NEWS ROUNDUP
Vaccines sooner | Auburn next? | AFL-CIO vs. filibuster | No, no, no
Friday, March 12, 2021
COVID-19
► LIVE from the Seattle Times — Coronavirus daily news update, March 12 — The latest count of COVID-19 cases in Washington totals 347,884 infections (7-day average of new infections per day: 734) and 5,107 deaths.
► From the AP — Biden aims for quicker COVID-19 vaccines, ‘independence from this virus’ by July 4
► From the Yakima H-R — Agriculture, grocery workers move up on vaccine timeline to March 17 in Washington state
LOCAL
From the News Tribune — Shipbuilder to reopen Tacoma facility, bringing 75 jobs for maritime workers — Bremerton-based SAFE Boats International announced it will reopen its Port of Tacoma manufacturing operation and add 75 new maritime jobs thanks to a $100 million contract from the U.S. Navy.
► From the PSBJ — Seattle-based Zillow to hire more than 2,000 employees in 2021, but many will work remotely
THIS WASHINGTON
► From the Kitsap Sun — Lawmakers in Olympia on the verge of a major policing overhaul — Lawmakers are on the cusp of overhauling policing and police accountability in Washington state, acting with unusual urgency to curb bad behavior by officers following last year’s turbulent protests for racial justice.
The Stand (March 11) — Cops-corrections coalition backs police accountability efforts
► From Crosscut — Court’s drug possession ruling upends WA’s criminal justice system — In the Blake decision, the Washington Supreme Court voided most drug possession cases in the state. The implications will be huge.
AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN
► From the Spokesman-Review — Washington to receive billions of dollars from federal stimulus package for schools, child care, local governments — Washington will receive $7.1 billion for state and local governments as well as an additional $635 million for child care, almost $1.9 billion for K-12 schools and $655 million for higher education. While local and state governments can expect large sums of money soon, how exactly the funds can be used depends greatly on the federal government’s guidelines.
► From Common Dreams — Pensioners, labor groups applaud key $86 billion provision in COVID-19 relief package — The Alliance for Retired Americans said would provide “greatly increased pension security” for more than 10 million people.
► From The Hill — American Airlines cancels 13,000 furloughs after stimulus package passes — American Airlines canceled employee furloughs on Wednesday when the House passed the COVID-19 relief package that provided payroll support for the industry.
► From HuffPost — Republicans mock rescue plan while pushing a tax cut for the richest — The American Rescue Plan is a giveaway to people who don’t really need help, according to Republican lawmakers. At the same time, Republicans say, America’s richest heirs need relief from estate taxes that might take a chunk out of their inheritance.
► From the AFL-CIO — As Biden signs American Rescue Plan, labor movement calls for structural changes to the economy — AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka:
“Now it’s time to start building toward a just recovery that leaves working people with a louder voice and a stronger hand than ever before. That means delivering unprecedented funding to create a 21st-century infrastructure alongside a new generation of good-paying union jobs. It means delivering the $15 minimum wage that should have been signed into law today. And most of all, it means strengthening working people’s right to organize together by finally passing the PRO Act.”
THAT WASHINGTON
► MUST-READ from Politico — ‘A creature of white supremacy’: AFL-CIO targets filibuster — The AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest federation of unions, called on Democrats Thursday to reform the filibuster, the Senate rule standing in the way of enactment of some of their top priorities for the Biden administration. In a statement, the AFL-CIO Executive Board wrote:
“The very survival of our democratic republic is at stake. And standing in its way is an archaic Senate procedure that allows the minority to block the majority—the filibuster. An artifact of Jim Crow. A creature of white supremacy. A procedure that was said to encourage robust debate but has turned into an instrument of government paralysis.”
► From the Boston Globe — A decision on tough new coronavirus workplace protections awaits Walsh as Labor secretary — The clock is ticking on a Monday deadline set by President Biden for the Labor Department to consider whether new nationwide rules are needed to safeguard workers from COVID-19 and, if so, to issue them.
► From Politico — Biden’s new COVID workplace rules set to collide with reopenings — The Biden administration is expected to issue new temporary rules next week to curb COVID-19 spread in the workplace, setting a collision course with the growing number of states loosening restrictions on businesses to aid their reopening.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Alternate headline for this story: “Business groups complain about being held accountable for workplace safety.”
BOEING
► From the Seattle Times — Boeing lands order for 24 737 MAX jets — A Miami-based investment firm has ordered 24 737-8 MAX jets, with an agreement that includes purchase rights for 60 additional planes, Boeing said Friday. The firm, 777 Partners, will lease the planes to low-cost carriers in which it has invested.
► From Reuters — Exclusive: Airbus targets Boeing’s freight fortress with potential A350 cargo jet — Airbus is canvassing airline support for a potential freighter version of its A350 passenger jet, targeting a key stronghold of U.S. rival Boeing as e-commerce lifts demand for transported goods, people familiar with the matter told Reuters.
NATIONAL
► From the Washington Post — The billionaire boom — Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg and six other billionaires made more than $360 billion during the pandemic, which may finally shatter the myth of the benevolent billionaire.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Crappy job? Don’t just quit. Great jobs in this country were made by people who refused to quit. Get more information about how you can join together with your co-workers and negotiate for better working conditions and a fair return for your hard work. Or go ahead and contact a union organizer today!
T.G.I.F.
► On this date in 2007, the great Amy Winehouse made her U.S. television debut, performing what would become her signature song on Late Night with David Letterman. “Rehab” went on to win three Grammy Awards, including Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. But alas, Winehouse was plagued by addiction and died of alcohol poisoning four years later at the age of 27. Her family subsequently established the Amy Winehouse Foundation, which “helps thousands of children and young people to feel supported, informed and inspired. We build their self esteem, help them to make better choices about drugs and alcohol and enable them to reach their full potential.”
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.