Tag Archives: card check

Tell Congress: No expiration date for clean energy


 No Expiration Date for Clean Energy

Unless Congress acts now, more key tax incentives for renewable energy, energy efficiency, and clean vehicles will expire at the end of the year. Meanwhile, fossil fuels will continue to profit from permanent subsidies that are not available to clean energy.

When veterans like me come home from war


VoteVets.org

After returning from Iraq, transitioning back to civilian life was a real challenge.

I struggled with anxiety, depression and an aversion to crowded areas. And while I have always found peace in the outdoors, it was never more evident than when I returned home. My road to recovery was not just spent in VA offices, but also on hiking trails and the cold water streams in some of our country’s national parks.

That’s why I eagerly testified before Congress last week in support of a bill that would allow all veterans with any disability rating FREE access to national parks for life.

For many veterans, the financial cost of accessing these parks is a prohibitive barrier to spending time alone, or with friends and family, hiking, rock climbing, rafting, camping, or just decompressing. But Congress is considering legislation to change that.

Can I count on you to send a message to your Representative telling them to support the bill granting free access to our national parks for veterans with any disability rating?

Sending a message using our tool will deliver it straight to your reps office, and it would mean a lot to the many veterans — including thousands of VoteVets members — who are counting on passage of this bill.

There’s also science to support why this legislation is important.

Last year, a University of Michigan study found that “Veterans participating in extended outdoor group recreation show signs of improved mental health, suggesting a link between the activities and long-term psychological well-being.”

This issue has bipartisan support in the notoriously partisan House of Representatives, and taking a moment to write your Representative today can push it across the finish line.

http://action.votevets.org/national-parks

Thanks for making your voice heard on this issue.

All the best,

Garett Reppenhagen
Iraq War Veteran
VoteVets.org

In the Newsroom with Gov.Inslee ~ Nov. ~


JayInslee11/24/2014 – Gov. Inslee asks Washington shoppers to support Small Business Saturday, shop local on Nov. 29

the other Washington … in news November 2014


PDF of today's Seattle Times front page

Fishermen’s wives sue to keep Oregon rescue station open

Sockeye salmon in the upper Columbia

Start early or late to reach holiday destination

Rep. Kagi predicts ‘grueling, contentious’ 2015 state legislative session | Lynnwood Today

Hollywood producers snubbing Seattle; here’s why

 

We’re no better than Ferguson; maybe worse


Seattle Times staff columnist

Mayor Ed Murray says “Seattle is not Ferguson.” In countless ways I’m sure he’s right, except for this very important one: It’s just as unlikely for cops to get charged for bad deeds here as it is in supposedly backward Missouri.

In fact we’re arguably worse than Ferguson.

No offense to the thousands of protesters marching on behalf of Michael Brown. But what has stood out to me is how the Ferguson case isn’t nearly as flagrant as recent police-brutality cases here in progressive Puget Sound.

In Ferguson, the police officer, Darren Wilson, had a good case to make that he was under some level of assault. If it’s true that Brown slugged the officer through the squad-car door and tried to wrestle away his gun — as the officer and some witnesses attest — then getting even a low-level manslaughter charge to stick against the officer would be next to impossible.

The Ferguson case is supercharged by that region’s racial history. But still — compare the facts of it to what happened in Seattle to John T. Williams in 2010. Ferguson isn’t on the same radar screen of outrageousness.

Unlike Brown, Williams didn’t assault anyone or do anything hostile, beyond toting his carving knife with a wood block and maybe looking menacingly in a police officer’s direction. The officer, Ian Birk, told him to drop the knife. When Williams didn’t — perhaps because he couldn’t hear — Birk shot five times and killed him.

Even the police department called that “egregious.” Yet no charges were filed. Our outgoing U.S. attorney, Jenny Durkan, this week compared that case to Ferguson in an article she wrote for The Washington Post, headlined: “As a federal prosecutor I know how hard it is to charge officers like Darren Wilson.”

An officer has to have malice or willfully bad intent to be convicted, she wrote. It’s an incredibly high bar. “Accident, mistake, fear, negligence or bad judgment is not sufficient,” Durkan wrote when declining to charge Birk.

You can see why the chances of Darren Wilson getting convicted by the state or the feds in Ferguson would be near zero.

We’ve had other baffling cases, such as Christopher Harris, a completely innocent man who mistakenly ran from police in Belltown in 2009 and then was shoved into a wall so hard it paralyzed him for life. The officer who did that not only wasn’t charged, but remained on the force.

But one case here was so extreme that prosecutors took the rare step of charging the officer. Troy Meade, of the Everett police, had shot an aggressive drunken driver, Niles Meservey, seven times from behind, killing him. The officer’s conduct was so questionable that a fellow officer did something unheard of: He crossed the blue line to testify against his mate, claiming the force Meade used was both excessive and vindictive.

Yet Meade was acquitted of second-degree murder by a jury in 2011. The officer argued the car was about to back up and hit him, and because the law puts such a premium on this state of mind defense, he walked.

My point isn’t to bash our local cops. These were isolated cases and don’t reflect on other officers.

But the narrative that’s developed out of Ferguson is that the officer there wasn’t charged because the system is inherently racist. Parts of it may be, but more so it’s just incredibly pro-cop. It lets them walk pretty much no matter what.

Durkan writes it’s this way for a legitimate reason: “We want police to be able to make split second decisions necessary to protect us.” That is crucial.

But in the Williams shooting in particular, it tilted too far. If there was nothing wrong legally with what happened to him, then it’s hard to imagine anything with the police ever being legally wrong.

Ferguson is bringing up an important debate about racial inequality.

But the case is too murky to support a national movement on police accountability.

We’ve had much starker ones right here. Seattle may be more Ferguson than Ferguson.

Danny Westneat’s column appears Wednesday and Sunday. Reach him at 206-464-2086 or dwestneat@seattletimes.com