Our friends in DC urge Congress to stop clowning around with Homeland Security Jobs.
Seattle City Council: Where are the jobs?
Working Washington got on the Washington Bus at the Candidate Survivor last night to see what our City Council candidates were saying about jobs.
The results: *crickets chirping*. Not much. But we did get a bit of a bite here and there.
The jobs talk roll: --When asked when she had ever not voted with the majority, City Councilwoman Sally Clark said she opposed the $25-per-employee-per-year head tax because she thought it would stunt job creation. The head tax, which was repealed, would have put $4.5 million toward transportation improvements, notably for bicycles and pedestrians.
--Every single candidate standing on the stage--from candidate Dale Pusey to longtime City Councilwoman Jean Godden--said they supported paid sick days for Seattle workers
--Candidate Michael Taylor-Judd said in response to a question about his stance against the Seattle deep bore tunnel that he instead wanted to spend the billions of dollars designated for the project on rapid transit and jobs
Hopefully, as the races roll on until August 16, when the mail-in ballots are due, we hope to hear more about how our city council people plan to put the 8.5 percent of Seattleites that are unemployed back to work.
Regardless, we had a lot of fun watching City Councilman Tim Burgess rap to the tune of Black and Yellow, and listening to City Council candidate Brad Meecham sing Lady Gaga’s Telephone in Japanese.
Hospitality workers rally for liveable wages, safe working conditions
We know Washingtonians want good jobs. Over 600 of our friends in the hotel industry rallied in front of the Westin Hotel to let everyone know. Check out the story here.
A solution to the debt ceiling distraction
by Nathan Jackson
When you buy something, you pay for it. Somebody forgot to tell Congress that.
With all this talk about debt, default and ceilings one of the most important questions has been ignored: how will this affect you? Political posturing has become the story of the day, with negotiations being reported like sports statistics by excited commentators.
Unfortunately, there are actual consequences if the debt ceiling is not raised: higher interest rates, more restrictive loan terms, cuts to socials services, and a possible stock market plummet. This is not a sport. The consequences are much more dire.
Let me explain: The debt ceiling is simply the bill for the spending that Congress has already approved and spent in the previous fiscal year, according to PBS. It is like the check at the end of a meal from a restaurant. When we eat the food and enjoy the environment, we pull out our wallets and pay the amount owed. The debt ceiling is simply the country paying for the supper it has already eaten.
The economic repercussions of skipping out on the bill are not completely predictable since the United States in its history has never pulled a “dine and dash.” Some of the problems that could arise from defaulting on our bills would include a downgrade of our national credit score (the judgment of how good we are for any money that we borrow, or our trustworthiness) as well as sour our reputation as a safe harbor for international financial investment, according to Reuters. It could also lower the trustworthiness of many states’ credit, making it harder for struggling states to get the assistance they need to strengthen their communities.
How would it affect us here in Washington State? Right now Washington State gets some of its funding from the Federal Government. If the Federal Government defaults and has to pick whether to pay the electricity or the water bill, then funding to states will most likely be first on the chopping block. In Washington State we receive federal money to support essential services like college grants, K-12 education, Head Start, job training programs, and other social services that many of us rely on to get back on our feet.
With many of us still struggling to find good work and to find safe, reliable childcare, we cannot afford the loss of Federal money in our community. We have already seen the state budgets shrink with drastic cutbacks in services. We can’t afford to let ideology overrule rational thought.
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We’ve been in this fight before, but things are different this time.
The fight about the debt ceiling has been stooped in willful ignorance of history and an attitude that is too optimistic about the possible problems. Under President Ronald Reagan, the debt ceiling was raised over a dozen times. Under President George W. Bush, the debt ceiling rose more than six times. This is truly a chosen crisis.
The crisis was created because members of Congress wanted to attach spending cuts to a normally routine legislation. The members of Congress have decided to gamble with our economic well-being to prove a political point driven mainly by ideology about the role of government.
But here are the facts. We could end this problem with a simple, clean bill to raise the debt ceiling. We could stop with the posturing and the speeches and simply get it done in order to avoid economic uncertainty. When the check comes, you pay it. It is not that complicated.
Sources: The Olympian Washington State Budget and Policy Center Reuters Think Progress Washington Post The Seattle Times CBS News ABC News
Rebuilding the American Dream
How 10 people created change in their neighborhood by Julio A Sanchez
It is not enough to talk about how upset we are by the direction the country is going. Our actions need to support our beliefs, and I believe we have to come together and work on meaningful steps to fix what we perceive to be wrong.
Last week an estimated 20,000 people did just that. Those concerned with the state of our Nation decided to come together in 1,500 house meetings sponsored by Move ON.
A total of 10 people came to the meeting I attended. We where a diverse group: white, Asian, Latino, men, women, gay, straight, working professionals, retired and underemployed.
I was one of those people. We all expressed it a little different, but we where there because we believed in the need to rebuild the American Dream, a dream based on fairness, not on attacks to the poor and middle class while the rich get tax loopholes for jets and capital gains. A dream whose final goal is equality and good jobs, not dissension and privilege.
During the meeting we shared personal stories about how the recession has affected us and our families and reminded ourselves moments when we have been proud of our country or our communities. Next we voted on a number of ideas to rebuild the American Dream that have been gathered by means of public contribution. Out of these ideas, those chosen will be moved forward as the cornerstones of a campaign to rebuild the dream.
At the end we left with a meaningful commitment to take a specific step to engage others in this process. My commitment was to talk to 5 other people about the Summer Leadership Conference and the Progressive Speak Out, a community event 700 people attended.
If you host your own meeting, the mechanics are rather simple: dedicate about two hours, tell friends to come by, it can be a potluck! Set an agenda with time for introductions and then get to work.
Would you like to organize your own house meeting? Click here: http://action.workingwa.org/page/s/houseparty
Do you want to vote on the ideas to rebuild the American Dream? Click here: http://contract.rebuildthedream.com/
"Si se puede!" -- Speak Out for Good Jobs
700+ Chant and Speak Out for Good Jobs
by Nathan Jackson
The Seattle Speak Out for Good Jobs was loud, raucous and filled with people asking a simple question: Where are the Jobs?
Congressman Jim McDermott and King County Executive Dow Constantine were on stage listening to us tell our stories about how this unfair, unbalanced economy is hurting working families who just want a fair deal.
The room was filled to capacity with people standing on the side aisles rapt in attention as person after person talked about their concerns and struggles. Community members came from near and far for the chance to speak out to power.
The lines on both sides of the microphone at the Brockey Conference Center in South Seattle Community College were nearly to the back of the room. People were standing and pacing waiting for their chance to let their voice be heard because they were sick of being powerless and nameless.
A World War II Veteran talked about how the only way we could make a major difference was to get ownership out of the hands of the powerful and back into the hands of the people.
"We have money for wall street, we have money for wars, don't tell me we're broke,” the veteran said. “We bailed out big banks now where's our bailout?"
Deborah Osborn of Tacoma, who has two college degrees, spoke about how things used to be OK, but now she struggles just to get by with basic needs like food and soap, which she grows or makes herself.
"It used to be ‘put it on the shopping list, no problem,’” she said. “Now if I don't grow it, find it or grind it we don't have it. We have to count every last dollar."
One woman even told the crowd that we are all in this together, to which Congressman McDermott agreed that none of us are alone. McDermott highlighted that one of the solutions in Washington State is to create a state bank so funds that we deposit here do not get invested far across the country in places like Manhattan.
Dow Constantine spoke about how the only way we are going to move these things forward is if we make the common sense investments in education, transportation, roads and bridges and each other. He said that it was madness that business leaders were actively trying to stop progress on the investments that were necessary to get this economy moving again for the working families of King County.
As the momentum of over 100 speakers filled the audience with a sense of comraderie, the room was noisy and responsive with cheers, boos and chants of “Si Se Puede,” the chant of legendary union activist Cesar Chaves meaning “Yes, it can be done” interspersed with the speakers. People were shouting out responses and nodding their heads as speaker after speaker kept returning to a question about fairness and an equal opportunity. We were not asking for handouts, just a fair shake.
Every speaker talked about how they wanted to work and couldn’t find living wage jobs that would solve their problems. Some of us were angry, some of us were hurt, but we were all fired up and ready to do what we needed to make these changes to get this economy moving again for the rest of us.
This is just the beginning and it is a great start.
Underfunding Schools Leads to Ritalin
by Sandra VanderVen My American Dream is that our country will value education enough to properly fund it. That way, no matter how much money a kid’s parents have, they have the same shot at success as everyone else.
What is your American Dream?
Last weekend, there were 1,500 meetings all over the country to determine what We The People want the American Dream to look like, and how to make it a reality. It is just what our country needs, and I’m excited to be a part of it.
Chatting with one of the meeting hosts, I mentioned that I’m disappointed that I have to push my son to succeed in school to a degree that I consider unbalanced and unhealthy, because I’ve realized that the more scholarship money he can get, the less crushing his debts will be after college.
It turned out we were both unhappily turning our backs on our own values because of the economic conditions we find ourselves in.
The choice before my new acquaintance, as a parent of a kid with Attention Deficit Disorder, was whether or not to give her child Ritalin. This drug is addictive. It lowers a child’s appetite, sometimes impeding growth. One can imagine that in general, parents would prefer not to use it.
She ended up deciding to give her child Ritalin, and here’s why. The public schools where she lives have been limping along, chronically underfunded, for decades. There are just not enough adults in the room to give each kid access to a robust education.
It’s even harder for what teachers they have left if the kids aren’t all marching to the same beat.
She decided that even though she doesn’t know what the long term effects will be (No one knows. Ritalin hasn’t been around long enough to find out), the situation was urgent. Her son was failing. His future was in jeopardy.
Schools with more resources offer an environment that allows kids to flourish. Without these resources, kids who don’t have a fall-back will end up with more disciplinary referrals and lower achievement, and more of them will end up medicated. Our schools rely on taxes, and when greedy corporations aren’t paying enough, our kids suffer.
I told a child psychologist I know about this conversation, and asked for his take on it. He told me that if you are rich, you can hire a tutor, you can enroll your kid in a costly program with smaller class sizes, you can do all sorts of things that help the situation, possibly preventing you from having to medicate your kid.
With the cuts in education funding we’re seeing in Washington State right now, kids with ADD that come from poorer families are going to end up in trouble more and medicated more than their classmates whose parents can afford tutors and other interventions. That’s not right.
Now I’m embarrassed that I even mentioned having to push my son more than I’d like to. It is nothing compared to drugging your kid as a path to academic success.
Standing alone, the choices look stark: failure or drugs. If we stand together and push our legislators to close tax loopholes for the rich and end subsidies for greedy corporations, we can expand our choices, gaining the ability to make real decisions about what is best for our kids: Staffing levels for public schools that give every kid a chance to thrive.
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Who We Are -- Linda W.
In this video, Linda talks about standing up for working families in Marysville.
Who We Are -- Shawna L.
Hi. I’m Shawna and I moved here for a better life for my children. I couldn’t find any work in Oregon and I came here to Washington hoping for a better chance. I had to get my sons out of the situation we were in, and even though it was really tough to move, I had to do it. When I got to Washington I had some trouble finding work, but I got a job at the packaging company, and I work overtime as much as possible just to get by. I asked my mom to move in with us to take care of the kids because I can’t afford child care. We're in Section 8 housing. Services are getting taken away and these budget cuts are making us choose between food and childcare. I chose food.
It's not fair what's happening. I’m so sick of services to the rest of us being cut while big corporations don’t even have to pay taxes. I pay my taxes even though I really can’t afford it, but they don’t have to. That’s wrong and that’s why I’m with Working Washington.
There’s no reason why big corporations should get away with paying nothing. It’s time for it to be fair.
Back to work on the South Park Bridge
Two unemployed construction workers from our Seattle Jobs Committee recently met with King County Councilman Larry Gossett. They were joined by a member of Gossett's staff who worked in construction industry and knew what it was like to go through discrimination and difficulty finding work. With construction work starting soon on the South Park Bridge, Councilman Gossett said he would help us get information on the diversity of people working that job and find out more about hiring.
He said that as workers organize to bring attention to any hiring inequalities on that project he will support us. The key to moving forward, he said, is sticking together and taking direct action to provide the "street heat" that makes change possible.
Want to work construction on the South Park Bridge? Let's show them we've got the street heat.