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WSLC
Reports Today
Updated
DAILY... Almost Every Day!™ by 9 a.m. Pacific
Links are functional at date
of posting, but sometimes expire.
WSLC Reports Today links to stories of interest to organized
labor;
some positive, some negative. The intention is to inform.
FRIDAY,
AUGUST 1
What union members should
know about Gov. Gregoire
Delegates representing
labor unions across the State of Washington voted
UNANIMOUSLY in May to support the reelection of
Gov. Chris Gregoire in 2008. Why?
Check out a list of examples of
pro-working family policies and legislation that Gov. Chris Gregoire has
supported.
▪ In today's Spokesman-Review --
Washington
rated No. 3 for doing business -- Washington is the third best state for
business, according to a national ranking by Forbes. That's up from fifth
place last year and 12th in 2006. "Our third-place ranking … confirms
that Washington is where you want to do business," says Gov. Chris
Gregoire. "By highlighting our future capacity, Forbes has told the
world Washington is open for business. Not just now, but far into the
future."
See
you in Vancouver!
WSLC's 2008
Convention convenes Monday
U.S.
Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, Gov. Chris Gregoire, U.S. Rep.
Brian Baird and many other distinguished political and labor leaders will be
featured speakers at the 2008 Constitutional Convention of the Washington
State Labor Council to be held Aug. 4-7 at the Vancouver Hilton Hotel.
Pre-registration for the convention is now closed, but delegates can
bring their credentials and register in person at the hotel.
Check out the agenda.
Boeing
news:
▪ In today's Everett Herald --
SPEEA
votes down Spirit's offer in Wichita -- “This vote is a rejection of
Spirit management’s refusal to share the profits... with the employees who
make it profitable,” says SPEEA executive director Ray Goforth. “This
casts a dark cloud on the future of Spirit.” The development could
have implications for contract negotiations at Boeing. (Also see SPEEA.org.)
▪ From AP -- Boeing
shares drop to three-year low -- Investors are wary of high oil prices
and a possible strike. A Bank of America analyst warns of a
"looming" strike by Machinists, estimating the chance of a work
stoppage to be "greater than 70%."
Local
news:
▪ In today's Seattle Times --
Snohomish
Health District faces $4 million shortfall -- Administrators say 35
employees will likely be laid off in November as part of the first round of
cuts.
▪ In today's Olympian -- Lacey
letter carrier wants to add kilt to uniform -- He pitched a resolution
to include kilts as an official option for male U.S. Postal Service carriers
at the NALC convention last
week.
Election
2008:
▪ At Postman on Politics -- Union
ready to spend big to unseat schools chief -- The Public School
Employees union, where Randy Dorn has worked for nearly a decade has spent
$60,000 to prepare ads backing his campaign, and opposing the incumbent SPI,
Terry Bergeson.
▪ At AFL-CIO Now --
Obama
speaks with union members: "We can turn around America" --
More than 2,500 union leaders, activists and members across the country join
a conference call to hear Obama talk about the challenges facing the
country, and the values and principles that inspire his campaign.
▪ In today's SF Chronicle --
Hillary
Clinton rouses union members in San Francisco -- She delivers a rousing
call to thousands of union workers to put Sen. Barack Obama in the White
House this fall.
▪ In today's Seattle P-I --
"Straight
Talk Express" takes the low road (Connelly
column)
-- Sen. McCain used to provide a hearty tonic to cure
those allergic to politicians, speaking his mind on such radioactive topics
as his role in scuttling the first Boeing-Air Force tanker deal. But
of late, McCain is saying goodbye to all that. His campaign is evolving into
nonstop attacks on Sen. Obama, salted with distortion and innuendo. After
years as a media darling, McCain has taken to complaining about his
opponent's press coverage.
▪ In today's Washington Post --
McCain's
ad formula employs lowest common denominator -- Even McCain allies have
winced at his Paris/Britney advertisement. Says one, "most voters won't
see the parallels between a presidential candidate and two party
girls."
National
news:
▪ From AP -- Wal-Mart
warning employees about Democrats, Employee Free Choice Act -- The
company has warned its U.S. store managers that if Democrats win power they
might pass a law making it easier for workers to unionize. But they say they
aren't telling workers how to vote. Executives told their employees they
would be required to pay hefty union dues and get nothing in return, and
warned that unionization could force Wal-Mart to cut jobs as labor costs
rise.
▪ In today's NY Times --
Jobless
rate climbs to 5.7%; 51,000 jobs lost in July -- The unemployment rate
reaches a four-year high after the 7th consecutive monthly contraction in
the labor market.
▪ In today's LA Times --
Workers'
pay, benefits lagging far behind inflation -- Inflation surged in the
second quarter, but the growth in workers' pay remained flat and down from a
year earlier.
▪ In today's NY
Times --
Fed
fears wage spiral that is little in evidence -- Surges in oil and food
prices come at a horrible time for the typical American worker, who has not
had a raise to speak of in this decade. Now, policy makers are assuming that
rational human beings, faced with higher prices, eventually demand and get
higher pay, despite their apparent lack of leverage. (In sum, the wonks are
afraid that people will demand more pay even though their ability to do so
has been curtailed by, among other things, the
systematic elimination of the freedom to form unions.
Immigration
news:
▪ In today's Seattle Times -- Immigrants
aren't welcomed here (guest column) -- Hardworking,
family-oriented, taxpaying immigrants make the economy of Washington
stronger. Investment in our immigrant residents is not just a warm welcome,
it is also a sound and smart public policy.
▪ In today's NY Times --
"The
Jungle," again (editorial) --
For years, the Bush
administration voiced compassion for exploited workers and insisted that
immigration had to be fixed comprehensively or not at all. But now it has
abandoned mercy and proportionality. It has devised new and harsher traps,
as in Postville, to prosecute the weak and the poor. It has increased the
fear and desperation of workers who are irresistible to bottom-feeding
businesses precisely because they are fearful and desperate. By treating
illegal low-wage workers as a de facto criminal class, the government is
trying to inflate the menace they pose to a level that justifies its rabid
efforts to capture and punish them. That is a fraudulent exercise, and a
national disgrace.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 2008
What union members should know about Gov. Chris Gregoire
Delegates representing
labor unions across the State of Washington voted
UNANIMOUSLY in May to support the reelection of
Gov. Chris Gregoire in 2008. Why?
Following is a list of some examples of
pro-working family policies and legislation that Gov. Chris Gregoire has
supported during her first term as Governor of Washington. Many other
worker-friendly legislators share in the credit for these accomplishments,
but Gov. Gregoire's support -- whether it was by signing legislation, by
requesting legislation, or by implementing policies through state agencies
in her administration -- was critical for each one of these accomplishments.
|

Union members
can download fliers comparing labor-endorsed candidate Christine Gregoire
and her Republican challenger, Dino Rossi, on important
bread-and-butter issues to distribute to your fellow union members. |
Gov. Chris Gregoire's accomplishments for Washington's
Working Families
-
Created 222,000 new jobs
-
Washington ranked as the 3rd
Best State to Do Business in Forbes Magazine.
-
Washington ranked 4th in union
membership density, proving that creating a good climate for Washington’s
working families also helps business.
-
Lowest unemployment in the
country.
-
Highest minimum wage in the
country.
-
On track to ensure every
Washington child has health care insurance by 2010.
-
Named “Public Official of the
Year” by Governing Magazine.
-
Washington State earned a
prestigious A- ranking by The Pew Center on the States for its
performance in managing public resources.
-
The Governor’s accountability
effort, Government Management Accountability and Performance (GMAP), was
selected as a Top 50 program by Harvard’s Kennedy School. This program
holds state agencies responsible for their performance and is used to
show citizens that their tax dollars are being wisely invested.
2008 Legislative Session:
-
Laid the groundwork to create
25,000 family wage, green economy (collar) jobs in Washington State.
-
Signed a supplemental capital
budget that authorizes $277 million in construction which will support
more than 1,100 jobs a year over the next four years including nearly $1
B school construction.
-
Helped create and institute new
heat stress rules to ensure that workers toiling in high
temperature/humidity conditions are safe and protected from undue heat
stress injuries.
-
Signed the Working Families Tax
Credit giving 350,000 low-wage working families in Washington a 5% tax
rebate to help deal with economic realities.
-
Signed a bill granting
continuation of time-loss and medical benefits if an employer appeals
those benefits ensuring that injured workers will not be forced to
settle claims for less than they would have been entitled if an employer
questions their claim.
-
Signed a $3 million initiative
for a joint labor/management apprenticeship program for the IAM to train
and educate workers in new composite technology and aerospace related
fields.
-
Signed legislation authorizing
construction for up to six new ferries for communities served by the
Washington State Ferry system. The legislation also calls for the
ferries to be built in Washington, with the goal of maintaining and
growing the maritime building industry, providing local family-wage jobs
and maintaining Washington’s shipbuilding infrastructure.
-
Approved loans totaling nearly
$278 million to 52 Washington communities by the state Public Works
Board. The loans will help local governments improve sanitary sewer,
solid waste, road and domestic water infrastructure while creating good
family wage jobs.
-
Granted collective bargaining
rights for academic employees at Washington State University.
-
Signed a bill to begin
financing the conversion of part-time to full-time faculty positions at
community and technical colleges.
-
Signed agreement between
Washington State hospitals and major nurse organizations to enhance
patient safety by improving hospital staffing policies.
-
Increased salaries for
Washington teachers.
-
Signed legislation to place a
labor representative on the forest practices board.
-
Made sure Viaduct and 520
construction improvements keep rolling.
2007 Legislative Session:
-
Requested legislation that
began “Running Start to the Trades” to return the industrial arts
education as a high-wage, high-demand profession to better inform and
prepare students to receive college level education and earn while they
learn.
-
Placed $8 million in Safety
Health and Innovative Programs grants to support Labor’s increased
safety awareness and health on the job.
-
Negotiated and signed a state
budget that includes $3.3 billion in capital expenditures, creating
thousands of good paying jobs.
-
Negotiated and signed a
transportation budget that creates $4.6 billion in new transportation
projects, creating thousands of good paying jobs.
-
Signed collective bargaining
agreements with over twenty state employee unions that provide
significant overall salary increases and additional adjustments for many
categories of state workers.
-
Created a Container Ports
Initiative that invests significant dollars to help with freight
mobility issues and to modernize our ports for the future.
-
Negotiated and signed an
education budget that invests over $900 additional dollars per pupil in
the K-12 system (the largest single investment in the history of the
system) to lower class size and improve teacher salaries; adds 10,000
slots to our higher education institutions, including an additional 300
for apprenticeship programs at the community colleges; adds $85 million
in scholarships and grants to be sure that all children, regardless of
income, have an opportunity to get the education they deserve.
-
Signed legislation that
corrects the hour bank problem for building and construction workers,
investigates the underground economy, reforms the vocational
rehabilitation system (Governor’s request legislation), corrects
problems in the prevailing wage surveys, improves the benefits in the
workers’ comp. system, protects workers in the self-insured system.
-
Signed legislation to promote
crane safety and require better oversight of contractors.
-
Signed legislation to allow
adult family home providers to collectively bargain.
-
Signed legislation to help
unions clarify the use of non-members agency fees monies.
-
Helped negotiate and signed
legislation that provides for family leave insurance to help working
families care for a newborn or adopted child.
-
Signed legislation that
requires a study and recommendations for dealing with employers that do
not provide health benefits.
-
Signed legislation that
requires 15% apprenticeship utilization requirement for school
construction projects over a certain dollar amount.
-
Began twenty initiatives to
address both cost and access to health care.
2005-06 Legislative Sessions:
-
Backed and
signed a $3.3 billion construction budget that provides more than 24,000
jobs for Washington workers.
-
Negotiated
and signed an $8.5 billion transportation package that will create
thousands of good, family wage jobs across the state.
-
Approved
legislation to require that 15 percent of workers on all state projects
are apprentices, ensuring with each building we build, we are investing
in the workforce for the next building.
-
Supported
the “Helmets to Hardhats” program that provides returning service
men and women with information and access to a training and education
package to help them get started on a productive career in the building
and construction trades.
-
Signed
legislation to roll back four quarter averaging of unemployment
insurance benefits in order to have time to produce a long-term solution
that doesn’t disproportionably affect workers in seasonal industries.
-
Approved
legislation to provide outside audits of the industrial insurance funds
to ensure confidence and transparency in the workers’ compensation
system.
-
Provided
changes to Unemployment Insurance system to eliminate provisions that
disproportionately reduced benefits for women, people of color, and
low-income workers, and to protect the experience rated tax structure
that many employers want to preserve.
-
Enacted
Legislation to give full collective bargaining rights to the State
Patrol.
-
Approved a
budget that fully funded negotiated raises for state employees.
-
Signed seven
master agreements with state employees negotiated through the collective
bargaining process for the first time in Washington history.
-
Approved
legislation to improve training programs for long-term care workers.
-
Chose to
sign as her first bill apprenticeship utilization legislation that
placed Washington as a leader in addressing the skills gap in the
construction industry that has created double the opportunity for the
next generation of building and construction trades professionals.
-
Called
together Washington Learns to begin breaking down the transitional
barriers between K-12 and higher education and to address serious
funding inequities and to improve student outcomes.
-
Signed a
proclamation supporting Veterans civilian reemployment and career
opportunities in Helmets to Hardhats.
Also,
check out What Union Members Should Know
About Dino Rossi, Gov. Chris Gregoire's Republican challenger in the
2008 election. For more
information, contact
David Groves at 206-281-8901.
Copyright © 2008
--
Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO
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