NEWS ROUNDUP
Enumclaw nurses picket ● #1 vs. #50 ● Unions, PhRMA unite ● La grève!
Thursday, December 5, 2019
LOCAL
► In today’s News Tribune — Enumclaw nurses picket over pay, staffing as CHI Franciscan aligns with other provider — Nurses at an Enumclaw hospital launched an informational picket Wednesday as contract negotiations continue into their seventh month. The rally at CHI Franciscan’s St. Elizabeth Hospital aimed to highlight the staff’s issues, including wages and benefits, patient care and staffing. The union also is calling attention to CHI Franciscan’s role in a new corporate operating structure finalized earlier this year.
ALSO at The Stand — St. Elizabeth nurses in Enumclaw to picket, rally on Dec. 4
► In today’s (Aberdeen) Daily World — Willapa Valley teachers strike reaches day 2 — The teachers strike in the Willapa Valley School District entered its second day Wednesday, Dec.4. Classes were canceled for the second day, and negotiations between the school district and the teachers union with a state mediator continued Wednesday.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The strike and mediated negotiations continue Thursday. In a blog post today, the Washington Education Association, writes: It’s a tough time of year to go on strike, and a strike fund has been set up for Willapa Valley educators. Please help out by sending checks to:
c/o WEA Chinook
5220 Capitol Blvd. SE
THIS WASHINGTON
ALSO at The Stand — WSLC’s Brown: Heck has served state ‘with honor and distinction’
► In today’s Olympian — Who’ll succeed retiring Denny Heck in Congress? It’s a crowded field of maybes — State Rep. Beth Doglio (D-Olympia) said she is “seriously considering” running. Other possible candidates include Rep. Laurie Dolan (D-Olympia), State Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal; Sen. Steve O’Ban (R-University Place); Suzan “Suzi” LeVine, commissioner of the Employment Security Department; and state Reps. Mari Leavitt and Christine Kilduff, both (D-University Place).
ALSO at The Stand — Guess which state has the strongest unions in the nation? — New national analysis finds Washington’s unions are strongest… and growing.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Washington state is No. 1. Of course! But which states are the worst? — The report was based on more than 70 metrics, including access to health care, quality of education, public safety, the state’s economy, GDP growth, migration into the state, patents, new businesses, natural environment and infrastructure, which takes into account not only bridges and roads but also broadband and power grids… At the very bottom of the rankings are Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana, with Louisiana coming in dead last.
EDITOR’S NOTE — These three “worst” states are all “right-to-work” states that discourage unions and block people from joining together to improve their jobs and their communities. As WSLC President Larry Brown points out: “Unions in Washington state are strong and growing. Our members not only join together to win great contracts for themselves and their families, they also advocate for innovative labor standards that lift up all workers in this state.”
► From the AP — Supreme Court: Car tab measure to remain on hold — The state Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that a voter-approved $30 car tab measure will remain on hold while a legal fight over the initiative’s constitutionality plays out.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Sound Transit removes top safety chief after report on fatal Amtrak crash — Sound Transit CEO Peter Rogoff has removed his agency’s top safety officer as a result of the fatal Amtrak Cascades passenger-train derailment on Sound Transit-owned tracks in DuPont, Pierce County, in December 2017.
► In today’s Spokesman-Review — House leaders get Shea report, but public release delayed — Top House members of both parties were informed Wednesday of the results of a four-month investigation of Rep. Matt Shea, but it may be next week – at the earliest – before the public sees some version of that report.
FOOD STAMP CUTS
► In today’s Seattle Times — New Trump administration restriction on food stamps to hit more than 75,000 people in Washington state
EDITOR’S NOTE — Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) issued the following statement Wednesday: “It’s hard to see this as anything but the President being cruel for cruelty’s sake. There is absolutely no reason to deny struggling individuals the food assistance they need. President Trump may not understand how much damage steps like this cause—but I do and I’m not going to stop fighting to get this heartless rule and others like it reversed.”
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Cuts to SNAP would disadvantage those seeking jobs (editorial) — The Trump administration’s recent push to finalize new rules to tighten eligibility and reduce benefits for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — also known as food stamps — is a solution in search of a problem. And it’s a heartless, unnecessary and counter-productive one, at that.
BOEING
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing chief engineer at center of 737 MAX crisis retires — Boeing Commercial Airplanes chief engineer John Hamilton, who was appointed in March to lead its response to the deadly 737 MAX crashes and testified before Congress alongside CEO Dennis Muilenburg, is retiring, the company informed employees Wednesday.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Flight chief at Horizon Air alarmed at pilots’ safety culture — One flight out of Paine Field in Everett discovered a 4.5-ton discrepancy in weight after take-off.
THAT WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — In Washington state, the Pharmaceutical Industry Labor-Management Association has hired one former labor leader as its registered lobbyist: Lee Newgent, former Executive Secretary of the Washington State Building and Construction Trades Council.
► From Bloomberg — NLRB used flawed data to back union election rule — The National Labor Relations Board used flawed data to support a rule change that would reduce unions’ power to defend against anti-labor campaigns, a Bloomberg Law analysis found. Deficiencies in the data could weaken the board’s defense in a legal challenge, two administrative law professors said.
► From the People’s World — Temporary Protected Status beneficiaries lobby lawmakers for permanent right to stay — Jose Palma and his family came to the U.S., legally, from El Salvador, decades ago. He wants to stay. So does Rena Sorto, another Salvadoran. So does Emanuel Baraq, who came from Haiti and now lives in Florida. Bricklayers’ union president Jim Boland wants to ensure they — and 400,000 other people from 14 countries overall — stay here for good.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Listen to the working class (by David Von Drehle) — Leading Democratic theorists tend to explain their loss of the working class in terms of race, gender, patriarchy and disruption — favorite frames of reference that are necessary to understand our politics but far from sufficient. What these frames fail to capture is the practicality of working people and their hard-earned allergy to egghead notions that cannot be made to work efficiently in the field.
IMPEACHMENT
► BREAKING today from the Washington Post — Pelosi asks committee chairs to proceed with articles of impeachment — Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said Thursday that President Trump’s wrongdoing strikes at the heart of the Constitution and asked House committee chairs to proceed with articles of impeachment, saying lawmakers have “no choice but to act.”
NATIONAL
► From the IBEW — The numbers are in: Union construction jobs are safer than nonunion — It may not be news to those in the business, but new numbers back up what IBEW and other union construction members already know: there’s safety in a union. New York’s Building Trades Employers Association, which represents more than 1,300 contractors in New York City, recently released new statistics using OSHA data. It found that union construction workers in the Big Apple are five times less likely to suffer a fatal accident compared to their nonunion counterparts.
ALSO at The Stand — A major court victory for safe workplaces (by Jennifer Robbins and Dmitri Iglitzin) — The Washington Supreme Court issued a strongly-worded opinion in Vargas v. Inland Washington, LLC on Nov. 21 that should help encourage general contractors to take more responsibility for making multi-employer workplaces safe.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Want a safer workplace? 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 today’s Washington Post — Fairfax Connector workers go on strike Thursday — Thousands of Northern Virginia bus riders will face limited to no service Thursday, as workers for the state’s largest transit system went on strike beginning at 3 a.m. They join a group of Metrobus workers who have been on strike since late October.
► From CNBC — UAW leaders approve Fiat Chrysler labor deal that includes $9,000 ratification bonuses, improved benefits — Local United Auto Workers leaders from across the country on Wednesday approved a new four-year labor contract with Fiat Chrysler, sending it to their rank-and-file members for final approval.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Got a Bad Boss? 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!
► From HuffPost — Even when men take parental leave, they’re paid more, new study finds — The pay gap shows up even though women have access to more kinds of paid leave.
► From Bloomberg — ‘Culture of fear’ grips UPS; workers say injuries underreported
► From CBS News — AMC Theatre workers press for holiday and overtime pay
► From Vice — Uber office had separate bathrooms for drivers and ’employees’
INTERNATIONAL
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.