Woonsocket Delegation Still Won’t Support Tax


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With the legislative session coming to a close, it seems that Woonsocket will not get permission from the General Assembly to assess the supplemental tax bill that local and state officials say is necessary to keep the financially struggling city out of receivership.

UPDATE: House Speaker Gordon Fox just said the House may vote on the supplemental tax with or without the support of the Woonsocket delegation. When I asked him, he said, “I’m not sure yet.”

In a meeting between Rosemary Booth Gallogly, the state director of revenue, and the Woonsocket delegation to the House of Representatives that ended at midnight last night, the delegation said it would only support the supplemental tax if the state agreed to a list of demands in exchange for their support. House leadership has said it would not move on the bill without the support of the delegation.

Today, Booth Gallogly said the state couldn’t agree to their demands that included: a single-digit supplemental tax that would not be included in next year’s tax allocation, suspension of a sewer treatment plant construction project, more state education aid and that the mayor and council be removed from the budget commission.

“What they are asking isn’t really acceptable,” Booth Gallogly said, noting that state law requires elected officials to be on the budget commission and there are federal requirements for the sewage treatment plant project. “I still hope the General Assembly will consider approval of the supplemental tax.”

In fact, she said some of the requests made by the delegation were beyond the state’s control to grant at this point in the legislative session. When I asked her if the delegation was negotiating in good faith, here’s what she said:

Indeed, it seems they weren’t. After learning – from reporters – that the governor’s office would not agree to their terms, they amended their offer and said they would support the supplemental tax if the state agreed to stop the sewage treatment plant project and keep the tax under double digits. Prior to that, both said it would be irresponsible to support the supplemental tax if all five demands were not met.

Chair of the state appointed budget commission said earlier today that the city might have to employ a receiver if the supplemental tax is not passed.

“If there is no supplemental tax increase you have to wonder if there is anything we can do at all,” he said. “At that point, a receiver would have a lot more authority.”

On May 22, both Baldelli-Hunt and Brien said they preferred a receiver to a budget commission.

“A receiver has the leverage to make the adjustments that need to be made,” Baldelli-Hunt said after addressing the House Finance Committee about the supplemental tax increase. “I don’t want a supplemental tax bill to stand in the way of getting a solid plan in place.”

Brien added, “I think a receiver is ultimately what we need to do.”

On the same day, Baldelli-Hunt said her position on the city’s finances is unrelated to speculation that she would like to run for mayor, saying, “This has nothing to do with politics.”

Tip Theft in Rhode Island


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Right now it’s perfectly legal in our state for restaurant owners and managers to steal gratuities from servers, bartenders, bussers, and other waitstaff. There’s no state law against it, and federal law says it’s cool so long as workers are left with enough money to make minimum wage at the end of the day.

I experienced tip theft firsthand over the 3.5 years I worked in room service at the Renaissance Providence Downtown Hotel. As a room service server I made $5.50/hr, so I depended on gratuities for most of my paycheck. Whenever a customer ordered room service, the hotel charged them an automatic 20% service charge, but also left a line on the receipt for “Additional Gratuity.” That seems like a fairly generous arrangement for servers, and it would be if all the money was actually going to us.

Both the hotel and our supervisors were skimming off our tips. First the hotel would take a chunk of that 20% service charge, then our supervisors who made two to three times our hourly wage would take 50% of the remaining service charge, as well as 50% of whatever we got on the “Additional Gratuity” line. Add that all up and we were taking home less than half of what customers thought they were giving us.

After unsuccessfully hassling my bosses about this set-up, I went to the US Department of Labor to file a complaint. I felt like something here had to be illegal. The DOL investigated for a few months, then told me that yes, the hotel and my managers were stealing our tips, but that there was nothing they could do about it because they were still leaving me enough to be over minimum wage. It wasn’t a total bust, though: the investigation spooked the bosses enough that they modified their policies. The hotel stopped taking a portion of our service charges, and our supervisors let us keep all of our “Additional Gratuities,” though they kept on taking half of the service charge. We won something, but it seemed insane that it had all been legal.

My hotel isn’t an isolated incident. Talk to anyone who’s been in the service industry long enough and they’ll have a similar story. Bosses, owners and supervisors have a variety of ways for tapping into servers’ hard-earned money. They skim off those mysterious service charges and administrative fees. They take an automatic portion of all credit-card tips. They insert themselves into the tip-pool. I’ve even heard stories about supervisors who directly ask servers for 20 bucks at the end of every night. And it’s all legal.

In states that have banned tip theft, workers are using the courts to fight these nasty practices. In a recent New York case, a judge ordered celebrity chef Mario Batali to pay 5.25 million dollars to waitstaff at his restaurants as backpay for years of stolen tips. In California, Hooters waitstaff have filed a series of class-action suits over stolen tip money among a long list of other labor abuses. At Boston’s Logan Airport, American Airlines Skycaps brought suit over misleading “baggage fees” that appeared to be tips but were in fact going to the company. New suits are popping up all the time.

In Rhode Island we don’t have the laws they have in New York, California, or Massachusetts, so workers here have no recourse when bosses like Mario Batali decide they want a cut of gratuities. A bill currently in the legislature is aiming to change that. Earlier this year, I worked with State Rep. Chris Blazejewski, State Rep. Teresa Tanzi, and others to formulate the anti-tip theft bill that Blazejewski submitted to the House in February.

The bill primarily bars managers, supervisors, and owners from touching any portion of an employee’s tips. It allows tip-pooling, because we want our bar-backs and bussers getting paid too, but it prohibits any supervisory employee from being a part of the tip-pool. It also bans employers from charging customers “service charges” and similar fees that appear to be tips but in fact go to the business, managers, or owners. Businesses can still add such charges, but if they don’t go entirely to waitstaff they need to be clearly marked as not being tips. Lastly, the bill will prohibit employers from charging waitstaff high fees when customers tips on credit cards.

All this will protect both workers and consumers. Blazejewski notes that “The legislation would prohibit fraud on the consumer and theft from the waitstaff…[Tip] money should go to the servers, not their employer, especially where many workers earn less than minimum wage. Besides being unfair to service workers, it’s also dishonest to consumers, who assume that tip is going to their waiter or waitress.”

The bill passed the House by a wide margin last Tuesday, with 64 in favor, 5 opposed, and 6 abstaining. The Senate version of the bill, sponsored by Sen. Erin Lynch, is still stalled in the Senate Labor Committee. It’s unclear if it’s being intentionally blocked or if it’s just being forgotten about. The bill has received strong local and national media coverage, including a big stories in the Huffington Post and on Boston NPR, so it seems unlikely the Senators are simply not noticing the legislation.

For now, we’re still hopeful we can push the act out of committee and we’re calling on all Rhode Islanders to call their State Senators to urge them on. You can find the call-rap and Senators’ numbers here.

Spamthony Gemma: A Business Plan for RI

Spamthony Gemma

Greetings! My name is Spamthony Gemma. I’m running for Governor Congress because I have a scheme plan to create 10,000 jobs in Rhode Island. Rhode Island needs more businessmen like me, Mitt Romney, and Don Carcieri to get this state back on track.

Let me take a moment to present you with a business opportunity.

Low risk – High return – Work your own hours!

Now’s your chance to get into the recession proof spamming industry! I’ve been having great success in the spamming industry and I want you to get in on a piece of the action. Here’s how it works!

First, I will stop buying my 500,000+ facebook fans from 3rd party vendors and will begin hiring Rhode Islanders to create fake facebook profiles. You can then use your fake facebook profile(s) to spam your friends about useful things such as plumbing services (hint: toss in a few hundred inspirational quotes and photos). You can even take it to the next level and start spamming blogs like this one!

This is just the ground floor – there’s plenty of room to move on to bigger and better opportunitie$$$. Anyone can take advantage of these emerging trends of the 21st century! I hope you’ll join me so that we can get our state back on track – together.

P.S. Vote for me, Spamthony Gemma!

This is a satirical parody posted by a member of the RI Future community.

Progress Report: Austerity Gone Awry in Woonsocket


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The most amazing story of the end of the legislative session is that two people – Woonsocket Reps. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt and Jon Brien – are able to thwart the will of the mayor, city council and state appointed budget commission and block a tax increase that would save the city from imminent financial ruin. This may literally be the most egregious example of conservative lawmakers opposing spending increases at the expense of their constituents the era of austerity has ever known. Sadly, the General Assembly ought to save Woonsocket from its elected officials.

Speaking of Woonsocket, add Jim Baron to the list of journalists now talking about how Rhode Island isn’t as liberal as you might think.

Has a deal been reached on the Homeless Bill of Rights? The House Judiciary Committee plans to vote on the bill today.

Mitt Romney’s plan to grow the economy: fire police officers, teachers and fire fighters. It’s actually a plan to shrink the economy so that rich people can hold on to more of their money.

Chafee looks to hire a lawyer for the 38 Studios debacle … this thing is far from over, and the governor might not be the only local politician to require counsel…

Libby Kimzey’s Campaign for Legislature Kicks Off


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Libby Kimzey, right, talks with Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin at Netroots Nation.

Libby Kimzey, a rising young progressive star in Rhode Island, kicks off her campaign for a seat in the House representing Federal Hill and Olneyville tonight at 6:30 with a fundraiser at the Phoenix Dragon restaurant, 256 Broadway. Tickets are $20 for individuals and $100 for supporters.

Kimzey, a former Brown student who stayed in the city, works for the Capital Good Fund, a nonprofit that offers financial planning services to low income people. She’s best known for managing Rep. Teresa Tanzi’s successful upset over David Caprio, but she’s also been advocating for issues at the State House since 2006.

Her campaign message, according to her website is “to bring accessible, community-centered leadership to my home district in Providence’s Federal Hill, Olneyville and Valley neighborhoods.”

She’s a bike enthusiast and a public transportation advocate. She spoke on a panel at Netroots Nation on Saving Public Transportation:

Watch live streaming video from fstvnewswire at livestream.com

She’s also an occasional RI Future contributor, and was a great help to me when I first took over this site.

Here’s the list of her host committee:

Ed Benson, Mary Bergeron, Kate Brock, LeeAnn Byrne, Tom Chen, Abel Collins, Kristina Contreras-Fox, Russ Conway, Pat Crowley, Scott Duhamel, Steve Durkee, Dawn Euer, Dania Flores, Alisa Gallo, Lauren Goddard, Greg Greco, Alma Guerrero, Marc Gursky, Paula Hodges, Nick Horton, Brian Hull, Stan Israel, Dan Lawlor, Joe Lazzerini, Carolyn Mark, Karen McAninch, Zack Mezera, Sara Molinaro, Alex Moore, Jef Nickerson, Hon. Lauren Nocera, Craig O’Connor, Dr. Jean Plover, Robert Preliasco, Aaron Regunberg, Marti Rosenberg, Tom Sgouros, Pat Smith, Hilary Sorin, Jenn Steinfeld, Hon. Ray Sullivan, John Taraborelli, Dr. Hannah Watson