NEWS ROUNDUP
Ill communication ● It’s not Boeing, it’s us ● Affirm Ref. 90
Monday, October 5, 2020
COVID-19
► LIVE from the Seattle Times — Coronavirus daily news update, Oct. 5 — The latest count of COVID-19 cases in Washington totals 89,874 infections (7-day average of new infections per day: 523) and 2,142 deaths (7-day average of deaths per day: 8)
► From the Seattle Times — Seattle may have lowest rate of COVID-19 cases among major U.S. cities — Seattle’s low rate of infections is a noteworthy achievement, particularly in light of the fact that we had to confront the virus before any other area of the country.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Make no mistake, after the Seattle area and Washington state became the epicenter of the nation’s initial, the proactive steps that Gov. Jay Inslee and local leaders took to “flatten the curve” and curb COVID-19 transmission — and the willingness of the vast majority to comply — has SAVED HUNDREDS OF LIVES in our state. So let’s remain vigilant and continue saving the lives of our family, friends and neighbors.
► From the Washington Post — Secret Service agents, doctors aghast at Trump’s drive outside hospital — Current and former Secret Service agents and medical professionals were aghast Sunday night at Trump’s trip outside the hospital where he is being treated for the coronavirus, saying the president endangered those inside his SUV for a publicity stunt.
► From the Washington Post — Prospect of Trump’s early hospital discharge mystifies doctors — The assertion by President Trump’s doctors that he could be discharged from the hospital as early as Monday astonished outside infectious-disease experts, who said he remains in a dangerous period of vulnerability when some COVID-19 patients decline precipitously and require urgent intervention.
►From the NY Times — The American people need the truth (editorial) — Too often in the past few days, the administration has appeared to be actively misleading the American people. Administration insiders are expressing frustration that no one even among Mr. Trump’s own staff seems to know what is going on. Among the broader public, anxious speculation and wild conspiracy theories are multiplying. The unnerving impression is of a White House in chaos.
► From Politico — Biden again tests negative for coronavirus — Joe Biden on Sunday tested negative for COVID-19, at least the third time since Friday, his campaign said.
► From Reuters — Biden leads by 10 points as majority of Americans say Trump could have avoided coronavirus — Joe Biden opened his widest lead in a month in the U.S. presidential race after Trump tested positive for the coronavirus, and a majority of Americans think Trump could have avoided infection if he had taken the virus more seriously, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.
► From Vox — The U.S. has reported more than 97,000 new COVID-19 cases since the news of Trump’s positive test — America’s COVID-19 outbreak is a lot bigger than Trump.
As the President and other VIPs hit by COVID receive top-tier medical care, remember these patients in New Orleans hospitals who were sent home, or to hospice, while still infected with the coronavirus. https://t.co/X1gDEe5OWM
— ProPublica (@propublica) October 5, 2020
LOCAL
► From the Tri-City Herald — Twin City Foods workers rally to join union after 2 die of COVID — Two workers at the Twin City Foods frozen vegetable plant in Pasco have died of complications of COVID-19, say workers at the plant. It is part of the reason that about 200 workers there want to vote to join the UFCW Local 1439. The union is waiting for the National Labor Relations Board to schedule the election.
► From the Seattle Times — Black Lives Matter logos in the workplace divide employers, workers and customers — Swedish and Starbucks allow it. QFC and Bartell Drugs do not. The grocery union is willing to fight about it, legal experts say it’s federally protected and some customers think it’s a reason to change where they shop. It’s the Black Lives Matters logo, whose presence on everything from buttons and shirts to masks and pins has created workplace tensions at many businesses.
The Stand (Sept. 23) — Grocery workers, UFCW 21 call on Kroger to end BLM ban
► From Crosscut — Census outreach in high gear for Native groups across WA — The pandemic has been just another hurdle for tribal leaders and organizations working hard to improve historically low counts in Native American communities.
The Stand (Sept. 16) — Our census is our power. It’s not too late to BE COUNTED!
► From the Seattle Times — 163 veteran Metro bus drivers are retiring, taking 4,400 combined years of memories — They’re the 163 older King County Metro bus drivers who this summer applied and were approved for a “voluntary separation” package, although that number might increase a bit. It meant saving the jobs of younger transit operators, as ridership had cratered because of the pandemic.
BOEING
► From KING 5 — What are the chances Boeing will build a new jet in Washington state again? — “I think Washington is still the incumbent, still the best place to build a jetliner,” said Richard Aboulafia of the Teal Group headquartered near Washington, D.C. “That doesn’t mean it wins.”
I bring all this up because Boeing is in a world of hurt right now, and probably more than ever is going to need some help from the good ol’ state of Washington. It will be a big debate next year, and with all the great jobs the company can provide, maybe we should give it to them. Only this time, can we please cut the codependency and finally get it in writing?
ELECTION
EDITOR’S NOTE — Likewise, delegates representing unions from across the state of Washington have voted to urge voters to Approve Ref. 90.
ALSO from the WEA — Approve R-90 for safe and healthy youth
► From the Seattle Times — Inslee seeks a rare third term amid pandemic, jobs and Boeing crisis — News of the nation and world has turned several shades gloomier since 2016, when voters awarded the former congressman his second term as governor. But Inslee said he’s confident he can help Washington bounce back from the COVID-19 pandemic and steep economic downturn.
THIS WASHINGTON
► From the (Everett) Herald — State still sifting through thousands of unemployment claims — Between March and September, the Employment Security Department paid out more than $11.3 billion to a million out-of-work Washingtonians — a third of the state’s workforce. But some claims were left pending for months, and some of those are still under review. To date, 21,000 people are waiting for the state agency to resolve an issue with their claim. A week ago, it was 31,000.
SUPREME COURT
► From the LA Times — Supreme Court starts new term, with health care, religion and gay rights on the docket — The Supreme Court opens a new term on Monday and within weeks is set to hear cases on healthcare and religion that may give a preview of how the conservative majority will wield its power.
► From the American Prospect — Chief Justice Roberts: America’s chief guardian of corporate power (by Richard Trumka) — Roberts remains reliably hard-line on the most fundamental issue facing our democracy: the growing imbalance of economic and political power. If he gains yet another conservative colleague, the Roberts Court may become the most dangerous branch of government. While Roberts has taken great pains to maintain public confidence in an era of intense partisan polarization by not allowing the justices to continuously split 5-4 along party lines, he is actually one of the foremost guardians of the corporate class in the history of the Court. As such, he is actively working against the very social balance he sometimes appears to be championing by consistently voting in a way that compounds inequality of income, opportunity, and power, putting our democracy on a trajectory to implosion.
► From the Washington Post — Positive tests for senators raise doubts about fast-track confirmation of Trump’s Supreme Court choice — Republicans’ tightly crafted schedule has now been thrown into uncertainty with the coronavirus diagnoses of at least two Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee and the fear that other senators could test positive in the coming days. A handful of other GOP senators, on and off the committee, are also isolating as a precaution after being exposed to infected colleagues.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Politico — ‘Danger sign’: State, local government job losses grow as Congress stalls on relief — State and local governments throughout the U.S. shed more jobs in September, ending a brief recovery during the summer, a sign that their economic pain is deepening as Congress fails to reach a deal on an economic-relief package.
► From HuffPost — Trump administration plan would cut pay for essential farm workers — The U.S. Department of Agriculture is moving to phase out a quarterly survey that helps determine wage rates on farms that use the H-2A guestworker program. If the administration suspends collecting data for the AEWR without another plan in place, many farms would be allowed to pay lower wages to field workers as early as next year.
NATIONAL
► From the Washington Post — U.S. faces shortage of up to 8 billion meals in next 12 months, leading food bank says — Tens of millions of Americans have turned to a local food bank for help after becoming newly food insecure because of the pandemic and its fallout. About 10 percent of American adults, 22.3 million, reported they sometimes or often didn’t have enough to eat within the past week. That is up from 18 million before March 13. Feeding America, a nationwide network of more than 200 food banks, projects a 6 billion to 8 billion meal shortfall in the next 12 months, a deficit that may be magnified with federal food assistance programs set to expire in the coming weeks and months.
The Stand (Aug. 3) — WSLC foundation is delivering ‘gift of hope’ to families in need
► From the Washington Post — Virginia Democrats face choice between idealism and revenge in vote on gerrymandering — Democrats have the majority in Richmond this year, and their voters have to decide: Do we strike a blow for nonpartisan maps or stick it to the GOP as they have stuck it to us?
► From NBC News — Regal cinemas to close down temporarily, impacting 45,000 jobs
TODAY’S MUST-READ
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.