NEWS ROUNDUP
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Monday, October 19, 2020
COVID-19
► LIVE from the Seattle Times — Coronavirus daily news update, Oct. 19 — The latest count of COVID-19 cases in Washington totals 98,201 infections (7-day average of new infections per day: 595) and 2,239 deaths (7-day average of deaths per day: 7)
► From the Spokesman-Review — Eastern Washington’s COVID-19 rate is more than double the West Side’s — The report found the seven-day rolling average test positive rate in Eastern Washington to be 8.8% on Oct. 2, compared to western Washington’s 3.2%. The daily hospitalization rate also was more than twice as high at the time. The report calls the COVID-19 situation in Eastern Washington – Klickitat, Yakima, Kittitas, Chelan and Okanagan counties and farther east – “unstable.” Efforts to control the virus must be maintained to avoid worse trends, according to the report. Health officials have urged residents for months to avoid large gatherings, social distance when possible and wear a mask.
The Stand (Oct. 14) — Let’s save lives together by wearing a mask (by Didi Gray)
► From the News Tribune — COVID safety complaints spark third investigation at Puyallup grocery distribution hub — Frustrations have mounted among workers dealing with a COVID-19 outbreak at the Fred Meyer grocery distribution center in Puyallup. Complaints sent to the state’s Department of Labor & Industries have resulted in the third COVID-19 safety probe of the center this year. Warehouse workers (Teamsters 117) have repeatedly described lax COVID safety standards.
► From the NY Times — Migrant farmworkers under lockdown: ‘You’re practically a slave’ — The guest workers have been restricted to avoid contracting or spreading COVID-19. “I never expected to lose my freedom,” said one, but it has successfully kept down infection rates.
► MUST-READ from the NY Times — Herd immunity? Or ‘mass murder’? (by John M. Barry) — A distinct minority of academics want to shift COVID-19 policy toward achieving herd immunity — the point at which enough people have become immune to the virus that its spread becomes unlikely. Most of their public health colleagues have condemned their proposal as unworkable and unethical — even as amounting to “mass murder.” But their idea of returning to something akin to normal — releasing everyone from a kind of jail — is attractive, even seductive. It becomes less seductive when one examines three enormously important omissions in their declaration… It omits mention of how many people the policy would kill. It’s a lot. The real death toll needed to reach herd immunity could far exceed one million. As horrific a price as that is, it could prove much worse if damage to the heart, lungs or other organs of those who recover from the immediate effects of the virus does not heal and instead leads to early deaths or incapacitation. But we won’t know that for years.
► From HuffPost — Trump mocks Joe Biden: If elected, ‘he’ll listen to the scientists’ — Amid a global pandemic that’s claimed more than 219,000 lives in the U.S., Trump mocked Biden during a campaign rally in Carson City, Nev., which around 5,000 mostly unmasked supporters attended.
LOCAL
► From the News Tribune — Should laid-off Tacoma hotel workers automatically get their jobs back when COVID ends? — Tacoma City Council is exploring an ordinance that would require hotels in Tacoma with 60 rooms or more to provide recall rights to workers laid off during the pandemic. The proposal was brought forward by Council member Lillian Hunter after former workers at Hotel Murano, operated by Provenance Hotels, spoke at a City Council meeting on Sept. 22. UNITE HERE Local 8 represents more than 100 workers at the Hotel Murano and is in support of the ordinance, and not just for its own unionized workers.
AEROSPACE
► From Bloomberg — Could Everett become Boeing’s next jetliner headquarters? — Boeing is weighing whether to vacate the Renton headquarters of the commercial-airplane division as it cuts costs and stockpiles cash. The result could be a move of the headquarters staff to Everett or Boeing Field in Seattle.
THIS WASHINGTON
► From the Spokesman-Review — Funding remains murky for transit agencies after court shoots down I-976 — While it’s nice that the car tab funds won’t be immediately removed from the equation, local transit officials said it’s still hard to make the math work for those trying to keep streets, bridges, trails and other transit infrastructure intact.
► From the Bellingham Herald — Families, caregivers oppose DSHS budget cuts that could take help away from 20,000 — Proposed cuts to the Washington state Department of Social and Health Services would mean thousands of elderly people and those with disabilities would lose long-term care services, legislators heard this week.
The Stand (Oct. 13) — Sign petition to avoid drastic budget cuts
► From the Seattle Times — Pandemic cuts enrollment at some state colleges, forces others to reimagine higher ed — Washington’s colleges and universities were braced for a big drop in enrollment this fall, expecting college kids to opt out of remotely taught classes and defer their educations for the duration of the coronavirus pandemic. The good news: Most kids showed up after all. The not-so-good news: Colleges are reporting that students from low-income families were more likely to hold back.
► From the Seattle Times — Thank you, lawmakers, for the gift of paid family leave (by David Ake) — As the family leave program nears its first full year in effect, I want to say thank you. Thank you to my fellow Washingtonians for enacting it, funding it and administering it. The time and security you gave my family when we really needed it was priceless. I’ll be a better father because of it. Strong families make stronger communities, and my family has never been stronger because of your gift to us.
The Stand (Jan. 20, 2020) — Thank you for Paid Family & Medical Leave — A few weeks in, this program is already improving lives in Washington state. But it didn’t just happen. It took years of hard work by some amazing people.
ELECTION
► From Working to Live podcast — Dealing with political bullies — The latest edition of the Southwest Washington CLC’s “Working to Live” podcast features Vancouver Mayor Anne McEnerny-Ogle and Assistant Chief of the Vancouver Police Department Troy Price joining Harold and Shannon to talk about the state of political discourse today, and what working people can do to keep themselves and their loved ones safe from political bullying.
► From KING 5 — Many Washington voters opting for ballot drop boxes instead of voting by mail — It appears a record number of voters are taking advantage of county ballot drop boxes instead of using the postal service.
The Stand (Oct. 15) — Got your ballot? Don’t wait. VOTE NOW!
► From Politico — States brace for surge of voter registrations as deadlines near — Virginia, Florida, Louisiana and Pennsylvania have experienced web outages, with more states approaching registration deadlines this week.
EDITOR’S NOTE — In Washington state, Oct. 26 is the voter registration deadline by mail or online. But you can register in person at your county election department right up until Election Day on Nov. 3.
EDITOR’S NOTE — The Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO is urging voters to support Ref. 90. See all of the WSLC’s 2020 election endorsements here.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From the Washington Post — Federal judge strikes down Trump plan to slash food stamps for 700,000 unemployed Americans — A federal judge on Sunday formally struck down a Trump administration attempt to end food stamp benefits for nearly 700,000 unemployed people, blocking as “arbitrary and capricious” the first of three such planned measures to restrict the federal food safety net.
► From Roll Call — Hit by pandemic, Amtrak is making cuts that may endure — With ridership still low and additional COVID-19 aid uncertain, the rail service has no clear path to restore reduced long-distance routes.
NATIONAL
► From Politico — California’s $100M dialysis battle comes with ancillary benefits for labor union — While SEIU-UHW says it is committed to passing Prop 23, political strategists suggest that labor backers may simply be playing the long game by placing an initiative on the ballot every two years challenging the industry. Win or lose, the union is putting pressure on dialysis companies to spend gobs of money each general election.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.