| ` | ||||
|
|
Updated DAILY... Almost
Every Day!™ by 9 a.m. Pacific
Tuesday
► From Bloomberg -- AFL-CIO's Trumka urges spending up to $3 trillion to spur jobs -- He proposes that the government spend as much as $3 trillion on schools and highway repairs to help create jobs, and said the U.S. should start a Troubled Asset Relief Program for small and medium-sized businesses. Trumka laid out a “five-point plan” he said would create or save at least 2 million jobs during the next year.
| |||
|
Health care reform news: ► In today's Wash. Post -- Poll finds deep divisions linger on health care -- A new poll shows Americans deeply divided over the proposals under consideration and majorities predicting higher costs ahead. But Americans continue to support key elements of the legislation, including a mandate that employers provide health insurance to their workers and access to a government-sponsored insurance plan for those people without insurance.
► In today's LA Times -- No health insurance: Death rates higher -- An analysis of patients who visited U.S. trauma centers between 2002 and 2006 found that the odds of dying after a traumatic injury were almost twice as high for the uninsured than for patients with insurance, even though emergency rooms are required to care for all comers regardless of ability to pay. ► In today's LA Times -- White House accord with drug industry may be going sour -- Democrats' intensifying efforts to pay for their overhaul and provide more relief for consumers are threatening to unravel a White House deal with the pharmaceutical industry and turn one of Washington's most powerful lobbies against the legislation. Drug makers, which have spent $110 million lobbying Congress so far this year, are preparing to make a stand in the Senate, where Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is working to unveil a healthcare bill this week. ► In the NY Times -- In the U.S. House, many spoke with one voice: Lobbyists' -- During floor speeches on health reform, 42 House members -- 22 Republicans and 20 Democrats -- used talking points provided by Genentech, a subsidiary of the Swiss drug giant Roche. ► In today's Wash. Post -- A centrist in health-care debate, Lincoln hears it from all sides -- Sen. Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) has become emblematic of the improbable distance that health-care reform has traveled, and how far it still must go before becoming law. ► In the Wash. Post -- Health reform foes solicit funds for economic study -- The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups are collecting money to hire a "respected economist" to conduct a study with a predetermined outcome: that the bill will kill jobs and hurt the economy.
State government news:
► In today's Everett Herald -- $2 billion short, state will find tax talk hard to avoid -- “I think absolutely we should (raise taxes),” says a member of the governor’s council of economic advisers. “We just cannot afford to make another $2 billion cut out of state government.” Yet that is what Gov. Gregoire will do in the budget proposal she’ll send to the Legislature next month. Under state law, it must be balanced without relying on new revenue. ► At TheOlympian.com -- Gregoire: Hands tied for most of $2 billion in needed cuts -- The problem budgeters face in trying to cut $2 billion from the 2010 supplemental budget is that about 70% of the budget is off-limits to cuts because of constitutional obligations to fund basic education, state debt and pensions, plus restrictions placed on federal stimulus dollars already accepted. ► At SeattlePI.com -- Basic Health wait list will soon surpass enrollees -- In a grim reflection of local economic hard times, the number of people on the wait list for the state's Basic Health plan is expected to surpass, for the first time ever, the number of people actually enrolled. ► In today's Everett Herald -- A counterproductive idea (editorial) -- Rep. Hans Dunshee, a savvy politician known for having a practical streak, would best serve his constituents by declining unions' invitation to challenge Hobbs and holding on to his considerable seniority in the House. (Funny how newspaper editorial boards, which consistently oppose all pro-worker legislation and traditional Democratic ideals in favor of trickle-down policies of business subsidization, suddenly seem so concerned about Democrats maintaining a majority in Olympia. Discuss.) ► Speaking of which... in the Columbian -- Businesses key to economic recovery (Don Brunell column) -- Hiking taxes would be the wrong thing to do. Our economy is just showing signs of recovery. Gov. Chris Gregoire hit the nail on the head in her remarks at the AWB Policy Summit this September: "Tell me a tax that you're going to increase that will give you $1 billion that doesn't hurt business, hurt individuals, hurt our recovery." (The AWB Boss goes on to overstate businesses' share of the tax base, to recount a revisionist history of state tax increases, and call for legislators to "stimulate" the private sector -- read: pass even more tax incentives.)
Local news:
► In today's Everett Herald -- County council budget projects fewer furloughs -- The council's 2010 budget counts on workers taking five unpaid days where County Executive Aaron Reardon's budget calls for 15. Most county workers have had to take 11 unpaid days this year. Both proposals try to avoid layoffs, though they might still happen if unions don’t agree to the furloughs. ► In today's Yakima H-R -- Yakima County budget: $51.9 million and counting... -- The county adopts a 2010 budget that includes job losses for 26 people, fewer beds for juvenile offenders and reduced public services. The bad news? More budget cuts are likely after the new year. ► In today's Seattle Times -- Budget gives Seattle libraries a break, raise parking fines by $4 -- The city council will minimize cuts to library hours, keeping 12 libraries open seven days a week.
Boeing news: ► In today's Seattle Times -- Boeing to aid emirate in aerospace ventures -- Airbus got a second order at the Dubai Air Show, while Boeing signs a deal to collaborate on projects designed to help the UAE's largest emirate build an aerospace industry. (Boeing is doing great at helping other nations develop into future jetmakers. But getting orders? Not so well.) ► In today's Everett Herald -- Boeing readies another 787 for tests -- Modifications have been finished on two more 787s as the company races to put the Dreamliner in the air by year’s end.
National news:
► At AFL-CIO Now -- Employers pressure doctors, workers to stay mum on work injuries -- Says Trumka: "Employer policies and practices that discourage the reporting of workplace injuries and illnesses are widespread and are undermining the safety and health of America’s workers. These destructive and discriminatory practices must be stopped." ► In today's Washington Post -- More families going without food -- The number of Americans who lack dependable access to adequate food shot up last year to 49 million, the largest number since the government has been keeping track, according to a government report released Monday that shows particularly steep increases in food scarcity among families with children. ► In today's Wash. Post -- USPS loses $3.8 billion for year as volume falls -- The loss comes despite $6 billion in cost-cutting moves. Total mail volume fell more steeply than ever -- by 25.6 billion pieces, or almost 13%, more than double any decline in postal history. Worse, the Postal Service expects that 2010 mail volume will drop by another 11 billion pieces. ► In today's LA Times -- Tide may be changing at Port of L.A. -- Exports were up in October for the first time this year, as Chinese consumers led a drive to buy U.S. products and factories stocked up on raw materials. The improvement over October 2008 is the first sign from the troubled Southern California port complex that global economic conditions may be recovering. ► In today's NY Times -- Their future is ours (editorial) -- America is stumbling under the challenge of integrating the children of immigrants, who need more supportive policies and programs.
| ||||
|
TUESDAY,
NOVEMBER 17, 2009
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Today at the Economic Policy Institute, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka and other leaders launched a bold new agenda to create new jobs and turn around our economy. Trumka is proposing five steps to help end the nation’s ongoing jobs crisis. In the face of a 10% official unemployment rate and millions more underemployed or struggling with long-term unemployment, Trumka says, we need immediate action to put people back to work. America’s jobs situation would be even more dire without the economic stimulus program President Obama and Congress enacted, which has saved or created 1 million jobs. But the depth of this crisis demands that we do more—and that we do it now, before more people lose their jobs, their homes, their health care and their hope. The following remarks were delivered by AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka at today's EPI’s “Spotlight on Jobs” Conference:
| ||||
|
Copyright © 2009 -- Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO
|