NEWS ROUNDUP
Sacred Heart deal ● Mad Matt more popular? ● Creepy U-Haul
Wednesday, January 8, 2020
LOCAL
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand:
WSNA nurses at Sacred Heart reach Tentative Agreement — The WSNA, UFCW 21 and SEIU Healthcare 1199NW credit their unity in contract talks with Providence for the progress and vow to continue fighting for fair contracts for all healthcare workers at Providence hospitals throughout Washington state.
Support Providence workers at candlelight vigils TODAY — All union members and community supporters are urged to join members of all three unions at Candlelight Vigils for Patient Safety from 5 to 6 p.m. this Wednesday, Jan. 8 at Providence hospitals throughout the state.
► In today’s Seattle Times — PCC to open store in Central District space abandoned by New Seasons — The store is expected to open within six months and employ 100 people in union-represented positions (UFCW 21), about half of whom would be recruited from the neighborhood, as is the co-op’s stated practice.
PREVIOUSLY at The Stand — As New Seasons store closes, UFCW 21 acts to help workers
► In today’s Seattle Times — Macy’s in Burlington, Walla Walla to close as the retailer cuts underperforming locations — The closures, two of nearly 20 Macy’s stores nationwide slated for closure in 2020, according to media reports, will mean the loss of 114 jobs in Burlington and 50 in Walla Walla.
► In the Skagit Valley Herald — Burlington Macy’s to close early this year
► In the Walla Walla U-B — Macy’s closing Walla Walla store
BOEING
► In today’s Washington Post — After the Boeing crash near Tehran, who will investigate? — Past crashes involving U.S. planemaker Boeing’s aircraft have compelled U.S. foes to overcome their resentments and allow American experts access to crash sites or to crucial evidence, because those countries lacked the capabilities or experience to lead complex investigations alone.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Boeing, reversing itself, says all 737 MAX pilots will need costly flight simulator training — Interim Boeing CEO Greg Smith said the change in approach was spurred because “public, customer and stakeholder confidence in the 737 MAX is critically important to us.”
► In the Wichita Eagle — Spirit AeroSystems offers voluntary layoffs amid Boeing 737 MAX uncertainty — It’s “a first step” in cost-cutting measures the company is taking after Spirit halted production of the 737 Max on Jan. 1. To deal with the stop in production, Spirit will likely have to reduce its workforce, Spirit President and CEO Tom Gentile said. He did not say how many jobs will be lost but warns of “many difficult decisions in the days and weeks ahead.”
► From KNKX — Moses Lake airport close to maxing out on Boeing 737 storage — The plane maker plans to deploy a fresh wave of mechanics across the mountains to maintain the large fleet until those planes can fly again.
THIS WASHINGTON
THAT WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — With the 2019 passage of Resolution #31, “the Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO, affirms that reproductive rights are workers’ rights and will defend and support efforts to obtain and maintain health care for working people covering all reproductive rights choices.”
NATIONAL
► From U.S. News — As minimum wage rises, suicide rates fall — Minimum wage laws can be a literal lifesaver for people who are struggling to get by, a new study suggests. The suicide rate declines among less-educated folks when the minimum wage is increased, researchers discovered. States experience as much as a 6% decrease in their suicide rates for every $1 increase in the minimum wage, said the lead researcher for the Emory University study.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Washington is among the 21 states that allow employers to enact a nicotine-free policy.
► From Deadline — SAG-AFTRA HQ in L.A. and N.Y. evacuated, closed after phone threat; LAPD finds ‘no suspicious device’ — SAG-AFTRA’s offices in Los Angeles and New York were evacuated Tuesday after receiving an unspecified threat of an attack.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.