will make Nov. 5 a nationwide “Day of Action”
for members to press their members of Congress to back the
effort. Says Trumka: "We hope to flood the halls of Congress
with calls from working families that want to see real
reform.” (Also see: Get
ready for Nov. 5.)
►
In the Wall St. Journal -- Trumka shows he's flexible on health overhaul
-- Labor is flexing its muscle to pass a health overhaul plan --
and signaling its flexibility.
►
From AP -- No guarantee Senate bill's public option --
The focus of the debate now shifts to
whether Reid can persuade a handful of moderate senators to get
behind his new proposal for a government-sponsored plan. That's
no sure bet.
►
In today's Oregonian -- Questions remain about reach of Senate's public
option -- According to a quick CBO analysis, about 90% of
all people seeking coverage would not be allowed to enter the
insurance exchange offering the government-run choice. The only
ones in the exchange would be those who currently lack coverage
and a small subset of small business.
► In today's
Seattle Times -- Washington's pioneering ways inform health-care
debate (guest column by Rod Hochman and
David Fleming) -- The best ways to achieve
more comprehensive health reform, with major changes in how
health care is delivered and financed, are still under
development. And many of those pioneering efforts are under way
right here in our "other" Washington.
Boeing
news:
► In today's Seattle
Times -- Gap remains in Boeing-IAM talks; S.C. may sweeten
deal -- Boeing's board met Monday in
Chicago without reaching a decision on siting a second 787 line,
as high-stakes talks continue between the Machinists union and
the company. In exchange for a 10-year
no-strike guarantee, Boeing would agree to binding arbitration
to settle wages and benefits disputes, but the union is
reluctant to accept that. The union also wants Boeing to commit
to place future plane-making here. Boeing opposes making such
promises that extend far into the future, but the Machinists
argue that's precisely what the company is asking from the
union. Any 10-year agreement would have to be ratified in a
vote of the union membership. The deal will reach that stage
only if Boeing offers a package the union leadership thinks its
members are likely to accept. Meanwhile, in South Carolina, a
special legislative session to deal with the state's insolvent
UI system may include a Boeing incentive package, although an
effort to impeach the Gov. Mark Sanford could get in the
way.
► At AFL-CIO Now --
Tanker contract would create 44,000 jobs in
U.S. -- Connecticut AFL-CIO President John Olsen points out
that the French use billions of illegal subsidies to low-bid
their proposal -- and the White House should insist the total
value of any such Airbus subsidies are taken into account in the
bidding to build the new tanker. (Also see: State
AFL-CIO's go to bat for Boeing.)
►
In today's NY Times -- Bid process for Air Force tanker is criticized
-- Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), who supports Northrop Grumman
and a European plane maker, says the proposed bid process was
“fundamentally flawed” because the Air Force gave
Boeing some of its cost data during a previous round of bidding.
Boeing counters that the Pentagon is not taking into account a
preliminary finding that Northrop’s partner, Airbus,
benefited from improper subsidies.
►
At SeattlePI.com -- Boeing approves quarterly dividend, pension
contribution -- Its board declares a
quarterly dividend of 42 cents per share and approves putting up
to $1.5 billion in common stock into the company's defined
benefit pension plans.
►
At FlightBlogger -- Boeing completes detailed design on 787 wing
fix -- Boeing says the final parts are being fabricated for
the side of body modification.
Election news:
►
In today's Seattle Times -- No confusion, approve R-71 for Washington
families (editorial) -- Opponents of Ref. 71 embrace any confusion they can
muster about the law to expand rights for registered domestic
partners and their families. This is not confusing. Mark the
ballot "approved." (The Washington State Labor Council urges
union members to Approve
Ref. 71.)
Local
news:
► At SeattlePI.com --
Chance of more jail cuts
worry police, officials -- Due to budget cuts, the state Department of
Corrections has begun sending some felons who violated probation
home with an ankle bracelet instead of back to prison. Since
late July, it has ended community supervision of nearly 10,000
offenders deemed low-risk. "As of a couple weeks ago, we laid
off 279 in prisons," DOC Secretary Eldon Vail said. "I think
we've laid off 60-plus in community corrections, but were going
to get to about 250 layoffs in community corrections within the
next month or so." With the state still
facing a $1.7 billion budget hole, officers are worried the cuts
could get worse after the Legislature reconvenes. Says WFSE's
Tim Welch: "The cuts in place now are a tragedy waiting to
happen."
►
In today's Tri-City Herald -- Study recommends demolishing FFTF, banning waste
imports -- Ground work for significant Hanford cleanup is
laid out for decades to come in a draft version of a new
environmental study. Among decisions it recommends are entombing
the Fast Flux Test Facility, emptying 99% of waste from
underground tanks, leaving the emptied tanks in the ground, and
continuing to ban some, but not all, radioactive waste from
being sent to Hanford.
►
In today's Walla Walla U-B -- Minimum wage to hold at $8.55 in 2010 --
"Anybody that is trying to support a family on minimum wage is
likely to, depending on family size, be on public assistance to
supplement that," says a local social-service agency director.
"When they get a wage increase, it just drives down then what
they would get supplementary." (WSLC President Rick Bender:
$8.50
an hour is still poverty wages for thousands of Washington
families.)
►
In today's Tri-City Herald -- Tri-Cities has state's lowest cost of living
-- Of the state's top five metro areas --
Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, Spokane, Tacoma, Yakima and
Kennewick-Pasco-Richland -- the Tri-Cities remains the least
expensive place to live.
► In
today's Yakima H-R -- Union Gap cuts 5.5 jobs over
heated protests -- Despite
protests from 50 residents and city employees, the council
votes for the cuts.
National news:
► From AP -- Obama to give $3.4
billion in grants for smart grid -- The president will announce $3.4 billion in grants to help build a "smart" electric grid
that will save consumers money on utility bills, reduce
blackouts and carry power supplies generated by solar and wind energy. It marks
the largest award made in a single day from the $787 billion
stimulus package, and will create tens of thousands of jobs
while upgrading the U.S. electric grid.
►
In today's NY Times -- The case for more stimulus (editorial) -- The economy is going
to need more government support, or it is bound to be very weak
for a very long time -- and vulnerable to a relapse into
recession. Unemployment is expected to worsen. Foreclosures are
expected to rise. State and local governments face budget
shortfalls in 2010 that are as bad or worse than this
year’s. Yet Washington is not providing a coherent plan
for effective stimulus.
►
From AP -- Hawaiian Airlines pilots say talks at impasse
-- The ALPA says it has asked the
federal government to release its members at the airline from
mediation, "a process that could start the clock for a future
pilots strike at the airline."
►
In the NY Times -- For Delphi pensioners, union label helps --
The GM deal with the government that ensures Delphi’s
46,000 union workers have their pension benefits restored, but
does not cover some 21,000 salaried nonunion
workers.
Chamber
news:
► At Huffington Post --
Who funds the Chamber of
Commerce? Help Huffington Post find out -- The Chamber has been vociferous in opposing financial
reform, opposing health care reform, opposing climate change
legislation (plus opposing to freedom to choose unions and opposing
the rights of gang-rape victims). It has always refused
to disclose its donors or even its taxable spending on political
races. HuffPost wants to find out more about
the Chamber's members -- help us learn more about who is funding
the Chamber by telling us what you know. Though their funding
comes from membership dues, those are based on size so larger
companies end up contributing most of the Chamber's revenue.
HuffPost is wondering whether any companies have adjusted their
level of support recently? Send us your tips at tips@huffingtonpost.com.
►
At Huffington Post -- Chamber sues group over climate change policy
prank -- The Chamber files a civil complaint against a
liberal activist group that staged a news conference to falsely
announce that the business federation had reversed its stance on
climate change legislation.
► In
today's Wash. Post -- The U.S. Chamber vs.
honesty (editorial) -- Not only is the
Chamber of Commerce indifferent to the truth in the Virginia
governor's race; it's also hostile to the business community in
the most populous and economically dynamic part of the state. In
positioning itself as an arm for the Republican Party, the
Chamber has cast doubt on its own
credibility.