NEWS ROUNDUP
St. Joe’s strike vote ● Acosta resigns ● ICE raids ● The first Fab Four
Friday, July 12, 2019
LOCAL
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Third group of Providence workers pickets for a new contract — Slow-moving negotiations in a year-long contract dispute between Providence Regional Medical Center and some of its employees prompted some union members to begin picketing the hospital’s sidewalks. The technicians and professionals (UFCW 21) employed by Providence are seeking wage increases and to retain sick leave benefits in negotiations that have been ongoing since contracts began to expire in March 2018.
► In the Seattle Times — Crosscut/KCTS management opts not to recognize staffers’ union effort — After workers from nonprofit online news site Crosscut and local PBS affiliate KCTS 9 petitioned for recognition as a bargaining unit under the Pacific Northwest Newspaper Guild, management declined to voluntarily recognize them as a union. Leadership from parent organization Cascade Public Media was notified of the efforts Monday morning after a card vote last Tuesday showed almost 90 percent support for a union, Crosscut staff reporter David Kroman said.
► From Crosscut — Workers on front lines of homeless crisis could get guaranteed wage hikes — Staff turnover among social service providers is rampant — consistently hovering about 50% a year for many of Seattle’s nonprofit organizations. As a result, employees say the struggle to fill vacancies never ends, institutional memory evaporates and the carefully fostered relationships with clients are lost. Workers blame a large part of that turnover on the poor pay, consistently less than $40,000 a year… A Seattle City Council committee voted unanimously to tie service provider wages to inflation, teeing up the issue for likely approval by the full council.
ALSO at The Stand — Union makes a difference at legal services, advocacy nonprofits
► In the (Longview) Daily News — WestRock moves supply chain to Atlanta, cutting 16 positions at Longview paper mill — Sixteen management positions were cut from the former KapStone pulp and paper mill this month as the local plant began its “integration” with its new owner.
BOEING
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing leader at Renton 737 MAX plant retires — After less than a year in charge in Renton, the Boeing vice president who runs the assembly plant there and manages the 737 MAX program is retiring. A factory operations expert, Eric Lindblad was brought in to fix manufacturing and supply chain issues but leaves as the jet program is engulfed by a safety crisis that has raised doubts about Boeing’s design.
THIS WASHINGTON
SWAMP UPDATE
THAT WASHINGTON
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump retreats on adding citizenship question to 2020 Census — Trump on Thursday backed down from his controversial push to add a citizenship question to the 2020 Census, effectively conceding defeat in a battle he had revived just last week and promised to continue despite a recent string of legal defeats.
► From Slog — How to prepare for ICE raids in Washington state
► From HuffPost — Obamacare had another bad day in court. That’s pretty alarming. — A legal challenge to the Affordable Care Act went before a panel of three federal judges on Tuesday and got a credulous, sympathetic-sounding hearing from the two judges who were appointed by Republicans. Yes, it’s happening again.
► In today’s NY Times — The new plot against Obamacare (by Paul Krugman) — There are, I’d say, two main implications of what we’re seeing here. The first is that right-wing partisanship has already corrupted much of the judiciary. At this point it’s clear that there are many judges who will rule in favor of whatever the G.O.P. wants, no matter how weak the legal arguments. The second is that even though Obamacare is now part of the fabric of American life, even though many of the beneficiaries are Republican voters — think about those numbers for Kentucky and West Virginia — Trump and his party are as determined as ever to destroy it.
► From Forbes — Trump to sign union pension plan fix by December predicts Ways & Means chair, but lead GOPer not so sure — The legislation has the support of the AFL-CIO.”This fix is urgently needed. Hundreds of thousands of working people spent a lifetime earning a secure retirement, only to see that future hang by a thread. Pensions are a promise—it’s time for Congress to take action and keep that promise.” said AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Liz Shuler.
► In the LA Times — A strong endorsement of the $15 minimum wage (by Michael Hiltzik) — The Congressional Budget Office, that nonpartisan arbiter of the impacts of federal legislation, reports that raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour would increase the wages of 27 million Americans and lift 1.3 million out of poverty as of 2025. The CBO also says that the change might cost jobs for 1.3 million workers, though that’s the squishiest part of the agency’s analysis. Overall, the CBO says, “For most low-wage workers, earnings and family income would increase, which would lift some families out of poverty.”
NATIONAL
► In the LA Times — Uber and Lyft try to blunt a court ruling that their drivers are employees (by Maichael Holtzik) — The question underlying the court decision and AB 5 may be the paramount issue confronting the working class in America today: the trend toward eviscerating workplace rights by classifying workers as independent contractors. Such classification — misclassification, labor advocates assert — deprives workers of such traditional workplace rights as wage and hour safeguards, compensation for on-the-job injuries, health and retirement benefits, and the right of collective bargaining (that is, unionization).
T.G.I.F.
► Many, many “Yesterdays” ago, the original Fab Four — Sargon, Hammurabi, Ashurbanipal and Gilgamesh — led what was surely civilization’s first rock band. The Entire Staff of The Stand is pleased to share their story, as told by They Might be Giants. Enjoy.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.