I finish with fixer or blix, but thought that maybe I am not cleaning the tube that dumps chemicals into the drum or out of the drum so blix or fixer is contaminating the developer on the next cycle.
Yeah, that's a possible problem.
Here is a picture of the two Kodak process negatives on the light table.
Which one is the first one you processed?
The bottom one definitely looks more cyan.
Inverted and (sort of, to the extent possible) compensated for the snapshot quality and backlight color, the color balance between the sheets doesn't look all that different:
The cyan density along the edge of the bottom sheet (red in the inverted file) can be a sign of insufficient fixing in that area. You could try and place a drop of fixer concentrate (C41 or B&W, doesn't matter) on the affected edge. Leave it there for 5-10 minutes, then wash the entire sheet. If you see the little dot where the fixer drop was as a lower density, more orange hue, then insufficient fixing was the problem.
Given the apparent pattern with a gradient of cyan density running into the frame and dropping away there, a light leak is another possible cause. Be wary of any red indicator LEDs etc. in your darkroom. Very bright white light filtering through black cloth (changing bag), film bags etc. can also show up as red fog (cyan density).