NEWS ROUNDUP
Swedish safety ● IAM sues NLRB ● Flawed I-976 ● $0 taxes for FedEx
Monday, November 18, 2019
LOCAL
► From KING 5 — Swedish nurses, health care workers vote to strike — Union nurses and health care workers at Swedish Medical Center announced that they have voted Friday to authorize a strike. Health care workers from SEIU Healthcare 1199NW, Washington State Nurses Association and UFCW 21 at Swedish Medical Center and other Providence-owned hospitals shared their concerns about patient care and working conditions at their facilities.
► From Q13 Fox — Swedish nurses, healthcare workers vote to authorize strike — “We know that we haven’t had the time to sit down and actually talk with our patients about what’s going on. It means that we wake up in the middle of the night with anxiety, that we think of something we may have forgotten,” said union negotiating team member Betsy Scott.
► In the NW Labor Press — Business owners call the union: We want in — It’s not every day an employer calls a union to talk about signing up. But that’s what happened at Hamer Electric in Longview and both the company owners and the union officers of IBEW Local 48 are celebrating a combination they believe will make both sides stronger.
► In today’s Columbian — Adjunct faculty seek stability, outnumber full-time instructors at Clark College — Adjunct professors trying to make a career in education often piece together a patchwork of classes at colleges throughout the region, making a few thousand dollars working part time at any given college in any given quarter.
► From Crosscut — Seattle’s film unions push back against City Hall’s new ‘creative economy’ strategy — A coalition of more than 2,000 film and music professionals say they feel like an afterthought in the city’s plans.
BOEING
► In the Seattle Times — Boeing abandons its failed fuselage robots on the 777X, handing the job back to machinists — After enduring a manufacturing mess that spanned six years and cost millions of dollars as it implemented a large-scale robotic system for automated assembly of the 777 fuselage, Boeing has abandoned the robots and will go back to relying more on its human machinists. Boeing said Wednesday it is reverting to an older approach that “has proven more reliable, requiring less work by hand and less rework, than what the robots were capable of.”
► In the PSBJ — Lawmakers propose $25M federal campaign to address aerospace worker shortage (subscription req’d) — U.S. Rep. Rick Larsen (D-WA-2nd) led a group of bipartisan lawmakers that introduced a bill Friday providing for a $25 million campaign to promote careers in aerospace and other transportation sectors.
► In the Seattle Times — Boeing’s fix tames the ‘tiger’ in the 737 MAX flight controls, say experts and critics — After months of intense scrutiny, even some of the harshest critics of the 737 MAX’s flight-control system believe Boeing’s software fix will prevent a recurrence of the scenarios that killed 346 people in the crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia.
► In the Seattle Times — As Boeing’s 737 MAX nears a return to service, will flyers return to it? — The latest version of Boeing’s bestselling workhorse faces a potential consumer backlash as its return to flight looms closer.
► In the Seattle Times — Watchdog paints troubling picture of relationship between NASA and Boeing — A report by NASA’s inspector general paints a damning picture of the space agency’s relationship with Boeing, one of its top contractors, saying NASA “overpaid” Boeing by hundreds of million of dollars.
► From the AP — Airbus nails $30B in new plane orders at Dubai Airshow
THIS WASHINGTON
► In the (Everett) Herald — Voters spoke, but I-976 must get court review (editorial) — Since 1998, Eyman has put 17 measures before the voters; six were rejected in elections, and 11 were approved. But of those 11, eight were overturned fully or partially in court, including his first $30 license tab measure, I-695, approved by the voters in 1999… Eyman and his supporters are wrong to claim that (legal challenges are) a case of I-976’s opponents simply not liking the outcome of the election. I-695 warrants scrutiny on these constitutional issues because so much is at stake.
► In the (Everett) Herald — Cities start to deal with the fallout of I-976 — Without the revenue car tabs brought in projects and road maintenance are likely to be postponed.
► In the Columbian — I-976 puts Vancouver’s street projects in jeopardy
► In today’s Oregonian — Inslee, Oregon governor will meet Monday to talk Interstate Bridge
THAT WASHINGTON
► In the LA Times — Trump’s plan to ‘save’ Medicare would actually destroy it (by Michael Hiltzik) — Trump has signed an executive order purportedly designed to “protect and improve” the program. Here’s the truth of the matter: Trump’s executive order is a stealth attack on the very program he’s swearing to protect. Buried within the order is a provision that would destroy Medicare by driving its costs to an unsustainable level. At the same time, Trump is proposing to turn more of the program over to commercial insurers. Put simply, he’s proposing to privatize Medicare.
ALSO at The Stand — Trump executive order aims at privatizing Medicare
► From The Hill — House passes Ex-Im Bank reboot bill opposed by White House, McConnell — The House on Friday passed a bill along party lines to fund and overhaul the Export-Import Bank after a bipartisan agreement crumbled under Democratic opposition.
IMPEACHMENT
► In the Columbian — Herrera Beutler stands by impeachment criticism in town hall call — Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-WA-3rd) repeated widespread GOP criticisms of the process. Democrats contend the process is identical to the one House Republicans used to impeach President Clinton.
► In the NY Times — ‘No one believes anything’: Voters worn out by a fog of political news — Paying attention to the impeachment inquiry and other developments means having to figure out what is true, false or spin. Many Americans are throwing up their hands and tuning it all out.
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — Tired of being disrespected? Get a union! Find out 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 WSJ — With Ford deal done, UAW turns to Fiat Chrysler — With a new labor agreement secure at Ford Motor Co., the United Auto Workers will pivot next to negotiations at Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV, where bargainers are expected to encounter a thornier set of issues.
► In today’s Seattle Times — T-Mobile CEO John Legere to step down in April
TODAY’S MUST-READ
EDITOR’S NOTE — Washington republican Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, Jaime Herrera Beutler and Dan Newhouse all voted for this corporate tax giveaway, which narrowly passed the House 227-205.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.