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Updated DAILY... Almost Every Day!™ by 9 a.m. Pacific UNTIL TODAY! :( Come back here Sunday for the launch of its replacement! Friday, April 29, 2011 National labor media coming to Seattle Get coverage of YOUR union's activities; sponsors needed
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Legislative news:
► Also see in Wednesday's News Tribune -- DOC cuts put safety at risk (by IBT 117's Tracey Thompson) ► At TheOlympian.com -- Budget talks go on at low-key Capitol -- House budget negotiators sent an offer to the Senate Thursday morning and the Senate was working to send back an answer a few hours later. But no one is talking about achieving major breakthroughs any time soon, and Senate Republican Leader Mike Hewitt is assuming the session will run the whole 30 days.
Boeing news: ► In today's Seattle Times -- Gregoire, aerospace union chiefs going to Paris Air Show -- IAM District 751 President Tom Wroblewski and SPEEA President Tom McCarty will join a delegation led by Governor Christine Gregoire to the Paris Air Show in June to promote Washington state to Boeing suppliers -- and even to Airbus and its suppliers -- as a good place for aerospace investment.
Local news:
► In today's Olympian -- Pierce Transit plans to trim Olympia Express -- It will cut its weekday Olympia Express service in half, and Intercity Transit is considering whether to pick up the slack. ► In today's Kitsap Sun -- North Kitsap School Board rejects plan to lay off 38 educators -- The board unanimously rejects a plan to cut 38 teachers, librarians and counselors, 10% of its certificated staff. ► In today's Kitsap Sun -- Departing teachers will reduce number of pink slips South Kitsap hands out -- The board approved layoffs for 15 teachers, but several have announced they are retiring or leaving. ► In today's Olympian -- Half century of service earns South Sound postal worker a joyous goodbye -- George Witherow, 85, will work one more four-hour shift today for the USPS and then, 50 years after he went to work for the federal government, he'll finally call it quits. More than 50 people crowded into the break room of the processing and distribution facility in Tumwater to say goodbye to him.
Trade news: ► In today's Seattle Times -- State eager for approval of free trade with South Korea -- Four years after President Bush reached a free-trade agreement with South Korea, Congress may at long last vote on it this summer -- paving the way for duty-free Starbucks roasted coffee in Seoul and lower sticker prices on Hyundai sedans in the United States. The pact, the largest since the NAFTA of 1994, has united odd ideological corners of Congress in support while splintering organized labor's long-standing opposition to liberalizing trade. This week, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke; Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Seattle); Rep. Dave Reichert (R-Auburn); and two other House members are making a three-day swing through the Korean peninsula to promote ratification of the agreement. ► At AFLCIO.org -- Why AFL-CIO, other unions oppose the U.S.-Korea free trade agreement
► At SeattlePI.com -- Locke: Korea trade treaty 'incredible... of great benefit' -- U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke shows he hasn't lost a penchant for hyperbole or his enthusiasm for free trade.
The Republican Medicare plan: ► In today's Washington Post -- GOP stretches on Medicare claim -- During the congressional recess, Rep. Ryan and other Republican lawmakers have been selling their proposal to restructure Medicare with what appears to be a poll-tested phrase: It will be similar to a system “just like” what members of Congress have. But under a 1997 law, the government pays a set rate of 75% of the costs of federal health plans and federal employees and members of Congress pick up the other 25%. The Congressional Budget Office analysis of the Republican Medicare plan says that by 2030, the government would pay just 32% of health care costs, less than half of what the federal plan currently pays. The other 68% of the plan would have to be shouldered by the retiree. (The CBO estimated that if traditional Medicare stayed in place, the government would pay 70-75% of the costs.) ► At Politico -- Union organizers put seniors on Ryan's trail -- Citizens Action and the Milwaukee Labor Council have a traveling band of seniors following his every move while he conducts town halls.
National news:
► At Politico -- Madison to Boston -- The collective bargaining fight that's unfolding between the Democratic Massachusetts Legislature and their nominal labor allies is neither a superficial reform nor political posturing. The proposal mostly ends labor's ability to collectively bargain over their health care packages at the municipal level. "It's very much like Wisconsin,” a local UAW president says. ► From AP -- Chevron profit rises 36% on high oil prices -- Chevron's net income rose to $6.21 billion from $4.55 billion a year ago. The results topped Wall Street expectations and marked Chevron's best three months since it earned $7.9 billion in the third quarter of 2008. ► At Huffington Post -- Reclaiming oil subsidies: Senate Dems prepping bill the would recover billions -- Seizing the moment, Senate Democrats work on legislation to reclaim billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies to Big Oil and redirect the money toward developing cleaner and cheaper fuel sources. ► In today's NY Times -- The intimidated Fed (Paul Krugman column) -- Instead of addressing the dismal unemployment picture at Wednesday's press conference, Ben Bernanke bent to the inflationistas. ► In today's Washington Post -- China's trade union takes up a new cause -- workers -- China's only legal trade union organization, a tool of Communist Party control long scorned by workers as a shill for big business, is experimenting with a novel idea: speaking up for labor.
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FRIDAY,
APRIL 29, 2011 The International Labor Communications Association (ILCA) recently chose Seattle as the site of its 2011 convention to be held Sept. 21-24. That means more than 100 labor communicators from across the nation will be coming to town. And that also means that your union has a great opportunity to get some national coverage of your activities, your successes, and your members. One day during the convention, these journalists will spread out across the Puget Sound area and cover stories about labor right here in our backyard. The stories will then be compiled and put on the ILCA website. Check out what they did for the 2009 convention in Pittsburgh. This is a tremendous opportunity for stories about our labor community to be publicized to a wider audience. Do you or does your union have a story you would like the ILCA to consider? Something that spotlights an issue that the wider labor movement needs to know about? If so, fill out a story idea sheet and return it to WSLC Communications Director Kathy Cummings. Also, the ILCA is seeking sponsors for the convention and for their Labor Media Awards, the only national recognition of labor's journalistic triumphs in North America. Please consider helping out this wonderful organization made up of volunteer communicators and support its efforts. See a list of sponsorship opportunities that are available. Again, email Kathy Cummings or call her at 206-281-8901 for more information or to sponsor the event. The ILCA executive board is meeting in Seattle on May 15-16 and it would be great to give them some preliminary story ideas and have folks signed up as sponsors, so get your stories submitted and place your ads as soon as possible. If you are unable to take action on this by May 15, don't worry -- you still have plenty of time before the convention to get your stories and ads in!
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2011
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Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO |