NEWS ROUNDUP
Strikes end in Kennewick, Toutle ● Nurses say ‘no’ ● Missy works it
UPDATE (Aug. 31, 2019)
► In the (Longview) Daily News — Toutle Lake teacher strike comes to an end
► In the Tri-City Herald — 99% vote to end Kennewick teacher strike. School starts Tuesday
Friday, August 30, 2019
TEACHER CONTRACTS
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — It’s done! Kennewick teachers, administrators reach tentative agreement to end strike — Just as the legal fireworks started to fly, the Kennewick teachers association and administrators reached a tentative agreement that would bring an end to a strike that has closed classrooms this week. The Kennewick Education Association announced at 6:30 p.m. that a tentative agreement was reached with the district. Teachers will reportedly have a general membership meeting on Friday at 10 a.m. to hold a ratification vote. School will be canceled Friday as teachers review the new contract proposal, a process that could take hours.
ALSO at The Stand — Tentative deal in Kennewick teachers’ strike — So the rally planned for Friday morning is CANCELLED.
► In today’s Ellensburg Daily Record — Teachers protest school board meeting urging the district for higher salaries — Contract negotiations have been ongoing since June and in a statement released by the Ellensburg School District on Aug. 23, the Ellensburg Education Association (EEA) and the school district are now bringing in a third party to help mediate a deal… EEA President Donna Grassel passionately argued to the board to imagine what the district will look like if experienced teachers leave for higher paying districts.
► Meanwhile, in today’s (Everett) Herald — Revised contract keeps Everett teachers Washington’s best-paid — Teachers in Everett Public Schools have agreed to changes in their contract that extend its length and ensure the district continues paying the highest salary in the state to veteran classroom instructors. Under the deal, approved on a boisterous voice vote Wednesday, the current collective bargaining agreement will be extended one year and expire in August 2021.
► From KNKX — Tacoma teachers, office professionals and other staff approve new three-year contract — Last year, Tacoma public schools were delayed by a teachers strike that lasted more than a week. This year, the district and the educators union reached an agreement well before the start of school.
LABOR DAY
ALSO at The Stand:
— This Labor Day, celebrate power of solidarity (by Larry Brown, Aug. 30)
— ‘Union Effect’ in Washington: Higher wages, better benefits (Aug. 29)
— Labor Day events planned across Washington state on Sept. 2
LOCAL
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Nippon Dynawave extruder employees authorize union leaders to strike — AWPPW Local 633 has been negotiating with Nippon, formerly the Weyerhaeuser Co. paper packaging mill in Longview, since March. The parties are at odds over “quality of life” in the workplace, said AWPPW representative Jim Anderson.
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — After years of preparation, work to empty Hanford leak-prone waste tanks is ready to restart — The Washington state Department of Ecology, the regulator on the project, called it “the beginning of another significant phase in the Hanford cleanup.”
► From Crosscut — King County lost FEMA homelessness funding because the region is too wealthy — Despite its homelessness “state of emergency,” King County no longer qualifies for a federal grant used by local shelters and food banks.
“If Kentucky were a country, we’d say that it was receiving foreign aid on an almost inconceivable scale… It’s fair to say that far more Kentuckians work in hospitals kept afloat by Medicare and Medicaid, in retail establishments kept going by Social Security and food stamps, than in all traditional occupations like mining and even agriculture combined. So if you really believe that Americans with higher incomes shouldn’t pay for benefits provided to those with lower incomes, you should be calling on ‘donor’ states like New Jersey and New York (and Washington) to cut off places like Kentucky and let their economies collapse.”
THIS WASHINGTON
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Democrat-led Legislature will sue the Democratic governor — The Legislature announced Thursday plans to sue Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee, saying he overstepped his authority with a series of one-sentence vetoes in this year’s transportation budget. Lawmakers said the governor violated the constitutional ban against vetoing less than a full section of legislation.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Reuters — Democrats’ Medicare for All must consider union-won plans: AFL-CIO — “There’s no question that ultimately we need to establish a single-payer system, but there has to be a role for those hard, hard-fought-for, high-quality plans that we’ve negotiated,” Trumka said. “You can’t ask the American worker, who sacrificed wages and everything, to simply say: ‘Okay, I’ll accept this plan here’,” Trumka added, noting that some union plans likely provide more benefits than Medicare.
► In today’s Washington Post — Trump has no trouble gutting the law to build his wall (editorial) — What are the niceties of established law, federal regulations or eminent domain compared with Trump’s wish to satisfy his partisans’ chants of “Finish the wall!”?
► From CNN — Trump administration is decimating workers’ rights (by Nan Aron and Celine McNicholas) — The Trump administration is advancing policies that further rig a system that’s already stacked against working people in America. There are few more powerful examples than the administration’s support of forced arbitration, a practice in which employers require workers to agree, as a condition of employment, to resolve all workplace disputes in arbitration. It robs workers of their right to take employers to court for all types of claims and forces workers into a process that overwhelmingly favors employers.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Apparently, right-wing conservatives think First Amendment free speech rights should apply to cash (Citizens United) and people who want union services for free (Janus), but not to union members protesting corporations.
NATIONAL
► In today’s Pittsburgh Post-Gazette — Google contract workers seek USW representation — Google contract information technology workers at HCL America Inc. are asking the NLRB for a vote on representation by the Pittsburgh Association of Technical Professionals, a project of the United Steelworkers union. More than 66 percent of HCL’s 90 employees at Google’s offices in Bakery Square signed cards seeking union representation. A vote by employees is needed before collective bargaining could begin for a labor contract.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Hey, contract workers for Amazon and other tech companies: Tired of doing the same work as “actual” employees for less money and less respect? 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!
T.G.I.F.
► The Entire Staff of The Stand are not fans of most award shows. And we can’t imagine sitting through the desperate attention-seeking and self-congratulatory nonsense of MTV’s Video Music Awards in its entirety. But thanks to YouTube, it’s easy to watch some of the individual performances. And Missy Elliott’s medley from Monday night is well worth seeing. Over-the-top production? Check. Crazy and amazing dancing? Check. A chance to revisit some great songs by the Turn-of-the-Millennium’s Queen of Hip Hop? CHECK!
Billboard’s review: “There’s no question as to who got the most people dancing at the 2019 MTV Video Music Awards.” Enjoy!
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.