Whitehouse On SCOTUS: ‘Corporate Activism’


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Sen Sheldon Whitehouse at RIC for a meeting of the RI Healthcare Exchange Commission.

Following President Obama’s lead, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse chided the Supreme Court saying some of its members have become more interested in activism than jurisprudence.

“If you can’t tell the difference between health care and broccoli there’s a real problem,” he said this morning at RIC, referencing Justice Antonin Scalia’s line of questioning as the court debated Obamacare last week.

Whitehouse even offered a reply to Scalia’s broccoli comparison.

“If you house burns down, we don’t rebuild your house,” he said, while talking to a group at RIC for the Health Care Exchange Commission meeting he attended. “But if you go to the hospital, we fix your broken leg.”

Later in the day, on a conference call with Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-NY, he said, “There comes a point when have to be able to tell the truth about the Supreme Court, and that is it’s activist and is becoming even more activist. One might even say corporate activism.”

Whitehouse, a member of the Judiciary Committee, was once considered by President Obama for an open slot on the high court.

He noted the irony in Republicans and conservative-leaning Supreme Court justices taking issue with individual mandates, saying the idea was often trumpted by Richard Nixon, the Heritage Foundation and longtime moderate Republican from Rhode Island John Chafee, Gov. Linc Chafee’s dad.

“It was the insurance companies that wanted mandates in the bill,” he said, noting that only because of federalism, the idea that some decisions are best left to the states, is the issue before the Supreme Court.

“Every state can require mandates tomorrow and there isn’t a lawyer in the country who would say that is unconstitutional.”

Whitehouse said many Republicans in Congress agree that universal health insurance would be good for society, but said many are afraid of raising the ire of party extremists.

“I know people who say, ‘you’re absolutely right but I can’t talk about that because I’d get a Tea Party primary opponent if I do.'”

He added that both Republican and Democratic leaders agree that once you drill down into the deficit the big drivers are often related to health care, saying, “If we don’t do it this way, the way we are going to do it is when China says you guys are out of control and we’re not going to loan you any more money.”

 

CWA Supports Product Stewardship for CFLs


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The House Environment and Natural Resources Committee heard testimony last week on several pieces of legislation aimed at involving producers in the end-of-life management of their products.

This concept, known as Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), creates financial incentives for manufacturers to design products that are less toxic, more durable, and more easily recycled. Rhode Island already has three EPR laws on the books. The collection of electronic waste, mercury auto switches, and mercury thermostats are managed through programs that are created and funded by manufacturers.

House Bill 7443 takes the next step in keeping mercury out of our waste stream, requiring manufacturers of florescent light bulbs either to develop a voluntary program to address the disposal of their bulbs or allow the Department of Environmental Management (DEM) to convene a stakeholder group charged with the creation of a mandatory program.

Sponsor of this bill and Committee Vice Chairperson, Rep. Donna Walsh (D-Charlestown) opened the hearing to a packed room by stating, “Producer responsibility is here to stay.” She also emphasized the flexibility of the bill. “There is a voluntary program in this. There are options.”

“I am excited about the NEMA’s (National Electrical Manufacturers Association) new position on producer responsibility,” said Jamie Rhodes, Rhode Island Director for Clean Water Action. “There was near universal agreement on the need for further action to prevent any additional mercury from being disposed of inappropriately. It is always a positive experience when we can work with manufacturers to develop a plan that works just as well for them as it does for all Rhode Islanders.”

Janet Coit, Director of Rhode Island DEM stated, “It looks like we’re moving towards the same thing.” The driving force behind DEM’s support for fluorescent lamp product stewardship is the hazard of improper disposal of mercury. Coit continued, “Mercury is a powerful neurotoxin and we do want to deal with that.” Liz Stone, spokeswoman for DEM, added, “What it comes down to, is that there are very few places in the state to take your bulbs.  So many people throw them in the trash because they don’t know what to do with them.”
In recognizing the positive steps that industry has taken voluntarily, staff attorney Jerry Elmer of the Conservation Law Foundations added, “Despite the fact that 90% of the mercury in light bulbs has been removed and that we’ve moving away from CFLs, there’s still a lot of mercury in the waste stream that needs to be addressed.” Rhode Island Resource Recovery Corporation estimated that they spend around $6,000 to dispose of the 8,000 – 12,000 fluorescent bulbs which they collect.

While House Bill 7443 gives DEM the ability to promulgate rules to address fluorescent lamps, it contains a specific provision to allow a voluntary program to be created by the industry and submitted to the DEM for approval. In support of a potential NEMA voluntary program, Stone added, “This law allows for a voluntary program and we at DEM prefer that. Laws have generally been passed because the industry needs that nudging.”

Matt Prindiville, Associate Director of the Product Policy Institute, described the success of similar programs in other states. “We have over 200 collection locations in Maine, many of them at retail locations. It’s easy for consumers to find these sites.”

RI municipalities have also supported the concept of EPR. “Fourteen of Rhode Island’s cities and towns, representing 56% of the state’s population, have already passed resolutions in support of producer responsibility,” affirmed Amy Vitale of Clean Water Action during the hearing. “This is an extension of existing Rhode Island laws aimed at reducing human exposure to mercury. Though the industry assures us that fluorescent lamps containing mercury are being phased out, their long lifespan ensures that they will be part of our waste stream for at least the next decade.”

Clean Water Action (CWA) is a national organization with over 40,000 members in Rhode Island, working to protect our environment, health, economic well-being and community quality of life. CWA organizes strong grassroots groups and coalitions, and campaigns to elect environmental candidates and solve environmental and community problems.

Many organizations were on hand to support this proposal, including RI Resource Recovery Corporation, Conservation Law Foundation, Clean Water Action, the RI Product Stewardship Council, Sierra Club, the RI DEM, Environment RI, and the Environment Council of RI.

RI Progress Report: Teachers v. Tuition, Ciccone, RIP Peter Lord


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Rightfully, Sen. Frank Ciccone is emerging as the biggest loser in the incident in which his senate colleague Dominick Ruggerio was arrested for allegedly driving drunk and refusing a breathalyzer. Ciccone is accused of attempting to coerce Barrington police officers to let Ruggerio off by threatening legislative retribution. We’re not sure exactly which is more dangerous to society: inebriated elected officials operating motor vehicles or inebriated elected officials using their positions to gain personal favor. Neither should be taken lightly.

Rest in peace, Peter Lord, the hugely-respected Projo environmental reporter who died yesterday of a brain tumor, and thank you so much for your years of explaining our natural world to us.

Thank you Gov. Chafee, for declining to give URI professors 3 percent raises at the same time that tuition is going up 9.5 percent. (I’m sure to hear from an ex-prof or two for this line, but oh well…)

As Providence is asking retirees to take a cut in benefits, the city failed to apply for $1.6 million in federal reimbursement from the Affordable Care Act to help offset these kinds of costs. Remarkably, the Capital City said it asked two health care providers to complete the application for it! I guess the old saying is true: if you want something done right, do it yourself. If you don’t, hire a health care provider.

More bad news for Barry Hinckley’s campaign for Senate. His spokesman John Loughlin has resigned after an erroneous attack on Sheldon Whitehouse’s Buffett Rule bill.  No word yet on whether Loughlin will be replaced by Hudson Hinckley, the previous campaign insider to give the candidate some bad press…

Congrats to Allan Tear, founder of Betaspring, who was asked by President Obama to join him at the White House today when he signs a bill into law that will help small businesses like his raise ore investment money.

Sen. Jack Reed will be at the soon-to-be-operational Wickford Junction train depot this morning, which is slated to start service later this month. The developers of the project have been waiting some 30 years for rail service in North Kingstown.

Turns out ALEC, the secretive business-backed group that quietly pushes for local legislation often bad for democracy and citizens, was behind the law that allowed Trayvon Martin’s killer to walk away without being charged.

Please, local media, give us less updates on lottery winners …. after all, lotteries are little more than a “cheap tax on the poor.”

Congrats to President Obama, who now seems guaranteed to get to run against Mitt Romney for re-election. “I’ve yet to meet a single person in the Republican establishment that thinks Mitt Romney is going to win the general election this year,” GOP cheerleader Joe Scarborough said yesterday.

 

A Possible Progressive Flameout in CD1 Race


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Rep. David Cicilline (D - RI 1)

The line I’ve been toting is that Congressman David Cicilline isn’t as beatable as his approval ratings suggest. First off, I doubt that his approval ratings are low because of his time in Congress, where’s he’s been a reliable progressive vote (as he was always going to be). What seems to be the zeitgeist is that Mr. Cicilline is disliked because Providence is having budget issues.

I still think without a progressive anti-Cicilline in the primary race, progressive voters who fear that Mr. Cicilline might lose aren’t going to abandon him. Progressives are warming up right now, though they haven’t caught fire (they seem to have a knack for picking disappointing candidates).

If soon-to-be-announced primary opponent Anthony Gemma runs as he did last cycle – like he was running for a different office – then the only way he’ll win is through voter antipathy towards Mr. Cicilline, and not for any love of Mr. Gemma.

Let’s consider that possibility for a second. If you’re a progressive, here’s the question I have to ask: where do you go from there? Who do you vote for in November? Do you vote for Brendan Doherty and give a seat to the Republicans on the off-chance that Doherty will be defeated in 2014? Do you vote for Mr. Gemma, a right-wing Democrat who appears more likely to side with the Republicans than the Democrats and who’s competence you don’t have much faith in, but if elected is likely to stay there for years to come? Or do you just skip voting in CD1 come November?

I’m suspecting the last one for many progressives. The issue is that there is no “white knight” in the wings. Since progressives are over-reliant on the Democratic Party, there’s no way to do an end-run around the Democratic nomination process and run a progressive independent. That independent would also have to be well-financed and well-known (and at least popular with a decent swathe of Rhode Islanders); or otherwise risk media marginalization (a very stark possibility). If Mr. Cicilline goes down in a primary duel with Mr. Gemma, that will be it. Two non-progressives will battle for the center-right of Rhode Island voters.

It’s a sad problem to have. The only progressive candidate is terribly flawed, making what should be an easy waltz to reelection an obstacle course.

Secretaries Shouldn’t Pay More Than Millionaires


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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.

What’s wrong with our tax structure in Rhode Island?

If you’re part of the 98% of Rhode Islanders making under $250,000 a year you’re paying your fair share and more. So why does the General Assembly say we don’t have the revenue to invest in affordable housing for all Rhode Islanders, making college affordable, or school breakfast programs in our public schools?

The problem is the way we’re raising revenue.

Rhode Island’s tax structure is inherently regressive, that means the poorer you are the higher share of your income you’re paying in taxes. And the numbers are astonishing!

When you combine all the taxes we pay, sales, property, income and car taxes, the 20% of Rhode Islanders who are living on $18,000 a year or less are forking over 11.9% of their annual income in taxes. For the top 1%, the people making over $390,000 a year it’s just 5.6%.

Think of it this way. If Warren Buffet and his secretary both go buy the same toaster and they both pay 7% sales tax on it, that flat tax rate means a lot more to his secretary. Its money that she can’t spend on basic necessities, but for Warren Buffet it doesn’t even make a dent.

We can start fixing our regressive tax structure this year with the Miller Cimini Tax Equity bill, and we need your help to do it!

Tell the General Assembly to stop balancing the budget on the backs of the middle and working class workers! Secretaries shouldn’t pay higher taxes than millionaires!

Lt. Gov, Whitehouse to Talk Obamacare To Commission


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Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts will update the Rhode Island Health Care Exchange Commission on what a Supreme Court decision on President Obama’s universal health care plan could mean for the Ocean State. And her special guest at the meeting with be Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse.

“We’ll definitely have a brief discussion about it,” she said. “I’m sure people will ask the Senator about it.”

Roberts, who has led the effort in Rhode Island to implement Obama’s Affordable Care Act, said this state’s model Health Benefits Exchange will likely survive regardless of what the Supreme Court decides Obamacare.

“If a mandate is ruled unconstitutional we still very much have a path here in Rhode Island,” she said, adding that even if insurance reforms are struck down by the court, “those are mostly existing consumer protections under state law.”

Because Rhode Island has a guaranteed issue law on the books means no one can be denied access to the Exchange.

If the Medicaid expansion is ruled unconstitutional, on the other hand, “that means we are where we were a few years ago and we wouldn’t be able to move as quickly towards universal coverage.”

Roberts doesn’t think that will happen though.

“I’m not a constitutional lawyer,” she said. “But I’m very optimistic those will remain in place.”

So long as the Medicare subsidies remain in place, Roberts said, “we won’t have to compel people into the marketplace.” States that don’t have guaranteed health insurance, such as the case across the South and Southwest would have a harder time because insurance companies can legally deny people coverage there.

Rhode Island is leading the nation in implementation of the Affordable Care Act. It’s the first and only state to receive a second grant from the federal government, according to Governing Magazine, worth $58.5 million.

In total, Rhode Island has procured about $65 million from ACA funds, and Roberts said she believes that money is safe.

“We should be able to help people regardless of how the Supreme Court rules,” she said.

Much of it will be used to create the database and web portal for the Health Exchange, she said.

Whitehouse, will be there to discuss a report he released last week entitled, “Health Care Delivery System Reform and The Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act,” highlighting progress in this area and the potential for improving patient care and lowering costs.

The Health Insurance Exchange meets Thursday morning at 8:30 at Alger Hall, Room 110, at Rhode Island College.

Martin Luther King Would Have Occupied PVD Today


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In honor of the 44th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Occupy Providence will hold a rally today “to carry on the great work of this fallen leader who was cut down in his prime for nothing less than his commitment to a fair and just world for all humanity ,” according to a press release from the group.

The rally will be from 4 to 6 pm today on the steps of Providence City Hall.

According to the release:

“At a time when the majority of Americans realize the injustice and corruption of the current system, it is important to commemorate this legendary organizer who spearheaded our last powerful social movement to stand up to the 1% and their system of social, economic and civil injustice with a unity rally- both as a tribute and as an organizing event. Speakers will address the pressing needs for change that we have today in the areas that MLK fought so hard for- Freedom and Equality, Jobs and Human Needs, Peace and Solidarity.  Pressing Civil Rights issues like the murder of Trayvon Martin and attacks on the 99% that are working people whose services, jobs and rights to organize are under attack and the call for a new system based on non-violent conflict resolution and peaceful co-existence all need to be urgently changed.”

The group put together this video to promote the action:

Litigation Lending: Payday Loans for Plaintiffs


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Rep. Michael Marcello addresses litigation lending at a recent State House briefing.

While payday loans have garnered a lot of attention at the State House this session, the legislature is also considering new regulations on another form of predatory lending – this one is known as litigation lending.

Litigation lending is the term used when a company will loan a potential plaintiff in a lawsuit money up front in hopes of being repaid – with huge interest rates – once a settlement is reached. It may seem like a benevolent service, but it often doesn’t end up being a benefit for the people who use these loans.

“These lenders charge outrageous interest rates to people who – as a result of an injury are in desperate straights – unable to work, without the funds they need to support their families and often facing enormous healthcare bills,” said Donald Migliori, the president of the Rhode Island Association for Justice, a group that advocates for consumer rights in the judicial system.

Rep. Michael Marcello, a Scituate Democrat, has sponsored a bill that would cap interest rates on such loans at 21 percent. Currently, the interest rates on these loans can be as high as 200 percent.

Referencing the payday loan bills, Marcello said yesterday, “This is just one more line for consumer protection.”

To understand just how predatory litigation loans are, one need look no farther than how they came to be. According to a recent article in the Rhode Island Bar Journal, “the origins of the [litigation finance company] industry are illuminating.”

A former Las Vegas loan shark and mobile home park developer named Perry Walton came up with the concept in 1998 after pleading guilty to “extortionate collection of debt” in another scheme, according to the Bar Journal.

“Walton began loaning money to plaintiffs, structuring these advances as ‘contingent obligations’ in order to sidestep usury laws,” according to the Bar Journal. “He then invited would-be lenders to seminars, charging as much as $12,400 to impart the secret of his lucrative new scheme. Two years later, 400 people has been trained by Walton and a new subprime industry was born.”

The Bar Journal referenced an example of a man who was injured at work and brought suit but needed surgery well before a settlement could be reached. He borrowed $25,000 from LawCash for the surgery. Because the 3.85 percent interest rate compounded monthly, he ended up owing $48.94 in interest daily. The man earned $80 a day prior to his accident.

“Every day, in every state, persons who have been injured by others’ negligence turn to [litigation loans] for desperately needed funds,” according to the Bar Journal. “It is only reasonable that they not be further victimized by usurious loans.”

Obamacare, Broccoli and the Supreme Court


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Antonin Scalia observes in court that the government cannot compel a citizen to purchase broccoli, and the government’s lawyers are Struck Dumb. They clearly do not spend time in my local pub. Every week some bonehead appears there with the “broccoli” canard. And there is a simple answer to that stupid assertion:

The government can bomb Pakistan with drones; the government can declare one man the property of another; the government can intern Japanese citizens; the government can declare a corporation a citizen; the government can tax your income at 99 cents on the dollar; the government can make it OK to shoot unarmed strangers in your neighborhood; the government can declare who is President without regard to the popular vote or to the Constitution.

Yes, Antonin. The government can make you buy broccoli.

I practice law in the trenches with ordinary people for clients. Ask them what the government can make you do. You have to be willfully blind to think our government lacks the power to make you buy broccoli. Willful blindness can, of course, be useful to a Supreme Court justice.

This is how John Locke describes government: Government is the power of coercion, up to death, to compel citizens to act for the common good (2nd Treatise of Civil Government, §3). Your “freedom” is the freedom to elect the government that coerces you—a government for the people or a government for the privileged. That is the beginning and end of your freedom, Judge Scalia.

No Red Carpet for Needy Families, Immigrants


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For years, a staple of talk radio hosts and budget hardliners has been the argument that Rhode Island public policy on welfare and public assistance has made the state a magnet for families, particularly immigrants, seeking its juicy benefits.

But the recent release of the Rhode Island Kids Count 2011 annual report pokes some neat holes in that meme.

Along with a comprehensive statistical analysis of issues including poverty rates of Rhode Island’s families with children, education, school lunch and breakfast eligibility and state aid (with emphasis on the urban core communities of Providence, Pawtucket, Central Falls and Woonsocket) comes an under-reported nugget from the 2010 Census: the number of R.I. children dropped 10 percent last year, from 247,822 to 223,956, the third-biggest decrease by state in the nation.

Couple that with the state’s 11 percent unemployment rate and high rental average, and the state’s not exactly a major draw for needy families who are seeking jobs, reasonable living costs and social services.

“That 10 percent drop is telling,” says Elizabeth Burke Bryant, executive director of RI Kids Count. “People tend to move because of extended family, or to be close to where the jobs are.”

“While there’s a significant decline in the caseload of children and families receiving assistance, it’s due to time limits and other indicators, and is not reflective of the number of poor children in the state,” she adds.

An Urban Institute state-by-state study of immigrant children from 1990 to 2009 also finds immigrant families, documented or undocumented, aren’t exactly flocking to Rhode Island.

From 1990 to 2009, the number of immigrant children in the state grew from 40,000 to 52,000, with the percentage of the state’s total number of children rising from 18 to 24 percent. That growth rate of 30 percent in raw numbers, however, ranked only 47th in the nation.

The difficult housing market is another reason families requiring social services aren’t overwhelming the state, says Stephanie Geller, RI Kids Count policy analyst.

The average monthly cost of rental housing in the state has risen from $748 in 2000 to $1,150 by 2011, according to the Kids Count report, with about 25 percent of Rhode Island’s families spending 50 percent or more of their income on housing costs.

“There’s a feeling overall that the price of housing is going down, but there’s more demand for rentals because of people losing their houses. We’re one of the few states that doesn’t have a dedicated source of funding for affordable housing.” Geller says.

Some of the pending General Assembly legislation Kids Count is keeping an eye on, Geller says, includes increases in co-payments for child care assistance and cuts in dental care assistance for both young adults and adults 21 and over.

Legislature Considers Better Public Records Act


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Mike Field, of the Attorney General's office, testifies at a hearing on a proposal to update Rhode Island's Access to Public Records Act.

Rhode Island’s public records law may get some much-needed revisions if a bill heard by the House Judiciary Committee last night becomes law.

The proposal, introduced by Rep. Michael Marcello, D-Scituate, would be the first amendment to the Access to Public Records Act in 15 years. It would: decrease the amount of time a public agency has to make public records available from ten to 7 days; require municipalities and government agencies to designate and train a public records officer; require police departments to make initial arrest reports available within 24 hours; and would make correspondences between elected officials regarding policy public documents.

Officials with the Attorney General’s office, which submitted a separate bill that doesn’t reach as far, the Department of Administration and local and state police took issue with the legislation, advocates for civil liberties and open government applauded the effort.

“This may impose some additional burdens on government employees but it should be accepted as an important part of their work,” said Steve Brown, the executive director of the RI ACLU.

Brown said people and organizations that seek public records in Rhode Island often run into problems obtaining them. He said the changes would improve citizen’s access to public records.

While police are against compelling arrest reports to be made available within 24 hours, saying this could be onerous for officers, John Marion, the executive director of  Common Cause RI, said making arrest reports available as quickly as possible is an important function of a free society.

“Arresting someone is the strongest action the state can take against an individual,” he said. “When the state takes away someone’s liberty – that’s what an arrest represents – the state should provide information about that in as timely as manner as possible.”

There is also a Senate bill, sponsored by James Sheehan, D- North Kingstown, that would update the Access to Public Records Act that open records advocates say doesn’t go as far as this one in ensuring that citizens have easy access to public records.

 

Mistake on Mayor’s Name Was Projo, Not Chafee


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Gov. Chafee took some heat over the weekend for misidentifying Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine as Raymond Fontaine in an op/ed in the Providence Journal. But it turns out it wasn’t his mistake. It was the Projo’s.

According to Chafee’s office, the piece they sent read: “…particularly Mayors Fontaine, Grebien, and Taveras…” The version that ran in Sunday’s print read: “…particularly Woonsocket Mayor Raymond Fontaine, Pawtucket Mayor Donald Grebien, Providence Mayor Angel Taveras…”

While the Providence Journal mentioned the mistake on its editorial page this morning, it amended that correction on the web this afternoon after a call from this reporter.

The original correction said: “In Governor Chafee’s April 1 column, “Local leaders need more power in crisis,” the first name of Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine was printed incorrectly.”The amended correction read: “April 3’s correction of the erroneous first name of Woonsocket Mayor Leo (not Raymond) Fontaine in Governor Chafee’s April 1 column, “Local leaders need more power in crisis,” should have noted that The Journal, not the governor’s office, miswrote Mayor Fontaine’s first name. Mr. Chafee’s office did not give the mayor’s first name when it sent the column.”

Editorial Page Editor Robert Whitcomb said the amended correction will run in tomorrow’s print edition as well.

“It’s an unfortunate mistake,” Whitcomb said. “As soon as we became aware of it, we corrected it.”

Bill Would Cut Payday Loan APR from 260% to 36%


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Rep. Frank Ferri testifies on his bill that would reform paypay loans in RI. In the background is former Bill Murphy, former House speaker, who opposes the bill.

Two weeks ago a House committee heard some compelling testimony on a bill that would curb exorbitant interest rates on so-called “payday loans.” Today it’s the Senate’s turn, as the Corporations Committee will discuss Sen. Juan Pichardo’s version of the legislation.

And according to a press release, Pichardo seems pretty confident the bill will become law.

“With strong support from both sides of the aisle, Senator Pichardo and advocates for the legislation have high hopes for eliminating the cycle of debt caused by high-interest payday loans,” said the release.

Indeed, much of the opposition to the bill comes from special interest lobbyists, such as former House Speaker Bill Murphy.

The bill would lower the annual percentage rate on payday loans from 260 percent to 36 percent.

There were 143,201 payday loans made in Rhode Island last year for a total of more than $53 million, said Margaux Morisseau, with NeighborWorks Blackstone River Valley, a community-building non-profit based in Woonsocket. Only 2 percent of payday loans she said go to people who pay them all back and don’t take out another one.

While detractors of the bill say this is the only way some people can get a loan in a bind, Morisseau said there are several other options. In an email she detailed a few of them:

  • Capitol Good Fund lends $2000 loans at 15% APR.  Their customers have taken out CGF loans to help get out of the payday lending debt trap.
  • West Elmwood Housing Development Corporation is piloting the “Neighborhood Loan Store” that makes loans up to $1500 at 18-25% APR.
  • Navigant Credit Union also recently launched “Smart Start” a safe, easily accessed alternative product at all of their branches. They loan $600, with a 90 day term, no credit required.

RI Progress Report: Hinckley Retraction, ‘Devout’ RI, Romney’s Problems and More…


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Paula Hodges curates the local news, and provides links to all the recent stories relevant to Rhode Island progressives, so you don’t have to…

Hinckley retracts criticism of Whitehouse bill
By JOHN E. MULLIGAN JOURNAL WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON — After charging that a tax proposal by U.S. Sen. Sheldon White-house would force municipalities to raise local property taxes, the Hinckley Senate campaign acknowledged Monday that its critique had been based on a misunderstanding of the Rhode Island Democrat’s legislation.

Benjamin “Barry” Hinckley III, the Republican candidate challenging White-house, asserted in a news release that the Whitehouse version of the so-called “Buffett rule” — imposing a minimum tax on those who make more than $1 million a year — would reduce the incentive for rich people to invest in tax-free municipal bonds.

Hinckley’s argument was that this would weaken demand for the bonds, which would in turn reduce the ability of cities and towns to raise money –– thus forcing them to raise local property taxes.

RI is 10th among least religious states, but most devout in NE
Ted Nesi, Nesi’s Notes, WPRI 12

Rhode Island is one of the least religious states in the country, but its residents are still more devout than those of any other New England state, according to a new Gallup survey.

The poll shows 32% of Rhode Islanders are “very religious,” tied with New York as the 10th-least religious state in the nation.

Rob Horowitz: The Politics Rule Out Single-Payer Heath Care System
Rob Horowitz, GoLocalProv

Last week’s oral arguments over the constitutionality of “Obamacare” and the prospect of the Supreme Court ruling that the law’s individual mandate requiring citizens to purchase health insurance is unconstitutional has reignited dormant longings by liberals for the adoption of a single-payer national health care system.

Liberal Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson wrote, “If the Supreme strikes down Obamacare, a single-payer system will go from being politically impossible to being in the long-run fiscally inevitable.” Robinson’s thoughts were echoed by a number of other liberal columnists and by commentators on liberal-leaning MSNBC.

Unfortunately, no matter how strong the substantive case may be for a single-payer health care system, the politics still preclude it. Even with large Democratic majorities in the House and Senate, Obamacare was difficult to pass despite the fact that the bill was supported by the American Medical Association(AMA) and the insurance industry was in neutral. Today, these powerful interests would launch an all-out campaign against any effort to adopt a single-payer, government-run heath care system

Romney problem: women voters
Scott MacKay, RINPR

As the race for the Republican presidential nomination has unspooled, front-runner Mitt Romney has developed a problem that could be fatal if it persists into the autumn campaign: women voters.

That is the message of a new public opinion survey conducted in 12 swing states by USA Today and Gallup and reported in the Washington Post by the Morning Fix’s Chris Cilliza.

The poll shows that in 12 states, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin that President Obama leads the former Massachusetts governor by 51 to 42 percent.

A month ago, Romney held a two percentage point lead in these same dozen states.

RI schools to stop buying meat with “pink slime”
By MEGAN HALL, RINPR

Rhode Island’s schools won’t be serving lean, finely textured beef much longer. The school districts have decided to remove what’s known as “pink slime” from the menu.

Disgust with meat trimmings sterilized with ammonia has reached Rhode Island. The beef additive has been a component of the meat we eat for more than ten years, but media reports, concerned consumers and a disgusting nickname have focused new attention on the so called pink slime.

The Rhode Island Department of Corrections is in charge of distributing food to schools across the state. The Department’s Patricia Coyne-Fague says school districts now have the option of ordering beef without the additive.

‘You think you got pension problems now…’
Edward Fitzpatrick, Providence Journal Column

It’s midnight in Barrington. Do you know where your state legislator is?

No, of course, you don’t. You’ve got a job, children, a life to lead. But you might have heard that shortly after midnight on Wednesday, the Barrington police pulled over Senate Majority Leader Dominick J. Ruggerio, D-North Providence, charging him with drunken driving and refusing a breath test. The police say another member of the Senate leadership, Frank A. Ciccone III, D-Providence, made a cameo at the scene, threatening police officers with legislative retribution and trying to pull strings to get Ruggerio off the hook.

The issue in R.I. is much bigger than just one senator
EDWARD ACHORN, Providence Journal Column

It was sad to learn that Rhode Island Senate Majority Leader Dominic Ruggerio (D.-North Providence) had been arrested for driving under the influence in Barrington early last Wednesday morning. We are all human, prone to making mistakes that we greatly regret, and we all deserve some sympathy when we stumble.

But it is sadder still to see the initial response by the powerful in Rhode Island, particularly Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed. She expressed no concern for the safety of the public — including our loved ones who must share the road with dangerous drivers. She conveyed no sense at all that driving drunk is a reasonably weighty offense and behavior unworthy of someone in one of the state’s highest offices.

When former House Minority Leader Robert Watson was arrested on charges of driving under the influence and possessing marijuana, Republicans — properly, I thought — removed him from his leadership position and expressed the hope that their troubled colleague would turn his life around. The party that dominates Rhode Island, the Democrats, demonstrated lower standards last week.

Doherty will keep $1,000 from Sen. Ciccone despite allegations
Ted Nesi, Nesi’s Notes, WPRI 12

Former State Police Col. Brendan Doherty says he’s keeping $1,000 donated to his congressional campaign by state Sen. Frank Ciccone, despite an allegation by police in Barrington that the lawmaker threatened them while they were arresting Senate Majority Leader Dominick Ruggerio.

“It is our understanding that Senator Ciccone has apologized for any comments that may have been viewed as improper,” Giovanni Cicione, Doherty’s campaign manager, told WPRI.com in an email. “For now we see no reason to take any action.”

Chafee strategizes with local leaders, Governor urges officials from towns and cities to persuade lawmakers to approve his proposals
By RANDAL EDGAR and PHILIP MARCELO JOURNAL STATE HOUSE BUREAU

PROVIDENCE — When he met with local leaders in January, the goal was to figure out what the state can do to help cities and towns shore up their finances.

On Monday, as Governor Chafee held a second meeting with mayors and managers from across the state, the focus was not on what, but how.

Specifically: how do you get a sweeping and controversial package of bills — including some ideas that have failed in the past — through the General Assembly?    The answer, voiced with varying degrees of urgency by Chafee and the local leaders after the 50-minute session, boiled down to this: mayors and managers need to be contacting their local lawmakers.

Americans in denial
Providence Journal Editorial

Why is anti-government fervor so extreme in those parts of America, mostly in the South and Southwest, that receive the greatest per-capita amount of federal help in relation to personal income and have the highest incidence of such social problems as illegitimacy and substance abuse?

We’re talking about Food Stamps, Medicare, Medicaid and other basic federal support systems. Is this just staggering hypocrisy by folks who admire, say, lobbyist and social-conservative presidential candidate Rick Santorum — a self-proclaimed man of the people who earns $1 million a year?

Unemployment, poverty, threaten child welfare
By FLO JONIC, RINPR

Kids Count has released its 18th annual report on the well being of Rhode Island’s children.

Rhode Island is losing children. The Kids Count fact book shows the number of children in Rhode Island has fallen 10 percent over the last decade, or a loss about 24,000 kids.

Kids Count director Elizabeth Burke Bryant says Rhode Island is one of only three states to have lost ten percent or more of its children.

Council passes special tax levy, 13.8-percent supplemental tax is expected to bring $4.3 million and prevent state intervention
By JOHN HILL JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

WOONSOCKET — The City Council voted 6 to 1 Monday night to approve a 13.8-percent supplemental tax levy in an effort to find enough money to keep the school system open through the end of the school year.

Only Councilman Roger Jalette voted against the measure, saying he thought a municipal bankruptcy was the only sure cure for the city’s $10 million school deficit.

But the other six council members said that while they thought the special tax was a bad choice, going into receivership would even be worse.

Taveras Beheads Flanders; Chafee Should Give Him Haircut


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Bob Flanders seemed to take a perverse pleasure in threatening other people’s livelihoods. But yesterday he was the one who got beheaded rather than getting a haircut when Providence Mayor Angel Taveras severed the city’s relationship with the Central Falls receiver-turned-municipal bankruptcy zealot.

Taveras fired Flanders yesterday because the retired Supreme Court justice, who was acting as an legal adviser to the Capital City in its quest to avoid going belly up, said he thought bankruptcy was inevitable.

“Judge Flanders’s recent comments concerning Providence’s fiscal crisis are unacceptable,” said Taveras in a statement. “Because of the harm his comments have done, effective today the City of Providence has severed its relationship with Judge Flanders.”

Somewhere between being named the receiver for Central Falls and being fired as a bankruptcy adviser to Providence, Flanders had become both obsessed and enamored with the idea of municipal restructuring. He penned pieces extolling bankruptcy’s benefits, and seemed to tell anyone who would listen what a boon Chapter 11 could be.

He even traveled to a bondholders conference in Philadelphia and, in trumpeting the virtues of coerced contract negotiations, according to the Huffington Post, said, “We could blow up any contract we liked.”

Turns out, however, that Providence didn’t mind blowing up his contract either.

Flanders had become an outspoken and often obnoxious force in the realm of municipal restructuring. He turned even ardent supports against him when he gave a poorly-received performance at the annual Follies, cracking wise about his job of stripping working class people of their agreed upon retirement plans. Dressed as an executioner, Flanders likened himself to Darth Vader and called himself the “lord of the pink slip.”

Prior to that, Gov. Chafee had to revoke Flanders decision to outlaw street parking in Central Falls after it became painfully evident that the decision was little more than a way to charge Central Falls residents for having cars (most homes in CF don’t have driveways, so parking on the road is the only option). He’s being sued by the ACLU for not properly adhering to the state’s rules for democracy in his role as Central Falls receiver.

While Flanders has done good work in getting Central Falls’ budget back in line, he proved disastrous at the public relations aspect of his role. He came across as arrogant and uncaring. He belittled the people he was supposed to be helping. He made Rhode Island seem like a state that didn’t care about its struggling communities, only their bottom lines.

Gov. Chafee would be wise to show the same kind of leadership that Taveras did and rebuke Flanders for giving municipal bankruptcy a bad name. But he shouldn’t be removed as Central Falls receiver; Chafee should simply slash Flanders exorbitant contract that pays him more than $360,000 a year.

Surely, Flanders would be amenable to taking less money to be the “lord of the pink slip” in Central Falls because, as we all know, a haircut is better than a beheading.

RI Senators Advocate for Middle Class


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Both of Rhode Island’s senators will be here in the Ocean State today and advocating for bills that would benefit the middle class. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, as we reported on Saturday, will be in Cranston for a roundtable discussion on his Buffett Rule bill. And Sen. Jack Reed will be at URI, with school president David Dooley to talk about his bill that would prevent the interest rate on some student loans from doubling in July.

“It is in our national interest to try and keep student loan rates low,” said Reed in a statement about his bill that would prevent the interest rate on Stafford loans from doubling. “As the price of college continues to increase, more students are forced to take out bigger loans to pay for their education.”

Reed’s office said the interest rate on Stafford Loans is slated to double in July, from 3.4 to 6.8 percent. According to the release, 7.8 million low- and middle-income students across the country utilize Stafford loans, 36,000 of whom are from Rhode Island. There are 8,000 URI students who utilize Staford loans.

Sen. Whitehouse will be at the Comprehensive Community Action Program’s headquarters (311 Doric Ave, Cranston) to discuss his Buffett Rule bill that would, according to his staff, “ensure that multi-million-dollar earners pay at least a 30 percent effective tax rate.”

Budgeting for Disaster: Cutting the Buddha


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FY2013 budget

FY2013 budgetOur budget tour continues with a visit to the Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals. The acronym is BHDDH and I’m told by insiders it’s pronounced “buddha.”

BHDDH is spending more time than usual in the news. This is largely because last year they cut $26 million from the budget that would have gone to private providers of care for disabled adults. You can see the cut on page 153 of Volume II of the budget (or page 17 of this excerpt), second line, where $206 million in 2011 went down to $180 million in 2012.

This is a cut about three times as big as Governor Chafee proposed. But if you remember, the General Assembly rejected Chafee’s sales tax changes, so they had to cut much deeper than he’d suggested.

Some background: Rhode Island provides services to these people in two ways. About 220 get services through Rhode Island Community Living and Supports (RICLAS), a state program, and a bit more than 3,000 others get services through private agencies who bill the state for their service. These agencies are almost wholly dependent on those bills.

BHDDH recently commissioned a big study of the matter and determined that the state actually doesn’t pay very much for this service. Over the last few years, the population under care grew slower than any northeast state besides Massachusetts, and we reduced the per capita expense from $76,803 in 2009 to $63,013 in 2011. This is despite being one of only nine states (out of 44 where data was available) without a waiting list for services. In other words, we appear to be getting pretty good service for our money.

There is another side, though. We get this great value by paying people very little. The going rate for direct support staff at the private facilities appears to be between $9 and $11 per hour, even for the unionized folks. Remember, these are the people who are bathing, feeding, teaching, and otherwise caring for highly disabled individuals. By contrast, direct care staff at RICLAS are paid about twice as much. (Representative Scott Slater has sponsored a bill in to set a minimum wage for direct support staff at these residences.)

Conversely—and somewhat unfortunately—some of the executives at the private organizations are paid far more than their counterparts in the state. David Jordan, the CEO of Seven Hills, who runs homes in Massachusetts, too, was paid $533,214 in 2009. ($265k in salary and the rest in pension contributions.) This year he has responded to the budget cuts by cutting support staff pay by 5% and ending most of their benefits. Executive pay was cut 3%, according to UNAP, the union representing workers there.

So what happens when the administration makes a plan to cut costs and the Assembly says that’s great, but please cut three times as much? Answer: some pretty dumb things.

For example, the state will only pay a fee for service provided, as opposed to a per-person “capitation” rate. This sounds fair, but if an employee shows up an hour late to work, the agency gets docked not only that employee’s pay, but also the overhead costs allocated to that hour of pay. It’s not as if the agency wasn’t responsible for that care, or the heat and electricity didn’t have to be paid for that hour.

The state also changed the way they assess the level of disability for each resident. This affects the amount the state pays for their care. We had been using a four-step measure, but it was changed to a seven-step “Supports Intensity Scale” (SIS). The SIS is probably a better measure, but the four-step scale doesn’t exactly translate over to the seven-step one and the staff to do re-assessments simply doesn’t exist. Result: BHDDH simply decided which levels of the old scale corresponded to which levels of the new scale, and voila, they had to pay less to support the residents.

Actually, what BHDDH says is this:

If SIS has not been performed and client is receiving services then, the resource allocation is based on previously approved level of service cross walked to the new levels effective 7/1/11.

 

So what do we learn from this? That there isn’t much deference to department plans in the Assembly, for better and worse. If you’re a department director with a plan to cut costs, you should probably only present a fraction of those costs, or risk having your department turned upside down by a demand to cut much more. The promise of cuts is like blood in the water; the sharks don’t care where they bite, and presto you have people mobilizing marches against you. Under these conditions, which director is going to volunteer cuts again?

And we also learn about the downside of privatization. Through aggressive use of private group homes and community-based care, Rhode Island has kept costs low, much lower than most northeast states. But part of the reason we could do that is that the private operators of those homes didn’t have to pay their employees well (and could pay their executives too well). Though I’m sure it would help (at some of the agencies), slashing executive pay won’t make up for the cuts; there simply aren’t enough executives with egregious salaries to make up $26 million.

Overall, administrative costs at the private agencies (about 10%) seem comparable to the RICLAS costs, as far as one can tell from the personnel lists in the budget. More important, because these are private agencies, we have only limited control over them. As some will recall, that was part of the point of the whole privatization push. We were to give up control of services so the invisible hand of the private market could work its magic. Well it has, and here’s the result.

None of this is to say it isn’t possible to squeeze costs down over time, but how much less do we want care-givers to be paid? Though we would like to be able to slowly reduce administrative overhead, the sudden cuts of this past year will not have that effect. More likely they’ll bankrupt one or two of the providers, and that will be a lesson to…someone.

Full disclosure: I have recently done some software consulting work for West Bay Residential Services, one of the DD residential care providers, and may do so again someday.

Update: Clarified the makeup of David Jordan’s 2009 compensation.

Read previous posts from this series

Why Did LGBT Expert Leave URI?


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To announce an event to be held a the LGBTIQQ Symposium, running from April 2 through 6, URI issued a press release in which it announced the symposium while highlighting the following: “The University of Rhode Island will present a panel discussion focusing on the unique workplace experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, intersex, queer or questioning individuals as they navigate life after graduation.”

In the context of its discussion of  “unique workplace experiences,” the panel should raise the question of why Andrew Winters is no longer at URI, his former workplace. This is a particularly harrowing question, as, since the mid nineties through last spring, Andrew Winters was the primary organizer of this very symposium.  Indeed, thus far many questions have been raised, but not a single one has been answered.

Here is a short summary of what has happened:

On April 5 of 2011, a number of concerned members of the URI community wrote a letter to URI President David Dooley.  In the letter we stated, with a sense of alarm and profound regret, our objections to the letter of reprimand that Andrew Winters had received from Kathryn Friedman, at the time Interim Associate Vice President in the Office of Community, Equity and Diversity.  Ms. Friedman alleged that the LGBT URI community had “without exception” expressed no confidence in Andrew Winters.

The two words “without exception” capture the unprofessional nature of this communication and the atmosphere of intimidation and bullying that characterized Andrew Winters’ “unique workplace experience,” once the university administration decided that his tenure at URI would be terminated.  Many also understand that it was precisely Andrew’s unrelenting effort to address bullying and harassment at URI that rendered him unwelcome in eyes of the URI administration.

Our esteemed colleague URI President David M. Dooley, replied: “This issue, however, pertains to a confidential personnel matter and I am not at liberty to meet with you to discuss the situation.”

The trouble with this administrative response was that it applies to any conceivable form of arbitrary and capricious conduct of the administration directed at anyone.  By definition, any such abuse of power by administrators could be construed as “a confidential personnel matter.” and, following this reasoning, would therefore be beyond scrutiny, discussion, and accountability.  This objection, predictably, drew no response.  The same happened to the letter to the Rhode Island Board of Governors of Higher Education.  The Board never had the courtesy to acknowledge receipt of our letter, and to date has failed to take appropriate corrective action.

Fast forward to Tuesday, Jan. 24.  At that date, The House Commission to Study Public Higher Education Affordability and Accessibility in Rhode Island visited URI for a public hearing to collect expert testimony to improve affordability and accessibility of higher education.  At the hearing, I made the following statement and raised the following questions, which are recorded in the minutes of the meeting:

As of August 2011, URI is number 14 on the Princeton Review list of the bottom 20, least LGBT friendly schools. Clearly, URI is not accessible to students for whom the LGBT climate and safety is a concern. URI operates under the cloud of what it has done to Andrew Winters, who, as we know, was bullied out. Your committee should look into several issues:

1. To force Andrew Winters’ departure, how much money was spent on URI’s offer he “could not refuse?” How much on unemployment benefits to which he is entitled?
2. The URI administration has stonewalled every single question by hiding under the cover of confidentiality. How can there be public oversight of URI procedures, governance, and due process?
3. How can there be progress, unless URI is held fully accountable for the injustice done to Andrew Winters?
4. How can Andrew Winters’ successor, Annie Russell, operate effectively in a climate in which messengers of bad news are not tolerated?
5. With all the above questions looming unanswered, how can there ever be adequate support for LGBT students at URI?
The charge of the committee explicitly refers to student support and governance issues. In other words, all the issues raised here are germane to the committee’s charge.

Since its inception, the URI LGBTIQQ Symposium has been conducted in the tradition of promoting cultural sensitivity and advocacy for fair and equitable treatment of LGBTIQQ people.  In keeping with this tradition, I respectfully ask that the citizens of Rhode Island demand redress of the injustice done to Andrew Winters and correction of the University governance that made this possible.

RIPEC Report: State Cuts Strangled Struggling Cities


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Chart courtesy of RIPEC

A new report from the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council confirms an idea that RI Future has been reporting on for a month now, namely that state cuts to cities and towns are a big factor in the state’s struggling cities inabilities to balance their budgets.

Since 2008, says the report, state aid to cities and towns has been slashed by more than $175 million, a reduction of 72.6 percent.

“Policy choices made by the state – specifically without accompanying mandate relief, and a provision for increasing state intervention for fiscally-stressed communities – increased the responsibility of municipalities to make changes to their fiscal structure,” reads the report. “In some cases, municipalities were able to effectively balance their budgets despite cuts to local aid. In other cases, however, municipalities made policy decisions to bridge budgetary gaps that did not result in long-term structural change.”

Ted Nesi reports this morning that the report backs up what RI Future has been reporting since early March.

“It lends credence to the argument made by Governor Chafee and others that much of the immediate crisis stemmed from the 73% reduction in non-education aid to cities and towns the General Assembly approved between 2007 and 2011.”

We first reported on this dynamic on March 5. A little more than a week later, we asked Governor Chafee about it, and he confirmed our theory. Here’s an excerpt from that story:

Governor Chafee said former Governor Don Carcieri and the General Assembly put struggling communities in peril when they cut some $195 million in state aid to cities and towns.

“It’s no wonder Providence is in trouble, it’s no wonder Pawtucket is having a trouble making payroll, it’s no wonder Central Falls went into bankruptcy,”  he said after speaking at a conference on the state’s economy at Bryant University today. “They just couldn’t sustain those kinds of cuts. There is no property tax base to transfer those kinds of cuts onto.”

Chafee said Carcieri and the General Assembly essentially balanced the state’s budget by taking money away from cities and towns – a move that he said the state’s wealthy communities could withstand but the poorer communities could not.

“I thought it was the path of least resistance,” he said. “That way they could go and say we didn’t raise taxes but at the same time they did raise taxes on the property tax payers of those communities. It was a little disingenuous to say we’re not raising taxes when you are passing it down to the property tax payers of the distressed communities.”

But no one put it more bluntly than RI Future’s Libby Kimzey, who is running for a seat in the House of Representatives to represent Providence. At a Pecha Kucha event in February said, “Right now the State of Rhode Island is being a jerk to Providence. Those are decisions that state lawmakers have made that put the city in the position of closing schools and we’re having this whole conversation about cutting retirees benefits and it just gets me really worked up.”

Here’s the video from that:

For too long in Rhode Island, we’ve allowed the right-wing to portray struggling cities’ budget problems as exclusively the result of unfunded pension liabilities. The reality is top-own cuts from the state are far more a factor in why cash-strapped municipalities are having a hard time paying their bills.

More Local Action Toward Justice for Trayvon Martin

The perplexing “missteps” by the Sanford police in the handling of the Trayvon Martin killing are adding up at an alarming rate. We recall that a narcotics detective, and not a homicide detective, was first to assess the scene and engage Zimmerman, or that the lead investigator, Chris Serino, had called for the arrest of George Zimmerman, but was overturned by the state Attorney’s Office claiming there was not enough evidence.

Sanford mayor, Jeff Triplett, against the urgings of his own police and local prosecutors, decided to release the 911 phone call tapes. Until now it was not known that the Sanford police dept. had advised the mayor in this regard.

Additionally, recently release video of George Zimmerman in temporary custody at the Sanford police headquarters 35 mins. after the shooting appears to challenge the veracity of his, and his family’s, claim that he was brutally assaulted by Trayvon Martin. On the video Zimmerman appeared to have no contusions or lacerations on the back of his head or to his nose, nor was there any observable blood stains on his clothing. Zimmerman has claimed that his nose was broken during a scuffle with Martin, and medical experts assert that a broken nose in this instance would have produce significant bleeding. Law enforcement expert, Lou Palumbo, after viewing the video noted that Zimmeran appeared “fully ambulatory.”

New witnesses continue to emerge with detailed accounts that also dispute Zimmerman’s claim of self-defense. One witness who wished to remain unidentified placed Zimmerman as situated on top of Trayvon.

…The larger man got off, then there was a boy that was now dead on the ground … He [Zimmerman] didn’t appear hurt…

Richard Kurtz, the funeral director who prepared the body of Trayvon, stated that he saw no irregularities to Trayvon’s body that would be consistent with the account of a physical struggle the likes of which Zimmerman testified to. Zimmerman’s “story just does not make sense,” said Kurtz.

Arguably the most crucial component to the entire case is a Sanford law which, according to Ken Padowitz, a former homicide prosecutor, states that because Zimmerman was handcuffed and taken to the police station by default means that he actually was officially under arrest, but was apparently never booked.

Somebody at that police department made a decision to not go through normal procedure.

Under Florida’s codes of criminal procedure unless George Zimmerman is charged within a 175 days of this apparent arrest he can never be charged for the murder of Trayvon Martin.

The clock of justice is ticking… literally.

Below is a list of local actions taking place in support of justice for Trayvon and his family:

  • April 3rd — This Tuesday Rhode Island College’s Unity Center is holding a campus and community forum from 4-6pm. All are welcome.
  • April 8th — This coming Sunday at 6pm the Providence Africana Reading Collective (PARC) will reconvene to focused on isolating our actionable interest in the TRAYVON MARTIN case. PARC meets a Tea in Sahara which is located on 69 Governor St. All community members are encouraged to come.
  • April 11th —  Roots Café is hosting a community forum and action planning session on justice for Trayvon Martin and his family. Key community leaders will be in attendance. Additionally, Roots Café is hoping to have a representative from the RI State Attorney’s office to provide a brief contextual description of Florida’s controversial “Stand Your Ground” law. Roots Café invites you to join your voice and action oriented ideas with other community members in a push for justice.

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