Feb 25: Housing Resource Fair in East Providence


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Congressman David Cicilline is hosting a housing resource fair on Saturday, February 25th from 9am to 2pm at East Providence High School, 2000 Pawtucket Avenue, East Providence, RI.

If you are having trouble paying your rent, staying current on your mortgage, are in foreclosure proceedings or want to learn about housing resources, you should go to this event, where you will have the opportunity to meet with loan counselors from banks and housing counseling agencies and learn whether there are and services available for you to save your home. You can RSVP here.

One of the better programs is the year old Hardest Hit Fund RI.  With foreclosures, unemployment, underemployment, and the deep recession still wreaking havoc on the state, there may be options so you can keep your home. If you are in trouble, the most important thing you can do is make sure you seek help immediately. The sooner you try and resolve the issue, the more options you will have.

DL Providence presents: Faces you should know – Feb. 22 from 7 – 9pm

2012 is already shaping up to be an exciting year in politics.  Not only is it a presidential election year, but we have our local politics to keep us entertained.  With the ongoing redistricting fight, the many social and economic issues that will be at play in elections, and Netroots Nation coming to RI in June, we are getting the gang back together and kick-starting Drinking Liberally Providence.  New hosts – Kate Brock, Paula Hodges and Dawn Euer have joined Chris Blazejewski & David Segal to set things in motion.  So, with new hosts in tow, it is  fitting to make February’s DL theme about some other faces with new political gigs in Rhode Island.

On the Docket for next Wednesday:

Jamie Rhodes, RI State Director, Clean Water Action

Jamie formerly served as Clean Water Action’s canvas director from 2006 – 2009 before heading to law school in 2009.  For now, he’ll be splitting time between the Clean Water Action office on Westminster Street and his final semester at Roger Williams University School of Law in Bristol until he graduates in May.  Rhodes has also worked for Ocean State Action and for David Segal’s Congressional Campaign.

Paula Hodges, RI Public Policy & Advocacy Director, Planned Parenthood of Southern New England

Paula is a Missouri native who just relocated to Rhode Island in December. She last worked as Political Director for Missouri National Education Association (MNEA), the state’s largest public employee union and prior to that coordinated progressive labor, environmental and women’s groups’ electoral plans at the America Votes – Missouri table. Paula previously served as deputy director of policy for Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan.

Kristina Fox, Organizing Director, Ocean State Action
Kristina is a native Rhode Islander now living in Providence. After serving two years in AmeriCorps she organized with UNITE HERE! Local 217 and helped win contract victories at the Westin Hotel, Dunkin Donuts Center and East Bay School Lunch Collaborative. Before coming to Ocean State Action she co-managed a nutrition education program for low-income families with Farm Fresh Rhode Island.

So, please join your new hosts in welcoming new faces and Drinking Liberally at a new (slightly earlier) time 7-9pm, and the same great location (Wild Colonial).

Marriage equality back on State House agenda


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Same sex couples in Rhode Islanders will have another opportunity at equal protection under the law as Rep. Art Handy, D-Cranston, will again introduce a bill in the General Assembly that would afford the same marriage rights as their heterosexual counterparts enjoy.

“Every year we move forward,” Handy said, who has introduced a similar bill in the previous nine legislative sessions. Sen. Rhoda Perry, D-Prov., will introduce the bill in the Senate.

Last year, Rhode Island passed a law that allowed gay couples to enter into civil unions. But civil unions, especially Rhode Island’s version, is not tantamount to marriage.

“Separating straight and gay couples into different institutions just isn’t legal,” said Ray Sullivan, of Marriage Equality Rhode Island. “Until same sex couples can marry, Rhode Island has not achieved justice under the law.”

Aside from the fact that “separate but equal” has already been deemed unconstitutional, Rhode Island’s civil union law has a provision that allows religious institutions, such as Catholic hospitals, to be exempt from some of the law’s provisions, meaning a Catholic hospital could deny a family member access to their spouse during an emergency situation or a religious school could deny health care benefits to an employee’s same sex spouse.

There is another bill that will be introduced that would repeal this part of the state’s civil union law, known as the Corvese amendment because Rep. Doc Corvese, D-Prov. and an ardent opponent of gay rights, managed to sneak the provision into the bill at the eleventh hour last session.

Because of the Corvese Amendment, Sullivan said. “Rhode Island has far and away the most discriminatory language of any marriage or civil union bill in the country.”

Last session, the same sex marriage bill did not get a straight up or down vote, even with the speaker of the House, Gordon Fox, being openly gay. He told me after last session that not supporting gay marriage was one of the most difficult decisions of his political career.

Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed does not support equal marriage rights for same sex couples. She told me last year that she thinks Rhode Islanders are more comfortable with civil unions than gay marriage. A poll last year indicated that Rhode Island actually supports gay marriage 50 percent  to 41 percent.

Some legislators have said they worry about electoral repercussions from Catholics, but in Massachusetts “every legislator who supported marriage equality and ran for reelection was reelected,” according to Sullivan.

The marriage equality proposal was first reported by Dan McGowan of GoLocalProv.

TOMORROW: 5th Annual Budget Rhode Map Conference


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Register now for The Poverty Institute‘s 5th Annual Budget Rhode Map Conference “From Poverty to Progress” to hear from leading experts about the economic vitality of Rhode Island and its residents.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

8:30 am: Registration and Continental Breakfast
9:00 am – 12:30 pm: Conference
Rhodes on the Pawtuxet
60 Rhodes Place, Cranston, RI 02905

$35 per person

Featuring keynote speaker Jared Bernstein 

Senior Fellow, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Former Chief Economist and Economic Advisor to Vice President Biden and member of President Obama’s economic team.

Additional Presentations Include: 

A Skilled Workforce: Meeting the Demands of the Innovation Economy

  • Julian L. Alssid, Executive Director, Workforce Strategies Center
  • Rick Brooks, Executive Director, Governor’s Workforce Board
  • Keith Stokes, Executive Director, RI Economic Development Corporation
  • Adriana Dawson, State Director, RI Small Business Development Center

Rhode Island’s Human Service Budget: The Story Behind the Headlines

  • Elena Nicolella, Rhode Island Medicaid Director
  • Linda Katz, Policy Director, The Poverty Institute

 

Despite headline, RI actually has moderate sales tax rates


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If you only read the headline from the Projo today you’d think Rhode Island has again, as the common talking point goes, landed on the losing end of a list of worst states as far as taxes go.

“RI tax burden still among highest in U.S.,” reads the headline.

However, if you took the time to read even the first sentence you’d learn that, actually, the Ocean State is somewhere in the middle of the pack nationwide as far as sales tax rates people pay state to state.

“Yet another ranking of the states’ tax burdens puts Rhode Island at the bottom in New England and in the middle of the U.S.,” reports John Kostrzewa.

The study, by The Tax Foundation, actually ranked Rhode Island 20th in terms of effective sales tax rates that a person would pay in a given state.

While Rhode Island’s state sales tax rate is tied for the second highest in the nation, when local sales taxes are factored in we drop down considerably. It’s an important distinction because it matters little what one jurisdiction or another may charge for a sales tax compared to what the consumer pays in actual retail sales taxes. There are 36 states that have local sales taxes and RI is not one of them.

“A state with a moderate state sales tax rate could actually have a very high combined state-local rate compared to other states,” according to The Tax Foundation’s report.

Kostrzewa makes an interesting point in his article that could actually, if The Tax Foundation factored it in, drop Rhode Island even lower on the list of states with high sales tax burdens.

“There is no mention in the report that Rhode Island’s 7 percent tax is not charged on all items,” he reports, “or that Governor Chafee has proposed that the sales tax be extended to taxicab and limousine rides, car washes, pet grooming and shoes and clothing that costs more than $175 an item. Or that the 8 percent meals and beverage tax be hiked by 2 percent under Chafee’s plan.”

The first clause of his sentence proves Rhode Island’s sales tax burden is actually lower than it may appear in the study (although this may be the case in other states, as well). The second part absolutely doesn’t belong in the study because it is not a part of Rhode Island’s tax system and it’s entirely likely these potential new sales taxes will never become reality. Somewhat similar ideas were cut from the proposed budget last year.

It’s important that Rhode Island discuss its taxing obligations in an honest and fair way, and as a community we aren’t always great at that. We’ve all heard the talking point that people routinely relocate away from Rhode Island because of high taxes and low marks in tax surveys.

On the other hand, just today, as it happens, the Providence Journal also ran a letter from the tax-hating former conservative senate candidate Bob Tingle on why perhaps we shouldn’t worry about those who threaten to flee the state for fiscal reasons. Tingle moved to Florida about a year ago but then decided to move back.

“Rhode Island has its faults, as does everywhere else,” he wrote about his homecoming. “But, Rhode Island is a beautiful and wonderful place. I am proud to be a Rhode Islander and I am extremely happy and grateful that my children grew up here. God Bless our beautiful Ocean State.”