NEWS ROUNDUP
Intimidation at Fred Meyer ● Trump scales back OT rule ● UAW leading the way
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
LOCAL
ALSO at The Stand — UFCW 555 calls for Fred Meyer boycott in Oregon, SW Wash.
► In The Stranger — UW Residents will strike for 15 minutes this Wednesday — Putting maximum pressure on the boss can be difficult when your job involves saving lives, but the resident physicians at the University of Washington have found a way. This Wednesday at noon, residents and fellows working at hospitals across Seattle will walk off the job for a 15-minute “unity break” to draw attention to the “unacceptable” contract UW is offering its frontline doctors.
ALSO at The Stand — UW’s medical trainees need fair pay, will walk out Sept. 25
► In the Kitsap Sun — PSNS employee describes ‘culture of toxic behavior’ at shipyard — When Brandon Hunt got a job in the rigger shop at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, her interviewer gave an ominous warning: “You have to have thick skin to work here.” What followed in nine years of employment haunted Hunt to the point she says she could not remain silent.
THIS WASHINGTON
► Today from Bloomberg — Long-awaited Trump overtime pay requirements unveiled — The Trump administration today will unveil a final rule to extend overtime pay eligibility to an estimated 1 million workers, replacing a stalled Obama-era initiative that would have covered four times as many employees. The department’s new rule lifts the annual salary threshold below which workers qualify for overtime wages to $35,568 from the current level of roughly $23,600.
► In today’s Olympian — Preventing mass shootings will take money for school behavioral health support, lawmaker says — Washington state Rep. Laurie Dolan (D-Olympia) on Monday called on the Legislature in 2020 to revise the state budget to provide more funding for school safety and mental health support for students.
BOEING
► From The Hill — Federal investigators find FAA safety inspectors were ‘underqualified’ — Investigators have concluded that the safety inspectors that were in charge of the training curriculum for Boeing 737 Max pilots were “underqualified” and that the FAA provided misleading information about the issue to Congress.
THAT WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand — Reject labor secretary nominee Eugene Scalia
► In the Spokesman-Review — Washington lawmakers want transcript of Trump call with Ukrainian president — Members of Washington’s congressional delegation are calling for the transcript of Trump’s July 25 phone call with the Ukrainian president that a whistleblower alleged was an attempt to invite foreign interference in the 2020 election. Those calling for the transcript include GOP Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers and Democratic Sens. Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray.
► In today’s NY Times — Mr. Trump, blow us away with your transparency (editorial) — Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) says that “President Trump is going to blow you away with his willingness to disclose and be transparent about this phone call, because I think he did nothing wrong and he has nothing to hide.” The president should welcome the opportunity to let Congress clear up this matter.
► From Politico — ‘Seismic change’: Democratic hold-outs rush toward impeachment — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is expected to make a statement on the issue Tuesday and has seemed more open to the idea of an impeachment investigation than ever before.
► Snowflake update — White House press secretary: Trump stopped briefings because reporters were mean
GM STRIKE: DAY 9
► In today’s Detroit News — GM strike, day 9: Negotiations press on as layoffs mount — Bargainers for the two sides worked a long day Monday, with negotiations ending at about 8 p.m. Their divide is centered around wages and health care and securing a pathway for temporary workers to get seniority.
TAKE A STAND! — UAW members’ fight is OUR fight. As this critically important strike drags on, and UAW families continue to make extraordinary sacrifices to compel GM to do the right thing, working families around the nation need to bolster them with solidarity. Please sign Washington state supports UAW strikers!
► From the USA Today — GM strike exposes anti-worker flaws in US labor laws. Companies have the upper hand. (by Kate Andrias) — U.S. labor law encourages firms to compete by busting unions and lowering wages. Workers need a collective voice to even hope for fair wages.
► From The Nation — The path to climate justice runs through the UAW strike (by Jane McAlevey) — The number-one priority for every organized group supporting bold climate solutions has to be winning a settlement that is good for the autoworkers — one that guarantees that any transition to electric-oriented jobs in the GM plants will preserve the workers’ union contract, create permanent jobs, and offer wages and benefits of the same standard as those enjoyed by full-time GM workers before the Great Recession.
NATIONAL
► In today’s LA Times — If you want to save money on healthcare, get sick in some other country (by David Lazurus) — It never fails to astonish when some Americans say they prefer paying the highest healthcare prices in the world and having millions of people uninsured rather than adopt effective approaches to affordable universal coverage found in nearly all other developed countries.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.