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Greetings,
10/27/09
This is the Federation Hotline updated Oct. 27.
URGE KEY STATE CONGRESSMEN TO SUPPORT PUBLIC OPTION IN HEALTH
CARE BILL
Momentum for some form of acceptable public option in the
national health care bill is growing and several key members of
the U.S. House of Representatives need to hear from you.
Rep. Jay Inslee of the 1st Congressional District, Rep. Rick
Larsen of the 2nd CD, Rep. Brian Baird of the 3rd CD and Rep.
Adam Smith of the 9th CD all need to hear from you to support a
robust public option.
The House is expected to vote as early as Friday, Nov. 6. A
National Day of Action has been scheduled for Thursday, Nov. 5.
So, tell Congress to act now. Call 1-888-460-0813. Tell your
member of Congress we need health care reform that doesn't tax
our benefits, holds employers accountable and includes a robust
public option.
BARGAINING TEAM BALLOTS IN THE MAIL; DUE BACK NOV. 13
The ballots for positions on the Federation's 2011-2013
bargaining teams are in the mail and are due back Nov. 13.
In General Government, elections will be among Federation
members by their respective policy group:
Corrections - Two candidates are vying for one seat.
Transportation - Five candidates are running for two seats.
Employment Security - Only two candidates were nominated for
the two seats, so they have won by acclamation: Kim Arnold and
Steve Pointec.
Labor and Industries - Six candidates are running for two
seats.
Natural Resources - Eleven are running for two seats.
Human Services - Seventeen are running for four positions.
Institutions - Thirteen are running for four seats.
Miscellaneous - Fifteen candidates are vying for three
seats.
In the Higher Education Coalition - the group of 12 Community
Colleges and three four-year institutions, there is one big
change this bargaining cycle. The administration at Western
Washington University has opted out and will bargain separately
this round. Meanwhile, for the first time, Eastern Washington
University will be in the coalition; that under the law is via a
decision made by the EWU administration.
Here is a rundown of the Higher Education Coalition elections:
Community Colleges of Spokane - Five candidates are vying for
three seats.
Everett CC - One nomination came in for two positions, so Max
Phipps has won by acclamation. The WFSE president will appoint
someone to fill the vacant seat.
Green River CC -- - One nomination came in for two positions,
so Todd Henderson has won by acclamation. The WFSE president
will appoint someone to fill the vacant seat.
Seattle Community College District - Three nominations for
three positions, so Betsy McConnell-Gutierrez, Milton Smith and
Matthew Davenhall have won by acclamation.
Shoreline CC - One nomination for one position, so Sam Bess has
won by acclamation.
Tacoma CC - Two nominations for two seats, so Angie Simpson and
Laurie Harmon have won by acclamation.
The Evergreen State College - Three nominations for three
seats, so Kirk Talmadge, Lana Brewster and Erik Carlson have won
by acclamation.
Eastern Washington University - Nine candidates are vying for
three seats on the coalition team.
Whatcom CC - One nomination for one seat, so Amy Weaver has won
by acclamation.
No nominations came in from six coalition institutions, so the
WFSE/AFSCME president will also appoint to fill those vacancies:
Bellevue CC (1); Central Washington University (2); Centralia CC
(1); Lower Columbia College (2); Peninsula College (1); and
South Puget Sound CC (2).
Washington State University - One nomination came in for nine
positions, so Eric Needham has been elected by acclamation and
the WFSE/AFSCME president will appoint the remaining eight
vacancies.
Western Washington University - Six nominations came in for
nine seats, so Mary Ann Armstrong, Ron Rawls, Brandon Taylor,
Timothy Harvey, Steven Vanko and Josef Bailey have all been
elected by acclamation. The WFSE/AFSCME president will appoint
the remaining three vacancies.
University of Washington - The 17-member UW Bargaining Team is
elected by geographic location based on the formula set out in
the Local 1488 constitution. The upshot is there will be only
one election because no one for the other positions was
nominated or there were fewer nominations than seats available,
so the nominees are elected by acclamation. The one election
will be among four nominees for two seats allotted to the UW
Main Campus Trades Bargaining Unit. Elected by acclamation are:
Paul Bentson (nominated for one of Harborview Medical Center's
two at-large seats); Joe Davenport (nominated for one of two UW
Main Campus at-large positions); John Miller (the sole nominee
for UW Bothell's one seat); Thomas Fowler (nominated for one of
the UW Medical Center's two at-large positions); and Remedios
Peters (nominated for one the UW Main Campus's two custodian
seats). The WFSE/AFSCME president will appoint the remaining
vacancies: Harborview at-large (1); HMC Public Safety Officers
(1); UW Medical Center at-large (1); UW Tacoma (1); PAC
Lab/Friday Harbor/Consolidated Laundry (1); UW Main Campus
at-large (1); UW Main Campus Library (2); UW Main Campus
custodians (1).
PUSHBACK AGAINST DOC CUTS BUILDS
Just about everyone now acknowledges that the cuts in DOC
Community Corrections are a threat to public safety and other
alternatives are needed to avoid what the Seattle P-I reported
"are a tragedy waiting to happen."
The P-I, KIRO radio in Seattle, the Seattle Times, KHQ TV in
Spokane and other media outlets have shed light on the harmful
DOC cuts. It shows they will not be swept under the rug and the
public is beginning to realize the billions in cuts imposed by
the Legislature are harming them personally.
The P-I reports that since July, the Department of Corrections
has ended community supervision of nearly 10,000 offenders
deemed low-risk. DOC Secretary Eldon Vail told the P-I that
translated to 60 layoffs so far in Community Corrections, "but
we're going to get to about 250 layoffs in Community Corrections
within the next month or so."
Further cuts may be coming as the state faces another $1.7
billion deficit.
But other sensible solutions are entering the public debate.
The P-I reported one source as saying "there are billions spent
for outdated tax loopholes, and eliminating or delaying those
would be better than trimming from a Corrections staff that's
already down to the bone."
The other cuts have come from Senate Bill 5288, "the
legislation that ended the supervision of thousands of offenders
(and) also reduced the community-custody terms for higher risk
offenders, such as sexual predators and people convicted of
violent crimes," the P-I reported.
On top of pressure from the union, Seattle City Council
members, five area mayors, five county sheriffs, Seattle's
police chief and the U.S. marshals recently signed a joint
letter to Gov. Chris Gregoire and Vail to protest some of the
cuts.
Vail told the P-I: "We try to make the best decisions we can to
do the least damage to public safety." He added: "I am pretty
concerned about, if there is another round of reductions that we
can't yet articulate or identify, because we are really down now
to supervising - particularly in Community Corrections - the
highest risk offenders. I don't know who else to get rid of."
RECAP: MOVEMENT TO SAVE RHCS ROLLS INTO BUCKLEY AT RAINIER
SCHOOL TOWN HALL MEETING
The move to close Rainier School in Buckley and four other
centers like it is part of a political agenda to wipe out
residential habilitation centers-a ruse that will actually drive
up the deficit and kill some of this state's most vulnerable
citizens.
That's the consensus from legislators, parents and Federation
members at a standing-room only town hall meeting to save
Rainier School Oct. 22.
More than 80 Local 491 members, parents, local elected
officials, firefighters and community supporters joined with two
key legislators the town hall meeting in the Buckley City
Council chambers.
The Save Rainier School town hall meeting followed by three
days the all-day picketing of the governor's Spokane regional
office by more than 100 Lakeland Village Local 573 members.
It's all part of a pro-residential habilitation center (RHC)
alliance to fight the recent consultant's report recommendation
to close Rainier School and Frances Haddon Morgan Center and
decimate by 90 percent Lakeland Village, Fircrest School and
Yakima Valley School.
Rep. Christopher Hurst, D-31st Dist., who organized the Rainier
School town hall meeting, made it clear the fight is not just a
local fight, but also a statewide mobilization.
"All the RHCs are targeted for termination," Hurst told the
standing-room only crowd in the Buckley City Council chambers.
Hurst's seatmate, Rep. Dan Roach, R-31st Dist., warned of a
"domino effect" that "if one (RHC) goes, they'll all go."
They handed out a call to action to generate letters to the
governor, the state budget director and the top leaders in the
state House and Senate (see below).
The legislators and others in the audience were disturbed by an
Oct. 19 news report in which the governor, commenting on the
adverse reaction to the consultant's report, appeared to suggest
one institution should be played off against another.
"The message to us to not cut anything really is not helpful,"
The Olympian quoted Gov. Chris Gregoire. "We need to be working
together and figuring out how to get from where we are to the
end...."
The governor continued: "Rather than tell me it's not a good
study ... tell me what a good study would show. What should we
close? The days of saying, 'this is bad,' 'shouldn't do that,'
'don't cut this,' and so on are gone. ... This is a day of, you
know: 'This is not the right thing to cut; you should cut over
here.' 'This is not the right thing to close; you should close
over here.' That's the dialogue we have to engage in right now."
Meanwhile, at the Rainier School town hall meeting, Hurst and
Roach made up a high-powered bi-partisan team that is crying
foul on the consultant's report and the real motives behind the
push to close Rainier and the other RHCs.
The 31st District representatives said the forces that hate
RHCs have seized on the economic downturn to wage a political
fight to close the facilities under the guise of fiscal
restraint.
"This is not about people and finances...," Hurst said. "They
(the anti-RHC forces) believe they should not exist."
When California drastically downsized and forced the severally
developmentally disabled residents into the community, the
mortality rate shot up 66 percent, Roach said.
"That is something they (the anti-RHC forces) can't ignore,"
Roach said.
Closure won't save any money, but will actually cost at least
$1.6 million a year in transition costs, they said.
"There is no monetary gain on the state level, it costs more
money and it will cost lives," Roach said.
Local 491 President Joy Cage said the argument that RHC
residents need to be in the "community" is misleading.
"Rainier School is not an institution, it's a community," Cage
said.
Rainier School residents and those at all RHCs are valued and
accepted in their community, she said.
"They got dignity and they got respect in the community of
Rainier School," Cage said.
The consultant's report advocates moving most residents into a
community network that right now doesn't exist. "We're concerned
about people's health and safety," Cage said.
"It's not about money, it's about what's going to happen to our
people in the community," Cage added.
Parent Bob Gee said his daughter Angela has lived at Rainier
School for 30 of her 46 years.
"I want my daughter to have consistent care," he said.
He scoffed at the anti-RHC forces that distort the Americans
with Disabilities Act to imply that those like Angela face
discrimination because they choose to live at Rainier School.
"I would dare you to ask Angela if she feels discriminated
against," Gee said.
He said Rainier School and the other RHCs have underutilized
capacity to provide respite care for home-cared disabled clients
so parents and family caregivers can get a breather.
CALL TO ACTION FROM REPS. HURST AND ROACH
Here is the call to action issued by Rep. Hurst and Rep. Roach
at the Oct. 22 Save Rainier School Town Hall meeting. We've
modified it to apply to all RHCs because of the town hall
meeting's consensus that if one RHC goes, they all go in a
domino effect.
Get the word out!
It's important that we get the word out about protecting Rainier
School, Frances Haddon Morgan Center, Lakeland Village, Fircrest
School and Yakima Valley School. Everyone needs to contact these
four people and let them know, in your own words, what these
RHCs mean to you, and how the closure would affect you, those
you love, and your community.
A personal letter goes a long way, and is by far the most
impactful way to get your message through. Although even an
e-mail can make an impact if it is written with a strong,
heart-felt message, a personal letter is always the best. Try to
encourage your friends and family members to send individual
letters as well.
Victor Moore, Director
Washington State Office of Financial Management
P.O. Box 43113
Olympia, WA 98504-3113
Governor Christine Gregoire
P.O. Box 40002
Olympia, WA 98504-0002
House Speaker Frank Chopp
P.O. Box 40600
Olympia, WA 98504-0600
Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown
P.O. Box 40403
Olympia, WA 98504-0403
QUICK REMINDERS:
- OPEN ENROLLMENT FOR HEALTH INSURANCE started Oct. 26
and runs until Nov. 30. Significant changes are coming to
co-pays and deductibles, depending on your plan. This is your
chance to switch to a new plan. Also be aware that Nov. 30 is
the deadline to verify the eligibility of any family members you
cover. The Public Employees Benefits Board sent out only one
open enrollment notice, so don't overlook the chance to change
plans. Benefits fairs start Oct. 27 in Cheney, the UW and
Spokane. For full information and a full list of benefits fairs,
go to www.pebb.hca.wa.gov .
- IMPORTANT NOTICE FOR KING COUNTY MEMBERS. King County
election officials have laid out the ballot there in a way that
it might be easy to overlook Initiative 1033. It appears in the
lower left corner below instruction panels. So, please don't
overlook it. Just about all labor, business and community groups
recommend a vote of NO on 1033 because it will add to the
deficit and force even deeper budget cuts.
SHARED LEAVE REQUESTS:
Finally, four shared leave requests:
IN NEED OF SHARED LEAVE: Lynne Barrett, an attendant
counselor 2 in Region 4 DDD State Operated Living Alternative
(SOLA) program, is recovering from injuries suffered in a
motorcycle accident. She is on extended leave for surgery and is
in great pain. She has used up all her leave. To assist Lynne
with a donation of eligible unused annual leave or sick leave or
all or part of your personal holiday, contact Kim Eagle at (206)
366-6702 or EagleKA@dshs.wa.gov.
IN NEED OF SHARED LEAVE: Erin Seymour, a customer
services specialist 3 with the Department of Health in Olympia
and a member of Local 443, is caring for her 36-year-old husband
who is battling cancer for a second time. He is undergoing
chemotherapy. He cannot work. He faces more chemo and major
surgery in the near future. Erin has nearly exhausted all leave.
To assist Erin with a donation of eligible unused annual leave
or sick leave or all or part of your personal holiday, contact
Lou Owen at (360) 236-4408.
IN NEED OF SHARED LEAVE: Anthony Arredondo, a juvenile
rehabilitation residential counselor at Green Hill School in
Chehalis and a member of Local 862, has been caring for his
seriously ill wife for some time and has exhausted all leave. To
assist Anthony with a donation of eligible unused annual leave
or sick leave or all or part of your personal holiday, contact
Tami Hodgins at (360) 740-3435 or hodgitj@dshs.wa.gov.
IN NEED OF SHARED LEAVE: Ray Holodnak, a DD case resource
manager with DSHS in Bremerton and a member of Local 1181, is
battling post-traumatic stress syndrome from his service as a
combat medic during the Vietnam War. He is unable to work and is
undergoing treatment. He has exhausted all leave and is
desperate need of shared leave. To assist Ray with a donation of
eligible unused annual leave or sick leave or all or part of
your personal holiday, contact your human resources office.
That's it for now. Call Nov. 3 for the next message.
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