New Law Helps Farmers, Fishermen Market Locally


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A new state law designed to “boost Rhode Island agriculture and seafood industries” will provide grants to farmers and the fisherman to help them market their products locally. It will also create the Interagency Food and Nutrition Policy Advisory Council that would, “develop solutions to regulatory and policy barriers to developing a strong sustainable food economy and healthful nutrition practices,” according to a press release.

Here’s the full press release:

Introduced by Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski and Rep. Deborah Ruggiero, the Rhode Island Local Agriculture and Seafood Act (2012-S 2611A, 2012-H 7701aa) directs the state Department of Environmental Management to establish program to provide small grants and technical assistance to farms and seafood businesses to promote sales of locally grown products. The bill also creates the Interagency Food and Nutrition Policy Advisory Council, which will help remove regulatory barriers that stand in the way of the local farming and fishing industries’ success.

The legislation is aimed at assisting local farms and fishing operations succeed as small businesses and helping them market their wares locally.

“We tend to think of economic development as growing jobs inside a plant or a building, but Rhode Island’s fishing and farming industries generate over a billion dollars to the outdoor economy,” said Rep. Deborah Ruggiero (D-Dist. 74, Jamestown, Middletown). “One of the benefits of this legislation is the state will provide funding for small farmers, farmer training, nutrition programs and ensure a sustainable local food system in our state.”

Assisting local agriculture and fishing businesses could have a substantial affect on not only Rhode Island’s economy, but also on the quality of life and health for the public, say the bill’s backers. Open land, jobs, nutritious and safe foods and educational opportunities for youth are all among the benefits of prosperous local industry.

“More and more, we hear about the importance of buying local, and this bill is aimed at helping to connect the small farmer or fishing boat operator to the consumer. Encouraging the buy-local movement is a big win for Rhode Island, because it means the success of small businesses, more jobs, and better, healthier, more plentiful and available food choices for the public,” said Senator Sosnowski (D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown, New Shoreham). “Local food gets from farm to table in fresher condition, and more local farms means more green space in our state. Food that travels less also means fewer trucks on the road, and less air pollution. Overall, more people eating more local food means better health for people and for our environment.”

Under the bill, DEM will administer the grants program, which is to be funded through a restricted receipt account with help from any federal, state or local agency, private foundation, or individual who wishes to contribute grant money or gifts to the cause. Grants of up to $20,000 each are to be given to help start or sustain small farms or fishing operations for projects and programs that help them – and the industry as a whole – become more viable and self-sustaining. DEM must hold a public hearing and issue an annual report on the grant program’s performance.

The legislation enhances the responsibilities of the DEM to help market local seafood and agriculture. The bill directs DEM to develop programs to promote interaction and business relationships between farmers and fishermen and restaurants, grocery stores, institutional cafeterias and other potential institutional purchasers of local agriculture and seafood products, including statewide and regional promotional events.

Additionally, the legislation creates the Interagency Food and Nutrition Policy Advisory Council, made up of leaders of the Department of Health, the Department of Environmental Management and the Department of Administration. The council is to develop solutions to regulatory and policy barriers to developing a strong sustainable food economy and healthful nutrition practices.

Sustainability Expert Jim Merkel at RIC Tonight


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Nationally-regarded sustainability expert Jim Merkel will be speaking at Rhode Island College tonight at 7 p.m. “He is by far one of the most respected thinkers on the topic in the country,” according to an email announcing the talk. “I guarantee that you will come away thinking about this world differently.”

The author of “Radical Simplicity,” there is also a movie about Merkel called “Radically Simple” you can see clips of it here, or watch the movie on Netflix.

According to a press release:

His recent work helped Dartmouth College earn the highest grade given on the Sustainability Report Card issued by the Sustainable Endowments Institute for the two years he led the campus’s sustainability efforts.

Originally a military engineer trained in foreign military sales, the Exxon Valdez disaster and the invasion of Iraq prompted him to devote his life to sustainability and world peace. Jim founded the Global Living Project (GLP) and initiated the GLP Summer Institute where teams of researchers attempted to live on an equitable portion of the biosphere.

While at Dartmouth, Jim worked to integrate environmentally and socially sustainable practices into the College’s operations and culture. His projects included Sustainable Dining, Solar Thermal Evaluation, Carbon Reduction, Sustainable Offices, Green Greeks and Solid Waste Reduction.

 

 

The National Day of Fear and Desperation


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Each year the President of the United States signs a proclamation encouraging all Americans to pray on the first Thursday in May, a national religious ritual first formalized by Congress in 1952. This year, that date falls on May 3rd, and both President Obama and Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee have declared their support for the National Day of Prayer. To the millions of Americans who do not believe in prayer or the constitutionality of state endorsed religion this annual ritual is viewed as un-American, blasphemous, or some combination of the two.

As Rhode Island’s founder, Roger Williams once noted, “Forced worship stinks in God’s nostrils.”

Putting aside for the moment the legal and religious arguments against the National Day of Prayer, let’s ask one simple question: Does prayer work? The answer, at least according to those who have actually sought to study and measure the efficacy of prayer is no. Study after study shows that people who are prayed for do no better in recovery than those who are not. Even those who believe in the power of prayer, despite all the contrary evidence, sometimes quip, “God answers all prayer, but sometimes the answer is ‘No.’”

So if prayer has no measurable effect on the wellbeing of our nation, why do we still insist on a National Day of Prayer, despite the insult the event hurls at millions of believing and non-believing Americans? If we are going to issue proclamations encouraging all Americans to engage in what has been scientifically shown to be an ineffective waste of time, why not declare a National Day of Homeopathy? Or hold a nation wide Bigfoot hunt?

Obama’s proclamation from 2011 quotes President Abraham Lincoln’s recollections about prayer, “I have been driven many times upon my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go.  My own wisdom and that of all about me seemed insufficient for the day.” Lincoln shepherded the country during its most desperate hour, and was more sorely vexed than any other President in history. Note that Lincoln was driven to prayer only when circumstances overwhelmed him and wise council was scarce. Here was a man pushed to the absolute limits of desperation, and in his time of weakness, he found solace in prayer.

I can understand the feeling of being alone, desperate and trapped by circumstances, and I can understand the appeal of and the emotional need for prayer under the most dire of circumstances, but I would argue that America, as a people, as a country and as an ideal are not in so desperate a position as to need a mandate driving us all to our knees to implore a mythological being for some sort of miracle. We are better than that.

It was not the power of prayer that threw the yoke of British rule off the backs of the colonists in the days of the Revolutionary War. It was the blood of heroes, the strategies of generals, the genius of diplomats, and the vision of Enlightenment ideals that did so. WWII was not won by the hand of God but by the economic, scientific and military might of the United States when it finally entered the war. And when humans walked on the moon, prayers were certainly issued, but it was the mathematicians and scientists, running millions of calculations and experiments, that got our astronauts safely to our nearest celestial neighbor and back.

Praying for a miracle is the ultimate wish for a quick fix, a lottery ticket for the soul. We all want something for nothing, but the truth is that nothing worth having is free, and nothing worth doing is easy. In the throes of an emergency all the prayers in the world are as nothing compared to the efforts of one rescue worker or doctor. As founding father Benjamin Franklin once said, “Lighthouses are more helpful than churches.”

The United States is facing some real problems right now, but none of these problems are going to magically solve themselves, and no God is going to burst forth from the heavens to deliver us. What is needed is for Americans to embrace the ideals of reason, compassion, optimism and action. What is needed is for Americans to roll up their sleeves and get to work fixing the problems our country faces with the power of their minds, the strength of their muscles and the love of their hearts.

The National Day of Prayer is simply an admission of our desperation as a people. Through its celebration we tell each other and the world that we are out of ideas, that we are desperate and lack wise council. Each year on this day we fall to our knees as a nation and loudly exclaim that we have given up, and we need a miracle. Meanwhile the rest of the world builds and innovates, making us feel ever more inconsequential, creating spiraling and negative feedback that reinforces our desperation, a desperation that can only be met by more prayer. We become prayer junkies, always looking for the next quick fix, always looking for that impossibly rare thing called a miracle.

We do not need a National Day of Prayer and we never have. We need to get to work.

Foes of Marriage Equality Fear God, Communists


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It’s both sad and bizarre the logic used by the religious right to argue against marriage equality. Even more sad and bizarre, of course, is that Rhode island legislators aren’t brave enough to flout the ridiculous arguments proffered by the opposition and grant same sex couples the same rights as their heterosexual counterparts.

Consider why Rev. Jay Stirnemann of the Christ Temple United Pentecostal Church in Tiverton doesn’t think gay couples should have the same rights as everyone else:

This might be what Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed and Rep. Doc Corvese, both Democrats who have fought against marriage equality, believe but it doesn’t seem to hold water with me. So I asked Rev. Stirnemann, if god created marriage, why animals don’t wed. Here’s what he told me:

Miraculously, his was not the most outlandish reason offered at a State House hearing last night on why legislators should reject marriage equality. That distinction goes to Chris Young, who said gay marriage is a secret plot by communists in the United States to end procreation. He even offered a picture that he said showed Russian troops training inside the United States to prove his point.

Of course, most sane people know this isn’t true. Even probably most legislators realize this too. The reason they won’t support marriage equality is not because they fear the wrath of god or communists, but rather they fear the wrath of voters who fear the wrath of god or communists.

It’s almost equally sad and bizarre that anyone who can get elected to the General Assembly doesn’t realize that this very vocal minority in no way, shape or form is at all indicative of Rhode Island in general. And even if they were, I certainly wouldn’t want my legislative legacy to include standing with Chris Young and Rev. Jay Stirnemann.

Rhode Island politicians should instead stand for reason and equal protection under the law and pass same sex marriage.

RI Progress Report: Dan Reilly, Central Falls, Catholics


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All best to the Central Falls Charter Commission. Here’s hoping Councilman James Diossa is right on when he tells the Projo, “The charter commission is going to bring the community out and get them engaged and involved.”

Portsmouth Rep. Dan Reilly’s parents, who are the biggest income tax evaders in the state, are not claiming to the state Supreme Court that they don’t owe $1.3 million in back taxes, they are simply arguing that the state didn’t ask for it soon enough and thus kicks in the statute of limitations. Talk about being embarrassed by your parents!

RINP estimated there were about 1,000 people at the rally for the Woonsocket cross. Mayor Leo Fontaine guessed there were 1,500 people. John DePetro, who never met a fact he couldn’t bend to suit his own purposes, said there were 2,000 people there. Either way, the establishment clause of the Constitution is not a popularity contest.

And speaking of organized religion … Rhode Island is no longer the most Catholic state. That dubious distinction now belongs to Massachusetts.

Here’s a list of ALEC’s top 5 anti-environment pieces of model legislation.

Is the sailor kissing a woman at the end of World War II in the famous Life magazine picture a Rhode Islander?

Turns out Mitt Romney didn’t want his foreign policy communications guy to talk. Why? Because he’s gay.

Politifact: it’s true that URI has the second lowest paid public college professors in the region.

 

Homeless Bill of Rights Passes State Senate


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Taking a “historic step” forward according to advocates, the Rhode Island Senate voted 33-2 to pass Senate Bill 2052, a.k.a. the Homeless Bill of Rights.

The law provides homeless people with protections against discrimination based on their housing status, preventing them from being told to move along if they enter libraries or sit on park benches and aren’t causing a disturbance. The passage of the bill in the Senate is considered a major step forward in protecting homeless from undue discrimination. Its passage brought a round of applause from the gallery and the floor.

The seventh item considered by the Senate that day, the rest had been deferred or otherwise passed unanimously without debate, but the Homeless Bill of Rights caused some discussion lasting roughly ten minutes. Senators rose to give their opinions regarding the bill, including Senators Moura, Nesselbush, Metts and Walaska. Senator John Tassoni, the bill sponsor, introduced the bill by thanking advocates, and the ACLU; “yes, the ACLU, I said it,” said Sen. Tassoni, causing laughter from the Senate floor and the gallery.

Leading the objections to the bill were Republican Senators Bethany Moura and Glenford Shibley, the two dissenting votes. Their fears mainly focused on a possible safety issue, as Sen. Shibley put it, “some homeless people are criminals.” He also suggested that the protections the bill would grant would lead to immigration by homeless individuals from other states.

Senator William Walaska, who voted for the bill, asked about where people would be registered to vote, something not covered under the law. Under current voting law, individuals can register to vote wherever they physically live, be it a street corner, a shelter, or a house or apartment address. Mailing addresses must be a valid mailbox though.

Rising to commend Senator  Tassoni on the bill were Senators Pichardo, Metts, Nesselbush, and Ruggerio. Many of them thanked him for his service over the years, and others responded to criticisms and questions on the bill. “We have most of the services in Providence,” said Senator Metts. “We’ll welcome them with open arms.” He also paraphrased Matthew 25:40, saying “what you do to the least of my brothers…”

The bill passed with bipartisan support, except for the two dissenting senators. A companion bill in the House must be brought to that chamber’s floor before the bill can be signed into law by the Governor.

South County Chamber Gets the Nod – Budget Passes


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The South Kingstown Town Council, in a session often resembling a scene from a junior high lunch table, passed the Town budget for fiscal year 2012 – 2013 in total. In a 4-0 vote, with one recusal, the budget was adopted – inclusive of a contentious $7000 line item allowance to the South County Chamber of Commerce.

Refereeing council members and town residents, Council Chair Ella Whaley urged all to stay on task in getting issues resolved and the budget passed.

From the outset, the meeting was heated as Council member Polly Eddy was asked to recuse herself from the vote, due to her position on the Executive Committee of Thundermist Health Center. Eddy who presently sits on the Executive Committee of the private non-profit organization, has held the position of President of the organization in past years, as well as sitting as a senior member of the South Kingstown Town Council.

In anticipation of the budget adoption, which in accordance with the Town Charter has to be completed by May 1, town resident and democratic committee member, Deborah Bergner submitted a letter requesting the removal of $7000 from the preliminary budget, slated for the South Kingstown Chamber of Commerce.

In addition to the petition she garnered, already an agenda item, Bergner’s letter received just prior to the meeting, repeated her ongoing contention that the South Kingstown Chamber of Commerce was acting in dual capacities, as a chamber and a political PAC.

“I feel that no taxpayer money should be given to a political organization. By forming a pack with little or no separation from the chamber itself, and becoming actively involved in local politics, they forfeited their right to receive money from the taxpayers,” Bergner corresponded.

Rebutting the contents of the letter on behalf of the Chamber of Commerce was Richard Pike, Chair of the South Kingstown Political Action Committee, explaining that the PAC operates separately from the chamber, was adamant that any funds appropriation from the Town would not be seen by the PAC.

“The $7000 – I can assure you, not one penny would go toward the political action committee.” Pike went on to add. “Anybody that thinks it’s not a good idea really needs to wake up and listen to some of the [things] that are going on. Businesses are hurting. They need help.”

In a tete-a-tete battle between council members and residents alike, the sometimes pathetic posturing of a political battle to come was revealed.

Supporting Bergner’s position was Maureen Martin, also a town resident, admonishing the council’s bantering in deciding the fate of Bergner’s petition and the Town’s budget before them for passage. Referencing councilman, James O’Neill’s comments with regards to the petition, Martin spoke.

“As I sit here as a citizen, I feel totally disrespected already. To refer to the petition that several South Kingstown residents signed as pathetic, is in and of itself, pathetic.” In addressing the petition before the Council in opposition to the Chamber expenditure, Martin expressed her belief that the funds were not appropriate for an organization not deemed non-profit.

“I do not think that the taxpayers of South Kingstown should be footing the bill for administrative costs of an organization that does not provide services to the needy, but instead participates in lobbying activities.”

Challenged by Carol Hagen McEntee, Council Vice President, Martin was asked to answer why the expenditure had never been questioned in the past. “Last year at this time we gave the $7000 unanimously. By your own admission, you have been a resident for [many] years. This has been going on for 21 years and you have never come forward and felt that this appropriation should be challenged. Why this year?”

“A couple of things – one is I didn’t know,” responded Martin. “I admittedly have not been actively involved in local politics. Had I known, it may have been different.”

After 2 hours, two motions were presented to the Council. The first, a motion to deny the resident petition in opposition to the Chamber appropriation, passed in a 4-1 vote, with member Polly Eddy the sole nay. Council member, Kathleen Fogarty, in a surprising turn of events, voted in support of the line item for the Chamber.

The second motion, the Town’s annual budget adoption, passed in a unanimous action, with Mrs. Eddy’s recusal on record.

At the end of it all, Town Manager, Steven Alfred was pleased with the outcome. “We have adopted a budget that supports our ability to provide for the Town and residents based on the financial situation before us. We are providing residents with the maximum benefit we can.”

Senate Takes Historic Vote On Homeless Rights


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The state Senate today has an opportunity to move Rhode Island one step closer to being the first state in the country to adopt a a homeless bill of rights, said Karen Jeffreys, of the Coalition for the Homeless, as members vote today on a measure that would guarantee Rhode Island’s most vulnerable residents equal protections under the law.

“Rights included in the bill include, but are not limited to, the right to use public spaces, the right to vote, and the right to equal treatment by police, employers and medical professionals,” according to a press release from the Coalition.

John Joyce, of the Rhode Island Homeless Advocacy Project, told the Associated Press in January that discrimination against the state’s homeless population is rampant.

The bill is sponsored by John Tassoni, a Smithfield Democrat. A similar bill in the House has not yet been voted out of committee.

Ending Discrimination Starts with Equal Protection of Law


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My friend Jon was a vibrant, kind and wonderful person. He loved music and dancing. He never ceased to make me laugh with silly jokes and goofy impressions of movie stars. I could always count on him to be there when I needed him, whether it was to help me move, or hold my hand when I was scared or sad.

But in 2008, I lost my dear friend when Jon took his own life.

I will never really know why Jon left us so early. But I do know that behind the laughter and the kindness Jon struggled to accept who he was. He struggled because our society told him who he was was wrong, immoral, sinful, and different.

Jon was gay.

For me, this is what the LGBTQ equality fight is all about. Homophobia – like racism, sexism, and classism – causes harm. Real and tangible emotional and physical harm. What’s more, our government condones this discrimination in its utter failure to grant LGBTQ couples the dignity and respect that only marriage can afford.

This week the House Judiciary Committee will take testimony on three pieces of LGBTQ anti-discrimination policy: the Equal Access to Marriage Act, the Equal Access to Family Courts Act, and Equal Religious Protection Act. They are simple pieces of legislation aimed at one goal, ending LGBTQ bias in state law.

If years past are any indication, testimony this Wednesday at the State House will be impassioned, fraught with Biblical references, personal stories, and legal arguments. For me the argument is not merely about same sex marriage, access to divorce or religious protection, though these are certainly a critical steps forward.

For me it is about my friend Jon, who after belting out Tori Amos songs in my living would lose himself in despair so deep that he couldn’t find his way out because we allow our government and our neighbors to discriminate against him and all LGBTQ Rhode Islanders.

It can “get better” but not if we sit on our heels and wait for it. We have to take action to make it better. Ask you legislators to stand on the side of tolerance, acceptance and love and fight for LGBTQ equality.

 

Originally posted on RightHer www.wfri.com/blog

Corvese Amendment Denies Rep. Ferri Equal Rights


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Rep. Frank Ferri testifies next to Rep. Doc Corvese.

The controversial Corvese amendment to the recently enacted civil union law, which legislators will reconsider today, is seen as an affront to the very rights the new law bestows on same sex couples – it allows religious institutions to not recognize the relationship or otherwise adhere to the law. But for Rep. Frank Ferri, a gay legislator in a long-time committed relationship who is sponsoring the bill that would repeal the amendment, it is also a practical matter.

“It affects me personally,” he said, noting that Our Lady of Fatima, a Catholic-backed hospital in Providence, is the closest to his job in Johnston. “If I get rushed to the hospital … they can refuse to acknowledge my husband or my civil union partner and not let him make any decisions for my health care. They can refuse to even let him in the room.

Pointing out that the civil union law has religious exemptions in it without the controversial codicil that was added at the eleventh hour last session, he said, “The Corvese amendment extends religious exemptions to a point that is unfair to the LGBT community and people who are in civil unions. It actually takes away rights, that’s what I find so egregious about it.”

Author of the language, Rep. Doc Corvese, a very conservative Democrat from North Providence, defended his amendment, saying a Catholic hospital probably would extend the same courtesy to a same sex couple that by right it would legally obliged to for a heterosexual couple.

“Just because we have the right to say or do something doesn’t mean we should,” he said. “With regard to a Catholic hospital I doubt very much they would prevent an individual in a relationship from discussing medical questions.”

He didn’t answer when I asked him what he would do if he were the hospital administrator. But he did when I asked if the Corvese amendment, or the man himself, were anti-gay. “Just because there are people who support traditional marriage doesn’t mean they are homophobic,” he said. “That’s just more liberal pablum forced on us by the media.”

The bill to repeal the Corvese amendment is one of three pieces of marriage equality legislation being heard by the House Judiciary Committee after the regular House session. Rep. Art Handy, a progressive Democrat from Cranston, is sponsoring a bill that would legalize gay marriage in Rhode Island. And Rep. Larry Valencia, a progressive Democrat from Charlestown, has a bill that would allow same sex couples to get a divorce in Rhode Island. (Would it say something about our state if gay couples could get divorced but not married?)

None of the bills are expected to pass. Marriage Equality Rhode Island supports all three. According to Ray Sullivan, of MERI:

It’s sad that in 2012 these hearings are even necessary, but unfortunately Rhode Island is still a place where all citizens are not treated equally.

The 2012 Equality Agenda is about eliminating across the board discrimination against LGBTQ Rhode Islanders in loving, committed relationships who are seeking nothing more than equal rights, protection and recognition under the law.

With momentum growing across the country and a strong majority of Rhode Islander standing with us, we won’t stop fighting and organizing until the governor signs marriage equality into law.

Members of the General Assembly who continue to support intolerance or stand in the way of progress should be advised that they do so at their own electoral detriment.

RI Progress Report: May Day Redux, E-Edition, Obamacare


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Some 300 people participated in a May Day march in Providence yesterday, according to the Projo. International Workers’ Day was supposed to serve as the spring reawakening for the Occupy movement: In Oakland, police clashed violently with protesters. In Chicago, some 2,000 people rallied against corporate greed. And in New York, the birthplace of the Occupy movement, the rally reportedly spilled over into Fifth Avenue.

Fewer than 300 people have signed up for the Providence Journal’s e-edition, the product that was supposed to help the august newspaper offset the loss of revenue from its print product. Please, Projo, for the good of Rhode Island, please figure out a viable digital strategy. I say this not as a media critique but as someone who has cherished your journalism since I was a young boy.

The state will get some $6 million more from Obamacare, said Kathleen Sebelius yesterday.

Sure, yesterday was a great news cycle for the Capital City … but then steps in the Wall Street Journal to rain on the parade, reporting that investors are still weary of investing in Providence.

Mitt Romney’s openly gay foreign policy spokesperson resigned saying, “my ability to speak clearly and forcefully on the issues has been greatly diminished by the hyper-partisan discussion of personal issues that sometimes comes from a presidential campaign.” In other words, Republicans didn’t like him because he’s gay.

If it surprises or scares you that organized religion is hemorrhaging members here in the Ocean State, see you today at the rally for the cross in Woonsocket.

Lawmakers Briefed on Plan to End Homelessness


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As marchers gathered for their May Day march on the west side of Providence to protest unfair economic conditions, a crowd of over thirty people, nine of whom were sitting legislators, listened to a briefing in the Rhode Island Senate lounge on the state’s Plan to End Homelessness, known as Opening Doors Rhode Island. The briefing was presented by Mike Tondra, Executive Director of the Office of Housing and Community Development and Eric Hirsch, Professor of Sociology at Providence College. The Plan would spend $130 million with the long-term goal of ending homeless in the state of Rhode Island, starting with veterans and then focusing on those chronically homeless; by focusing on the neediest populations first, it would significantly reduce the costs of homeless in the state.

Mr. Tondra, who also is the Executive Director of the Housing Resources Commission which adopted the plan earlier this year, presented the origin of the Plan, how it was developed with the input of housing authorities; local, state and federal departments; and advocates and charities. Prof. Hirsch provided the factual basis for the Plan. He explained that the $130 million price tag associated with the Plan is one that takes into a variety of sources; including federal, state, local, nonprofit groups, and other institutions like universities and hospitals.

Projected decreases in homelessness under Opening Doors Rhode Island

Prof. Hirsch said the cost of keeping families and the chronically homeless in homeless shelters was ultimately more expensive than paying for supportive housing, the “housing first” model. According to him, the costs of homelessness for 48 people currently total just over $1.5 million, working out to $31,617 per client served, whether it be in hospital or ER visits, staying in a shelter, or spending time in jail or prison.

“And that’s not including ambulance costs,” he said. “The city of Providence spends over $300,000 per month on ambulance runs.”

In the very first year after the Plan would be implemented, the total cost would drop to slightly more than $400,000 for 48 people; with most of the costs going towards housing subsidies and supportive services. The savings mostly come from less need for hospitals and shelters, as housing would provide less need for either. The savings work out to $7946 per person.

Worcester, MA, has already done this, Prof. Hirsch pointed out, saying that it wasn’t merely fanciful thinking. There, the city took all of the money it reserved for shelter and put it into vouchers for supportive housing, reducing chronic homelessness from a high of about 100 down to merely four individuals. Sen. John Tassoni (D — Smithfield), the briefing’s sponsor, concurred, “if Worcester can do it, Rhode Island can do it.”

Beyond all the facts and figures, the moral argument stood out. Said one homeless man, Vern, to the assembled legislators, “don’t make your children and grandchildren go through what I’ve gone through.” Said Prof. Hirsch, “does anyone here really believe that it’s morally acceptable to allow someone to spend eight years without a home?” When no one responded, he said, “that was a rhetorical question.”

Tassoni: Second Legislator To Drop Out of ALEC


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Citing the “self-serving ideas of corporations and rich, powerful interests,” Sen John Tassoni, a Smithfield Democrat, become the second member of the General Assembly to officially distance himself from the American Legislative Exchange Council, the shadowy far right wing organization known as ALEC that pairs legislators with corporate interests, after news that more than 20 percent of state legislators belong to the group, and that their memberships are funded by taxpayer dollars.

“I’m not sure how I became a member, but having learned recently about the enormous amount of corporate funding for the group and corporate influence on the group, I have decided to terminate my membership and have sent that specific request to JCLS,” he said in a press release. “ALEC, it seems, is not about an exchange of ideas but rather about pushing the self-serving ideas of corporations and rich, powerful interests. I have no desire to be associated with that kind of organization.”

Last week, the Providence Journal reported that Sen. Walter Felag, a Warren Democrat, is looking to get out of ALEC too.

With Tassoni and Felag leaving ALEC, there are still 22 legislators who belong to the group that authors conservative model legislation for use in state houses across the country. There are now nine members from the Senate and 13 in the House. Ten are Democrats and 12 are Republicans.

Chafee Helped Brown, Providence Behind Scenes


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It’s a huge day for Providence which, among other bits of good news, announced today that Brown University will pay the city $31 million over the next 11 years. While Mayor Angel Taveras and Brown President Ruth Simmons both deserve much credit for getting the deal done. So does another local leader who rarely wins praise for his efforts: Gov. Linc Chafee.

When talks broke down between Taveras and Simmons earlier in the year, it was Chafee, a Brown alum, who brought the two back to the negotiating table.

In a statement, Taveras praised Chafee for his “statesmanship” and David Ortiz, Taveras’ press secretary called the governor’s efforts “crucial” to the deal that was announced at the State House – not at City Hall or Brown – today.

“The governor brought us together and helped me understand a little bit better how important Brown is to the city and to the state,” Taveras said after the press conference. “One of the things the governor doesn’t get much credit for is he does a lot that people don’t necessarily see and I think this was another example of it.”

Simmons agreed, saying Chafee was “a  more neutral presence when the discussions were especially fraught.”

She added, “Because we were very divided we needed somebody to bring us into the room with a completely different perspective and he was able to do that to argue on behalf of the state, to argue what our joint agreement would mean to the state, and he had credibility in doing that. It was very helpful; we’re very grateful to him.”

RI Progress Report: Taveras, Homelessness, Class Warfare


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Happy May Day. Find out what’s happening locally here and across the country here. Learn about the history of the holiday here.

Providence Mayor Angel Taveras will announce a deal with Brown today for more in lieu of tax money and last night his office announced that Lifespan would be giving the city $800,000 a year. That, and the City Council passed his pension overhaul last night. Not a bad run for the Mayor, says Ian Donnis.

“We get tired of announcing this is the worst year for homelessness ever.”

House Republicans would kick nearly 300,000 poor children out of the school lunch program and 1.5 million people off of food stamps to protect tax cuts to the rich. Of course there is class warfare going on … an op/ed in today’s Providence Journal rightly puts the blame for it on the GOP.

So far, the General Assembly has passed no new environmental bills this legislative session.

Congressman Jim Langevin joins the calls for keeping student loan interest rates low.

We could have told you this long ago but we’re glad a panel from Parliament now agrees that Rupert Murdoch is unfit to lead a multinational media company.

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

May Day: Haymarket and the 8-Hour Work Day


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May Day, or International Workers Day, is a holiday celebrated in more than 80 countries around the world. But not so much in the United States, even though it started here and, for a brief time served as this country’s de facto Labor Day – a holiday to remember and honor the working class and the struggles of organized labor to win employee rights and fair wages.

Eventually, though, the country settled on the end of summer to recognize labor, mostly because the powers that be didn’t want the occasion to be forever linked to the events of the first May Day in Chicago of 1886.

For several years prior, labor unions had been calling for a national general strike on May 1, 1886 to lobby for an eight-hour work day. And they got one. More than 340,000 workers participated, and almost 200,000 actually went on strike. There were rallies of 20,000 people in New York, and 10,000 people took to the streets in Baltimore.

In Chicago, the epicenter of the fight for an eight-hour work day, some 40,000 workers went on strike and marched with local anarchists.

“Not surprisingly the entire city was prepared for mass bloodshed, reminiscent of the railroad strike a decade earlier when police and soldiers gunned down hundreds of striking workers,” according to the International Workers of the World website. “With their fiery speeches and revolutionary ideology of direct action, anarchists and anarchism became respected and embraced by the working people and despised by the capitalists.”

The protest lasted until May 4, when union members and anarchists met in Chicago’s Haymarket Square. Tensions had grown to furious levels after two were killed by police the day before at a strike outside of the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company plant. Handbills were distributed calling for violence. Slogans included: “Workingmen to Arms!”, “One pound of DYNAMITE is better than a bushel of BALLOTS!” and “Make your demand for eight hours with weapons in your hands to meet the capitalistic bloodhounds, police, and militia in proper manner.”

As both police and protesters seemed to expect, a riot broke out after police advanced on the assembled mass and someone threw dynamite into the line of law enforcement officers.

“The villainous teachings of the Anarchists bore bloody fruit in Chicago tonight and before daylight at least a dozen stalwart men will have laid down their lives as a tribute to the doctrine of Herr Johann Most,” read a now famous New York Times article under the headline “Rioting and Bloodshed in the Streets of Chicago.”

Some 60 police officers and 70 protesters were injured with seven dead police and four dead strikers.

A bomber was never identified, and police brought conspiracy charges against eight organizers. The trial, Chicago v. August Spies et al, but better known as the Haymarket Affair, became well known for its miscarriage of justice. The convictions were appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, which didn’t hear the case.

Of the eight defendants, seven were sentenced to death, four were actually hung and one committed suicide in jail before the sentences of the remaining two were commuted down to life in prison.

Before being hung in November of 1887, Spies, a central speaker that day in the Haymarket Square, is said to have said, “The time will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you strangle today.”

Low Income, Homelessness Issues at State House Today


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The powerful House Finance Committee will hear a bill today that would restore the $12 million cut from the Neighborhood Opportunities Program last legislative session.

According to Housing WorksRI’s website, the NOP program is “a unique, state-funded program designed to provide homes for low-wage working families and individuals with disabilities. The program provides funds to cover the difference between the rental cost affordable to very low-wage Rhode Islanders and the cost to owners of actually operating the rental unit. Essentially, NOP funding allows rents to be set at a level that is both affordable for renters and sustainable for owners.”

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Scott Slater, a progressive Democrat from Providence, would also put a referendum question on the Novemeber ballot asking voters to approve a $75 million bond for the program.

There’s also a briefing on the Plan to End Homelessness at 2 p.m. hosted by Sen. John Tassoni, a labor-backed Democrat from Lincoln. The plan was approved by most social service agencies involved with it but is not expected to be funded by the General Assembly.

Then, later today, the House Judiciary Committee will hear a bill today authored by Rep. joy Hearn, a Barrington Democrat, that would make it illegal for people under 21 to enter nightclubs where alcohol is served.

“I’ve introduced this bill before, but never has this been a more critical problem than it is today with all of the violence happening at our nightclubs,” Hearn said in a press release. “There’s more and more fights breaking out at these clubs at closing time. Meanwhile, we’re trying to focus on building and expanding our knowledge districts, but we’re getting distracted by these setbacks. This bill can also be seen as a plus for nightclub owners who are trying to put a stop to recurring violence in their establishments.”


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