NEWS ROUNDUP
1,000 outside Swedish ● WA unions hold steady ● Last day to save apprenticeship
Monday, August 26, 2019
LOCAL
► From The Stranger — A thousand health care workers picket outside Swedish Hospital — On Thursday organizers say close to 1,000 health care workers with SEIU Healthcare 1199 NW and other unions demonstrated outside Swedish’s First Hill campus, following a day of informational picketing at all seven of Swedish’s locations in Seattle. Since bargaining began last April, workers have been asking for better nurse-to-patient ratios, better wages and benefits, and more training and support for custodial staff. They point to high executive pay and the company’s profitability as evidence that the money is there.
EDITOR’S NOTE — How does a double-digit pay raise sound to you? Get more 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!
► In the Columbian — La Center School District reaches tentative agreement — The La Center School District and La Center Education Association have reached a tentative new contract for teachers, meaning the school year should start on time.
► In the Tri-City Herald — Kennewick teachers make signs and plan rally as Monday’s strike deadline looms — Kennewick teachers and administrators spent a fifth day in mediation talks on Sunday as Monday’s end-of-day deadline for teachers to strike loomed. By late afternoon there was no word of any progress. Teachers planned to meet Sunday night to make signs.
► From KATU in Portland — Activists to push for wage equality at Fred Meyer — Demonstrations are planned statewide at Oregon Fred Meyer locations, as activists claim a wage disparity between male and female new hires at the grocery store chain.
► In the News Tribune — Tacoma grocery distribution center workers hit with layoffs amid UNFI Centralia move — In February, UNFI announced it would be closing a longtime Tacoma grocery distribution center with plans for a new Centralia site. The company at that time encouraged workers “to consider joining us at the new facility, and it is our hope they will do so.” The warm overtures apparently have cooled in the months following that announcement. A labor dispute between UNFI and Teamsters Local Union 117 over terms of their contract is now in active arbitration, with a ruling expected in early October. In the meantime, the site’s Tacoma workers were notified of layoffs Aug. 20. The layoffs will come in four phases, starting Sept. 28 going into December.
► In the News Tribune — Day of LNG hearing also to include rally, march — Puget Sound Energy’s liquefied natural gas facility on the Tideflats faces a final public permit hearing on Tuesday, and both sides once again are ready to make their case for and against the project. The hearing, like the one held in October, is set to take place in two sessions: from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and from 6:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday at Tacoma’s Rialto Theater, 310 S. Ninth St.
THIS WASHINGTON
► From Crosscut — How Washington state turned blue: Three decades of data explain our partisan shift (by H. Stuart Elway) — In the latest Crosscut/Elway Poll, Democrats far outnumber Republicans. It wasn’t always like this. The “blueing” of Washington appears to be a combination of the rightward tack of the GOP and the changing demographics of the state.
THAT WASHINGTON
Monday’s the deadline 2 stop anti-union groups & employers from undermining union #apprenticeship programs. Urge the DOL to keep IRAPs out of the construction industry – NOW! Friends & Family of the Trades, please use this link to make your voice heard: https://t.co/RG16Esa0bP pic.twitter.com/8Qh10ZtWDz
— Frank Callahan (@FrankMBTC) August 24, 2019
ALSO at The Stand:
— Save veteran construction training programs (Aug. 19)
— Urge Labor Department to save state-registered apprenticeships (Aug. 1)
► From Politico — Sen. Lindsey Graham: ‘Accept the pain’ of the U.S.-China trade war
NATIONAL
► From the Times Daily — AT&T communications union workers on strike — Members of CWA at AT&T Southeast went on strike at midnight Friday over AT&T management’s unfair labor practices during negotiations for a new contract. The strike involves more than 20,000 technicians and others who install, maintain and support AT&T’s residential and business wireline telecommunications network in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee.
► From HuffPost — A ‘liberal sweatshop’ is quashing its workers’ efforts to unionize — Underpaid and overworked canvassers at one of the environmental movement’s top fundraising groups (The Fund for the Public Interest) are accusing management of busting their attempt to unionize after the group shut down a North Carolina office where workers announced they had organized. People at the fund saw the closure as a warning to workers in the group’s outposts in more than a dozen cities not to join unions.
► From Bloomberg — Google doesn’t want staff debating politics at work
► A related story from the AP — Tech industry becomes hotbed for employee activism — Liz O’Sullivan, 34, considers herself part of a “growing backlash against unethical tech,” a groundswell in the past two years in which U.S. tech employees have tried to remake the industry from the inside out — pushing for more control over how their work is used and urging better conditions, job security and wages for affiliated workers. While some speak out and others sign petitions, workers are collectively taking action like never before.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
EDITOR’S NOTE — Are you a campaign staffer (or any other type of worker) in Washington state who wants a stronger voice on the job? Get more 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!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.