VIDEO: Three Perspectives on Income Tax Equity Bill


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At a hearing last night, many spoke in favor of Rep. Maria Cimini’s legislation that would raise income taxes on Rhode Island’s richest residents as a way to raise revenue and encourage job creators to lower the state’s unemployment rate, and I chose three to feature because they represent a wide variety of reasons why it makes sense for Rhode Island to take proactive steps to better fund government.

The bill would raise the income tax on those who earn more than $250,000 from 5.99 to 9.99 and that rate would decrease by one percentage point for each percentage point that the state’s unemployment rate drops. It would raise some $132 million in additional revenue.

Electoral Abstinence: Choosing None of the Above


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Expect the President's reelection campaign to be far tougher than 2008

Thousands of Rhode Islanders went to work today (or looked for work) instead of to the polls. Maybe they were going to vote, but then decided they just wanted to go home. Or maybe they didn’t like the candidates. Or maybe they just didn’t know where their local polling place was. They’ll all be counted as people who didn’t vote.

I didn’t go to my local polling place either, even though it’s a short walk (or even shorter bike ride) from where I live. It wasn’t that I don’t think that the delegate candidates don’t deserve to go Charlotte (or Tampa, if that’s your preference). It’s that I don’t want who they’re voting for. Barack Obama, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, Newt Gingrich; not matter who a delegate is pledged to, what’s the point?

France held its first round of presidential elections on the weekended. U.S. media was keen to tell us how the process works. And buried in this Slate article about Socialist candidate Francois Hollande’s use of an Obama-style get-out-the-vote operation was the idea that the 30% of people who didn’t vote are termed “les abstentionnistes” which I think translates into “the abstainers.” The article makes the point that in France, not voting is constructed as a conscious choice, versus the American idea that not voting is a sign of laziness or inability or apathy.

So I abstained. I made a conscious choice. And, believe it or not, plenty of people made this choice too. When we think about why people don’t turn out, there are certainly plenty of reforms we can make to lower the bar to participation (a week long celebratory holiday for voting was suggested by a teacher once and is my favorite idea). But we also need to focus on why should I turn out for Candidate X. And that’s on Candidate X.

In this case, it’s on President Obama. I voted for President Obama twice, once against Hillary Clinton and once again against John McCain. In 2008, there were a lot of reasons to go to the polls and vote. Sarah Palin as vice president, the traditional idea of Democrats as the solution to economic depressions, the worst stock market crash since 1929, etc. September 2008 had unleashed the idea that Democrats would attempt a second New Deal in many people my age. We had hope, and we voted for change. And we really thought things were going to change.

This woman could've become Vice President.

The President betrayed that hope, and he didn’t bring change. He expanded the scope of the War on Terror to include American citizens, doubled down on the War on Drugs, continues to issue signing statements, failed to push for a strong enough stimulus, fails to forcefully push for LGBT rights; and surrounds himself with Wall Street hacks largely responsible for the crisis (Larry Summers isn’t “change you can believe in”); Mr. Obama has proved over and over that he is a Third Way Democrat; Bill Clinton without the panache or economic rebound. Is it any wonder large portions of Mr. Obama’s voters stayed home in 2010? He hadn’t given them anything to believe in since inauguration day. And his party got shellacked for it.

Occupy Wall Street contains plenty of youth who are angry with the President. The ability of a largely disenchanted and unemployed youth to turn the nation conversation on economics away from the national debt and towards economic inequality proves just how important they are to politics. Even Republicans picked up on this.

OWS’ major flaw is their antipathy towards electoral politics, but understandable, given that their faith in Barack Obama was rewarded with the half-measures and inept political maneuvering that define his presidency. The healthcare plan enacted, while having some great upsides, is emblematic of this. One of its defenses has been “but the Heritage Foundation originated it!” This neither eases conservative anger nor does it rally progressives and liberals.

President Obama should be a lesson for all Democrats and anyone who uses progressives as part of their electoral coalition. David Cicilline is facing the toughest election of his political career. Turning to a populist, energized campaign based on strong, deliverable ideological issues would move the campaign beyond Providence’s finances. It would also pick up dedicated support from inventing young people. Allowing his campaign to become a referendum on the Democratic Party makes his general election prospects dim, as well as his primary ones. Both Mr. Cicilline and challenger Anthony Gemma are going to use the following phrases: “grassroots support” “protect Social Security” “failed Republican policies”. The only thing that will distinguish them are their stances on abortion, unless Mr. Gemma flips.

Governor Lincoln Chafee was largely elected on a progressive coalition that saw Frank Caprio and John Robataille as symptomatic of the Republicrat-Democan system (for more of that, see our editor Bob Plain’s reporting on ALEC). Unfortunately, he’s largely fallen into that dynamic, and has essentially abandoned his progressive followers. If he runs in a three-way race again in 2014 (assuming he doesn’t change parties once again), energizing those progressives will be important.

So, given that candidates are well-versed in not delivering anything, is it any wonder so many people abstained rather than vote for a delegate to go “aye” for Barack Obama or Mitt Romney?

More than 20% of General Assembly Involved with ALEC


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More than 20 percent of Rhode Island’s General Assembly is affiliated with ALEC, the right-wing group sponsored by corporate America that drafts model legislation for use at state houses across the country, according to a list provided by Rep. Jon Brien, the state chairman and a member of the group’s board of directors.

There are 24 legislators, half of whom are Democrats, associated with the conservative group that has come under fire as of late for sponsoring the Stand Your Ground law in Florida, voter ID efforts and other conservative initiatives. 11 of the members are from the Senate

Additionally, according to Brien, there are 14 former members of ALEC in the General Assembly, all of whom are Democrats, including some of the state’s most liberal legislators, such as Harold Metts, Josh Miller and Rhoda Perry. All of the former members are Senate Democrats

Here’s the list:

Current members

  1. Sen. Dennis Algiere, R – Westerly (12/31/12)
  2. Rep. Samuel Azzinaro, D – Westerly  (12/31/13)
  3. Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, D – Woonsocket (12/31/13)
  4. Rep. Jon Brien, D – Woonsocket (12/31/12)
  5. Rep. Doreen Costa, R – North Kingstown    (12/31/13)
  6. Rep. John Edwards, D – Tiverton    (12/31/13)
  7. Rep. Laurence Ehrhardt, R – North Kingstown    (12/31/10)
  8. Rep. Michael Marcello, D – Scituate    (12/31/13)
  9. Rep. Peter Martin, D – Newport    (12/31/13)
  10. Rep. Brian Newberry, R – North Smithfield    (12/31/12)
  11. Rep. Daniel Reilly, R – Portsmouth    (12/31/13)
  12. Rep. John Savage, R – East Providence   (12/31/12)
  13. Rep. Lisa  Tomasso, D – Coventry    (12/31/13)
  14. Rep. Robert Watson, R – East Greenwich    (12/31/12)
  15. Sen. David Bates, R – Barrington    (12/31/12)
  16. Sen. Marc Cote, D – Woonsocket (12/31/12)
  17. Sen. Walter Felag, D – Bristol    (12/31/12)
  18. Sen. Dawson Hodgson, R – North Kingstown    (12/31/12)
  19. Sen. Frank Lombardo, D – Johnston    (12/31/12)
  20. Sen. Francis Maher, R – Exeter    (12/31/12)
  21. Sen. Christopher Ottiano, R – Portsmouth    (12/31/12)
  22. Sen. Glenford Shibley, R – Coventry    (12/31/12)
  23. Sen. John Tassoni, D – Smithfield    (12/31/12)
  24. Sen.  William  Walaska, D – Warwick    (12/31/12)

Past members

  1. Sen. Daniel DaPonte, D – East Providence (12/31/10)
  2. Sen. Louis DiPalma, D – Newport   (12/31/10)
  3. Sen. James Doyle, D – Pawtucket    (12/31/10)
  4. Sen. Paul Fogarty, D – Burrillville   ( 12/31/10)
  5. Sen. Hanna Gallo, D – Cranston    (12/31/10)
  6. Sen. Maryellen Goodwin, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  7. Sen. Paul Jabour, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  8. Sen. Beatrice Lanzi, D – Cranston    (12/31/10)
  9. Sen. Michael McCaffrey, D – Warwick    (12/31/10)
  10. Sen. Harold  Metts, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  11. Sen. Joshua Miller, D – Cranston    (12/31/10)
  12. Sen. Rhoda Perry, D – Providence    (12/31/10)
  13. Sen. Roger Picard, D – Woonsocket    (12/31/10)
  14. Sen.  V. Susan Sosnowski, D – South Kingstown    (12/31/10)

 

ACLU Sues Over Wrongful Detention of US Citizen


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Ada Morales, of North Providence, is a US citizen. But twice she has been detained by law enforcement officials who didn’t realize she she had become naturalized in 1995.

In an effort to ensure the same thing doesn’t happen to her a third time – or someone else for the first time – the RI ACLU is suing state and federal officials saying they violated her constitutional rights.

Here’s the press release from the ACLU:

The ACLU today filed a lawsuit in federal district court on behalf of a North Providence resident who has twice been detained as a deportable “alien” even though she is a U.S. citizen. The lawsuit alleges that federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials and Rhode Island officials often bypass Constitutional requirements and safeguards when they detain individuals on immigration grounds.

In May 2009, Ms. Ada Morales, who was born in Guatemala and who naturalized as a United States citizen in 1995, was taken into custody on unrelated criminal charges. While she was being held at the ACI, an ICE “immigration detainer” was lodged against her. Even though a judge ordered Ms. Morales released, the R.I. Department of Corrections held her in custody for an additional 24 hours because of the ICE detainer. “When I found out that I was being detained for immigration reasons, I was shocked,” said Ms. Morales. “I told the Rhode Island officials that I’m a U.S. citizen, and I offered to show them my naturalization certificate and passport, but no one would listen. They just assumed they could hold me because of my Guatemalan background and the color of my skin.” An ICE official later apologized to Ms. Morales for her wrongful detention, but acknowledged that it could happen again. In fact, she had been unlawfully detained in virtually identical circumstances once before, in 2004.

“Ms. Morales’s ordeal is another example of how ICE’s detainer practices lead to wrongful detention,” said Kate Desormeau, staff attorney at the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project. “ICE has no business detaining U.S. citizens. Yet because of ICE’s practice of issuing detainers first and asking questions later, we’ve seen U.S. citizens unlawfully detained all across the country.” Rhode Island ACLU executive director Steven Brown added: “This case is an important reminder of the collateral damage that harsh immigration policies can cause, and provides a compelling reason why Rhode Island should not be in the business of assisting with federal immigration enforcement.”

An ICE detainer is a document that advises law enforcement officials that ICE may seek to take an individual into custody for deportation purposes once state or local custody ends. The suit alleges that ICE officials issue detainers “without a sufficient investigation to determine whether arrestees who are perceived to be ‘foreign’ (based on their place of birth, race or ethnicity, foreign-sounding last names, and/or English language ability) are in fact U.S. citizens.”

The suit also claims that ICE has been deliberately misleading about the legal effect of immigration detainers, prompting local and state officials to believe that they are required to continue holding individuals on the basis of detainers even though detainers are only requests that a person be held.

ICE agents and state and local officials typically treat a detainer as authorizing continued imprisonment, even if no state or federal charges are pending and no deportation proceedings have been brought. Unlike a criminal warrant, immigration detainers are issued by ICE itself, and are not based upon a probable cause determination by a neutral judicial officer.

The lawsuit claims that federal and state officials violated Ms. Morales’s constitutional rights to due process, equal protection of the laws, and freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures, and seeks injunctive relief and damages for violation of her rights.

The suit is being handled by RI ACLU volunteer attorneys Mark Freel and Erika Lindberg from the law firm of Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP, and National ACLU attorneys Omar Jadwat and Kate Desormeau.

Brien Joins ALEC Board as Group Comes Under Fire


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Conservative House Democrat Jon Brien of Woonsocket is not only a card carrying member of ALEC, the right wing group backed by some of America’s most powerful corporations that writes model legislation for use in statehouses around the country, but he’s also the lone Democrat on the group’s 17 member board of directors.

“I don’t feel it’s largely Republican but I think it’s a conservative group,” he said, noting that ALEC stands up for low taxes and free market policies which are also core values of his. “I’m a conservative, I make no bones about that.”

He added, “It’s a collaboration between business and legislators. It’s no different than a U.S. senator getting a donation from a corporation.”

Brien said he was just named to the group’s “governing body” in the past month. He said he was introduced to ALEC by former Woonsocket lawmaker and majority leader Jerry Martineau, a past state chair of ALEC who served jail time for political corruption for using his position in the General Assembly to curry business favors with CVS and Blue Cross.

“Jerry and I have always been friends,” Brien said. “I wanted to pick up that mantle.”

Brien will be attending ALEC’s spring task force meeting in Charlotte this May where, he said, “we’ll probably be talking about everything that is going on in the court of public opinion.”

ALEC, which has for years flown below the mainstream media’s radar, has been in the news of late for authoring the Stand Your Ground law in Florida that came under fire when it almost allowed George Zimmerman to go un-prosecuted for the killing of Trayvon Martin. Brien said last week ALEC decided to no longer work on non-economic policy after several large corporations dropped their membership

More recently, Common Cause has accused ALEC of tax evasion because the group is registered as an educational non-profit when it engages in lobbying efforts.

“It’s a corporate front group that is cheating the tax payers,” said John Marion, the executive director of Common Cause RI. Marion and Brien exchanged tweets on the issue yesterday afternoon. “They should own up to the fact that they are lobbyists and register as every other group has to do.”

Brien denied the allegations, saying ALEC has done nothing wrong with its taxes. He said Common Cause has targeted ALEC not because the group is flouting its tax obligation but because ALEC, like Brien, support Voter ID laws, which Common Cause works against.

“They can’t beat us legislatively, so they are coming after us in another way,” Brien said.”Do you think Common Cause is mad about taxes or because we are beating them on Voter ID?”

While he referred to himself as the “godfather of Voter ID in Rhode Island,” he said he did not use the ALEC  model bill for Voter ID. He said he has never proposed an ALEC model bill in the House but he often proposes legislative issues that are also near and dear to ALEC such as anti-tax bills, education reform efforts and others.

Brien said since becoming the state co-chair of ALEC he has signed up some 10 new members from the legislature. He named Reps. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, Dan Reilly, Doreen Costa, Lisa Tomasso, and Samuel Azzinaro. He said he hopes many of them join him at the annual meeting this August in Salt Lake City.

At that meeting, he will appoint Rhode Island legislators to ALEC task forces. The task forces, he said, pairs legislative members with corporate sponsors to hammer out new model legislation.

RI Progress Report: Primary, Busy Day at State House


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Polls are open today in Rhode Island, and even though it’s still not yet 6 a.m. we’re going to go out on a limb and call the primary for Obama. If you need a hand figuring out which delegates to support for the Democratic Convention, see our endorsements here. But it’s also a hugely busy day at the State House.

The House Finance Committee will take up the controversial tax equity bill that would raise income taxes for Rhode Island’s richest residents. And Rhode Island’s environmental coalition will hear from Gov. Chafee in the rotunda this afternoon before it unveils its 2012 legislative agenda, expected to include transportation funding, voter referendums for open space and clean water and a better way to discard of garbage.

Additionally, two House members from very different sides of the aisle will have their very different bills on in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants heard in committee at 1 p.m. Rep. Grace Diaz’ bill will codify into legislation the decision made by the Board of Governors for Higher Education last year allowing anyone who finished three years of high school in RI to qualify for in-state tuition “regardless of immigration status.” And Rep. Doreen Costa’s bill would “prohibit anyone who cannot prove U.S. citizenship or permanent residency from receiving in-state tuition rates and fees at public higher education institutions.”

Providence Mayor Angel Taveras unveiled his budget proposal last night, which could help right the fiscal ship in the Capital City. But it’s contingent on some factors beyond the city’s control, such as the outcome of the inevitable lawsuit over his pension reform efforts. Here’s the brief that appears in today’s New York Times.

Conservatives like to defend Citizens United by claiming that it gives liberal groups the right to raise unlimited campaign money as well, which is true but irrelevant since the majority of big time donors support the GOP. In fact, 8 of the ten biggest Super PACS support Republicans.

California will vote on banning the death penalty this November. Too bad a plurality of executions in the US take place in Texas.

Had Rhode Island partnered with instead of fighting the Narragansett Indian Tribe, the state would have been well ahead of the regional casino trend rather than well behind it. Can’t blame the Narragansetts for suing us.

This page may be updated throughout the day. Click HERE for an archive of the RI Progress Report.

Tax Equity Bill Before House Finance Commitee


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Sen. Josh Miller and Rep. Maria Cimini, sponsors of a bill that would raise taxes on the richest 2 percent of Rhode Islanders.

The tax equity legislation will get a public debate at the State House today as Rep. Maria Cimini’s bill that would raise income taxes on Rhode Island’s richest until the unemployment rate drops will be heard by the House Finance Committee tonight after the regular session.

“I’m looking forward to making a the case for a fair ways to raise revenue,” Cimini said. “We are at a crossroads. Either we are a state that fulfills its public needs or we are not.”

The bill would raise the income tax rate on those who earn more than $250,000 a year from 5.9 to 9.9 percent and for each percentage point the state unemployment rate fell that tax bracket would reduce by one percent until it reaches 5.9 again. The tax rate for those who earned more than $100,000 was 9.9 until it began gradually being reduced over the past several years. The bill would add $131 million in new revenue.

Also testifying tomorrow will be economist Chuck Collins, a “senior scholar” with the Institute for Policy Studies, as well as several others.

Rhode Islanders for Tax Equity, a coalition of unions and other grassroots activists formed to support the bill, “plan to ask legislators whose side they are on–the side of hard-working, middle class Rhode Islanders or the side of political insiders and wealthy Rhode Islanders? Citing a stubbornly high unemployment rate that coincides with the lowering of tax rates on the rich,” according to a statement.

Earlier this session, the group released this chart that shows that as the tax rate for the richest Rhode Islanders has dropped the unemployment rat has gone up:

And this video showing how decreased top income tax rates have contributed to Rhode Island’s economic slowdown:

Cimini said she doesn’t think the bill will pass as is, but remains “cautiously optimistic” that parts of it will make this year’s budget proposal. She plans to meet with Speaker Gordon Fox about the bill in the near future, she said.

Occupy Providence plans to rally outside the State House to help bring attention to the bill. According to a press release, “The march will show how Rhode Islanders are fed up with politicians damaging our economy by giving tax breaks to the rich.”

Budgeting for Disaster: Taxing History


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Is it really too soon to modify our tax code?

In the discussions of taxes at the State House, one line you hear a lot this year is that our state’s new income tax code is new and we should give it time to see how it works out.  That’s what House Speaker Gordon Fox has said, and I’m hearing that it’s the line of the day on Smith Hill, available from any of the House or Senate leadership.

This is, of course, a silly point to make.  The tax changes made last year basically just baked in the low taxes on rich people offered by the “flat tax” alternative.  It used to be that a rich person could choose whether to pay tax under the tax code everyone else uses or using the flat tax limit, and now the flat tax limit is part of the code everyone else uses.  This part may be new, but the overall “strategy” at issue — lower taxes on rich people, expect economy to get better — has been the order of the day in Rhode Island for a long time.  To illustrate what’s really been going on in Rhode Island tax policy, I put together the following graph.

The blue line is the effective RI income tax rate on a fairly typical taxpayer in the top 1% over the last 16 years, with the various cuts that taxpayer has received indicated.  These cuts don’t count tax credits like the film production or historic structures credits, which are typically only available to high-income individuals and which make the effective rate even lower.  The black line indicates the effective tax rate on the median taxpayer (the 50th percentile).  You can see a slight decline in the 1997-2002 period, but the other changes didn’t do much of anything for them.

The unemployment rate, of course, has nothing to do with the tax rate, except as a rhetorical club used to beat people about the head and neck.  There is no evidence that it has any causal relationship with the state tax rate (in either direction), but the relationship between taxes and “job creators” is commonly invoked to persuade lawmakers to support lower taxes.   I’ve included the unemployment rate on the graph as a service, so you can see how little is has to do with the movement of taxes.

One more thing you should know about this graph.  There is some evidence available that the 2012 tax changes raised taxes substantially on the middle percentiles of taxpayers.  Unfortunately, it’s premature to say more than that, since the data won’t be available until later this year, at the earliest.

The House Finance Committee is holding a hearing on several bills designed to raise taxes on the top 1% Tuesday afternoon at 4:30pm in State House room 35.  Rep. Maria Cimini (D-Providence) is the prime sponsor (with 36 co-sponsors) of a bill to raise the taxes on people earning more than $250,000 per year by four percentage points, with that top rate coming down as the unemployment rate also goes down.  Think of it as a “pay for performance” clause for rich people.  There are also bills by Rep. Larry Valencia (D-Charlestown, Exeter, Richmond) and Scott Guthrie (D-Coventry) that will have more or less the same effect, though the income limits and tax changes are slightly different (neither of those bills have the unemployment clause).

Brien, Common Cause Spar over ALEC on Twitter


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Rep. Jon Brien is the local co-chair of ALEC, the pro-business political group that drafts model legislation that supporters, often elected members of state legislatures like Brien, propose at the local level. ALEC has come under fire as of late for authoring the Stand your Ground law in Florida that initially protected George Zimmerman from prosecution.

Common Cause filed a complaint with the IRS today saying the ALEC is violating its status as a non-profit by engaging in lobbying efforts.

Here’s the exchange on Twitter today between Brien and John Marion, the executive director of the local chapter of Common Cause:

Occupy PVD To Hold ‘Robin Hood’ Rally at State House


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Occupy Providence returns to the State House Tuesday, this time to show solidarity for the Miller-Cimini income tax equity bill that is being heard by the powerful House Finance Committee at around 5 p.m. The rally will begin at 4:45.

The bill would raise income taxes on the richest Rhode Islanders, those who earn more than $250,000, back to 9.9 percent, the rate paid by those who made more than $100,000 when former Gov. Don Carcieri and the General Assembly lowered them to 5.9 percent. The bill would drop the rate one percentage point for every percentage point the unemployment rate drops.

This Tuesday, April 24, Occupy Providence (OP) will hold a “Tax the Rich” march at the State House. Occupy Providence’s “Robin Hood” Merry Band of Protesters will march to the King’s court (the RI State House) to oppose the policy of giving income tax breaks to the rich and soaking the poor and middle class with regressive taxes like real estate and sales tax.

WHO: Occupy Providence in Robin Hood costumes, along with other groups supporting the same cause.

WHAT: “Robin Hood” March – OP’s Merry People demand tax justice

WHEN: 4:45pm April 24, this Tuesday

WHERE: The start of the march is at the State House lawn, corner of Gaspee and Francis St.  The march will end inside the State House. Also, some Occupy Providence members will be participating vigorously in the House Finance Committee hearing on taxing the rich, in Room 35 of the State House.

WHY: To demand higher taxes on the rich. The march is timed to coincide with a House Finance Committee hearing Tuesday that considers bills to raise taxes on the wealthiest. Some Occupy Providence members will participate vigorously in that hearing. Occupy Providence expects that the House Committee will vote to kill these bills by “holding them for further study”.  The march will show how Rhode Islanders are fed up with politicians damaging our economy by giving tax breaks to the rich.

VISUALS include Occupy Providence members – some dressed in Robin Hood costumes – marching with signs around, and then into, the State House.

Post-Script to TEDx PVD


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Several hundred people (including professionals, academics and students) gathered at the Rhode Island School of Design’s Metcalfe Auditorium and witnessed the first-ever TEDx Providence event in the Ocean State on April 15. But at the end of the day, what does it really mean? One day after the historic event, I asked myself that very question and here’s one person’s take on that very question.

HOME TO INTELLIGENT CIVL DIALOGUE CALLING FOR ACTION & KNOWN THE WORLD OVER

Providence (and Rhode Island) is becoming home to a number of events which serve three distinct purposes–

  1. Coalescing positive elements (and by elements I mean people, who have created pockets of positive ecosystems here). Being positive in a place where cynicism has ruled the roost for so many years takes a lot of energy, time and commitment. Positive individuals NEED to have outlets to be around similarly positive people to gain support, recharge their psychic batteries and share their ideas and thoughts on improving our local community, and the world as a whole;
  2. Having events which engage and welcome our student community is extremely important as we look for more of them to stay here upon graduation; and
  3. TEDx Providence is now part of a growing list of exciting events which attract not only locals but which are also attracting individuals from around the world to come to Rhode Island (e.g., A Better World by Design, BIF Summit on Collaborative Innovation, MakerFaireRI, Social Venture Partners-Rhode Island SEEED Summit, our state’s eight film festivals, the Newport Jazz and Folk Festivals, Bryant University’s World Trade Day, etc.) to learn, network and dream big! Why is that important? Engaging with the world means just that, but first starts with welcoming individuals here. Not to sell them on our locale, but rather to show them them the talent that resides here and how we can help them achieve great success with our talent pool (and vice versa); that is the very essence of what engagement means.
Kipp Bradford

ACKNOWLEDGING, HIGHLIGHTING AND LEVERAGING OUR WORLD CLASS TALENT IS ESSENTIAL

If you look at who presented at the inaugural TEDx Providence event…..I mean look at them–their life experiences, professional achievements and the impact they have had on the community….I can assure you of this–any community in the WORLD would love to have these individuals residing and working there. They represent the tip of the iceberg, but what sort of talent resides here! Professors who are great mentors; entrepreneurs who have contributed beyond the launch of their own ventures and work far beyond our borders; new arrivals to the state; new ideas being implemented that other communities around the world can learn from; and artists who exemplify innovation!

So, continue to watch out for such activities right here in your own backyard and get engaged!

Ontario Poses Conflict for Conservative Ideology


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OK, I recently spent some time in Ontario.

Which, is part of Canada, but it’s only a part. I cannot speak about Canada as a whole, but I can speak about Ontario.

Ontario has a much higher tax burden than any state (including RI and NJ) in the USofA.  Gas costs more than $5 per gallon. It has universal health care. The minimum wage is $10.25 per hour.  Union density remains very high. Factory jobs pay well. The regulatory environment makes California look like a Libertarian paradise.

IOW, it’s a socialist heck-hole.

If one listens to RW ‘economists’, these conditions mean that the economy of Ontario has to–HAS TO!!–be in the tank, right? According to every RW pundit and crank and know-nothing, all of those conditions mean that the economy has to–HAS TO!!–be creeping along at a negative growth rate. It’s a law of nature. Taxes, regulation, unions, high minimum wage, any one of these are job killers. The whole group of them must be–MUST BE!!–Economy Killers.

Right? Right! Ayn Rand said so!

Guess what? The economy of Ontario is booming. There was no financial crisis. Why not? The regulatory environment didn’t allow the banking system (or shadow banking system, which pretty much doesn’t exist north of the border) to play Russian Roulette the way banks here did.

The high minimum wage means that even people working low-end service jobs have money to spend. And they spend it. Which stimulates the economy. Just like Henry Ford said would happen.

The universal health care means less time is lost to sickness, and that sick people get care before they end up in the emergency room, and cost 5-6 times what it should cost to treat them. Costs which uninsured people pass on to the rest of us. So their health care system produces comparable results at about half the cost.

(Ah, I can hear it: but but but you have to wait six months for a hip replacement!! Yeah. What’s the point? Hip replacements are elective. Yes, they make people’s lives better, but they aren’t generally a matter of life and death. And, who gets most hip replacements in the US? Folks with single-payer health insurance. Except here we call it “Medicare”.)

My point is that, according to Ayn Rand, and Paul Ryan, Charles Krauthammer and the WSJ (and too many others to name), the economy of Ontari0 has to–HAS TO!!– be dismal. In fact, it’s great.

How is that possible? Could it be (gasp!) that RW ‘economics’ is actually an ideological position, completely divorced from the way the real world actually works?

That’s exactly what it means. The stuff that RW ‘economists’ claim is actually an ideological belief that has nothing to do with how the economy in the real world actually works.

Don’t believe me? Go to Ontario. Look at the cranes in Toronto, the spanking-new factories along the highway, the huge numbers of houses being built in London, the industry in Sarnia.

Tassoni: Kennedy Plaza a Mess, RIPTA Chief Should Go


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Outgoing Senator John Tassoni, always quick to pick on bullies, has set his sights on RIPTA director Charles Odimgbe, saying recent staff cuts have left Kennedy Plaza in shambles and that Odimgbe should be replaced. Full press release after the photo.

Kennedy Plaza in Providence is a mess, said Sen. John J. Tassoni Jr., and it’s RIPTA’s fault. Armed with pictures showing piles of debris scattered around the RIPTA bus waiting area on Kennedy Plaza, Senator Tassoni (D-Dist. 22, Smithfield, North Smithfield) said the situation is further indication that “the person that was hired to fix the problems at RIPTA is not doing a very good job of handling day-to-day operations, and that makes me wonder how qualified he is to address much bigger problems at the bus company.”

The upkeep of the bus waiting and transfer area at Kennedy Plaza is the responsibility of the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority, said Senator Tassoni. “Apparently, in a rush to appear as if he was getting a grip on RIPTA’s budget problems, CEO Charles Odimgbe eliminated a number of employees, including those responsible for maintenance of the authority’s facilities, including Kennedy Plaza.”

“The result of that decision may have saved a few dollars, but it has left no one to do the job of cleaning up Kennedy Plaza,” said Senator Tassoni. “That is certainly not doing anything to improve the reputation of RIPTA and I’m sure that the Providence mayor can’t be too pleased that Kennedy Plaza is starting to look like a dump because RIPTA is not doing its job of cleaning up after itself.”

Senator Tassoni said it’s become obvious to him that the RIPTA CEO “is not making the hard decisions necessary to address the serious and ongoing budget problems. Rather than making cuts by trimming the ranks of the well-paid middle- and upper-management personnel, he eliminates a lowly position and Kennedy Plaza is left to become a mess. Rather than implementing serious efficiencies, he testifies before the finance committee that his only options are to raise rates or cut bus routes.”

“I think it is clear Mr. Odimgbe is not up to doing the job for which he was hired and that it is time for the governor to replace him with someone who can,” said Senator Tassoni.

RI Progress Report: Taveras Budget, DD Cuts, Welcome Wickford Junction


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras announces his proposed budget tonight … it’ll be interesting to see how he plugs that $22 million hole in the city’s operating expenses. We’ll learn tonight if any more of the local non-profits decided to pony up and help out the Capital City.

A great editorial from the Projo about the cuts the General Assembly made to services for the developmentally disabled. They write, “…how do administrators’ salaries play in all this? There has been a tendency in some non-profits as well many for-profits for the salaries of top people to rise even as those at lower levels are cut. (Our winner-take-all society . . . .)”

Starting today, you can take the train from Wickford Junction to Providence for $2.50.

Scott MacKay handicaps the one congressional race, CD1, that seems to have grabbed Rhode Island’s attention. And if you’re ready to start paying attention to the campaigns for seats in the General Assembly.

Common Cause says ALEC, the pro-business lobby group that drafts conservative model legislation for state legislatures, is abusing its status as a non-profit.

This page may be updated throughout the day. Click HERE for an archive of the RI Progress Report.

Vote Progressive for Dem Convention Delegates


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Logo for RI Democratic Party

Democrats don’t have as much at stake in Tuesday’s primary vote as does the GOP, who don’t have all that much at stake actually, but they do have an opportunity to send progressives and liberals to the party convention in August rather than the old-guard, moderate Democrats who usually get to go.

First, you need to know where to vote. Type your address into this Google gadget and it’ll spit out not only where, but it’ll give you directions there too:

And if you need a hand knowing who’s a progressive and who isn’t, we made a little cheat sheet for you. The progressives are listed in bold, with a short description. Both Districts vote for 11 delegates … and don’t forget, you don’t have to vote for 11. And if you’re trying to send a progressive slate to the convention you may not want to since a vote for a non-progressive could make a big difference when the votes are tallied.

CD1

  1. Onna A. MONIZ-JOHN – According to EastBayRI.com, she’s ” a retired Affirmative Action and Welfare director for the City of East Providence” who was recently honored by the Rhode Island Black Heritage society for her “outstanding contributions to the African American community in Rhode Island.”
  2. Julie E. MEYERS – A Leadership RI alum and a vocal advocate of marriage equality.
  3. Jeffrey M. PADWA – He’s got Providence Mayor Angel Taveras’ endorsement as city solicitor, so he’s got ours for delegate.
  4. Terri-Denise CORTVRIEND
  5. Myrth YORK– A three time gubernatorial loser, who considered running for mayor before endorsing Taveras, she used to represent the East Side in the General Assembly.
  6. David A. SALVATORE
  7. June S. SPEAKMAN – The president of the Barrington Town Council, she is considering running for a seat in the state Senate against Republican David Bates, who has held the seat for 20 years.
  8. Brett P. SMILEY – He was Charlie Fogarty’s campaign manager and has been an outspoken activist for marriage equality in Rhode Island.
  9. Douglas W. GABLINSKE
  10. Anne W. CONNOR – A longtime liberal in the tradition of the Farmer-Labor Party, Anne is an advocate of the process rather than a political insider. See our story on her here.
  11. Mary A. GASBARRO
  12. Tom CODERRE – Works for Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed, an all-round good guy.
  13. Joseph R. PAOLINO, JR.
  14. Herbert P. WEISS
  15. Rebecca Kim MEARS – Watch for this Brown University freshman in the years to come.
  16. Gerald Pedro CARVALHO – Not necessarily a progressive, but he’s a longtime Newport fisherman.

CD2

  1. Joshua MILLER – As a state senator, he’s sponsoring the high-profile tax equity bill that would temporarily raise taxes on Rhode Island’s richest residents and another that would decriminalize small amounts of marijuana. For a day job, he owns the Hot Club, Trinity Brewhouse and Local 121. Forget about delegate, we should elect this guy president.
  2. Frank G. FERRI – Another staunch State House progressive, Ferri is the sponsor of legislation that would curb payday lending.
  3. Patrick T. FOGARTY
  4. Thomas J. IZZO
  5. Michael A. SOLOMON
  6. Elaine PRIOR – She helped to run the Downcity Farmers’ Market, reason enough to send her to the convention.
  7. Andy M. ANDUJAR – Works for David Cicilline, an occasional visitor to Drinking Liberally.
  8. Hecmy A. JOSE
  9. David J. GRAZIANO
  10. Mark S. WEINER
  11. Elisa M. POLLARD
  12. Paul H. ARCHETTO
  13. Teresa TANZI – As one of the most progressive members of the House, this year she has stood up for local fishermen, local beer and wine makers and women’s rights.
  14. Helen S. TAYLOR
  15. L. Susan WEINER
  16. Zoe I. WEINER
  17. Ryan Patrick KELLEY

Anne Connor Campaigns for Democratic Convention


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Anne Connor
Anne Connor
Anne Connor, with the State House in the background, outside of the GTech building where she works.

There are no shortage of usual suspects looking to go back to the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, NC this August, but none of them collected as many signatures as did Anne W. Connor, a self-proclaimed political outsider from Barrington, who garnered more than twice the 150 signatures needed to register for the ballot.

“I’m just an ordinary citizen,” she said, during her lunch break the other day. She is a licensing specialist with G-Tech, but she’s also worked as a paralegal and a librarian during her career.

She lives in Barrington where she and her husband, a retired lawyer, raised their two children. Her political inspiration, she said, is Treasurer Gina Raimondo, whose campaign she volunteered for.

A loyal Democrat since  supporting Adlai Stevenson in the 1950’s, she said she really swore her allegiance to liberal causes in college when her roommates father, a member of the Farmer-Labor Party, informed her politics.

“He said he wouldn’t mind paying more taxes if it meant an older person or a student could get better public transportation,” she said, noting that this is still her philosophy to this day. “I’m happy to pay more in taxes as an individual if everyone else pays according to their means.

To this day, she holds many traditional progressive values. She supports health care reform, Planned Parenthood, the the Buffet Rule, and said she didn’t think Rhode Island should have passed a voter ID law last year.

“I think it’s burdensome for senior citizens,” Connor said. “You want to make it as easy for people to vote as possible and no one has demonstrated for me that there is any voter fraud in Rhode Island.”

She enjoys reading, cooking and spending time with her two grown children. She’s also the president-elect of the First Unitarian Church in Providence, which runs the mobile Loaves and Fishes program and was supportive of Occupy Providence last year.

Connor said she isn’t trying to launch a political career or curry favor with party insiders. Instead, she said she wants to go to learn about the process and her party.

“I want to find out what people are thinking in other parts of the country,” she said. “I want to get the pulse of the nation.”

Trucks Back in Pawtucket, Get Ready For Rumble


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In the next few days, I-95 North in Pawtucket will reopen to large tractor trailer trucks. I am not looking forward to it.

They’ve been gone so long, and it’s been so nice taking those S curves (especially with the new Grand Theft Auto signage) that it’s going to be hard to get used to sharing the road with ginormous semis.

But we need our highways to cut through the heart of our cities… No matter what the cost. Enjoy the weekend because Gridlock starts on Monday.

Sigh.

Occupy Sexism Action Fights ‘Rape Culture’


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Rape culture, says the Women’s Center at Marshall University, is when “sexual violence against women is normalized and excused in the media and popular culture. [It] is perpetuated through the use of misogynistic language, the objectification of women’s bodies, and the glamorization of sexual violence.”

Sound a bit too familiar? Join Occupy Providence and the Rhode Island Anti-Sexism League for their Occupy Sexism event today for “a rally at City Hall Park at noon, and continue with a march ending at the Sarah Doyle Women’s Center at 26 Benevolent Street at 2 PM.,” according to a press release.

Here’s more:

April 22nd is Occupy Sexism: a day of action in an effort to continue the dialogue around rape culture. Inspired by the International Slutwalk events of 2011, Occupy Sexism carries the conversation one step further to address the pervasive discrimination and violence faced by women, and by persons of every gender on a daily basis. Occupy Sexism is sponsored by the Rhode Island Anti-Sexism League and co-sponsored by the Providence Branch of the International Socialist Organization, and Occupy Providence.

Please join us for a rally, speakers, and workshops that aim to bring awareness to, and discuss ways to fight back against, attacks on women and the LGBT community, reproductive rights, rape culture, sexual assault in the military, sexism in the Occupy movement, sex workers, and more. These issues directly affect your family, your friends, your neighbors and you every day. Come get educated and empowered to fight back against sexism!

 

GoLocal’s Creative Use of Statistics in Ed. Rankings

Here’s a math question for you. What’s wrong with this statement from GoLocal’s latest (exclusive!) attack on public education?

Rhode Island spends more per student than most other states, ranking in the top ten nationally, but it’s 32nd in the country for student achievement, according to a GoLocalProv analysis of data for all 50 states… In an effort to fairly measure the effectiveness of education spending, GoLocalProv ranked each state by how much it spends per pupil.

Small wonder that’s an “exclusive.” It’s also an incredibly sophomoric method of comparison and reflects a fundamental lack of understand of statistics. None the less, the corporatization crowd jumped right on it as proof of their foregone conclusions:

“This data highlights the stark reality that although we invest heavily in public education in our state, our performance remains unacceptably low,” said Maryellen Butke, Executive Director of RI-CAN, an education reform group.

She added: “People should be asking how we’re spending that money and how much of it is reaching classrooms.”

Well, she’s half right. People should be asking how we’re spending that money and how much of it is reaching classrooms. Those that do, already know the answer to my initial question about the mathematically challenged GoLocal analysis.

If you’re still not with me, ask yourself this:  How fair is it to make comparisons on spending as if the cost of living doesn’t vary state to state?  One would expect high cost states to have higher per student spending as well. Surely a reputable analysis would attempt to account for that. In fact, of the top ten high cost of living states only California and Hawaii do not also appear in the top ten spenders per pupil… and Hawaii is 11th. What a shock, eh? Turns out you have to pay people more to work in areas where their costs are higher, and schools aren’t magically unaffected by regionally variable expenses like fuel, real estate, etc. The conclusion one would have to draw is that RI spends roughly an average amount per pupil and gets roughly average results. Nothing to crow about, but hardly the crisis these corporate shills would have us believe.

Say I wonder what the average pay is for a journalist in the rural south? I’m guessing there’s “proof” there that Beale is overpaid.

Haven Brothers: Legacy of the American Diner Movie


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If you live in Providence, there are certain landmarks you learn about almost immediately. The Superman Building located in the heart of Kennedy Plaza, the statue of Roger Williams overlooking the city from College Hill, and of course, Haven Brothers situated each day next to City Hall.

When the Rhode Island Council for the Humanities (RICH) announced their Grant Awards for 2011; a $5,000 grant was awarded to Southeastern Massachusetts Arts Collaborative (SMARTS) to support the script development phase of a documentary film, being directed by (former venerable Green Party political candidate) Jeff Toste, on the oldest operating American diner on wheels, downtown Providence’s Haven Brothers Diner.

http://www.havenbrothersmovie.com/

Haven Bros. Diner in Downtown Providence

 Correction: An earlier version of this story indicated the movie was being produced by David Bettencourt, which it isn’t. Also, an earlier version listed a fundraiser, which has been canceled.


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