(via bitchaura)
Be there! Plan ahead, since, you know, it’s like a month and a half away. But get excited and bring twenty friends!
(via bitchaura)
Bones and Muscles of the Head of the Raven
The Myology of the Raven, a Guide to the Study of the Muscular System in Birds. R. W. Shufeldt, 1890.
npr:
And the most dogs ever seen skipping on the same rope numbers 13.
The longest ears of any pooch on record belong to Harbor, a Black-and-Tan Coonhound. Harbor is 8 years old and weighs 40.51 kg (89.2 pounds).
Harbor looks ready to fly away!
My brother and I. I made the “punk is life” piece of art for a school project. I am in my job interview clothes so I think I look pretty silly too.
This was in Seaside a few years ago!
Tue, 09/13/2011 - 3:03pm — Anonymous
TACOMA, Wash. — Striking teachers in the state’s third-largest school district hit the picket line Tuesday morning after weekend contract negotiations failed to result in an agreement.
Eighty-seven percent of the Tacoma Education Association’s total membership voted Monday evening to walk out, union spokesman Rich Wood said.
On Tuesday morning, teachers walked back and forth in front of Lincoln High School with picket signs while the districts 28,000 students stayed home.
“Kids need us. But they also need us in a positive learning environment,” said teacher Brent Gaspaire.
The union and district are still fighting over pay, class size and the way the teachers are transferred and reassigned.
The Tacoma School District will seek an immediate court injunction Tuesday to terminate the strike, which school officials contend is illegal, district spokesman Dan Voelpel said.
Superintendent Art Jarvis will revisit the decision to keep schools closed in light of whatever happens in court, Voelpel said.
Both the Washington attorney general and state judges have ruled that state public employees do not have the right to strike.
District officials sent automated calls to parents and staff explaining their response to the strike. Athletics will continue since coaches are covered under a different contract.
Tacoma teachers have been working without a contract since school started Sept. 1. The union and district negotiated Saturday but couldn’t agree on a contract proposal.
A strike vote at the end of August failed by about 28 votes. Union bylaws require approval by 80 percent of the nearly 1,900 members to authorize a strike.
Since the last strike vote was so close, the union decided to allow members with schedule conflicts to vote early. About 200 union members with after-school responsibilities like coaching voted Friday or Saturday, Wood said. This time, 1,623 of the union’s 1,869 members voted to walk out, he said.
A 2006 state attorney general’s opinion said state and local public employees - including teachers - have no legally protected right to strike. That opinion also noted state law lacks specific penalties for striking public employees.
During several past teacher strikes, Washington school districts have gone to court and judges have ordered teachers back to work.
In Washington, only the Seattle and Spokane school districts are larger than Tacoma.
Tacoma teachers earned an average salary of $63,793 during last school year, according to the district. They are the best-paid teachers in Pierce County and about the fifth-highest paid among the state’s largest districts, behind teachers in Everett, Northshore, Seattle and Bellevue, according to state data.
The Legislature included in its state budget a 1.9 percent cut in teacher pay but left it up to school districts to figure out how to save that money. Some districts have made cuts elsewhere, some have cut teacher pay, and others have worked out compromises with their local teachers union.
The News Tribune reports that on the issue of pay, the district said Sunday it has offered teachers two options.
They could maintain the current pay schedule and sacrifice pay for one personal day, one individual optional training day and one school-wide training day. Or they could accept an effective 1.35 percent cut in the salary schedule. In exchange, teachers would be allowed to schedule 2.5 furlough days.
The district said it has also offered to keep class size maximums at the current level. The union wants to decrease class sizes, but the district says subtracting one child per class could cost the district about $1.8 million a year.
(via bradicalmang)
500 Longshoremen take guards hostage, threaten police with baseball bats — Seattle, WA
Work is at a standstill at the ports in Seattle and Everett as a labor dispute that started Thursday morning turned violent.
At least 500 longshoremen stormed the Port of Longview about 4:30 a.m., broke out windows in the guard shack and — as longshoremen wielding baseball bats and crowbars held six guards hostage — others cut brakelines on box cars and dumped grain, according to Longview Police Chief Jim Duscha.
No one was injured and there were no arrests, Duscha said. Fifty police officers from Kelso, Longview, Cowlitz County, the Washington State Patrol and Burlington Northern Railroad responded to the scene.
Duscha said tensions between the International Longshore and Warehouse Union and EGT Terminal have run hot for the past few months after contract negotiations broke down.
The ILWU believes it has the right to work at the facility, but the company has hired a contractor that’s staffing a workforce of other union laborers.
Thursday’s violence was first reported by Kelso radio station KLOG.
“We’re not surprised,” Duscha said. “A lot of the protesters were telling us this in only the start.”
One police sergeant was threatened with baseball bats and retreated, Duscha said. “One officer with hundreds of Longshoremen? He used the better part of discretion.”
The train was the first grain shipment to arrive at Longview. It arrived Wednesday night after police arrested 19 demonstrators who tried to block the tracks. They were led by ILWU International President Robert McEllrath, who said they would return.
The blockade appeared to defy a federal restraining order issued last week against the union after it was accused of assaults and death threats.
In Seattle, port spokesman Peter McGraw said he had no additional information on the walkout.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2016144477_longshoremen09m.html
From NPR’s Kitchen Window: Confessions of a Sriracha Fanatic
In case anyone was wondering, Sriracha is the official condiment of ShortFormBlog. It’s the perfect complement for falafel.
(via npr)
Wired did an interview with the famous Vegan Black Metal Chef. I posted his first video here:
Wired.com: Are you also in a band?
Vegan Black Metal Chef: Yes, my main project is called Forever Dawn. You can hear some old, shit recordings on the MySpace.
I would describe it as industrial…
(via tumblrisforlulz)