NEWS ROUNDUP
Swedish must address staffing ● PRO Act teed up ● PSAV workers need contract
Monday, February 3, 2020
LOCAL
► In the (Everett) Herald — Strike at Swedish is over, but contract dispute is not — The three-day strike at every location of health-care provider Swedish is over, but some nurses and other workers are still rallying outside the hospitals… The two sides have been negotiating for nine months. In its last offer, Swedish proposed 11.25% raises over four years, new child and elder care benefits, and no changes for paid time off. Union organizers said the deal didn’t do enough to boost staffing levels. Now, that offer is off the table. With the strike, Swedish withdrew it.
► From KUOW — Staff describe chaotic scenes Swedish hospital during strike. Swedish says everything is fine
► In the Seattle Times — Swedish has hundreds of nursing jobs open, creating double the vacancy rate of other local hospitals — Staffing levels are one of the key grievances cited by 7,800 Swedish nurses and health care workers who just conducted a three-day strike. Along with recent cuts in nursing units, Swedish has hundreds of nursing positions open, creating a vacancy rate more than double of other major hospitals in the Seattle area.
► In today’s Yakima H-R — Employers locally — and across the state — eager to recruit former Astria Regional employees — Some 500 people lost their jobs when Regional closed suddenly. Many of those workers are expected to secure jobs in the medical field and, ideally, remain in the Yakima Valley.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Many are interested in Washington state’s hardest-to-fill teacher jobs. They just need support to get there, survey finds. — In Washington state, there are thousands of people working in classrooms without complete teaching credentials. If they get the support they need to be fully certified, they could be instrumental in staffing some of the hardest-to-fill teaching jobs — and could help bring more racial diversity to the state’s mostly white teacher workforce, according to a report released this week.
► In the Tri-City Herald — Benton deputies call Sheriff Hatcher a ‘tyrant.’ Majority vote ‘No confidence’ — His treatment of employees is “unprofessional and dehumanizing,” said the union.
THIS WASHINGTON
► In the (Everett) Herald — Deadline pressure is growing to get bills out of committees — At the Capitol here, lawmakers will be focusing on the legislative session’s first important deadline. Friday is the cutoff for getting a policy bill out of committee. Those that don’t make it out by 5 p.m. Feb. 7 are pretty much done for the session.
The Stand (Jan. 27, 2020) — Newspapers take the low road with opposition to HB 1888 (by David Groves) — The fact that newspapers and their lobbyists are not only dismissive of public employees’ right to privacy and safety at home, but also parroting the anti-union talking points of the Freedom Foundation is very disconcerting. When newspapers stray from simply making their case on questions of public policy to aligning their agenda with secretly funded quasi-political organizations, they risk losing not only their credibility on open government issues, but also the public trust in their journalistic objectivity.
► In the (Centralia) Daily Chronicle — Carolyn Long raises more than $1 million in challenge to Herrera Beutler — Carolyn Long, the Democrat pursuing a rematch against Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler in southwest Washington’s 3rd Congressional District, has raised more than $1 million in what is looking like the state’s most competitive House-incumbent challenge of 2020.
The Stand (July 30, 2019) — WSLC endorses Carolyn Long for Congress in 3rd District
► In today’s Olympian — Eyman loses another lawsuit, followers ante up for governor’s campaign — A Thurston County judge on Friday dismissed a lawsuit filed by anti-tax activist Tim Eyman that sought a ruling on whether Initiative 976 complies with the state Constitution and should take effect.
THAT WASHINGTON
EDITOR’S NOTE — All seven members of Washington’s Democratic House delegation are co-sponsors of the PRO Act, and Sen. Patty Murray is prime sponsor in the Senate with Sen. Maria Cantwell co-sponsoring.
► From the AP — Impeachment trial heads to historic end in frenetic week — Trump’s impeachment trial heads toward a historic conclusion this week, with senators all-but-certain to acquit him on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress after narrowly rejecting Democratic demands to summon witnesses.
► In today’s Washington Post — In case you had any doubt, impeachment will plague Senate Republicans (by Jennifer Rubin) — Both poll numbers and the hapless Senate Republicans’ performances on Sunday trying to justify their conduct in the impeachment trial suggest President Trump and his enablers are clueless if they think the public will accept the trial as exoneration of the president. Rather, it seems Republican senators are shockingly unaware of their constitutional obligations and unable to provide a coherent explanation for their actions.
► From Vice — AT&T lied about everything it promised to do if it got a tax cut — AT&T said a net neutrality repeal and tax cut would result in new jobs and more broadband investment. It’s cut tens of thousands of jobs and is spending less than ever.
NATIONAL
► From Vice — Instacart workers win historic union election — A group of Instacart employees in the Chicago suburb Skokie voted to unionize with the UFCW Local 1546 on Saturday—a historic win for the grocery delivery platform. The vote was 10-to-4 in favor of the union, according to workers.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Puget Sound-area PSAV workers have voted to unionize but have been fighting for a first contract for years. If you are holding an event at a facility that uses PSAV (like the SeaTac DoubleTree Hotel) tell them they need to settle a first contract with these workers or you demand to use a different unionized a/v contractor.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.