NEWS ROUNDUP
Inslee intervenes in Swedish talks ● Snapback clawback ● Richland’s solar farm
Thursday, February 27, 2020
LOCAL
► In today’s (Everett) Herald — Inslee gets involved in contract talks between Swedish, SEIU — Gov. Jay Inslee and a professor from MIT’s Sloan School of Management are part of the latest effort to broker a deal between Swedish Medical Center and the union representing 7,800 of its employees. Negotiators from Swedish and SEIU Healthcare 1199NW will meet separately Friday with industrial relations professor Thomas Kochan, federal mediator Beth Schindler and Inslee’s staff ahead of face-to-face sessions next week, the governor’s office announced Wednesday. The health care provider and union have exchanged proposals once since a three-day strike in late January… Sit-down talks between the health care provider and union are set to start March 5 in SeaTac. The governor wants a deal within four days.
► In today’s Peninsula Daily News — McKinley mill in Port Angeles making paper now — McKinley Paper Company is producing paper at a mill that had been dormant for three years. McKinley, which uses 100 percent recycled material for its products, reportedly has filled about 120 job openings.
► In today’s (Longview) Daily News — Despite hit to grain exports, Port of Longview makes $7.3M in profit in 2019 — Despite a down year for exports, the Port Longview netted $7.3 million profit last year — nearly double what officials projected when the port adopted its 2019 budget.
► From KUOW — Bothell High School closed over COVID-19 concerns — Action taken “out of an abundance of caution” after a staff member’s international travel.
► In today’s Seattle Times — Russell Wilson tweets against proposed NFL collective bargaining agreement: ‘I VOTE NO’
THIS WASHINGTON
YESTERDAY at The Stand — Labor: No ‘snapback’ without accountability — Union leaders tell legislators that Boeing tax breaks should not be automatically reinstated without strong, specific accountability language to boost aerospace jobs in Washington state.
► From Crosscut — 5 things Boeing’s tax break money could buy instead — To prevent a tariff war, Washington lawmakers may take back some of the company’s record-setting tax break — and free up $100 million per year in the state budget.
► From KNKX — Northwest organizations that work with immigrants say the ‘public charge rule’ is causing fear — Pacific Northwest organizations that work with immigrants are trying to reassure their clients who are worried they may not be able to get permanent residency because the Trump administration’s “public charge” rule has now gone into effect. Critics say the rule amounts to a wealth test intended to bar low-income immigrants from receiving green cards.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► In today’s Tri-City Herald — This $6.5 million Richland solar farm will bring 100s of workers to train — Construction has begun on a 20-acre solar project that will be paired with batteries to power 600 Richland homes as soon as this summer. Energy Northwest expects the project to draw national attention as utilities watch to see how a megawatt-scale project integrates with battery storage for renewable energy sources. Hundreds of workers from throughout the country are expected to train on solar and battery technology at the project annually… The project is being built on land owned by IBEW Local 77 that is leased to the Regional Education and Training Center, a nonprofit organization to train new and current workers. State Commerce Director Lisa Brown said the project will contribute to the transformation to a clean energy economy, while providing skilled, family-wage jobs.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Politico — Coronavirus gets a Trumpian response — He cracked wise, told a story with a stand-up comedian’s patter, waved around colorful graphs and listed facts he had just learned.
► From HuffPost — Trump ripped for putting ‘science denier’ Mike Pence in charge of coronavirus
NATIONAL
EDITOR’S NOTE — You, too, can come together and raise your voices! 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 NBC News — Judge blocks Instacart from misclassifying its California workers — A county judge in San Diego has granted a preliminary injunction finding that Instacart has probably misclassified the overwhelming majority of its California workforce. And in doing so, Instacart “avoids paying its ‘shoppers’ a lawful wage,” San Diego City Attorney Mara W. Elliott said late Monday.
► In the Boston Globe — Union study finds Black Starbucks baristas in airports paid less than whites — Black baristas at airport Starbucks make a median wage of $11.15 an hour, $1.85 less than white baristas, according to a report released Tuesday by the hospitality workers’ union UNITE HERE. The union examined 2019 employment data of more than 2,000 unionized workers — 85 percent of whom were people of color, and 35 percent Black women — at 142 stores operated by HMSHost in 27 airports around the country.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.