NEWS ROUNDUP
Pipefitters compete | No airport here | Weaponized debt
Tuesday, May 16, 2023
LOCAL
► From the Spokesman-Review — Pipeline for area pipefitters: Competition seen as critical recruiting tool and skill developer for a trade in demand — Below pop-up awnings and under the watchful eyes of journeymen, apprentice pipe fitters and welders worked last week to show off their skills in turning steel and copper into useful building components. While not quite the Olympics, the competition pitted workers from local unions against each other for the chance to compete at regionals in Las Vegas and possibly the national competition in Ann Arbor, Michigan. “It’s a cool thing,” said Joe Krels, who is the director of training for the Inland Empire Joint Apprenticeship and Training Committee. “It’s a way we use to keep local workers up to date with industry standards.”
TODAY at The Stand — TAM Board of Trustees opts for more union-busting — WSLC vows continued solidarity with TAM Workers United: “We have defeated these tactics before, and we will defeat them again.”
► From NW Public Broadcasting — YVC faculty union demands transparency — Yakima Valley Community College faculty union members have voted no confidence in the college’s president Linda Kaminski. Union leaders say the administration has become unaccountable and is not addressing their complaints. According to the recent voting results, 88% of faculty union members voted “no confidence.” No union members voted “confidence,” while 12% abstained from voting.
The Stand (May 10) — Yakima Valley College faculty vote ‘no confidence’ in president
► From KUOW — Do WA schools need air conditioning? Some teachers think so after this heatwave — Shannon McCann, a special education teacher in Federal Way and the president of the district’s teachers union, said the heat in her classroom and others across the region rose to unbearable levels Monday. “None of us are doing our best when we’re sitting there overheated,” McCann said. “It is sweltering.”
► From the Tri-City Herald — School union treasurer accused of stealing $18K in Kennewick employee dues over 10 years — Karen Ann Steele, 63, a Kennewick school transportation employee allegedly embezzled $18,000 in union funds over the course of her 10 years as treasurer for Public School Employees of Washington Local 1948.
Last week, students in the University of California system as well as Cornell University fought to get Starbucks taken off college campuses in response to union-busting.
Now students are fighting in solidarity at the University of Washington. Please sign this letter in support! https://t.co/S5FDugj3vq
— Starbucks Workers United (@SBWorkersUnited) May 15, 2023
THIS WASHINGTON
► From the Spokesman-Review — State lawmakers strike tentative compromise on drug possession penalties ahead of special session — Washington state lawmakers have come to a tentative agreement on drug possession and public use laws ahead of a special session that begins Tuesday.
► From the Cascadia Daily News — State rep announces bid for Whatcom County executive — Rep. Alicia Rule (D-Blaine), a social worker and recently reelected state representative, wants to make the jump to Whatcom County executive.
THAT WASHINGTON
► From Reuters — Biden, McCarthy to meet as debt-ceiling talks come down to wire — They have little time to reach a deal. The U.S. Treasury Department on Monday reiterated its warning that it could run short of money to pay all its bills as soon as June 1, which would trigger a default that economists say would be likely to spark a sharp economic downturn.
► From Politico — Intensifying debt talks threaten rare GOP unity — House Republicans took a hard line going into high-stakes debt negotiations with President Joe Biden. Their Senate counterparts are now gently reminding them to show some flexibility.
► From the Washington Post — Liberals grow fearful Biden may reward GOP for weaponizing debt ceiling — The White House’s liberal allies are increasingly worried that negotiations with House Republicans over the budget risk rewarding the GOP for threatening the U.S. economy with default.
► From The Hill — Student loan forgiveness: What to know as the Supreme Court mulls case — Within the next month or so – but likely sooner – millions of federal student loan borrowers will know whether or not they’ll see thousands of dollars in debt erased from their accounts. The Supreme Court is expected to make a ruling in two cases that sought to halt President Joe Biden’s plan to forgive up to $20,000 in federal student loans for over 44 million Americans.
► From the AP — CEO pay again in focus as the heads of failed banks appear before Senate panel — The recent failures of a trio of midsize banks has once again raised questions about whether senior executives in the U.S. are being rewarded more for short-term gains — like rising stock prices — than for ensuring their companies’ long-term health.
NATIONAL
► From the AP — Union for Canada’s second biggest airline says pilots issue 72-hour strike notice — The pilots union for Canada’s second-biggest airline have issued a 72-hour strike notice to WestJet, and they warn the airline could be shut down before the weekend.
► From The Hill — Health complications followed state abortion restrictions, research finds — Medical providers described being unable to provide typical medical care, sometimes to the detriment of their patients’ health, in states that implemented abortion restrictions in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, according to a new report.
The Stand posts links to Washington state and national news of interest every weekday morning by 10 a.m.