts leaders like Bill Barr (by former FBI Director James Comey, who was fired by Trump) — Accomplished people lacking inner strength can’t resist the compromises necessary to survive this president.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From HuffPost — Companies backing NAFTA overhaul outsourced hundreds of thousands of jobs — Multinational corporations pressing Congress to adopt an updated version of the NAFTA shed over half a million U.S. jobs for trade-related reasons since NAFTA took effect, according to a new analysis of government data.
► From MSNBC —
President @RichardTrumka was on @MSNBC w/ @AliVelshi last hour talking about the new #NAFTA. We want to get to yes, but it’s going to take more work. #1u pic.twitter.com/WNQuNZ005z
— AFL-CIO (@AFLCIO) April 30, 2019
► From The Hill — Trump ruling boosts gig economy firms — A Trump administration decision identifying gig economy workers at one company as “independent contractors” rather than “employees” could have massive implications for the tech industry.
► From Politico — Trump’s infrastructure deal with Democrats leaves GOP rolling its eyes — Every few months, Trump gets in the negotiating room with Democrats and everyone leaves happy — except for the president’s own party. This week’s huddle on a $2 trillion infrastructure bill was no different.
NATIONAL
► From HuffPost — Florida Legislature votes ‘yes’ to arming teachers — Fedrick Ingram, the head of the Florida Education Association, said arming teachers was ultimately a “wrong decision” stemming from the “wrong conversation.” “Unfortunately, [lawmakers] have not asked teachers how to make these schools safer, because any teacher will tell you that we need to be talking about counseling and mental health issues. Those are the things that will stop these issues before they happen.”
► From The Onion — RockStar Games begins imprisoning programmers for ‘Red Dead Redemption 3’ — “We’ve herded an incredibly talented team of programmers into holding pens, and they’re already hard at work making sure Red Dead 3 is the most immersive installment in franchise history,” said Rockstar producer and company president Sam Houser.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.