Time to Move Woonsocket Cross to Private Land


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The Supreme Court today denied an appeal in a case involving the Mount Soledad Cross in La Jolla, California, thereby effectively ruling the 29-foot tall cross on public property unconstitutional. (For a history of the Mt. Soledad cross, see Wikipedia. For a report on today’s ruling, see here.)

This ruling should give supporters of a similar cross in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, now the center of a swirling controversy  since the Freedom From Religion Foundation sent a letter to Mayor Leo Fontaine asking the cross be removed, pause. There are many similarities between the two crosses, and those similarities demonstrate without a doubt that the Woonsocket Cross is in fact in violation of the First Amendment.

Supporters of the cross in La Jolla had argued that the cross atop the memorial was only one element of the overall design, and that the display was a war memorial, which granted the monument a kind of secularity under the law. But in January 2011, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed with that logic, saying that La Jolla was sending the message that the government was endorsing a specific religion, Christianity, in allowing the cross to be displayed on public property.

The Mt. Soledad cross was built in 1954, the cross in Woonsocket was constructed in 1952, as I pointed out back in May.  This dating places both crosses solidly in the anti-communist cold war religious boom of the 1950’s. Previous to this time period war memorials were almost never adorned with religious symbols. Look around, the cases in La Jolla and Woonsocket stand out because they are exceptions. Most war memorials are secular and patriotic, not religious. But the 1950’s became a heyday for ostentatious displays of Christianity, out of fear of “godless” communism, so in addition to dotting the land with Latin crosses and Ten Commandment displays we also saw the words “under God” awkwardly jammed into the Pledge of Allegiance and “In God We Trust” scrawled on our currency.

The bill passed in Rhode Island by the General Assembly in the wee ours of the morning just before ending their last legislative session that sought to confer some sort of retroactive secularity on the Woonsocket Monument, if signed into law by Governor Chafee or allowed to stand without his signature, will not pass constitutional muster, and will only serve to muddy the issue. This poorly reasoned bill will end up being contested in and thrown out by the courts, costing our state more money in legal fees.

Mayor Fontaine and the Woonsocket City Council should be very much aware of the cross in La Jolla. They were briefed on it by by legal counsel on May 1, 2012 as can be seen and heard in this video ‪The Woonsocket Cross: Woonsocket City Council Special Meeting – May 1, 2012‬  at the 27 minutes 25 seconds point. Counsel for Woonsocket felt confident that the Supreme Court would overturn the Appeals Court ruling, which would strengthen Woonsocket’s case. Unfortunately the Supreme Court decided otherwise.

The City of Woonsocket could certainly decide to fight this case, and it would be well within their rights to exhaust every legal option in doing so, but the cost to the city both financially and emotionally could be quite damaging. It might be time for Woonsocket to consider a new strategy: Move the cross topped monument to private land, and re-dedicate Place Jolicoeur with a new, secular memorial to our cherished veterans.

Anthony Gemma Should Drop Out of CD1 Race


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Anthony Gemma

Anthony GemmaThe campaign to represent Rhode Island’s first congressional district in Washington DC will surely be the most interesting and scrutinized local race this year and, so far, there is only one thing that is certain: Anthony Gemma won’t win.

He could, however, potentially damage David Cicilline enough in an ugly primary to leave the incumbent vulnerable to the real challenger, Republican Brendan Doherty. But he won’t win. Not even the primary. No way. Not gonna happen. No chance.

First off, Gemma has absolutely no institutional support, which is crucial in a primary. At Friday’s annual local Democratic Convention, his nomination didn’t even garner a second, reports Will Collette in an excellent piece on the event in Progressive Charlestown. Collette writes:

When it came time for nominations, one delegate, who said she grew up as a friend of Gemma’s back in the day, stood to put his name in nomination. When Party Chair Ed Pachecho asked, not once but three times, if  any delegate would second the nomination, not one delegate among the 200+ would do so.

That leaves me to wonder how Gemma can claim to be the only electable Democrat for the First Congressional District when he can’t organize up a second to his nomination among 200+ Democrats. His supporters yelled out “democracy, democracy” when his nomination failed for lack of a second, but minutes later, they all filed out of the room.

But it’s more than just Gemma’s lack of support that makes him a bad candidate; he’s also just a bad candidate.

Last election, as a rookie, he ran as a pro-business fiscal moderate and this time he is claiming to be more progressive than his very progressive opponent – it paints the picture of a flip-flopper politically and at best an unknown variable on policy given that he’s never held office before, or even shown much interest in the process until a few years ago.

He’s also a pretty poor public speaker, a disaster at dealing with the local press pool and far less than adroit at answering questions on his feet. His latest gaffe was not taking a hardline on Nazi Germany in a recent interview with the RI Progressive Democrats.

Note to all pols: when asked about Hitler or the Nazis, it’s totally okay – if not a necessity of political survival, to throw them under the bus.

For these reasons as well as many others, we implore Anthony Gemma to drop out of the race. He cannot win; he can only do damage to the party he says he supports and, truth be told, he’s kind of embarrassing himself.

Which is too bad, because Gemma is a smart, super hard worker who is genuine and good and who wants to do right by his community. Electoral politics just doesn’t seem to be his bag.

I expect he’ll find more far more success if and when he starts some sort of local liberal think tank or online media venture – either would suit his skill set better than running for office, probably would have a greater impact on Rhode Island and could be done for a fraction of the cost. And, he’d get to be a hero rather than a spoiler.

Candidates Must Make It Official By Wednesday

The campaign season may have begun months ago, but Rhode Islanders who are thinking about running for office must make it official by this Wednesday at 4 p.m. in order to be eligible to appear on this year’s ballot.

Candidates have the next three days to file official Declarations of Candidacy. That deadline is just one of the milestones included in our “How to Run for Office,” a free guide that outlines the key steps candidates must take in contests for everything from school committee to U.S. Senate.

Candidates for federal offices and electors for independent presidential candidates must file their Declaration of Candidacy with us. Voters who plan to run for state or municipal office must file with the board of canvassers in the city or town where they are registered to vote.

The 30-page guide is posted on our website along with the Declaration of Candidacy form and other key documents. You can even track who has filed day by day using our website. Visit tomorrow morning to see who filed today.

Progress Report: Gordon Fox and 38 Studios, Campaign Declarations and Corporate Food Lobbyist Bill Murphy


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House Speaker Gordon Fox said during the legislative session that things were too hectic to answer questions about 38 Studios … well, what’s his excuse now? Meanswhile, Dan McGowan, GoLocalProv’s intrepid reporter, accuses the state’s most powerful pol of possibly committing a campaign finance violation by not disclosing details of a fundraiser put on by Michael Corso.

Speaking of GoLocal, they rank Central Falls as the worst community in Rhode Island … what do you want to bet that later this week they rank either East Greenwich or Barrington as the best? No matter what GoLocal says its criteria or formula is for deciding such an arbitrary distinction, the bottom line is, in RI, the affluent suburbs win and the impoverished inner-cities lose. It’s quickly becoming our state motto.

If by “period of uncertainty,” the Projo means next big bubble to burst with Rhode Island playing the role Nevada did in the real estate crash, then yes, public higher education is going through a period of uncertainty. By the way … let’s hear it for URI President David Dooley, who doesn’t want to work on his own contract until his staff is made whole. RI is lucky to have this guy.

Speaking of the Projo … the august daily newspaper owes GoLocalProv and EG Patch each a hat tip this morning in their Political Scene column, in which the paper reports that two longtime politicos – Gary Sasse, of East Greenwich, and John Lombardi, of Providence – are both considering running for state legislature.

And we owe the Projo a hat tip for pointing out that not only does former House Speaker Bill Murphy lobby for payday loans, but he also represents a handful of some of the worst food-producing corporations on earth, including ConAgra, Pepsi, Coke and General Mills.

And another hat tip to the Projo, for a pretty decent editorial of the impending death of DOMA, and how marriage equality may finally be heading the the Supreme Court.

Awesome headline: “RI Blows Save, Schilling Takes Loss”

Me, Jon Brien Talk ALEC, Woonsocket on WPRO


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I have to hand it to Rep. Jon Brien – while I think his politics are repugnant, he’s always a good sport about answering my questions when I ask him about either his involvement with ALEC or his decision to bring his community to brink of bankruptcy. So last week, when he asked if he could turn the tables on me and interview me when he filled in for Matt Allen on WPRO, it was easy to say yes. Here’s the segment:

We had a great conversation about his role with ALEC, the reasons for and against the failed supplemental property tax for Woonsocket and the recent New York Times op/ed that tied the two together.

In the second hour, we touched upon everything from marriage equality to organized labor and how conservative the General Assembly is … we also took calls that were mostly unsympathetic to my progressive points of view. It makes for some good radio. Here it is:

Thanks Jon Brien, Matt Allen and WPRO … it was a lot of fun!

Chafee Should Veto Woonsocket Cross Bills


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At 2:30 AM on the morning of June 13th, an hour before adjourning for the year, the General Assembly approved two outlandish companion bills, H-8143A and S 3035 as amended. In direct contrast to the principles that animated the founding of our state, these bills establish a government commission with the blatantly inappropriate and unconstitutional role of deciding for religious faiths which symbols of theirs are religious and which ones aren’t. As a long-time and staunch supporter of separation of church and state, Governor Chafee should veto this ill- advised legislation.

The bills were prompted by the on-going controversy surrounding a town-maintained Latin cross in front of a Woonsocket fire station. But whatever one’s views of that monument’s constitutional validity, this legislation crosses a line that the First Amendment cannot tolerate. It not only extensively entangles government in religious matters, it epitomizes the worst fears of the founders of the Constitution, who believed that separation of church and state was needed as much, if not more, to protect religion from the state as to protect the state from religion. This bill would allow government officials to declare that even a sacred religious symbol, icon, inscription, or statue has attained a secular value. Thus, government could attack religion in the guise of protecting it, by degrading, minimizing and politicizing the sacred nature of religious symbols in order to “protect” them from those advocating separation of church and state. No government commission should be permitted to decree that a religious symbol no longer has a religious meaning or that it has become predominantly secular.

Further, rather than resolve disputes over government sponsorship of religious symbols, the establishment of a commission like this will only magnify them and politicize religion to an extremely uncomfortable degree. It is ironic that those who claim a desire to protect religion would promote a bill that essentially gives a state commission the power to strip religious symbols of their sectarian meaning.

Passage of this bill is even more ironic when one considers the attacks that Governor Chafee was subjected to from the right last December when, in line with his Republican predecessor, he referred to the State House “holiday tree” instead of calling it a Christmas tree. Yet many of those same people have rallied around a bill that now establishes a government commission whose stated purpose is to declare religious symbols secular! We are hopeful that Governor Chafee will see this legislation for the politically mischievous and constitutionally problematic bill it is and give it a well-deserved veto.

Sewage Treatment Gets Legislative Treatment


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State House Dome from North Main Street
State House Dome from North Main Street
The State House dome from North Main Street. (Photo by Bob Plain)

In the waning days of the legislative session, can one be forgiven for suspecting that Assembly members don’t give a, well how about a quart of  sewage solids about the municipal governments they represent?  Sewage stories from Woonsocket and Warwick lead one to suspect otherwise.

Woonsocket first. Woonsocket is currently under a DEM order to drive nutrient pollution down beginning in 2013. Nutrient pollution, in the form of nitrates and ammonia, acts as fertilizer for algae blooms that use up oxygen in the water, killing the fish that aren’t driven away. The estimated cost of these improvements is around $35 million.  The system serves Woonsocket, but also some customers in neighboring towns, on either side of the border with Massachusetts.  The estimate is that this will add a couple of hundred dollars to annual sewer bills.

Woonsocket’s now-infamous House delegation, Jon Brien, Robert Phillips, and Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, tried to get the DEM requirement killed during the last legislative session. Unfortunately, DEM is only enforcing a federal EPA requirement, so it’s more complicated than just yelling, “stop.”

Complicating the issue, upstream from Woonsocket, the sewage authority over the line in Massachusetts is suing the EPA over the same rules. The dodge currently preferred by the city of Woonsocket and their House delegation is that Rhode Island wait for the outcome of that suit. Though it might seem to make sense to wait for the suit to settle, similar suits around the country have failed. Besides, clean water is — to most people — a good thing. Might the delegation have proposed helping Woonsocket pay for the sewage treatment upgrades?

Move now to Warwick. The Assembly repealed a law to mandate that homeowners along the new sewer routes hook their houses up to those sewers.  A typical hookup costs $1500-2000, and annual sewer bills are around $450. The mandate is/was part of the Greenwich Bay Special Area Management Plan, a plan to clean Greenwich Bay, once home to a thriving shellfish fishery, and now mostly closed to digging clams.

Governor Chafee vetoed the bill and the Assembly overrode his veto. Another victory for low sewer bills. Except that the finances of the Warwick Sewer Authority have budgeted in a certain number of hookups per year. This is part of how they borrowed the money to fund the expansion in the first place, and how they make their budget each year. Without those new hookups, the people already connected to the sewer will see their rates rise, both according to the financial statements, and to Janine Burke, the Warwick Sewer Authority director, who I spoke to about it.

Alternatively, the Authority has the legal authorization to charge a fee — a “connect-capable” fee of around $200 per year — to the houses along its route that aren’t hooked up. To date it has chosen not to do so (which puts it out of compliance with the Greenwich Bay plan), but it can revisit the issue. At any rate, overriding that veto in order to keep sewer costs down seems like it may be a losing strategy.

What both of these stories say is that the state is interested in seeing cleaner water. The Assembly gave no orders that DEM repudiate the EPA requirements. No one will go on record wanting dirty water and dead fish. They just don’t want to pay for the cleanup.

To a small extent, you have to give the Woonsocket gang of three a little credit for consistency. They don’t think cleaner water is worth spending any money on, and so reject both the money and the requirements, even if they offer lip service to clean water. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt told the Woonsocket Patch:

“I understand it’s important to decrease the pollutants in the water and I also understand that eventually, this must happen. But we can’t possibly move forward with this project at this time and consider ourselves fiscally responsible leaders.”

So their position is clean water, later. The rest of the Assembly seems ok with the idea of clean water now, so long as someone else pays for it. Neither perspective seems worth endorsing to me.

What about the perspective that clean water now is a good thing worth paying for?  It’s a good thing for Woonsocket, but it’s also a good thing for everyone downstream, which means Lincoln, Cumberland, Pawtucket, Central Falls, Providence, and everyone on Narragansett Bay. Untreated sewage currently flows into the water from the Warwick shore, but East Greenwich benefits from a cleaner Greenwich Bay, too. Given all that, why should the state insist that all sewage problems be solved locally?  Yes, Woonsocket residents pay higher property taxes proportional to their ability than nearly any other city or town in the state.  Sewer customers in Providence and Pawtucket have seen their rates climb dramatically in recent years for the same reasons.  Does the state have nothing to offer besides words? How about money?

Let’s end with a riddle. In 2010, our state’s economy, measured by the gross state product, was about $49.2 billion dollars. Corrected for inflation, this is larger than it has ever been in our little state’s history, despite our monumental unemployment rate. There are those who say that our economic growth is because of the dramatic drop in tax revenue over the past decades. That’s silly because growth has slowed or stalled as taxes have been cut. But slow growth or fast, the economy now is bigger than ever.

So remember, when you hear about how we can no longer afford clean water or good education or comfortable retirements — let alone find enough jobs for everyone — that our state is collectively richer now than it has ever been before. Ever. Feel better now?

Progress Report: Gary Sasse Considers State House Run, Caleb Chafee Grows Up, Teen Pregnancy in Central Falls


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Gary Sasse, the architect of the Carcieri tax cuts, is thinking of running for Bob Watson’s seat in the state House of Representatives, reports my alma mater EG Patch … Sasse is smart and likable but his singular obsession on finance makes his focus a little narrow to serve the General Assembly well.  We’ve already seen where Sasse’s fiscal policies did for the state when he worked for Carcieri – together, they cut the state workforce at the expense of the state’s pension obligation and lowered taxes on the wealthy at the expense of the struggling cities. Balancing a budget on paper is one thing but governing is something altogether different and more complex.

Besides, the rumor around town is that he has already told the local GOP committee he won’t run, and if he does he won’t even campaign … I hear local conservatives are practically begging him to throw his hat in the ring because they know what a strong candidate Democrat Mark Schwager is. The doctor and former town councilor is a fiscal moderate and a social liberal.

Big time congrats goes to my good buddy Matt Allen, of WPRO, who broke the story of Caleb Chafee having a party at the family farm in Exeter. Matt is one of the hardest workers and deepest thinkers in the local marketplace of ideas – and while I don’t agree with him philosophically, he’s got a moral compass that would make George Washington jealous. That said, we are talking about an 18-year-old having a party. This isn’t a scandal, it’s called growing up.

Best line of the week: “There’s no crying in taxpayer-backed video game development!”

The Projo the other day misreported the percentage of teens who get pregnant in Central Falls. The actual number is 8.5 percent but the Journal reported that it was 85 percent. 85 percent? How could anyone think  – for even a brief moment – that almost 9 out of 10 teens in Central Falls get pregnant? Would this mistake have been made if we were talking about Barrington?

Did you know you can see giant wild sea turtles in Barrington this time of year? Me neither.

Here’s what Rhode Island’s constant complaining about taxes has gotten the Ocean State: the worst bridges in the country and the second worst roads next to, yep, Alaska … I’ve never been the Last Frontier, but I’m pretty sure I want our public infrastructure to be way better than it is there.

More on RI public sector pensions, this time The Economist weighs in.

We Need Diversity in Rhode Island’s General Assembly


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On my last post I was called out for having previously said somewhere at some time that the General Assembly, and the House in particular, has too many white, male lawyers. Here I’m going to lay out some of the facts I found about the over-representation of that specific type of person.

95% of our State Representatives are white. 77% of Rhode Islanders are white.

75% of our State Representatives are male. 48% of Rhode Islanders are male.

28% of our State Representatives are lawyers. 0.4% of Rhode Islanders are lawyers.

27% of our State Representatives are white, male lawyers.

I’m all for having some white, male lawyers in the State House. It’s also okay to have more lawyers than the general population. As some people have pointed out, the job of a legislator is to make laws, so a law degree does not hurt in that regard. However, more important than the technical drafting of the language (after all, there are State House staff with this responsibility) is representing the interests of all Rhode Islanders. Passing a budget that works for all Rhode Islanders. Strengthening public education, investing in infrastructure, creating job opportunities and maintaining safety nets is what I want my legislators to be busy doing. You can’t fix problems you don’t see, and so I want my General Assembly to have eyes in as many places as possible, and I do believe that requires diversity in all factors, from gender, race and age, to class, employment history, and experiences with poverty.

So, if you’re a cashier, or a waitress or a salesperson, it’s time you gave some thought to running for office. Your community needs you. The stakes are too high to sit on the sidelines.

My sources:
http://www.rilin.state.ri.us/  – each state rep’s bio page for gender, race, occupation info
http://www.statehealthfacts.org/profileind.jsp?ind=5&cat=1&rgn=41 – for gender and race info on RI
http://lawschooltuitionbubble.wordpress.com/original-research-updated/lawyers-per-capita-by-state/ – for lawyer info on RI
http://www.seniorjobbank.org/database/Rhode_Island/Rhode_Island.html – for employment info for RI

Former Chafee Staffer Seeks State House Seat


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Sam Lovett, at his old desk in the governor’s office.

Sam Lovett, who worked for Gov. Chafee as a communications associate and before that on David Segal’s campaign, is running for a legislative seat in the State House to represent East Providence.

He’s 24 years old and says politically he sees things from “a millennial point of view.”

What does that mean? The Democrat says the state should focus on fending off the brain drain, helping Main Streets thrive and protecting the rights of all people.

“Without the growth of vibrant communities to empower Rhode Islanders, we will continue to see the decline of our state’s strength,” he said according to his website. “I will work with the talented parties at state and local levels who are able to assist in revitalizing our communities.”

An equally important part of his platform, he said, will concern social issues.

“Being an ethical voice for social justice in Rhode Island is a major reason why I have decided to run for this state seat,” he said on his website. “Advocating on behalf of the elderly and disabled, ensuring accessibility for the blind and deaf and hard of hearing, continuing the good work of the Rhode Island Senate in supporting the homeless, as well as protecting the rights of minority groups, and the reproductive rights of women — these will be focal issues I support with my candidacy.”

Lovett specialized is social media while with the governor’s office. In April, he left for a job with GovLoop, a social network that connects government employees and officials. He said he left on good terms. He did not yet seek Chafee’s endorsement, but says he expects his former boss will support him – and Lovett says he supports his former boss.

“I would never bet against him,” Lovett said. “With him in charge Rhode Island always has a shot.”

The governor’s office could not be immediately reached for comment (I’ll update this post when I hear from them).

Lovett was raised in East Providence and attended Boston College where he studied history.

Because of redistricting the seat won’t be contested by the incumbent. Already declared for the seat are Robert Britto, according to the East Providence Reporter, and Charlie Tsonos, of East Providence Patch.

Old vs. New in Campaign for State House Seat


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There’s no other way to say this: The old ways aren’t working, our state is moving in the wrong direction, and I need your help to fix it.

Today, John Lombardi announces his candidacy for State Representative of District 8. Mr. Lombardi has served on the City Council for almost three decades, and I thank him for his years of service to the City of Providence.  But it is time to look forward.

It’s time for new ideas and new leadership – that’s why I’m running. Our neighborhoods deserve better, and with your help, I know we can turn it around

The fact is that there’s really no difference between John Lombardi, and our current state rep, Michael Tarro – they’re both political insiders, with a stake in the old way of doing things, in City Hall and on Smith Hill.

For years, all of us in Federal Hill, Olneyville and Valley have been let down by poor leadership. And for too long, elected officials have been making short-sighted decisions in order to reward friends and get re-elected. Today we’re all living with the results. Since April, I’ve knocked on hundreds of doors and the response has been overwhelmingly positive. People are ready for a new direction, they’re tired of politics as usual, and I’m in this to fight for all of us who know that Providence can do better. I’m in this to win.

I need your help. Please donate $100 or $10 today, or sign up to volunteer.

Though the number of people seeking to represent District 8 changes today, our campaign does not.

I look forward to working with you to build a stronger Rhode Island. Please feel free to email me and let me know your concerns, to learn more about my campaign, and how you can get involved.

Progress Report: Local Health Care Reform; Purple Rhode Island; Payday Loans, Mother Jones and Diane Ravitch


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Congratulations to Christine Ferguson, who Gov. Chafee tapped to run the new Health Benefits Exchange. Rhode Island now has one of the sharpest minds in health care running one of the nation’s most innovative state-run systems. This is a phenomenon known as good news, Ocean State. Let’s do more stuff like that.

Some people call Rhode Island the most liberal state, which it isn’t (take it from someone who has lived in Oregon, Hawaii and Vermont). Nate Silver of the New York Times calls it the most elastic, or the state most “relatively sensitive or responsive to changes in political conditions.” Ted Nesi writes, “Silver’s conclusion fits with the long-running debate over whether Rhode Island is truly a blue state.”

Gina Raimondo might not like payday loans … but some of her political associates don’t seem to mind them all that much, reports Ian Donnis.

Mother Jones, the long-running lefty mag out of San Francisco, takes a look at our new Homeless Bill of Rights. It was sloppy and irresponsible of me not to include this on my recent list of progressive victories in this year’s legislative session.

Steve Brown, executive director of the local chapter of the ACLU, pens a blog post about the Pleau case and the feds decision to seek the death penalty for him on the ACLU’s Blog of Rights site. He writes, “We know that the death penalty is not a deterrent, that it is imposed in a discriminatory, arbitrary and irrational manner, and that it remains capable of convicting innocent people. Even more fundamentally, as part of a civilized society, it should be unacceptable for our government to respond to a heinous crime with another act of barbarism and violence.”

“Is Rhode Island the worst state,” asks nationally-renowned education expert Diane Ravitch on her blog. “I personally don’t think Rhode Island is the worst state, as compared to states like Louisiana, Ohio, Michigan, Florida, and Indiana,” she writes. “But it deserves credit for moving in the same direction and seeking to earn its spurs in the competition for worst.”

Progressives, for the record, have nothing against charter schools … it’s when charter schools and their advocates get all anti-union that they run afoul of the left.

Fortnight Against Freedom

In the United States, Roman Catholic bishops have called for an alliterative “Fortnight for Freedom” to run from June 21, the vigil of the Feasts of St. John Fisher and St. Thomas Moore, to July 4. The bishops are calling on the faithful to use these two weeks for prayer, study and action, specifically regarding the HHS mandate, requiring employers to provide reproductive services as part of their health care. The Catholic Church, as well as many other religious, anti-reproductive rights groups, have decided this is an abridgment of their religious freedom and are waging a political and public relations war against the mandate.

Here in Providence, Bishop Thomas Tobin held a special mass and prayer breakfast at the Cathedral of Saints Peter & Paul bright and early on Tuesday morning to kick off two weeks of anti-Obamacare political partisanship. Of course, that’s not how Tobin characterized this effort to the 400 plus believers in attendance:

We need to emphasize first of all what this commitment to the defense of religious freedom is not all about. This exercise is not primarily about the Church’s teaching on contraception, although that teaching of the Church is very clear and valid. This is not a statement about women’s health or national health coverage, although that too is a very legitimate issue. Nor is this an exercise of the church participating in partisan election politics during this election year, although Catholics certainly should be and must be involved in that process as well. The defense of religious freedom that we proclaim today is just that: the defense of religious freedom.

Later, Tobin reiterated the the Fortnight for Freedom:

…is not primarily political, it is above all a matter of faith.

Tobin then goes on to explain where he got his marching orders from: Pope Benedict. The pontiff recently warned visiting U.S. bishops about the proponents of “radical secularism” who seek to stifle the church’s proclamation of “unchanging moral truths” that can be found through the church teachings on natural law. (CatholicNews.com)

The Fortnight for Freedom is truly aimed not at the average American but at the Catholic laity, “engaged, articulate and well-informed,” who have an obligation, mandated by God, to confront politicians on issues of concern to the Catholic hierarchy, especially reproductive health care issues. As Tobin explains:

This is your task. This is your mission. This is your fight. It is my task… to inspire you, to motivate you and to encourage you. It is your task to go into the world and fight the battle, challenge politicians, and change unjust laws.

It is telling that at a forum ostensibly defending freedom of religion and conscience the phrase “separation of church and state” was never once uttered, even though Roger Williams, Thomas Jefferson and JFK, just to name three of countless examples, considered such an idea to be the bedrock of true religious liberty. Indeed, Tobin expresses nearly the exact opposite of this essential concept when he says:

It is your vocation, dear brothers and sisters, to transform the secular order into the Kingdom of God.

and later:

We believe that we are endowed with dignity and freedom, and first among those freedoms is the freedom to serve the one who created us…

So much for the values we Americans hold dear. The Kingdom of God does not sound like a place where democracy, or freedom of conscience, could possibly be welcomed. The Kingdom of God sounds exactly like what it is: theocratic rule by a religious elite. An unbiased look at the current and past make-up of the Catholic Church gives one a full picture of what this theocratic Kingdom of God will look like.

The interpretation of the First Amendment advanced by Bishop Tobin and the Fortnight of Freedom is Orwellian in nature. Democracy becomes theocracy. Freedom becomes servitude.

Let’s face it: Real freedom of religion and conscience can only come when, as JFK so eloquently put it 52 years ago, “separation of church and state is absolute.”

Summer Is Here and So Are the Sailboats

Right on cue, Summer Solstice arrived on June 20 and ushered in temps well into the 90’s, providing the first blast of real heat for Southern New England this year. It was about time too, the choruses of “When is it going to warm up?” were getting a little stale.

Well, warm up it did. With schools out and summer vacation just getting into full swing, the shoreline beaches were packed today and the roadways leading to them were clogged starting early in the morning. Routes 4, 1 and 102 were at near standstills around noon today and the traffic was sustained well into the afternoon as those who couldn’t get to the beach early,  made their way down later in the day.

Across the bay in Newport, the situation was much the same, except in the case of the City by the Sea, there is a cruise ship anchored offshore and plenty of tourists were on hand in the city’s shopping and tourist areas, spending money and providing a much-needed boost to the state’s economy.

The tourists in Newport also got to see a real show today, as the eight teams vying in the America’s Cup Race Series were all in the water today, testing the carbon fiber hulls and various sails in advance of next week’s races, scheduled to kick off on Thursday.For those unfamiliar with America’s Cup racing, the ships have evolved over the years but the premise is the same; just think of it as NASCAR, for the very rich.

The RIEDC has done a fantastic job putting this event together, partnering with America’s Cup Race Management and NBC Sports, among others. Unlike America’s Cup races here in years past, these races will be visible from shore and the base at Fort Adams will provide spectacular views of the action from very close in-shore. There will be plenty of other activities on site with action taking place from 11 am – 7 pm from June 28-July 1. Prior to the 28th, entrance to Fort Adams and the racing facilities will be free, anyone wishing to attend on race days will have to purchase tickets and pay to park.

ALEC Praises Rhode Island’s 2011 Pension Cuts


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While Rhode Island debates if ALEC has its hand in our local politics, a new report indicates the right wing group is at least happy with the results.

In its 2012 annual “Rich State, Poor State report,” the American Legislative Exchange Council praises Rhode Island for its efforts to pare back public sector pension benefits last year.

“Perhaps the biggest pension reform success last year came from Rhode Island,” reads the report, authored by right-wing economists Arthur Laffer, Stephen Moore and Jonathan Williams, in a subsection titled “Blue State Rhode Island Passes Bipartisan Pension Reform.”

The authors, two of whom (Laffer and Moore) are charter members of the far-right wing Club for Growth, anticipated further reform on the municipal level in this year’s legislative session.

“The initial draft of [the bill] set out not only to reform state pension plans, but municipal ones as well,” says the ALEC report. “As it went through the legislature, the municipal aspect of pension reform was removed. This is unfortunate, as other cities in Rhode Island are seriously underfunded and on the verge of delinquency. We anticipate seeing more good reforms from the Ocean State this year and hope they can tackle their pension burden once and for all.”

Conservative Woonsocket Rep. Jon Brien, a member of ALEC’s board of directors also pushed hard for the municipal pension efforts this year.

In fact, the ALEC report cites an article Brien wrote with report co-author Williams for the Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity, a local right wing organization that advocates for political objectives similar to ALEC: lower taxes and smaller government. Its website identifies Williams as “a member of the RI Center for Freedom’s special pension task force, is a co-author of ‘Rich States, Poor States’ and serves as Director of the Tax and Fiscal Policy Task Force at the American Legislative Exchange Council, a non-partisan membership association of state legislators.”

The Center also runs the new website the Ocean State Current, which took issue with the New York Times column yesterday making a link between Brien’s ALEC ties and his position against increasing taxes in Woonsocket to avoid receivership.

Rhode Island is one of two states singled out in the report for making “the tough choice to reform programs and benefits.” The other was Wisconsin, which did so through the controversial Act 10, pushed by Gov. Scott Walker, that led to a recall campaign against him.

The PDF was too big too upload, but you can download it for yourself here. And here’s the entire section on Rhode Island:

Blue State Rhode Island Passes Bipartisan Pension Reform

Perhaps the biggest pension reform success last year came from Rhode Island. This tiny liberal state had a big problem: An estimated unfunded liability ranging from $6.8 billion to more than $15 billion (depending on your actuarial assumptions). Assuming an unfunded pension liability of roughly $15 billion, which is from the estimate that uses generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) from the private sector, every man, woman and child in Rhode Island owed $14,256. Realizing that the system was un- sustainable, Gov. Lincoln Chafee and State Treasurer Gina Raimondo proposed and successfully pushed for the Rhode Island Retirement Security Act of 2011 (RIRSA), which the legislature passed on a bipartisan basis.
While initially many Rhode Islanders didn’t take the need for reform seriously, they began to see reality when one city in the state, Central Falls, declared bankruptcy and cut public pension plans by nearly 50 percent.22 Passing RIRSA wasn’t easy and took a lot of input and analysis from employees, retirees, residents, and other groups throughout the state. The plan provides that:

•     Reforms well as new workers.
•     Both employees and taxpayers will  share the burden of investment risks.
•     Workers  are subject to cost-of-living adjustments that take into consideration the pension fund’s over or under performance.
•     Cost-of-living adjustments are frozen for current retirees in the defined-benefit plan.23

Not only does RIRSA save Rhode Island taxpayers billions of dollars, it also provides public workers with the security that their money will be there when they retire. Rhode Island has proved that the choice is not between Republican or Democrat, Left or Right. Though RIRSA was monumental, Rhode Island still has some work to do. The initial draft of RIRSA set out not only to reform state pension plans, but munici- pal ones as well. As it went through the legislature, the municipal aspect of pension reform was removed. This is unfortunate, as other cities in Rhode Island are seriously underfunded and on the verge of delinquency. We anticipate seeing more good reforms from the Ocean State this year and hope they can tackle their pension burden once and for all. Reflecting on the success of pension reform in the Ocean State, Gov. Chafee remarked, “With the passage of the Rhode Island Retirement Security Act, Rhode Island has demonstrated to the rest of the country that we are committed to getting our fiscal house in order. While this is an important step toward comprehensive pension reform, it is not complete. Our job is not done.”

Occupy Prov: Bail Out Workers, Not CEOs


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Note: This was written by Paul Hubbard, Chris Murphy and Jared Paul. It reflects  Occupy Providence’s position on the 38 Studios debacle. The die-in represents the destruction of jobs by trickle-down strategies not the workers who lost their jobs.

CHANTING “MONEY for jobs and a decent wage, not for bailouts and 38,” 75 members and supporters of Occupy Providence (OPVD) rallied and marched through the streets of Providence on June 9.

OPVD organized the protest around three demands: No bailout of Wall Street/38 Studios bondholders, tax the rich, and solidarity not austerity, locally, nationally and internationally.

Assembling outside the Rhode Island Convention Center where the liberal blogger conference Netroots was in progress, the crowd heard personal testimony from working people who described how the economic crises and austerity agenda of the 1 percent have impacted their lives.

OPVD then marched several blocks to the former headquarters of 38 Studios, which spoken-word artist Jared Paul, an organizer with OPVD, described as a “crime scene.” Dozens of marchers then laid on the ground and were outlined in chalk as they participated in the great RI Jobs Dead On Arrival “die-in.” The action was designed to dramatize the destruction of good jobs caused by the “trickle-down” policies of the 1 percent and evidenced by the 38 Studios debacle.

38 Studios, a video game company owned by former Red Sox baseball star Curt Schilling, was financed in 2010 with a $75 million loan from the RI Economic Development Corporation (EDC). Gambling on Schilling’s risky start-up with taxpayer funds, the quasi-public agency floated up to $125 million in “moral obligation” bonds on Wall Street to guarantee the deal.

Chris Mastrangelo, an organizer with OPVD, made the analogy of a gambler who goes “on the street” to a loan shark for money to bet on a horse. Schilling, for many years a right-wing proponent of “small government,” was only too happy to accept the EDC loan.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

NOW THAT 38 Studios has collapsed, laid off its entire workforce in three states (700 people) and filed for bankruptcy, the bondholders (sharks) on Wall Street still expect to be paid. Gov. Lincoln Chafee and the Rhode Island Legislature have promised full payment. This will cost Rhode Island’s taxpayers $112 million over the next 10 to 20 years.

Speaking at the die-in, Paul Hubbard of the International Socialist Organization said:

The austerity agenda of Rhode Island’s 1 percent, recently imposed by the governor and the Rhode Island legislature, means massive cuts to education, the developmentally disabled, state worker pensions, public transportation and Rhode Island’s poor. These are the real crimes, crimes perpetrated against Rhode Island’s working families, against the 99 percent, against humanity…Our sisters and brothers in Greece, Egypt, Spain and Quebec have risen up against the austerity agenda of the global 1 percent. Occupy Providence is proud to stand in solidarity with the global 99 percent.

OPVD then marched through the city of Providence to the State House, where dozens of protesters assembled in front of the building’s main entrance. Chalk outlines of dead bodies, representing another crime scene, were drawn on the plaza outside.

Marching back to the convention center, the site of OPVD’s four-day “sidewalk occupation,” dozens of protesters stopped by another crime scene–the tax-exempt Providence Place Mall. Sixty protesters marched through the first floor, chanting, “Tax the rich! Solidarity not austerity!”

Security guards appeared and began assaulting peaceful protesters at the front of the march, physically pushing them toward the middle exit. A large group of protesters easily avoided the guards and continued to the exit at the far end of the mall as planned. There, a “mic check” ensued as OPVD again started chanting.

Security guards called in the Providence police, who detained and handcuffed about a dozen protesters as they attempted to leave. An hour later, all were released after signing agreements to stay off the mall premises for one year.

OPVD then re-assembled and finished the march, returning to cheers from those at the sidewalk occupation as well as bystanders outside the convention center. Speaking to the media, organizer Mariah Burns said, “The police used handcuffs on peaceful protesters simply exercising their rights to assembly and free speech. These tactics were clearly designed to intimidate and were completely unnecessary.”

As the scandal surrounding 38 Studios continues to unfold, OPVD has pledged to continue its struggle for justice and against Wall Street bailouts.

GOP Strategy for General Assembly Needs Work


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So, according to RINPR’s Ian Donnis, RI Republican Party chairman Mark Zaccaria only plans to run 40-50 candidates for the 113-member General Assembly (about half of the number who ran in 2010 during the Tea Party Revolt). Mr. Zaccaria says that the goal is to force floor fights over every major piece of legislation, and that the focus on fewer candidates will allow for deeper distribution of resources.

I’m not buying it. First, Democrats are extremely well-equipped, monetarily, to fend off challengers (for instance, Speaker Fox alone has a quarter of a million dollars, search the filings here). Second, I’d be more inclined to believe that the RI GOP was a strong and credible organization if they actually came off that way. But go to their website and tool around for a bit. I found these problems with it:

  • The carousel only has one thing on it, leading to lots of clicking on those arrows.
  • The sole item in the carousel asks if you’ve heard their radio ad, but clicking on it just brings you back to the home page.
  • The “At The Front” blog has one article, which discusses Rhode Island Democrats and hardly mentions the Republicans.
  • There are no events on the events page.
  • The lead story in “Latest News” is the selection of Delegates for the Convention.
  • There’s a Twitter feed, but it’s used so rarely (tweets from 13 and 28 days ago) that it might as well be static.
  • RIGOPtv (their YouTube channel) shows a video from 2011 about the jobs plan put out by the U.S. House Republicans.
  • The “About” section is about Mr. Zaccaria, not the party.

Obviously, the Democrats have a much better website (they also have more money to spend on it). And obviously, you can have a crappy website and still be a really great organization. But in the 21st Century, we should note that websites are often the first impression you make on people. And RIGOP.org is not an inspiring impression, though its big candidates (Brendan Doherty & Barry Hinckley) have much stronger websites.

My main issue is with any political organization (Republican, Tea Party, Democrat, Progressive, Green, Moderate, etc.) looking to undo the establishment is that “less is more” does not seem to be an actual functioning approach. There’s just so many things you get from more candidates:

  • A Sense of Movement: When you have a lot of people standing up and declaring themselves under your banner it makes people take notice. It also means that you have more chances to win. If you can’t assist everyone with your meager resource, then focus on those you believe have a chance, and make it clear to those you can’t that you’ll help them if you gain those resources.
  • Larger Networks: Each candidate brings in a different social network. The more candidates that are running, the greater amplification of your organization’s message through their networks. Also, the people they attract to their campaigns are going to be your next generation of candidates and supporters. With fewer candidates, you’re restricting yourself.
  • Drowns Out the Wackos: Some people just have weird beliefs. And they’re often dedicated enough to act upon those beliefs. More candidates means that you’ll keep those folks from totally defining your organization. Obviously, if you’re not a political party, you can exert more control over your candidates. But since the only way to keep someone from running under your banner as a party is to primary them, more candidates means you can show such candidates to by atypical.
  • Free Experience: Training people requires work and time. While it behooves you to offer training to candidates and their staff, there’s nothing like real, on-the-job experience. Yes, inexperienced people screw up. But that’s how people learn. Your goal as a political organization should be to minimize and counteract those mistakes, making it easier for people to participate without sinking your candidates.

Those are benefits I see. Certainly, I’m no heroic field director or party organizer. I think for the Republicans to announce that they’re fielding almost half of the candidates they had in the last election makes it look like they’re contracting, rather then expanding. Which makes them look far weaker then might actually be the case. And if the emphasis is going to be on quality rather than quantity, you have to be of better quality then your opponents.

The other issue here is that perhaps the Republicans have set their sights too low. Forcing a floor debate on major bills isn’t exactly the rallying cry that inspired Tea Party activists last election cycle (“We Want Our Country Back!”). If someone promised me they were going to lose a lot while talking a lot, I’d laugh in their face. The promise needs to be big: our members are going to have control of the state. That should be the promise of any party or organized faction in the state. Republicans aren’t even promising to take one chamber of the General Assembly.

Because but no matter your goal, you’re probably not going to live up to it (unless you’re the ruling Democratic Party). And if you’re going to go down, go down kicking and screaming, because whimpering doesn’t look strong.

Progress Report: Celebrating Providence; Gist Wants to Close a Charter


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Happy birthday, Providence Biltmore – the downtown landmark celebrates its 90th birthday tonight. Flo Jonic of RINPR marks the occasion with a great feature story, reporting, among other gems, “In the early years, the chef grew vegetables and raised roosting hens on the roof of the hotel so that celebrities like Benny Goodman could have fresh eggs.”

Speaking of downtown landmarks, the New York Times had another RI story yesterday … this one, also written by a Rhode Islander (Elizabeth Abbott is a former Projo reporter and URI prof), was about the Superman building and the Arcade.

And still speaking of downtown landmarks, we’re looking forward to the movie about the history of Haven Brothers. It could be argued that the mobile diner is the godfather of the food truck trend sweeping Providence and other hip cities across the country. (Portland will be so mad if we try to lay claim to starting the food truck trend!)

One more point about downtown: whenever I walk around the Jewelry District I can’t help thinking of how lucky the city is that it gets to double the size of its urban core. It’s a once-in-a-millennium opportunity that every other city in America would relish. It’s too bad local headlines are so often about our local cities literally starving to death because there are worlds of potential within them.

Education Commissioner Deborah Gist, the godmother of charter schools in Rhode Island, is recommending closing a Providence charter school for failing to educate its students in math. The school was originally named Textron/Chamber of Commerce Academy. So much for the private sector being able to do it better…

Speaking of the 1 percent, we’re also looking forward to Ted Nesi’s new show “Executive Suite.” It’s sure to be interesting and insightful even if the name implies it won’t be geared to the working class.

Nurses picketed outside Women and Infants yesterday to call attention to the hospital’s use of temporary (read: scab) nurses.

Good, bad or indifferent, the Pew Center says Rhode Island has been the most aggressive (read: conservative) in paring back public sector pensions.

Forget Model Bills, It’s About the ALEC Mindset


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It’s great to have the conversation turned toward the conservative forces at play in Woonsocket, but it’s unfortunate that the concern seems to be getting lost in a search for something that doesn’t exist: secret ALEC model legislation that tells its members what to do when their city has a choice between bankruptcy and raising taxes.

Joe Nocera’s piece on ALEC in Woonsocket wasn’t about direct links, it was about what ALEC’s ideas on municipal government look like when applied to a financially struggling city. “It’s not pretty,” he concluded.

Besides, model legislation may be useful but in a way ALEC’s ideology has already gone viral.

This is how the New York Times reported on this pretty recent phenomenon in April:

“Most of the attention has focused on ALEC’s role in creating model bills, drafted by lobbyists and lawmakers, that broadly advance a pro-business, socially conservative agenda. But a review of internal ALEC documents shows that this is only one facet of a sophisticated operation for shaping public policy at a state-by-state level. The records offer a glimpse of how special interests effectively turn ALEC’s lawmaker members into stealth lobbyists, providing them with talking points, signaling how they should vote and collaborating on bills affecting hundreds of issues like school vouchers and tobacco taxes.”

Of course, ALEC has no blueprint on what to do when a city goes through what Woonsocket is going through. No city has ever gone through what Woonsocket is going through: the General Assembly, specifically the House, prevented the elected city council and mayor from raising revenue enough to avoid insolvency at the behest of three local legislators because they preferred receivership to taxes. There’s no model legislation for that.

But make no mistake about it, Brien’s policy positions for his hometown are tailored perfectly to how his fellow ALEC board members would want him to handle the situation. His stock in the far-right, anti-government group will surely skyrocket if the Woonsocket budget crisis is balanced on the backs of public sector retirees rather than private property owners. He’ll be the star of the conference in Salt Lake City this summer. Maybe Baldelli-Hunt will go too, she’s also an ALEC member.

Brien said he hasn’t been in touch with anyone from the organization since he attended a conference in May. He didn’t need to be. He implemented perfectly the broad brush ALEC game plan: fight taxes, shrink government and bust unions.

That may be why Times columnist Joe Nocera talks about the “ALEC philosophy” rather than the ALEC smoking gun. Nocera certainly didn’t blame ALEC for Woonsocket’s woes, as Ted Nesi reported. And while playing the ALEC card might sound unseemly when one words it as such, it is altogether fair in this instance. There is, as I wrote in my piece, “enough circumstantial evidence to at least raise the question.”

Ian Donnis makes an important point here: “Brien makes no bones about identifying with ALEC’s ‘free markets, low taxes’ philosophy; he says his constituents support the same values.”

There is no doubt Woonsocket is an ALEC-friendly place. There is a local small government group that’s been active the past several years called the Woonsocket Taxpayer Coalition, that adheres to the same low tax/small government values as does ALEC.  And, indeed, ALEC has long had ties to the community. CVS is the only Rhode Island company that is a member of ALEC. And Brien said he got involved with ALEC through former Woonsocket legislative leader Jerry Martineau, who used to be the state ALEC chair in the 1990’s.

“Jerry and I have always been friends,” Brien told me in April. “I wanted to pick up that mantle.”

Brien now owns the ALEC mantle. He should do so for better or worse.

NY Times Links ALEC to Woonsocket Fiscal Crisis


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Sometimes it takes a view from 20,000 feet rather than in the trenches to see the big picture. Such may be the case with today’s New York Times, which makes the connection between the budget crisis in Woonsocket and Rep. Jon Brien’s involvement with the American Legislative Exchange Council.

ALEC, reports Times columnist and native Rhode Islander Joe Nocera, “has a very clear agenda for dealing with state budgets. It wants to shrink them. Although Brien has denied that he is applying the ALEC philosophy to his small city, it looks, in fact, as if that’s exactly what he is doing. It’s not pretty.”

Nocera says the Woonsocket House delegation is using the fiscal crisis as an opportunity to shrink government. He even calls it the “ALEC philosophy.”

Brien denies the charge, of course. It’s a point he is incredibly sensitive about.

When I recently wrote that the “General Assembly ought to save Woonsocket from its elected officials” prior to its last chance of the year to approve the supplemental tax bill, he laughed it off. But when I tweeted this that night, he took great offense, immediately leaving his seat on the House floor and coming up to literally yell at me while I sat at the press booth.

Similarly, a week earlier, when I tweeted this and this, Brien demanded a retraction:

While many have speculated that the Woonsocket House delegation’s decision not to support the supplemental tax bill had to do with Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt coveting the mayor’s office, it could have more to do with Brien’s idealogical adherence to the ALEC game plan.

He’s brand new to the once-shadowy, ultra-conservative organization’s board of directors (RI Future broke this story) and had just recently come home from his first ALEC meeting as a member of leadership when the Woonsocket House delegation launched its effort to sink the supplemental tax. If Brien and the rest of the Woonsocket House delegation didn’t see the crisis in Woonsocket as an opportunity to implement the ALEC agenda locally, I’m sure his colleagues on the board of directors wish that he had.

There’s certainly enough circumstantial evidence to at least raise the question.

Initially, Brien suggested borrowing from the city pension fund to close the budget gap – a move that certainly would have created a pension crisis where none exists today. On one hand this may seem like robbing Peter to pay Paul, but it’s not. Every Rhode Islander understands that if the problem lies with pensions, we can simply slash those pensions, though we would never treat taxpayers this way. If it hurts organized labor, and you’re an anti-union ALEC conservative, all the better.

Also, the Woonsocket delegation did little to advocate for more education funding money for their struggling city, even though the school department is currently suing the state saying they aren’t paying up quick enough. But instead Brien lobbied hard for Gov. Chafee’s municipal aid package, which would have helped cities like Woonsocket in that it would have eroded collective bargaining rights.

The now-infamous Woonsocket trio of Brien, Baldelli-Hunt and Phillips also tried to kill a federally-mandated sewage treatment plant when they were negotiating with the governor’s office about the supplemental tax. Not only would it have shrunk government, but it would have done so in a way that would have relegated a pesky environment-protecting project mandated by the EPA and the Clean Water Act to the back burner – talk about an ALEC home run!

ALEC experts from Washington DC have cautioned me against looking for fingerprints left by the far-right organization. Since garnering so much bad press recently, they said, ALEC has adapted and learned to operate without leaving a trail. To that end, it’s at the very least worth exploring.

If Nocera is correct, and the Woonsocket House delegation didn’t support the supplemental tax as a way to implement ALEC’s dreams of a smaller government, then this picture I took of Baldelli-Hunt talking to the media as Brien looks on during the last night of session certainly captures that story:


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