This Week at the General Assembly


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A highlight and discussion of some of the notable pieces of legislation going through the General Assembly this week.

Education aid advance bill passes Assembly, becomes law – The General Assembly approved and the governor signed legislation requested by the East Providence Budget Commission to allow the city to receive its state education aid early to prevent it from running out of cash this week. The legislation (2012-H 70522012-S 2016) was sponsored by the chairmen of the House and Senate Finance Committees, Rep. Helio Melo (D-Dist. 64, East Providence) and Sen. Daniel Da Ponte (D-Dist. 14, East Providence, Pawtucket).  Strange how the state is required to pass emergency legislation releasing education funds early to the city of East Providence after cutting education funding and aid to cities and towns by about $200 million over the past 5 years.

House committee hears bill to adjust auto valuation process – The House Municipal Government Committee heard testimony on legislation that would revise the motor vehicle valuation process that is used to set municipal auto excise taxes. Sponsored by Rep. Joseph M. McNamara (D-Dist. 19, Warwick, Cranston), the bill (2012-H 7098) would use an assessment method based on the trade-in value of a car, rather than the “clean retail value” now being used.  An all-too-predictable backlash caused by the state eliminating the motor vehicle tax reimbursements to cities and towns, which then put cities and towns on the hook to raise the revenue (through motor vehicle taxes).

East Bay legislators to fight any tolls on Mount Hope, Sakonnet River bridges Rep. Raymond E. Gallison Jr. (D-Dist. 69, Bristol, Portsmouth), Rep. John G. Edwards (D-Dist. 70, Tiverton, Portsmouth) and Sen. Walter S. Felag Jr. (D-Dist. 10,Warren, Bristol, Tiverton) introduced bills (2012-H 71302012-S 2092,2012-H 70362012-S 2093) to prevent the Rhode Island Turnpike and Bridge Authority from instituting tolls on the Mount Hope and Sakonnet River bridges. RITBA postponed a vote on tolls scheduled this week until Feb. 8 while the Department of Transportation works on alternative funding proposals.  I can understand why people of the island wouldn’t want to pay tolls.

Aquidneck delegation sponsors bill for scenic tour, transportation tax exemption – Legislation has been submitted in the Senate to restore the sales tax exemption on scenic tour and transportation services. Sponsored by President of the Senate M. Teresa Paiva (D-Dist. 13, Newport,Jamestown), the bipartisan legislation (2012-S 2049) has been referred to the Senate Finance Committee.  What the state should be doing is eliminating all the tax exemptions and lowering the sales tax rate.  Same goes for income taxes, eliminate the myriad tax deductions and loopholes, and lower the overall rate (although the state should have more than 3 income tax brackets).

Bill introduced to allow Neumont University to launch R.I. campus  – House Majority Leader Nicholas A. Mattiello (D-Dist. 15, Cranston) and Sen. Hanna M. Gallo (D-Dist. 27, Cranston) have introduced legislation (2012-H 71682012-S 2075) to allow Neumont University, a private computer-science university with a campus of about 330 students in Utah, to apply to the Board of Governors for Higher Education to establish a second campus in Providence.  Beware of for-profit educational institutions.  They’re not all evil, but there is a huge incentive to falsify records to boost attendance, and to cut corners on the quality of education.

‘Katie’s Law’ bills again introduced in Assembly – Legislation has been introduced in the General Assembly again this year to require that a DNA sample be collected from suspects arrested for any crime of violence. The bills (2012-H 70562012-S 2061) are modeled after “Katie’s Law,” which has been enacted in 24 other states. Sponsors are Rep. Brian Patrick Kennedy (D-Dist. 38, Hopkinton, Westerly) and Sen. David E. Bates (R-Dist. 32, Barrington, Bristol).  Collecting DNA from suspects?

Bill would prohibit political contributions from vendors with state contracts – Rep. Michael M. Marcello (D-Dist. 41, Scituate, Cranston) has introduced legislation (2012-H 7093) to prohibit any vendor who has a contract with the state worth more than $5,000 or who has a bid on a state contract worth more than $5,000 from making contributions to any political committees established to promote the candidacy of an officeholder responsible for awarding contracts or any declared candidates for that office.  We should move toward publicly funded elections.

SOPA/PIPA Dead, At Least For Now

vote for the net
Huge win for the Internet, its users, and democracy.  LA Times:

The SOPA online piracy bill that helped spark this week’s unprecedented Internet protests will be redrafted, its lead sponsor said Friday.

The move came shortly after the Senate postponed a key vote on the companion PIPA bill scheduled for next week and amid calls for consensus before Congress moves forward on any legislation to address the problem of foreign piracy websites.

This New York Times article covers a lot of the work many of the grassroots groups — including Demand Progress — have undertaken to help us win this fight.  (We’ve grown from squat to more than one million members strong over the last year.)  And these quotes from the boss of the Hollywood Lobby are perhaps the most extraordinary words of all:

The MPAA (the lobby for big movie studios which created these terrible bills) was shocked and seemingly humbled.  “‘This was a whole new different game all of a sudden,’ MPAA Chairman and former Senator Chris Dodd told the New York Times. ‘[PIPA and SOPA were] considered by many to be a slam dunk.’”

“’This is altogether a new effect,’ Mr. Dodd said, comparing the online movement to the ArabSpring. He could not remember seeing ‘an effort that was moving with this degree of support change this dramatically’ in the last four decades, he added.”

Principles are Worth More than Political Awards


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You may have heard about our recent letter to General Treasurer Gina Raimondo requesting that she return an award from The Manhattan Institute, an extremist right wing group that promotes offensive, ignorant and hurtful positions towards the LGBTQI community, women, minorities, and our environment.

Marriage Equality Rhode Island was among a group of organizations that respectfully asked Treasurer Raimondo to return the award and condemn the hateful positions promoted by the Manhattan Institute. Instead of returning the award, she defended her association with the New York think tank by saying: “Accepting an award from any organization is never an across-the-board endorsement of its leanings.”  But that just misses our point.

Organizations like the Manhattan Institute use awards programs for many purposes, including raising money and validating their positions on a range issues to a broader, mainstream audience.  A cursory review of the Manhattan Institute’s website will, in fact, lead one to a number of articles and position papers that advance an anti-gay agenda and misogynistic agenda.

As LGBTQ people we know the power in who you will or won’t stand next to you. We know that standing for equality and fairness means refusing to stand next to ignorance and hatred. Raimondo’s close association with this organization could be interpreted by many as implicit acceptance of all their positions, not just those related to public pensions. We have advised the treasurer that those who aspire to political leadership are judged by the company they keep. Principles are worth far more than political accolades.