NEWS ROUNDUP
Villainous Starbucks | Biden earns praise | We took their children
Monday, August 8, 2022
SHAME ON STARBUCKS
13 years of dedication, passion and hard work. This is what @Starbucks does to hardworking and dedicated employees. Shame on them. No respect or courtesy. Please Share @SBWorkersUnited https://t.co/528G83tKnk
— Sam Amato (@HiSamIsCool) August 5, 2022
“This is the week of my thirteenth anniversary at Starbucks and I was fired. I was fired because I was a union leader at my store. My manager couldn’t even explain to me why they were firing me. She couldn’t look me in the eye.”
Starbucks Workers United says that this is the ninth union leader in Buffalo to have been fired due to union activity, part of over 75 firings of union supporters across the country.
Hey, Howard. In response to your latest firing, here’s what Union Solidarity looks like.
EDITOR’S NOTE — Ready to experience some workplace solidarity and gain a real voice on the job? Get more information about your right to join together with co-workers and negotiate for better wages and working conditions. Or go ahead and contact a union organizer today!
ELECTION
The Stand — Pro-worker candidates fare well in primary (election results UPDATED this morning) — In the 3rd CD, there are fewer than 4,800 ballots remaining to count in Lewis, Pacific, Wahkiakum, Cowlitz, Skamania, and Klickitat counties, according to the Secretary of State’s estimates. But there are an estimated 30,000 remaining in Clark County, where the next update is scheduled for 5 p.m. today. Stay tuned!
► From the (Everett) Herald — In GOP battle of Sutherland vs. Low, Democrats may tip the scale — With Rep. Robert Sutherland and Snohomish County Councilmember Sam Low expected to split Republican votes in the 39th LD general election this fall, corralling support from Democrats will be requisite to win a two-year term representing communities in Snohomish and Skagit counties.
LOCAL
► From the Cascadia Daily News — Immigrant farmworker’s rights supporters rally at City Hall — A rally Friday in front of Bellingham City Hall honored the life of Honesto Silva Ibarra, 28, an immigrant farm worker who died in Whatcom County in 2017. Organizers said the rally also served as a call to action for the city to improve resources for immigrant workers.
AEROSPACE
► From the Washington Post — In court, a fight over whether those killed on Boeing jets are ‘crime victims’ — The Justice Department has argued that the 346 people killed when their flawed Boeing 737s crashed are not crime victims under federal law, even though federal prosecutors charged the company with conspiring to defraud federal regulators and the company admitted to that conspiracy.
THAT WASHINGTON
TODAY at The Stand — Inflation Reduction Act ‘will transform lives’ — AFL-CIO’s Liz Shuler hails Senate passage of bill to reduce energy and health care costs, and calls for swift House passage.
► From the Seattle Times — Biden deserves praise for policy victories (editorial) — The president has earned the right to celebrate some much-needed victories. Especially, because when it comes to his policy priorities, a win for Biden is a win for all Americans.
► From the Washington Post — With Sinema’s help, private equity firms win relief from proposed tax hikes — Last-minute changes to the Inflation Reduction Act pushed by the Arizona Democrat protect the industry from a new minimum tax aimed at large corporations.
► From KING — Washington operators to see increase in Ferry Boat Program funding — The Federal Highway Administration recently announced its 2022 allocations for $172 million worth of funding.
NATIONAL
► From the Washington Post — Inflation is helping gig companies like Uber — and hurting their workers — Workers say that, while fees and prices are soaring for consumers, they themselves are struggling to make ends meet. Meanwhile, the companies say more drivers are joining the apps as a side gig to combat inflation, which gig workers say is increasing competition for the jobs that are out there.
► From the Sacramento Bee — In California, landmark labor decision could have ‘profound’ impact on a industry — California labor officials have issued civil penalties to an employer that fired a group of farmworkers it misclassified as independent contractors; labor experts say the landmark decision could have a “profound” impact on the agriculture industry.
► From the LA Times — California child-care providers fight to ‘retire with dignity’ — California child-care workers signed their first union contract with the state about a year ago. Now, they want retirement benefits.
► From HuffPost — Austin restaurant workers plan to unionize local pizzerias in new organizing effort — In a rare move, workers at a neighborhood restaurant chain are looking to the join the wave of union organizing at Starbucks, Amazon and Trader Joe’s.
► From the Guardian — Qantas asks executives to volunteer to fill in as baggage handlers — Senior executives at Qantas are being asked to trade their high-profile positions to work as ground handlers as part of a plan to combat labor shortages.
TODAY’S MUST-READ
► From The Atlantic — “We need to take away children”: The secret history of the U.S. government’s family-separation policy (by Caitlin Dickerson) — During the year and a half in which the U.S. government separated thousands of children from their parents, the Trump administration’s explanations for what was happening were deeply confusing, and on many occasions—it was clear even then—patently untrue. Trump-administration officials insisted for a whole year that family separations weren’t happening. Finally, in the spring of 2018, they announced the implementation of a separation policy with great fanfare—as if one had not already been under way for months. Then they declared that separating families was not the goal of the policy, but an unfortunate result of prosecuting parents who crossed the border illegally with their children. Yet a mountain of evidence shows that this is explicitly false: Separating children was not just a side effect, but the intent. Instead of working to reunify families after parents were prosecuted, officials worked to keep them apart for longer.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.