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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (May 16, 2014)
Washington AFL-CIO scores legislators for 2014 session By DON McINTOSH Associate Editor Washington State Labor Council (WSLC), AFL-CIO, has released its rankings of state lawmakers for their work in this year’s legislative session in Olympia. It’s not a cheery report. WSLC called the 60-day session another taste of “D.C.-style political gridlock” because the Republican-led state senate blocked votes on infra- structure spending and dozens of la- bor-backed bills — and approved anti- labor legislation that had no chance of passing the Democratic-majority House or being signed by Washing- ton’s Democratic governor Jay Inslee. It was Washington’s second year in a row of political impasse, created when two Democratic senators defected in late 2012 and turned control of the Washington Senate over to the Repub- lican minority. Washington voters will have a chance to change the partisan makeup of the Legislature this No- vember. As a state labor federation, WSLC coordinates political work for its affil- iated unions and their 400,000 mem- bers. This year it promoted a package of bills it called the “Shared Prosperity Agenda.” Some of that agenda passed the House, but failed to get a vote in the Senate, including bills to: • Require businesses with five or more employees to provide paid sick leave; • Establish the union wage as the prevailing wage for public construction contracts; • Crack down on wage theft; and • Curb contracting abuses by re- quiring cost analysis before outsourc- ing, mandating that contracts to have performance objectives and a cancel- lation clause, requiring agencies to monitor contracts to ensure they are meeting performance objectives, and instituting a five-year ban on contrac- tors who commit fraud or other crimes. WSLC said Senate Republican ob- struction killed even uncontroversial bills that had House Republican sup- port — like a school construction bill that passed the House 90-7. But other WSLC proposals didn’t make it even in the Democratic major- ity House, including a bill to raise the state minimum wage to $12 over three years, and a bill to assess a fee on large employers that don’t provide health in- surance to their low-wage workers. Meanwhile, the Senate took up an anti-labor agenda, passing bills that link teacher evaluations to student test scores, amend the state constitution to require a two-thirds supermajority vote to raise taxes, and create a “good faith” defense when employers violate mini- mum wage and overtime laws. None of those proposals went anywhere in the state House. One bill passed both chambers over labor’s objection and would have be- come law if it weren’t for the gover- nor’s veto. That was a bill pertaining to a program of state grants and loans to local jurisdictions for infrastructure projects intended to promote business development and job creation. The program requires that the jobs created pay at least the county median wage, but Sen. Brian Hatfield (D-Raymond) amended it to eliminate that wage stan- dard. After the House refused to agree with that amendment, a “compromise” was reached to remove the wage stan- dard from half of the program’s grants. It passed the Senate 39-10 and the House 53-44. WSLC counted just one legislative win: The “DREAM Act,” which al- lows children of undocumented immi- grant workers to receive state need grants to attend public institutions of higher education. Here’s how legislators stacked up in Southwest Washington, where many readers of this newspaper live. For each legislator, the first figure is the percentage of pro-labor votes in the 2014 session; the second figure is the lifetime percentage. DISTRICT 49 Senator Annette Cleveland (D) 100% / 100% Position 1 Rep. Sharon Wylie (D) 90% / 87% Position 2 Rep. Jim Moeller (D) 100% / 90% DISTRICT 17 Senator Don Benton (R) 13% / 27% Position 1 Rep. Monica Stonier (D) 90% / 85% Position 2 Rep. Paul Harris (R) 0% / 32% DISTRICT 18 Sen. Ann Rivers (R) 0% / 15% Position 1 Rep. Brandon Vick(R) 0% / 5% Position 2 Rep. Liz Pike (R) 0% / 5% Rep. Liz Pike (R-Camas) also spon- sored a bill to create a sub-minimum “training” wage for new hires — 75 percent of the minimum wage for the first 680 hours (four months of full- time work). WSLC publishes House and Sen- ate voting records each year so union members can understand how their elected representatives voted on issues that affect jobs, wages, and working conditions. The full report is available at the WSLC web site, wslc.org. PAGE 8 BREMERTON, Wash. — The Washington CLUB Charity Golf Clas- sic will be held June 11-12 at Gold Mountain Golf Complex in Bremerton, Washington. CLUB stands for Contrac- tors, Legislators, Unions and Business. Wednesday is a pre-CLUB tournament in which participants play their own ball. Thursday is a four-team scramble format. The tournament is a fundraiser for three Washington charities. Since its inception 13 years ago is has raised more than $1 million. For more infor- mation, contact Brian Remington at 206-432-9014 or e-mail him at: brian@golfcorpsolutions.com. Even if an employer fails to buy workers’ comp coverage, an injured worker has the right to obtain benefits. Learn about your rights before you give up on obtaining help when you are hurt on the job. Vancouver Laborers re-elect Ritchey VANCOUVER — Dave Ritchey has been re-elected business manager/secre- tary-treasurer of Vancouver- based Laborers Local 335. He ran unopposed. Also elected without op- position were President Shannon Stull, Vice Presi- dent Chad Brown, Record- ing Secretary Wayne Dotson, Sgt.-at- Arms Mike Williams; Auditors Daryl Schill, Jeff Wilmot and Ken Cram; and Executive Board members Bobby Wescott, Fred Wilson Jr., and Glenn (Butch) Willman Jr. Willman, Ritchey, and David Letinich were tapped as del- WA-CLUB charity golf tourney June 11-12 egates to the Laborers District Council. Ritchey, 53, is a 35-year member serving in his fifth term. Local 335 is comprised of 540 members working as con- struction laborers, heavy and highway laborers, and public employees. Local 335 held a nomina- tion meeting on April 23. There were no contested races, so all of the nomi- nees won by acclamation. Officers and Board members were installed May 5 by Laborers Northwest Assistant Re- gional Manager David Hayes. Terms of office are three years. NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS MAY 16, 2014