Decriminalizing Pot Would Save State Money


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Massachusetts, Connecticut and Maine have already decriminalized possession of less than ounce of marijuana, as have a total of 13 states. But don’t take our neighbors’ words for it, a special Rhode Island senate commission on marijuana prohibition found in 2010 that the move would actually save the state money.

“Even by conservative estimates,” reads the group’s final report. “Rhode Island state agencies and departments involved in criminal justice stand to save money in their respective offices should the Rhode Island General Assembly decide to pass the decriminalization of possession of an ounce or less of marijuana.”

The report is relevant as the Senate Judiciary Committee is slated to hear Sen. Josh Miller’s bill that would make possession of less than an ounce of pot punishable by a $150 ticket. Currently, those caught with less than an ounce can be imprisoned for up to a year or fined between $200 and $500, or both.

In 2009, according to the group’s report, 1,145 people were charged with simple possession of marijuana and were represented by the public defender’s office. At an average of $347 per case, the change in law could save Rhode Island some $400,000 a year.

A “majority” of the Rhode Island Senate Commission to Study the Prohibition on Marijuana, made up of medical, legal and political leaders from across the state “agrees that marijuana law reform will not only benefit the state from a budget perspective, but would also avoid costly arrests or incarcerations due to simple possession of marijuana.” Former Central Falls Police Chief Joe Moran and retired State Trooper Joseph Osediacz did not think so.

The state as a whole seems to agree with the majority of the commission. A Public Policy Polling survey found that 65 percent of Rhode Islanders agree that the penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana should be lessened. Last week, when a House committee debated a similar bill 15 people testified in favor of the legislation and only one, Kathy Sullivan of the Barrington Prevention Coalition, testified against it.

Also on the docket is Sen Rhoda Perry’s bill that would legalize and tax marijuana.

Lower Taxes Don’t Always Mean Better Living


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As some legislative leaders continue to balk at rolling back income tax cuts as a way to correct Rhode Island’s budget deficit, saying they still need to let the flatter taxes play out to see if they stimulate the economy, maybe there’s something they should consider.

“There is no reason for states to expect that reducing or repealing their income taxes will improve the performance of their economies,” according to a new report from the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy that shows that the nine states with the highest income taxes are faring better economically than the nine states that don’t have income taxes.

Here’s a link to an article about the study, since .pdf links are clunky.

While contrary studies from the right-leaning organizations exist, the ITEP study says they miss some key points: growing states, whether they have high or no income taxes, are doing better than shrinking or static states and states with no income taxes tend to get money from natural resource extraction.

Rhode Island has been rolling back its top level income tax bracket since 2007, but this year a new bill gaining steam at the State House would put the top income tax bracket back at 9.9 percent for those making more than $250,000. Speaker Gordon Fox initially said the bill would go no where this year, but later issued a more cautious response as the legislation gained momentum.

Budgeting for Disaster: Medicaid in the Budget


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FY2013 budget

FY2013 budgetIn volume II of the budget, you’ll find there the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS), which contains the Departments of Children Youth and Families (DCYF), Health (DoH), Human Services (DHS), and Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH).

Collectively these departments spend over $3 billion, about 40% of the overall budget. In the Governor’s budget, only about 40% of that is actual tax dollars, and the rest is either federal money or restricted receipts, such as fees for service.

The big kahuna in the Human Services budget is, of course, Medicaid, so we may as well begin there. The expense for Medicaid has been moved from the DHS budget to the umbrella EOHHS. This, of course, means nothing to the budget’s bottom line, only that the accounting for that expense appears on page B2-118 for years before FY12 and before, and on B2-12 for FY13 and beyond.

So much for where to find it. How much is it? The Medicaid budget for next year is projected to be $1.66 billion, approximately the same as was originally budgeted for this year.

The same as this year? But what about the skyrocketing medical inflation? It’s there, but masked by offsetting cuts in service. The “Managed Care” portion of Medicaid that you see in the breakdown of the Medicaid costs is also known as RIte Care, and it has more than doubled in ten years, though it still amounts to only about a third of all the Medicaid. The annual cost increase for Managed Care has been about 7.5% each year. Eligibility rules tightened, but demand increased, so that includes a very minor decrease in enrollment over that time. What’s worse, federal reimbursement paid for 55 cents of every dollar in 2003, almost 64 cents in 2010 (part of the stimulus package) and only 51 cents in 2013.

In order to control these costs, the state has added or increased co-pays and restricted eligibility several times in recent years. Apart from that, there has been little more than some studies and planning from Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts in response to this ongoing disaster—remember, this affects everybody, not just the state budget—and this year is no different. The Governor’s 2013 budget will cut all dental care for adults to save $2.7 million. “Refinements to Medicaid managed care programs” will save another $2.5 million [ES-56]. Lots of these refinements involve cutting services, though some, like providing more care through “Patient-Centered Medical Homes” are potentially good ideas, depending on how they’re implemented.

One problem with the push for managed care is that in some cases it may well insert a new layer of bureaucracy where none is needed. A director of a residential care provider pointed out to me that his agency is already providing managed care for most of their residents. That is, with the advice of a consistent array of medical professionals, the agency selects care options for its residents. This is pretty much what the medical home concept suggests. If new requirements simply force them to add a layer of doctors to what they’re already doing, it won’t necessarily reduce any costs or improve any care. (It also calls into question the cost savings estimates for the managed care push.)

The other big component of cost saving in Medicaid is a proposal to save another $14 million by simply paying 4% less for the care.

Paying less? Who knew you could just solve the health care cost problem so easily. Why didn’t we think of this years ago? But yes, the Governor’s budget proposes paying 4.14% less for all Medicaid coverage that require a monthly per-person fee (“capitation”). This is mostly Neighborhood Health Plan, though  United Health also has a share of that market. Neighborhood, though, has the misfortune of being in the business of serving the Medicaid population almost exclusively, so they will be much harder hit than the other two. Obviously any cost cutting reform has to start somewhere, but it’s hard to see how this will do the trick.

It’s worth an aside here to mention one of the factors in health care cost inflation that seems never to come up in serious discussions of the rising cost of health care. After all, what’s the fastest-growing component of a medical practice’s expenses? More likely than not, it’s health insurance for its employees. For all the fancy machinery of modern medicine, it’s still a labor-intensive business. A giant facility like Rhode Island Hospital puts more than half its budget towards salaries, and a small practice will see an even higher fraction, 70% or more.

A physician’s assistant earning $65,000 a year is probably receiving a health benefit worth around 20% of that if he or she has a family. What’s more, all those pharmaceutical firms, medical device manufacturers, and bandage makers also have to deal with rising health care costs. In other words, a significant part of what an increase in health care costs pays for is… an increase in health care costs.

This sounds like a dopey little irony, but engineers call this a feedback loop, and electronic systems with less feedback than this also spiral out of control. Obviously there are plenty of factors driving health care inflation—not least the vast number of people who see health care as a way to get rich—but at root, linking health care and employment creates an unstable system, prone to amplify increases.  Could that not be worth some attention?

Next: Food inspection dereliction
Read more from this series

Sen. Crowley vs. Bob Flanders on Bankruptcy’s Benefits


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Bob Flanders, the receiver for Central Falls, and Elizabeth Crowley, a state senator from Central Falls, are both offering Woonsocket advice on whether or not to pursue bankruptcy. Whose advice should Woonsocket put more stock in? Let’s compare…

Crowley has to live with the effects of bankruptcy. Flanders doesn’t even show up for public meetings in Central Falls, and will get paid more than a third of a million dollars because of bankruptcy.

Crowley went to Central Falls High School, and worked for 40 years there as a city clerk. Flanders went to Harvard Law School, lives in East Greenwich and I’ll bet had never been to Central Falls before becoming its receiver.

Crowley has said bankruptcy has been bad for Central Falls’ morale. Flanders told the Projo “it’s not a mark of shame.” But he also made some pretty pointed jokes about it at the Follies, for which he was roundly criticized.

Crowley said Central Falls lost its public libraries and community center because of bankruptcy. In East Greenwich, where Flanders raised his family, the school committee recently decided to spend $1 million renovating its school library. Oh yeah, about a third of that project will be paid for by the state. In 2010, East Greenwich renovated a historic gym into a community center for $3 million.

Woonsocket may indeed decide that bankruptcy is the best option for it to right its fiscal issues. But it would be wise to consider Crowley’s perspective on it more than Flanders. Doing otherwise would be like asking the fox, rather than the farmer, for advice on protecting the hen house.

RI Called ‘Hostile’ on Pro-Choice Issues


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A Guttmacher Institute map shows in dark red the states that it lists as "hostile" on pro-choice issues, including Rhode Island.

If it’s true, as Nancy Pelosi said recently when  she was here in Rhode Island, that the recent dust-up over reproductive freedom for women is an election year tactic, it might just prove to be a successful one in Rhode Island.

While we may like to fancy ourselves a left-leaning state, such is not the case when it comes to abortion rights.

The Guttmacher Institute, a public policy group that specializes in reproductive health, has listed Rhode Island as being the only northeastern state listed as being “hostile to abortion.” And it’s been listed that way since at least 2000. Check out these three maps to see how the country has become more hostile to abortion rights since 2000.

It’s not surprising that Rhode Island would be listed as hostile as only a third of overwhelmingly Democratic House of Representatives are on record as being pro-choice, according to Planned Parenthood of Southern New England. The Senate is even more hostile to reproductive rights, with only seven of 38 members identifying themselves as being pro-choice or 18 percent – and one of the them is Republican Dawson Hodgson of North Kingstown.

Given this, it’s no wonder Rep. Karen MacBeth’s bill that would require Rhode Island abortion doctors to perform an ultrasound and to ask the woman if she would like to see the picture might gain traction – even though it carries very high fines for doctors who don’t comply: $100,000 fine for a first offense and up to $250,00o for a second offense.

A Republican legislator who is pro-choice but doesn’t go on record for political purposes recently told me that abortion issues are losers for social liberals. Abortion politics, they said, energize only the anti-choice side of the debate.

To that end, it is no surprise that FOX News told MacBeth, she said, they are ready to report on Rhode Island if and when her bill comes up for a vote. Seeing how well economic issues are going for conservatives, they may as well try to move the debate over to social issues.

Bits & Pieces: Spring in America and Underdogs


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(via Wikipedia)

Al Jazeera Examines Occupy Wall Street: Occupy Providence has thrown the buzzwords “American Spring” around on their Google Groups page a bit, and I’m still skeptical, but this video on Al Jazeera English’s “Fault Lines” program gives us a reminder of just what was going on then. Undoubtedly, Occupy changed the debate. Since Occupy retrospectives seem to be in vogue (bringing some attention to Rhode Island due to the negotiated ending), this one is good.

“Fault Lines” is a pretty good program, and I’ve largely enjoyed each new one. Most interesting to Occupiers is probably this one on Chile’s mass actions. I’d argue that Chile, with its Chicago School-designed free market economy, relative modernity and democratic government is far more similar to the United States than either Spain or Greece or any of the Arab nations that have faced mass movements, and it’s been far more successful at mobilizing youth despite a far more traditional organizing model.

How Underdogs Can Win: Malcolm Gladwell provides a on the idea of David vs. Goliath, and dissects how undermining the rules of the game creates havoc when facing more traditional-minded opponents. For anyone who’s ever had to run on tight resources, it’s definitely rewarding. Mr. Gladwell is/was a tobacco industry shill, but there’s no denying he’s a capable writer. Though… I’m still not sure if on closer examination the whole thing doesn’t fall apart.

RI 10th Least At-Risk for Corruption In Nation: According to the corruption risk report cards released by the State Integrity Investigation. Since I’ve previously written about how RI isn’t really corrupt versus other states, I feel vindicated. Unfortunately, we got a C overall and the least corrupt was New Jersey with a B+. The naysayers are bound to point out that we got an A in redistricting, despite the CD1 maneuvers. But we got Fs in Judicial Accountability and State Civil Service Management, so I guess that’s where the conversation should focus (it probably won’t). The next step for the Investigation is to suggest solutions. Keep an eye out.

New Hampshire Libertarian Republican/Democratic Coalition Defeats Marriage Repeal: In a 211-116 vote in the House, libertarian Republicans and state Democrats joined up to defeat a socially conservative Republican attempt at repealing the extension of marriage to cover homosexual couples. Given that in Rhode Island, it was a struggle even with a gay Speaker of the House to pass civil unions, this defense of the right of marriage by social liberals in New Hampshire proves that it doesn’t matter what letter stands next to your name, you can still defend people’s rights. The question for the Republicans is if this means that the party’s social conservatives are finally facing a backlash after their success in 2010.

96% of Americans Admit to Receiving Welfare (When Told What Counts As Welfare): Yes, apparently when you don’t have to check in with a government agency to get welfare, you don’t acknowledge it as welfare. However, when you’re aware you’re receiving government welfare, you’re much more pro-government. Ezra Klein’s post for Washington Monthly ends up reinforcing the notion that our welfare system is dangerously screwed up. Basically, tax policy transfers a lot of wealth from the poor to the wealthy. The post doesn’t go into it, but in many ways, deficit spending does the exact same thing. Poor people don’t buy government bonds.

Rhode Islanders Take On Payday Lenders:* Speaking of tax policy, over at the Barrington Patch, a large group of people, churches, politicians, and advocacy groups have a letter laying out why reforming payday loans is a smart idea. It’s pretty clear that the industry makes an exorbitant profit and won’t go belly up if they have to deal with reduced profits, nor that the current rate (260% APR) is particularly necessary. In case you missed it, Cracked.com’s John Cheese wrote an article long ago about how one gets screwed being poor, and payday loans took #4.

__________________________________

*Correction: Earlier, this letter was falsely attributed to Barrington Patch editor William Rupp. Apologies for the mistake.

The Smaller The Town, The Hotter The Politics


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Charlestown Town Council President Tom Gentz

With less than 8,000 people, beautiful beaches and forests and relative affluence, you’d think Charlestown would be a tranquil place. But don’t believe it. Politics is almost always a blood sport, and it seems that the smaller the setting, the bloodier it gets.

The dominant political group in Charlestown is called the Charlestown Citizens Alliance, or CCA. They are closely related to the RI Statewide Coalition (which is headquartered in Charlestown). The CCA has taken over from the GOP as the voice of the elite, with a little dash of Tea Party flavoring.

To give you a taste of Charlestown politics, come visit Progressive Charlestown.

Our hot topic in town is a move by our CCA-controlled Town Council to begin purging town staff who hold politically incorrect thoughts.

Here’s the story from Rhode Island’s Down Under:

Charlestown Citizens Alliance launches purge against town staff

Town Hall morale has always been a problem, but it seems to be at an all-time low, as the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA) appears poised to try to clean house.

The tempo of public attacks on Town Administrator William DiLibero by the CCA’s top elected officials, Town Council Boss Tom Gentz and Council Vice-President Deputy Dan Slattery, has escalated to the point where a vote of no-confidence, if not dismissal, seems likely within the month. It all hinges on which way Boss Gentz thinks the political wind is blowing (his e-mail is tom.gentz@charlestownri.org).
And don’t be surprised if Deputy Dan tries to figure out a way around the anti-revolving-door ethics rule to get the Town Administrator job for himself (he applied for the gig before). Under state law, there is a one-year waiting period for a Council member to become a town employee, but Deputy Dan hasn’t let the rules stop him in the past.

Boss Gentz – trying to figure out which way the wind blows
Councilor Lisa DiBello’s vote to dismiss DiLibero is a sure bet. DiBello was fired by DiLibero in May 2010 and he is one of the lead defendants in DiBello v. Charlestown. Indeed, as Gentz and Slattery come down on DiLibero, they cement their relationship with DiBello. As the saying goes, “the enemy of my enemy is my friend.”
Even though it would appear to be a clear conflict of interest for DiBello to participate in any personnel action against DiLibero (given her lawsuit), DiBello has shown a casual regard for her ethical obligations in the past.
The CCA sent out an e-bleat to its supporters on March 20, listing DiLibero’s high crimes and misdemeanors as though they were Articles of Impeachment.
They say DiLibero “concealed important information.” They say “he politicized issues.”
They say “he has risked a cordial relationship that the Town has with the National Park Service (NPS) and US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) regarding Ninigret Park.”
They say “his actions cost the Town a considerable amount of money and time spent by town employees for initiatives that were impossible to achieve.”
Councilor Lisa DiBello – pay-back time
Finally – and this one is pretty amazing, coming from the CCA – they say “his actions caused false expectations by hundreds of  local youngsters and coaches who expected to get lighting at Ninigret.”
Hypocrites!
With the CCA’s history as Charlestown’s shadow government, and the record of their town leadership team of Gentz, Slattery and Platner in concealing important information, they lack the credibility to raise this charge against DiLibero.
As for “politicizing issues,” it is the CCA and its town leadership team that have politicized every issue – affordable housing, alternative energy, land use – usually to push its own radical agenda of serving the interests of Charlestown’s elite.
This current attack on DiLibero and their parallel attack on town management of Ninigret Park shows just how the CCA runs its own political machine. While the CCA rails against the imposition of state law on Charlestown with regard to affordable housing, they seem to be pleading for more federal dominion over Ninigret Park.
Our craven colleagues at the CCA will do anything and say anything to advance their anti-family agenda – even when it means taking contradictory stances on “legal, ethical and moral principles” – and to suck up to their donor base among Charlestown’s elite.
With the CCA’s oft-demonstrated hostility toward families with children, it is shocking to see them charge DiLibero with dashing the hopes of the poor urchins regarding the prospects of sports lighting.
As for their issue about DiLibero “risking” the town’s cordial relationship with the Interior Department, it seems that DiLibero was the only person among the town leaders who was willing to at least raise issues with Interior, rather than simply knuckle under to the feds.
Federal overseer Charlie Vandemoer
Yes, it’s true that Charlestown’s federal overseer, Charlie Vandemoer of the US Fish and Wildlife Service, asked the state to hold off on granting Charlestown funds for dark-sky-friendly sports lights. He raised legitimate concerns. But since when do we simply accept the feds’ position as immutable and non-negotiable?
Instead, it appears that the CCA and its town leadership team have seized on federal resistance to proposed uses ofNinigret Park as a reason to roll back town authority over the town’s land – and to purge DiLibero.
Being the Town Administrator of a strife-torn, deeply divided town like Charlestownis a daunting challenge. The politically safe way to live long and prosper in the Town Administrator job is to do as little as possible because if you try to do anything, you will piss somebody off.
DiLibero has made mistakes. But do we have a reasonable expectation that he or anyone will never make mistakes? I think it’s pretty surprising he hasn’t made more mistakes, because he has actually tried to get some things accomplished in town.
I have not agreed with every action he has taken – I’ve called him on some of them. But his mistakes have, in my opinion, been without malice and more often due to attempts to do things that didn’t come off. One of the CCA’s charges against him is just that – that he has had his staff try things that were, in the CCA’s opinion, “impossible to achieve.”
That is their opinion. I believe the only things that are impossible are those that we fail to try. The CCA does not want progress in Charlestown. They want to freeze Charlestown like a bug in amber. They yearn for some mythical good old days when the town elite ran things without challenge. When their inferiors knew their place.
Now the CCA has decided that DiLibero threatens that vision of an antebellum Charlestown and he has to go.
There are other town staff who are on the CCA hit list. I will not identify them so as not to draw more attention to them. But don’t expect the CCA purge to stop at DiLibero. Indeed, if they succeed in ousting him – and decide to install Deputy Dan in his place – you should expect to see wholesale departures of town staff.
It’s time for good and decent people in Charlestown to say enough to the CCA. They rode into office promising a change to a more civil, tranquil political environment, openness and transparency, and an end to personal vendettas and agendas, and yet, if anything, they have clearly and indisputably made matters far worse.

Could R.I. Be the Next Social Enterprise Hub?


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The Social Enterprise Ecosystem Economic Development (SEEED) Summit was held March 16 and 17 at Brown University. (Kyle Hence/ecoRI News staff)

Business leaders, legislators, academics, researchers, students and social entrepreneurs from across the country gathered March 16 and 17 for a two-day conference at Brown University to advance social enterprise as a new paradigm for economic development.

In a speech Saturday, Rep. David Cicilline, D-R.I., said he was drafting the first proposed national legislation to directly support social enterprise — an emerging movement that innovates new business models to help solve social and environmental ills.

“You are the game-changers we need, you are the economic engine regenerating our communities,” Cicilline said. “Social enterprise has the greatest potential to deliver the products and services that solve the major challenges we face. It’s a movement whose time has come.”

Cicilline is committed to introducing social enterprise legislation in the next several weeks, according to a senior staffer. His proposed draft legislation would amend the Small Business Act to direct the Small Business Administration to aid and assist small businesses that are mission-driven enterprises by providing access to capital and technical assistance and establishing an Office of Social Entrepreneurship, and it would identify ways the government could leverage existing programs and resources to better support nonprofit social enterprises.

With the former mayor’s announcement of in-the-works federal legislation, which was greeted by great applause inside Alumnae Hall, the city, the state and its elected officials have now clearly emerged as leaders and innovators within a national movement toward social enterprise, largely catalyzed by Social Venture Partners of Rhode Island (SVPRI).

The Social Enterprise Ecosystem Economic Development (SEEED) Summit was organized by SVPRI in partnership with Brown University and with the support of a number of nonprofits, corporations and foundations, including The Rhode Island Foundation and the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities.

If the collapsing economic system were the Titanic, then social enterprise is one of the lifeboats. Social enterprise encompasses often-visionary yet eminently practical business structures, where profit motive meets social mission and community focus merges with global thinking to solve pervasive problems.

A social enterprise can be a for-profit company with a social mission, or a nonprofit that operates an aligned for-profit business to help sustain its operations, according to Kelly Ramirez, executive director of Social Venture Partners of Rhode Island.

About 90 percent of U.S. consumers identify themselves as socially responsible, and there are more than 30,000 social enterprises nationwide, according to SVPRI’s Mary Bergeron.

Social enterprise is a nascent movement searching to define itself with a new lexicon for new structures and new ways of thinking. A social enterprise ecosystem is the social, organizational and financial infrastructure — the fertile soil — needed for the “seed” of a social venture to take root and grow. Well-developed ecosystems or developing hubs are emerging in Durham, N.C.Seattle and Cincinnati.

These enterprises fills both mission and economic niches in their communities, and are a vital part of the answer to commonly faced problems. Cicilline understood this implicitly when he said at the close of the conference:

“Our social entrepreneurs have the talent, the drive and the ability to leverage a relatively small amount of dollars into enough resources to identify and implement solutions to some of the most pressing challenges in our community, in our country and in our world. It’s economic imperative, it’s a social imperative, it’s a moral imperative and it cuts across partisanship, and it’s right here in your home town, or it’s halfway around the world.”

… read the full story on ecoRI News.

Are Tides Turning Toward Tax Equity Legislation?


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URI students lobbied state legislators last night at the State House on the Miller-Cimini tax equity bill that would raise income taxes on Rhode Island’s richest residents. And the bill might just be gaining traction.

I asked Speaker Gordon Fox about its chances for passage after the session.

“I’m not going to say yes no or anything at this point,” he said.

Really? When last I asked the speaker about tax equity legislation earlier this month he gave me a pretty unequivocal no, saying, “At this point I’m closing the door on doing anything with income tax until we have a little more historical evidence about what’s going with the reforms we did a few years ago.”

Does that mean the tides are turning for the bill that would raise the top income tax bracket back up to 9.9 percent? Fox cautioned me not to draw that conclusion. “Don’t read into my remarks,” he said. “At this point, that is my standard.”

He also mentioned the $130 million deficit the state faces this budget season. The bill is estimated to raise an additional $118 million in revenue.

Meanwhile, the state’s unemployment rate is rising again for the first time in eight months. The Miller-Cimini tax equity bill offers an incentive to affluent job creators: for every one percentage point the unemployment rate goes down so would the tax rate for those making more than $250,000 annually until they both fall to 5.9 percent.

And if Fox and the rest of the General Assembly is looking for other new sources of revenue for the state, they may want to reconsider marriage equality. It turns out, according to a new report, that letting gay couples enjoy the same rights as others would mean an additional million dollars in tax revenue.

Community Forum on Trayvon Martin Murder

Due to the egregious inaction by local, state and even federal authorities in Florida regarding the non-arrest of GEORGE ZIMMERMAN, the killer of TRAYVON MARTIN, and given the complex racial dynamics and their implications for Black males nationally, the Providence Africana Reading Collective (PARC) will host a community action forum.

We will discuss/plan how we might involve ourselves in action which will help pressure the powers-that-be to expedite a just resolution to this matter.

I’ve spoken with the Florida State NAACP President, Adora Obi Nweze, and the national communications director, Derrick Turner. They’ve detailed specific actions the NAACP is either organizing or coordinating with other Civil Rights and Black organizations on, both in Florida and nationally. I will report back this info to the community here in Providence this Sunday evening at the Providence Africana Reading Collective’s gathering.

I am also in conversation with other activist and community leaders here in Providence about the prospect of holding a Million Hoodie Protest March here in the city in solidarity and justice for Trayvon Martin and his family. This idea will be explored further at the PARC community forum.

Please come and bring your thoughts and voice!

Where: Tea in Sahara, 69 Governor St.

When:  This Sunday (March 25)

Time: 6pm

Other: To augment the gathering we will read Thomas C. Holt’s essay: “Racial Identity and the Project of Modernity.” Those interested in reading the text may email me at marco.mcwilliams@gmail.com

RI Says Happy Birthday Affordable Care Act


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Director of HHS Stephen Constantino, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, Lt. Gov. Elizabeth Roberts and Kathleen Otte, administrator for the US Administration on Aging celebrate the anniversary of the Affordable Care Act.

Today marks the second anniversary of the federal health care reform law, the Affordable Care Act. Here in Rhode Island elected officials, health care leaders, and Rhode Islanders who are benefiting for provisions of the law celebrated the passage in Providence.

 “Although the country is still almost evenly divided over the Affordable Care Act, here in Rhode Island we are fully committed to ensuring that Rhode Island is a national leader in implementing health reform. And for the Rhode Islanders who are already benefiting from provisions in the law in very important ways, health reform has improved their lives,” said Lt. Governor Roberts.

“The Affordable Care Act is already making a real difference for real people and real families in Rhode Island by improving access to higher-quality care, reducing health care costs, and giving Rhode Islanders new and better choices,” said Whitehouse.  “Through her work to set up the state health insurance exchange, Lieutenant Governor Roberts is helping Rhode Island lead the way in expanding access to quality care and driving down costs.”

The highlights of the event were Rhode Islanders who told their stories of how they are benefiting from the Affordable Care Act, which continues to provide thousands in the state with insurance protections, preventive benefits, and resources to improve care.

For 22-year old Brianne of Providence, being able to stay on her mother’s insurance because of a provision in the ACA “has been a relief financially and emotionally trying to make ends meet.” The recent URI graduate is working part-time as a physical therapy aide and suffers from several allergies. Her mother’s coverage has ensured that Brianne can get the frequent medical attention her condition requires. As of June of last year, Brianne was one of over 7,500 young adults in Rhode Island who gained health coverage as a result of the reform law.

For frame shop owner Geoff, providing health coverage “is just the right thing to do.” Geoff was relieved to qualify for the Small Business Healthcare Tax Credit, a provision of the law made available in 2010 to make it more affordable for small businesses to offer health coverage to their employees. As a small business eligible for the credit, Geoff was able to claim up to 35% of premiums paid for his employees’ coverage and put that savings back into the business. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the tax credit will save U.S. small businesses $40 billion by 2019.

Jane, a senior citizen in affordable housing, had to pay out of her own pocket for expensive, life-saving drugs when she reached the coverage gap, known as the “donut hole.”  Jane was one of almost 15,800 Rhode Islanders on Medicare who received a $250 rebate to help cover the cost of their prescription drugs last year. Additionally, when over 14,800 Medicare beneficiaries in Rhode Island hit the donut hole in 2011, they received a 50 percent discount on their covered brand-name prescription drugs. That discount yielded an average savings of over $500 for each senior for a total savings of over $8.2 million to older Rhode Islanders.”

Participating in the event were

Lt. Governor Elizabeth H. Roberts, Chair of the RI Healthcare Reform Commission, along with Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Tri-Regional Administrator Kathleen Otte from U.S. Administration on Aging, and community partners RI Health Coverage Project and Ocean State Action,
The event included state officials, community partners and RI Healthcare Reform Commission members. Also featured was an exhibit of student artwork on display from RISD instructor Lindsay Kinkade’s visual and graphic design class, “Making It (Healthcare Reform)Understandable.

 

Fla. Judge Rules Pension Reform Unconstitutional


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If a Rhode Island judge views pension reform laws the way a Florida judge recently did, public sector retirees may not have their benefits cut after all.

“This Court cannot set aside its constitutional obligations because a budget crisis exists in the State of Florida,” wrote Circuit Court Judge Jackie Fulford in her ruling that the state legislature could not enact a new law that required state employees to contribute to their pensions and forgo annual cost of living increases.

Here’s an article on the ruling from the Miami Herald.

Judge Fulford ruled that the law was “an unconstitutional impairment of plaintiffs’ contract with the State of Florida, an unconstitutional taking of private property without full compensation, and an abridgment of the rights of public employees to collectively bargain over conditions of employment.”

While many have argued that Rhode Island state workers do not have a contractual right to a pension, there is language in this state’s law that created the system suggesting that the legislature intended otherwise.

“All employees as defined in chapter 8 of this title who became employees on or after July 1, 1936, shall, under contract of their employment become members of the retirement system and shall receive no pension or retirement allowance from any other pension or retirement system supported wholly or in part by the state of Rhode Island,” reads Chapter 36-9-2, part of the set of laws that created the state employee pension system.

Rhode Island’s landmark pension reform law passed in a special session last year has yet to be challenged in court because no one has standing to challenge it until the cuts actually kick in. For current employees that will be this summer and for retired state workers that won’t happen until January. It is expected that the law will be challenged in court.

Education Funding vs. the Restaurant Industry


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Who needs the government’s help more: restaurants or public schools? Which do we value more as a society? The answer to these questions is likely to play out as Rhode Island debates Gov. Chafee’s proposed increase to the meals tax.

While Tea Party activists and restauranteurs rally against the 2 percentage point increase – which, just so we are clear about the kind of increase Chafee is suggesting, would amount to four dimes on a $20 lunch or less than $2 on an $80 dinner – they are effectively lobbying against a $40 million to boon to public schools.

That’s because Chafee proposed the slight increase as a way to better fund public schools in Rhode Island.

“This is a way that the governor could accelerate the education funding formula,” said Chafee spokesperson Chris Hunsinger.”You can talk to almost any mayor who was in the municipal strategy session up here and accelerating the funding formula was one of the ways that was talked about at length that the governor can help cities and towns.”

She mentioned Providence Mayor Angel Taveras and Cranston Mayor Allan Fung by name.

Public school funding is one of Rhode Island’s biggest problems, as evidenced by Woonsocket’s inability to pay for its schools and the state take-over in the 1990’s of the Central Falls school district. And a recent report, as reported by RINPR, shows that graduation rates in Rhode Island are falling.

The restaurant industry, on the other hand, is one of the state’s most successful sectors. Whenever almost anyone talks about what’s right with Rhode Island its world class cuisine is almost always mentioned. Chafee told me recently that as we’ve seen unemployment skyrocket and schools, cities and towns fall into further economic morass, the local restaurant industry has stayed level.

You’ll have a hard time convincing me that people are going to stop going out for an $80 dinner because it’s going to cost $82 instead. Similarly, I think most Rhode Islanders would be happy to pay an extra quarter for a pizza if it means more money for our struggling schools.

Conversely, if the state doesn’t find a better way to fund public education, more and more of our children will be looking for jobs in restaurants rather than looking to spend money in them.

Minority Students as Pawns in War on Public Schools


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Earlier this year, the “nonpartisan” (*cough*) Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity (RICFP) released a report, “Closing the Gap:  How Hispanic Students in Florida Closed the Gap with All Rhode Island Students,” which purported to explain “in some detail why Florida’s reforms, while benefiting all students, have been especially beneficial to disadvantaged students.”

I was immediately intrigued because the claim runs counter to everything I know about the effects of the high-stakes testing, especially on students such those with learning disabilities or students in many predominately minority communities (see “High Stakes Testing: Not So Hot”). What I found though was nothing but a rehash of the standard right-wing talking points framed as “so sensible and obvious” that they needed no explanation, coupled with demagogic appeals to save a poor immigrant girl, hopelessly struggling for a better life. So much for answering the question why. I’d have to look elsewhere.

Consider a typical claim from the report:

  • Florida’s 4th grade Hispanic students scored about two grade levels below Rhode Island’s reading average for all students in 1998 and improved to match RI’s achievement level by 2009.
  • Rhode Island’s 4th grade Hispanic students reading average score is 16 points lower than their peers in Florida, roughly the equivalent of one-and-a-half grade levels worth of progress.

Sounds good, but that’s not a detailed explanation of why. Can high-stakes testing do all that? The answer is all too predictable and conveniently omitted from the statistical analysis of the Rhode Island fringe-right.

Researcher Walter Haney has debunked claims that Florida is closing the racial achievement gap, showing that narrowing of test scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) appears to be caused primarily by a massive increase in grade retention.

In August, Florida Governor Jeb Bush and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg coauthored a Washington Post opinion column touting their “successes” in closing race-based achievement gaps. Indeed, according to the 2005 NAEP results, Florida had shown remarkable improvement in 4th-grade results and appeared to have significantly reduced the gap between white and minority students.

Boston College Professor Walter Haney, however, looked at the NAEP scores on which Bush and Bloomberg based their claims and at Florida enrollment numbers. He found a troubling explanation for the apparent improvement: The state has been forcing unprecedented numbers of minority pupils to repeat third grade, on the order of 10 to 12 percent, meaning that fewer low-scoring students enter grade 4 at the normal age.

In a report titled, “Evidence on Education under NCLB (and How Florida Boosted NAEP Scores and Reduced the Race Gap),” Haney wrote, “It turns out that the apparent dramatic gains in grade 4 NAEP math results are simply an indirect reflection of the fact that in 2003-04, Florida started flunking many more students, disproportionately minority students, to repeat grade 3.” Percentages of minority students flunked were two to three times larger than percentages of white children forced to repeat grade 3. Haney says this likely explains the striking decrease in the race-based score gap.

But isn’t “getting tough” the help these kids need? Unfortunately that also is unsupported by evidence, but it does make the stats look good to those not paying too close attention (or to those on the right with a different agenda).

Haney notes that making students repeat a grade based on test scores has been shown by many researchers to be ineffective at improving achievement over the long term (see “Grade Retention,” this issue). It does produce increased scores in the repeated grade, and in some studies it has shown to produce increased scores in the subsequent year or two. This means that students who enter grade four after spending a second year in third grade are likely to score somewhat higher than if they had not repeated grade 3. But within a few years any academic gains disappear, as Chicago researchers documented in that city (see Examiner, Spring-Summer 2004).

Yes, lies, damn lies, and statistics. That’s bad news for the very kids we’re supposed to be trying to help and exactly the type of ethnic cleansing of the public schools warned of by progressive reformers.

One Florida superintendent observed that “when a low-performing child walks into a classroom, instead of being seen as a challenge, or an opportunity for improvement, for the first time since I’ve been in education, teachers are seeing [him or her] as a liability” (Wilgoren, 2000).

Perhaps most interesting are the reforms the report intentionally ignores. The RICFP tries to paint this as a debate between those advocating positive change and those who “defend the status quo of failing schools,” in fact much of the “study” is dedicated to beating that tired drum, but what’s clear is that it’s only specific changes that are considered by the proponents of corporatization. Consider this section:

Florida’s Public Schools Chancellor Michael Grego attributes their success to rigorous standards for all students, teacher training focused on instructing non-English speakers and programs such as dual language classes where English speakers learn Spanish and vice versa.” [emphasis in the original]

Bilingual education for all students?! That’s an idea which might just have some merit, but you won’t find that in this report’s foregone conclusions. Anything not fitting the corporate model is unceremoniously discarded. Never mind that their own report contains this gem:

”The numbers suggest that the persistent gap has more to do with the language barrier among a subset of that group. There are some four million Hispanic students in public schools whose primary language is not English. The NCES report showed an even larger difference between those students, known as English language learners or ELL, and their Hispanic classmates who are proficient in English. For example, in eighth grade reading, the discrepancy between ELL Hispanic students and non-ELL Hispanic students was 39 points, or roughly four whole grade levels.” [emphasis added by RICFP] (Source: Webley, Kayla, “The Achievement Gap: Why Hispanic Students Are Still Behind,” June 23, 2011, TIME, U.S.)

Oddly that quote is preceded by the highlighted comment, “Florida’s success can be attributed to rigorous standards for all students, regardless of race.” Yes it can, but only by ignoring all evidence to the contrary. They later do just that, concluding, “it is long overdue that we step away from pointing to poverty, lack of parental involvement, or language barriers as excuses for lackluster student achievement.”

The report continues along this curiously contradictory path in discussing the question “Do Disabilities Inhibit the Capacity to Achieve?” As a parent of dyslexic children, let me answer this one outright:  as measured by standardized testing, absolutely. Yes, students can improve but that doesn’t change the inherent unfairness in judging them solely on this basis. As the report concludes in the section on student outcomes for children with disabilities, “those who are most poorly served by traditional district schools are most likely to transfer to a better school.” It’s small wonder given the alternative of the thin gruel of glorified test prep. Surprise, surprise! Forcing these kids out of the public schools raises test scores. Problem solved (well, at least if you’re the beneficiary of those public dollars now privatized).

I have to admit that as a parent of dyslexic children their proposal to offer vouchers to special needs children to attend alternative schools has some appeal, especially given the extreme focus on high-stakes testing currently in vogue in RI public schools under Education Commissioner Gist (my daughter attends a school for dyslexic children and my son is likely to attend next year).  This is something perhaps to be considered, although I have reservations that this may be a stalking horse for full privatization efforts at some later date.

In any case, as progressives, we need to do all we can to prevent the mistakes of Florida’s “Lost Decade” from being repeated here in Rhode Island (for more see “NCLB’s Lost Decade for Educational Progress:  What Can We Learn from this Policy Failure?”).

Payday Lenders Hire Power Broker Bill Murphy


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Former Speaker of the House Bill Murphy (photo by Ryan T. Conaty: ryantconaty.com)

One of the most interesting battles going on in the state house this year is over the fate of the “payday lending” industry. Payday loans are short-term loans, typically arranged something like this: I loan you $100 now in return for $110 taken from your next paycheck in a couple of weeks.

This sounds good, unless you do the math and notice that this works out to about a 260% annual interest rate.  If you don’t, it’s likely enough that in two weeks you’ll ask for an extension, and it only takes a couple of dozen like you and suddenly my business is booming.  And there are a lot more customers than that around here.

It wasn’t legal to charge interest rates that high until an exception to usury laws was carved out for check-cashing businesses in 2001. According to Margaux Morisseau, who is spearheading the effort to repeal this exception, payday lenders in Rhode Island now write over 140,000 of these loans each year, totaling $50 million, the bulk of which are written by Advance America, based in South Carolina, and Check ‘n Go, nominally based in Ohio, though it might be controlled by partners based in Texas or London. You can admire the process at rhodeislandpaydayloans.com. My favorite quote:

“When it is due date of your RI payday loan, the loan amount and the service charge will be automatically debited against your pay check. An extension of your RI cash advance is also possible by paying an extension fee.”

There are a couple of interesting points to the story (beside the lack of proofreaders for web content). First, it is consistently astonishing to me both how profitable it can be to exploit poor people — and how many financiers are eager to do so. After all, a huge amount of the financial carnage of the 2008 meltdown was built on liar loans and various kinds of mortgage fraud aimed at sucking wealth from low-income families who hoped to afford a home. (And no, the Community Reinvestment Act had nothing to do with this, as you’ll doubtless read in uninformed comments.)

Obviously there is a risk associated with these kinds of loans, but even assuming a generous loan loss provision, we’re talking about more than doubling one’s investment each year. These are returns investors in more, um, traditional businesses can only dream of.

There’s a bill in the Assembly that would repeal this exception and limit interest to 36% — still awfully high, but in the range that banks charge on some credit cards.  Morisseau has put together an impressive coalition to push it, and Representative Frank Ferri and Senator Juan Pichardo have been very energetic sponsors. Morisseau and Ferri found 50 co-sponsors out of 75 members for the House Version, and she and Pichardo got 25 out of 50 in the Senate. Sounds like a slam-dunk, right?

Wrong. On the other side, Advance America has retained Bill Murphy, the recently retired Speaker of the House.

So what can a retired Speaker do in the face of 50 house members who oppose him?  Sure he knows where a lot of bodies are buried, but what can he possibly hold over so many people?  How is this a fair fight?

Here’s how it works. Murphy’s services are not provided gratis to Advance America. They are paying him $50,000 this year, according to the Secretary of State’s web site. How much work will that entail?  A bunch of phone calls and a handful of meetings. Nice work if you can get it.

And you can get it if you try — so long as you’re a current member of the House or Senate leadership. If Bill Murphy can prove to Advance America that he’s worth $50,000 a year for almost no work, then Speaker Gordon Fox or Majority Leader Nick Mattiello or even Corporations Committee Chair Brian Patrick Kennedy can justifiably claim to be worth the same amount to lobbying clients who happen along after they retire from the House. In other words, killing a bill like this on Bill Murphy’s say-so is key to a big payday for them down the road. Preserving a system that benefits Murphy is the way to keep the trough full at which they might hope someday to feed.

Of course, there are lobbyists who do real work for their money — arranging testimony, doing research, preparing press campaigns — and some of those are even ex-legislators. But the real money is in having a name that can make things happen despite how many are on the other side.

Now in fairness, I have no idea whether Fox, Mattiello, or Kennedy hopes to cash in on their service in this way, and in all likelihood, neither do you. But a very compelling indicator of whether they do is if this bill — sponsored by two-thirds of the House — gets out of committee and onto the House floor for an actual vote. Are the people who control the agendae of the House and Senate interested in a democratically run General Assembly, or is their interest in preserving the system by which ex-legislators profit handsomely from what was, in theory, public service?

Appendix:

For comparison,

Dan Connors, former Senate Majority Leader

George Caruolo, former House Majority Leader

Stephen Alves, former Senate Finance Chair

 

Whitehouse Intros Super PAC DISCLOSE Bill


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RI Future first reported this story Monday morning, but we thought you might want to know that it has now actually happened. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse introduced the DISCLOSE Act, which would require Super PACs and other anonymous political donors to stand by their TV ads by requiring that they put their names on them.

“The American people deserve to know who is really behind these ads,” said Whitehouse, according to a press release from his office.  “This legislation will require organizations involved in elections to tell the public where they are getting their money, and what they are spending it on – shining a badly needed light into the activities of these groups.”

Here are more quotes from some of Whitehouse’s 34 co-sponsoring senators:

“In the age of super PACs, it is more important than ever for citizens to understand who is financing political campaigns and negative attack ads. Voters must be able to make informed decisions, and this legislation provides rules that will prevent this unregulated influx of money from compromising the transparency of our electoral process.”
– Senator Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire

“Republicans and Democrats have both touted disclosure in the past and the ideas in this bill have earned broad support. There’s a lot we need to fix with campaign finance, but at a minimum, the American people at least deserve to know where the deluge of money financing these new shadow campaign operations is coming from.”
– Senator Tom Udall, D-New Mexico

“Citizens United unleashed a wave of corporate campaign cash that threatens to drown out the voice of the people.  This is a serious threat to our democracy and we cannot stand by while it happens.”
– Senator Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon

“We believe that all of the unlimited cash allowed by the Citizens United decision must at least be disclosed.”  “This legislation seeks to limit the damage of the Supreme Court decision that has given corporations and the very wealthy unprecedented sway over our elections, and represents one of the most serious threats to the future of our democracy.”
– Senator Charles E. Schumer, D-New York

Video: Why Flat Tax Hasn’t Worked For Rhode Island


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Rhode Islanders for Tax Equity release a powerful new video today that explains why un-flattening the income tax code and increasing the rate that the richest residents pay would help to solve many of the issues that are currently plaguing the state.

The group, made up of many unions and economic activist groups from around the state, is pushing for passage of the Cimini-Mill bill which would increase income taxes for those who make more than $250,000 a year.

You’ll notice the video says the tax rate was lowered in 2006. And if you’re a regular reader of RI Future, you’ll remember that House speaker Gordon Fox told me recently he wouldn’t consider this bill this session because it is the first year that the new tax rate was in place. In actuality, the tax rate has been getting flatter since 2007 and this is the first year it is completely flat at the top.

Here’s a chart showing unemployment going up as the top tax rate goes down:

RITE has an interesting slogan on its website: “Rebuild RI the RITE Way.” Not too far off from the Projo’s new series of the state of the state’s economy, “Reinvent RI.” Interestingly, both efforts are designed to help Rhode Island get out of the economic mess it is in.

George Nee, president of the AFLO-CIO and a member of the group, added in a press release that such a move would be a boon for Rhode Island’s struggling economy:

“Only the top 2% of income earners in Rhode Island will be affected by this bill. Our hope is that the other 98% will benefit through this increased revenue, which could be used to lower property taxes, help small business owners create jobs, stop college tuition increases, restore funding to programs for the neediest Rhode Islanders, and fix our roads and bridges. This is a bottom up campaign. We are hoping this video helps educate and motivate lower and middle-income Rhode Islanders and helps create a groundswell of support for this bill.”

 

Homeless and Advocates Fight for Help at Senate Hearing


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The ACI
Sen. John J. Tassoni, Jr.
Sen. John J. Tassoni, Jr., Chair of the Senate Housing and Municipal Government Committee (via Smithfield Democrats)

The State Senators of the Committee on Housing and Municipal Government met to hear testimony from homeless people and their advocates about the state’s emergency winter shelter and the move of the men’s shelter currently situated at Harrington Hall to the Gloria MacDonald building at the ACI.

Homeless people, advocates, service providers, and their supporters packed the room, with a number of people remaining standing throughout the roughly hour and a half long meeting where it was made clear that the state cannot continue on its present path.

With 88 beds, Harrington Hall is unable to meet demand and is often over capacity. Men looking to reserve a bed can do so if they agree to follow conditions laid out in a contract, about 40 have done so; another contract allows use of the 30 lockers available, all of which are currently reserved. Four showers are available.

When asked about the state of the bathrooms, which serve far more than 88 men each day, Sean Trott, a shift supervisor, said they are horrendous, but by shelter standards “we’re considered clean.” Trott described some shelter residents starting their days at 3:00 am to avoid waiting for the bathroom; “they are the hardest workers I know,” he said. When he ended his testimony, Trott received an ovation from the crowd for his full description of the conditions. Sen. John Tassoni, a Lincoln Democrat, said, “I wouldn’t even let my dog stay in that shelter.”

Sen. Tassoni and Sen. DeVall both spoke about being appalled by the conditions of Harrington Hall. Sen. DeVall expressed frustration that a year after viewing the shelter, conditions hadn’t improved and a solution had not yet been found. “The leadership needs to go over there and see what it’s like,” said Sen. Tassoni.

The senators also expressed surprise when a worker at Emmanuel House said that the shelter run by Crossroads Rhode Island on Broad St. in Providence maintained a policy of keeping half its beds empty, a revelation which was met by murmurs of knowing displeasure from the viewing crowd. The senators agreed to call a representative of Crossroads Rhode Island to the next meeting.

John Freitas, a member of the Rhode Island Homeless Advocacy Project (RIHAP) who is himself homeless said that shelter was not the solution, “housing is the solution.” Mr. Freitas stepped away from the podium without fielding a question from the senators. Indeed, not a single currently homeless or recently homeless person who gave testimony was questioned by any of the senators. The senators were more willing to engage with advocates, whom they often asked pointed questions to.

Early on, Sen. Hanna Gallo (D – Cranston) entered the meeting and was invited to ask questions. Most pressing to the senator from Cranston were five sex offenders who currently reside at Harrington Hall. Citing walking distance to a library and a baseball field, Sen. Gallo opposed moving the shelter to the new location. Sen. Gallo received support from Sen. Pinga and Sen. Maher. Jean Johnson, Executive Director of the House of Hope, responded by noting that House of Hope registers the sex offenders as residing there. If any fail to return at night, the police are notified. Thus, the location of said offenders is known and watched from 7 pm at night to 5 am in the morning. No such protection exists for sex offenders not registered with the shelter. Sen. Tassoni said that this was the result of a few residents in Cranston getting their neighbors worked up over nothing, noting that 82 sex offenders currently reside in Cranston.

Sen. Crowley asked Ms. Johnson what happens to a typical resident in the morning. “They get on a bus and go to where we know people usually congregate, such as Providence,” replied Ms. Johnson.

“What’s to stop them from getting off at Pine St.?” said Sen. Crowley.

The ACI
The ACI in Cranston

“Nothing,” said Ms. Johnson. She went on to note that in House of Hope’s time running Harrington Hall, sixteen sex offenders had found housing, while seven were returned to prison. However, only the one of those was due an incident of recidivism; the others were due to parole violations.

Jim Ryczek, Executive Director of the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless, gave testimony to the committee where he said that many of the issues with the sex offenders were problems that the House of Hope had taken on upon themselves, providing a service to the state that the Department of Corrections would otherwise have to fill. Sen. Maher acknowledged that the senators were aware of this lack in the Department of Corrections. Sen. Pinga also expressed a desire to separate the five sex offenders from the rest of the residents at Harrington Hall. Neither senator offered suggestions for how such a thing might be done. Mr. Ryczek, a resident of Cranston and father of two young children, noted the jarring experience of receiving a sex offender notice in the mail, but asked the senators to look beyond that to dealing with people who need assistance.

Sen. Pinga did note that all towns and cities in Rhode Island are required to have 10% of their housing stock be affordable housing, which would help in alleviating homelessness. Sen. Tassoni pointed said that only 40% to 50% of municipalities had so far met that goal.

John Joyce, co-director of RIHAP, delivered some of the last testimony. “It seems like year after year the conversation about homelessness ends when the winter shelters end,” said Mr. Joyce. He said that the state’s commitment to the homeless doesn’t end, and pointed out that Dr. Eric Hirsch, a Professor of Sociology at Providence College, had calculated it cost the state $8,000 more to keep someone in a shelter than in permanent supportive housing with wraparound services (Dr. Hirsch also gave testimony earlier in the meeting). “We can end homelessness in Rhode Island,” said Mr. Joyce.

Committee Considers Legalized Marijuana


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Marijuana would be legal, and available at designated stores, if a bill being heard at the State House tonight were to become law.

“It would be a brave new world,” said Rep. Edith Ajello, a Providence Democrat who is sponsoring the legislation. “It would be taxed. There would be stores that sold marijuana, legally licensed by the state just as stores are licensed to sell alcohol.”

Ajello, it should be noted, doesn’t think that brave new world will come to fruition this session. Not only does she not think her bill would pass this year, she doesn’t think the federal government would allow the change.

But a related bill, which would decriminalize marijuana, might. This bill, she said, has healthy support in both chambers and is similar to the law in Massachusetts and Connecticut.

That decriminalize bill, sponsored by Rep. John Edwards, D- Tiverton, Portsmouth, would lessen the punishment for possession of less than an ounce of pot a ticket and a $150 fine. Oh yeah, and “forfeiture of the marijuana,” according to the bill that will also be heard tomorrow night.

Law enforcement is expected to oppose the legislation.

Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut and New York have all decriminalized possession of small amounts of pot. In total, 13 states have such reduced penalties for possession.

Ajello said she expects marijuana will be legal in the near future once more people realize how harmless it is.

I do think it is where we will be,” she said. “Marijuana is not thought to be any more dangerous than alcohol and we have legalized and taxed alcohol. I think ultimately we can move through decriminalization to legalizing and taxing.”

Outpost of Design, Culture: A Talk with Manya Kay


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In a day and age when newspapers and magazines are going out of business at a record pace, Providence is home to a new magazine created by Manya Kay called Outpost Journal. You don’t have to look very far on the Internet to find web sites to the death of both newspapers and magazines; sites, such as www.magazinedeathpool.com/ and newspaperdeathwatch.com/ have tracked these developments closely.

But what some see as adversity others, like Manya, see the opportunity. Outpost Journal personifies simple elegance in its look and feel with a healthy blend of citizen journalism mixed in. If there ever was such a thing as a magazine made to be in plain view on your coffee table, this is the one!

The following is an interview I recently had with Manya regarding the launch of her new venture and what it means to Rhode Island and beyond.

1) Can you speak about the origins of Outpost Journal and recent decision to launch the publication?

We’ve been kicking around the idea for Outpost in various formats for almost a decade, but started working earnestly on getting it together in its magazine format in the summer of 2010 with my NYC-based co-founder Pete Oyler. My husband, Clay, works on the publication formally as a photographer and informally in too many ways to count.
The idea for Outpost came about because we are obsessed with creative living and change-making, and because we know a couple of simple things:
1) People in Providence inspire us! The artists living and working here are producing some really interesting, top notch work and the sense of community is incredible. There are also lots of great creative collaborative efforts.
2) People outside Providence don’t always immediately understand what is so great about living here. Again, we are inspired every day by individuals living and working in Rhode Island, and recognize the importance of ambassadorship (in representing our city and state’s unique and innovative qualities) beyond our borders.
3) Whenever we visit other cities, which we really like to do, we discover people and projects that also inspire us- both by reminding us of stuff in Providence, and showing us how we could do better/might do things differently.

2) Why this venture (and why now)?

Because we feel that no one else is covering this subject matter in such a multidimensional way. We thought it was really important to embody what we were talking about by creating each issue as a work of art in itself, essentially, an interpretive snapshot of art and change in smaller urban centers across the nation.

3) What do you hope to get out of this experience?

One of the most enjoyable parts for us is making connections with folks in other cities- we get really energized by discovering new projects and meeting new people. It’s also really interesting to gain an understanding of how the arts ecologies of different cities function (in what ways are local institutions supportive or not supportive, where does the funding comes from, how do artists live in that particular place, what kind of work do they make, who participates in public projects, what does the face of the city looks like both in public and private spaces, etc.).

4) Assistance you may need?

We need help raising funds to print issue 2, as well as to commission a public art installation (for Issue 1, we commissioned an artist to knit a giant cardigan for an 11-ft statue of hometown hero Mr. Rogers in Pittsburgh). We are currently in the process of obtaining our 501c(3) [Subsequent to this interview, Outpost Journal received its 501c(3) designation] and until we receive it are umbrellaed under the amazing AS220. We accept donations and pre-orders of the issue, and will be running a Kickstarter campaign in May that we will need help promoting. We need help organizing our launch party in Providence for the second issue (next fall). We need people to like us on facebook, follow us on twitter, and generally spread the word!

5) How people can subscribe to the publication?

Go to www.outpostjournal.org/#shop and you can purchase Issue 1, and pre-order issue 2 (scroll down for Issue 2).

6) Who are you engaging to help you in these efforts (i.e., interns, where they are from)?

We have had two great interns from Brown- Sophie Soloway, who also helped organize A Better World by Design conference, and now Maggie Lange, who recently graduated and has been helping out on the editorial side. Our Design Director lives in the South Bronx but is a RISD grad and would love to come back here and teach someday. We also have a great group of supporters and contributors and contributing editors and artists, many of whom are from Providence.  Putting the publication together is a true team effort and we are forever grateful to everyone that has made Outpost possible!

This column is as much about civicism than anything else; a word, which looks and sounds a lot like its nemesis, cynicism (the scourge which inhibits our creative actions, evolutionary change, and ultimately our own economic and cultural sustainability). So let’s hear it for our civicism!


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