Occupy Goes Home: Making Me Love OWS at NN12


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People crowded around to talk to the panel when it concluded

I hadn’t meant to attend this discussion, but I’m glad I did. Occupy Goes Home: The Occupy Movement and the Foreclosure Crisis was hands down the best thing I attended on Thursday, and blew the rest out of the water. Moderated by Sarah Jaffe (Labor Editor at AlterNet), it featured Matt Browner-Hamlin (from Occupy Our Homes), Nick Espinosa (of Occupy Homes Minnesota and the activist who famously glitter-bombed Newt Gingrich), and Rachel Falcone (of Housing is a Human Right and Organizing for Occupation).

This was perhaps the best argument for what Occupy needs to be, and the panel was really tight in relaying a strong message about the nature of the financial system effecting regular people and the seriousness and impact of debt. They pointed out that nearly the entire room was carrying some level of debt (myself included), whether it was on student loans or on mortgages. They pointed out that nearly all foreclosures during the crisis have been fraudulent or used fraudulent documents (a Nevada law that forbade robo-signing and punished people for filing foreclosures with fraudulent documents dropped foreclosures by 93% according to the panel, just to give you an idea of the rampant fraud).

I was overjoyed to hear that Guilford County, North Carolina was leading the way against foreclosures under the leadership of its Register of Deeds, Jeff Thigpen (I graduated from Guilford College). I really heard echoes of that early democratic finance movement in American history after the Revolution, especially in the actual resistance to creditors by various means. The idea of debt being something we’re all very ashamed of, but also a very universal experience in America is a powerful concept. And to tie it into this fraud-based foreclosure, well, a panelist made the point that this undercut nearly 500 years of jurisprudence in the Anglo-American tradition.

Ultimately, in terms of electrifying discussions, this was it. There was a very real, personal edge to this: Mr. Espinosa’s mother is facing foreclosure herself. I think also, it was a glimmer of success and a very powerful issue that Occupy touched on during its long months away. The question moving forward is whether it can return itself to prominence on a whole host of new issues in America, or whether the 2012 elections and the looming debt ceiling showdown (part 2!) will prevent it from being much an issue.

This was also a panel that provided actual solutions. Perhaps because it wasn’t so high up in the clouds, it really provided a sense of what needs to be accomplished. There are laws that can be advocated for, or passed by those in government (one person was a member of a county government and asked whether there was legislation to help prevent abuse by banks). Yes, they had criticisms of the whole system (the failure of the federal government to hold the banks accountable loomed largest). But they never failed to have a response to a question; even one about media coverage. The solution? Create your own media. And they’re right, because a sort of counter-media (to coin a phrase) is developing around this country; one of live-streamers, bloggers, and social media.

The final proof for me? When the panel ended, a mass of people surged forward to shake the hands of the speakers.

Netroots Asks: ‘What Does A New Economy Look Like?’


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I stumbled across our editor Bob Plain at Beyond Occupy: What Does a New Economic System Look Like? which took place at 10:30 AM. Bob was unfortunately trying to coordinate with David Pepin on the budget live-blogging, leading to some furtive discussion on his cellphone that eventually attracted a few stares before Bob went outside. The panel discussion itself was somewhat disappointing. I was hoping for an articulated view of a new economic system. It was moderated by Jenifer Fernandez Ancona of the Women Donors Network; and features Sarita Gupta (Executive Director of Jobs With Justice), Simon Johnson (Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management and former Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund), Colin Mutchler (CEO and co-founder of LoudSauce), and Erica Payne (Founder and President of the Agenda Project).

As I said, if I was expecting a sort of map of how a new economic system is supposed to look, this was not it. Despite an early statement about this discussion being titled “Beyond Occupy” due to the fact that Occupy changed the nature of discussion but needs to articulate a vision, no such vision came forward. There were some interesting turns of phrase. Mr. Mutchler seemed to have the clearest vision of what an economy should be organized around: happiness. A commenter from the audience seemed to support that, but undercuts their own authority by saying that happiness is in the Constitution; it’s not. Ms. Ancona said that ultimately what happens are two competing views of the economy: that of the right which views it as a natural force and that of the left that views it as a human-created force.

Watch live streaming video from fstvnewswire at livestream.com

Most surprising was the fact that labor was de-emphasized here. At one point, Ms. Ancona turned to Ms. Gupta and said, “I don’t think I imagine a future with labor.” Ms. Gupta was somewhat tepid in her response, saying that the labor movement in America was too concerned with its specific members and hadn’t grown out of a class conscious movement. Which is both right and wrong. But it’s about what you’d expect; the “netroots” is largely non-union, who understand a union in theory but don’t feel the need to associate with the labor movement. It goes to show, “progressive” is a wide-open term.

While ultimately a “new economic system” doesn’t come forth (Erik Loomis of Lawyers, Guns and Money criticized this discussion as “5 people talking about the greatness of slightly reformed capitalism” on his Twitter feed), I think Mr. Mutchler was the most on the ball when he said that we’re living in an era where institutions (like big banks and even democracy) are breaking down; but that below the surface, new innovations are taking place. But there was no real takeaway here.

Live Blog: R.I. House Budget Session


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3:39 a.m.: The amended budget passes, 57-15. We are done here – off to the sunrise. Get ready to pay higher bridge tolls, and hug your school bus monitor.

3:37 a.m.: Newberry: “This was a missed opportunity. This budget doesn’t do it. Thirteen things were laid on the table tonight. That’s not right.”

3:33 a.m.: Trillo takes on efforts to raise taxes on the wealthy: “Those rich people have lawyers. They have accountants. And they pay about 40 percent of our state’s taxes. When I hear this kind of talk, it drives me crazy. You don’t understand basic economics.”

3:30 a.m.: EDC stays alive, 56-16.

3:29 a.m.: Lima: “The car’s totalled. Junk it.”

3:28 a.m.: Melo opposes the dissolution, saying the governor’s office is studying reforms in consultation with RIPEC.

3:25 a.m.: Gordon wants to keep the EDC, although with removal of loan guarantees.

3:22 a.m.: Watson, who had proposed his own amendment to ban EDC, agreed with Lima but wasn’t certain the economic development portfolio belonged in the lieutenant governor’s office (which would inherit $2.5 million of its $4.6 million budget, with the remainder to go back into the general fund.

3:20 a.m.: Lima submits an amendment to dismantle EDC, less than 24 hours after the apparent demise of 38 Studios. “EDC has lost the trust and the confidence of the state of Rhode Island, and for good reason. ” Her measure would move the responsibility of economic development to the lieutenant governor’s office, and she feels it should be handled by an elected official.

3:12 a.m.: A Costa amendment would eliminate $2.3 million in legislative grants, redirecting the funds to programs for those with developmental disabilities. Rejected, 54-18.

3:09 a.m.: Newberry offers an amendment making a 20 percent health insurance co-pay mandatory for state legislators, an act he termed symbolic. Fox rules it out of order, Newberry challenges, and the body upholds the speaker 57-16.

3:04 a.m.: We’re out of new amendments. Melo offers an amendment cleaning up typos in the final appropriations document, and the changes are approved 70-4.

3 a.m.: DaSilva’s amendment is tabled, 51-16.

2:55 a.m.: DaSilva proposes a bill increasing income tax by 0.5 percent for those making $125,000 or more, and 1.5 percent on those making $250,000, with the new funding going to cities and towns. “We’ve just raised taxes on taxis, dog grooming, and things that are going to hurt the common person. This would given them a little bit of relief.”

2:50 a.m.: Fox rules because a similar bill was held in committee, the amendment is out of order. Baldelli-Hunt is not taking this lying down, sniping back at Fox, who calls for a vote upholding the chair, which passes 52-16.

2:45 a.m.: Baldelli-Hunt proposes consolidation of state advertising, which was passed in the House session but later repealed.

2:40 a.m.: Baldelli-Hunt offers an amendment to limit fees charged by check-cashing services and payday lenders, running up against an industry represented by former House Speaker Bill Murphy. “It takes hold of an industry that has existed since 2005, when special interest legislation was passed,” she says, noting that companies are allowed to charge rates as high as 262 percent under current legislation. The bill is tabled, 49-19.

2:35 a.m.: Lima amendment would force businesses applying for tax credits to sign sworn affadavits on financial records. It dies, 42-28.

Last year, I was in a Providence Newspaper Guild Follies number lampooning the zombification of state legislators at the end of the session (The Rocky Horror Show’s “Time Warp” with a chorus of “Let’s rush adjournment again!”). Tonight, I don’t need stage makeup to feel zombified.

2:20 a.m.:  John Savage (I-East Providence) offers an amendment proposing a 0.25 percent state tax hike on incomes over $55.000 and 0.5 percent on incomes over $125,000. It’s tabled, 48-20.

2 a.m.: Jared Nunes (D-Coventry) offers an amendent banning Department of Health employees being coverted from private contractors to state employees from pension and state health care eligibility. Amendment fails, 56-18.

1:57 a.m. Cimini’s amendment is tabled, 53-20, effectively killing it.

1:56 a.m.: Ajello: “In January, if the numbers don’t add up, I’m going to be poking everybody.” Met with a move to table.

1:53 a.m.: Cimini steps up with her amendment to repeal the tax cut for the wealthy.

“We have an obligation to more than offer a balanced budget every year,” she says, adding that workforce development and education must be priorities. Melo rises in opposition, claiming the amendment is retroactive.

Edith Ajello (D-Providence) compares Cimini’s amendment to the Buffett Rule. “I’m saying raise income taxes on highest income, not highest earners.”

1:49 a.m. Budget revision passes, 50-17. Melo asks for new articles.

 

1:48 a.m.: In response to a motion to table, Guthrie says, “It just seems like we do things to hurt people in this state.” He then raises the fighting phrase “flight of the earls.” Nonetheless, the vote to table carries, 50-22.

1:40 a.m.: Scott Guthrie (D-Coventry) offers an amendment to the revised budget that would restore revenue sharing for cities and towns. Here it is: the attack on the 2006 2 percent tax rate cut for those making more than $250,000, which he says reprsents half of a similar bill to be proposed by Maria Cimini (D-Providence). “If you want to consider the people that put you here, you should at least consider it.”

 

1:30 a.m.: Is there a General Assembly rule that reps must remain GQ on the floor? After nine hours, there should be a few loosened ties out there. I hardly see any.

1:20 a.m.: On to Central Falls, with a $2.6 million appropriation to fund payments to police and fire retirees who had their pensions reduced by up to 55 percent from fiscal 2012 to FY 2016 under city bankruptcy provisions. They would not receive more than 75 percent of their former pension payouts. It passes, 64-6.

1:17 a.m.: The taxes and revenues amendment, cut up for easy digestion, passes.

1:13 a.m.: This is where things get crazy, when an amendment is broken in sections for a final vote. Because Fox is a member of the PPAC board, which may be affected by the measure, he yields the gavel to Coderre for the first section, which is approved.

1:10 a.m.: Trillo on the main amendment: “This was a pretty good budget, but we loused it up with $10 million in tax increases. We gave something back to people we hurt, than slammed a bunch of new people.”

1:05 a.m.: Grace Diaz (D-Providence) is finally heard from, with an amendment to the definition of “little cigars” designed to keep them out of the hands of children. Backing her is another new voice this evening, David Bennett (D-Warwick). For seemingly the hundredth time tonight, Melo says, “I rise in opposition to this amendment.” It fails, 40-18.

1 a.m.: Baron, via Twitter: “I will give a dollar to any rep who has an amendment and doesn’t introduce it.” With WPRI’s Ted Nesi occupado with Studio 38 today, however, the aggregate tweet count from press row tonight is taking a hit.

12:57 a.m.: Peter Palumbo proposes an amendment to remove sales tax from cigarette rolling papers (or cigarette tubes, which he says are not sold in Rhode Island). The bid to remove tax from your E-Z Widers fails, 49-20.

12:47 a.m.: It’s not just stamina wearing down here; it’s also cell phone batteries. Brien just visited press row to borrow a phone charger from WRNI’s Ian Donnis, whose tweet total by the end of night will be as unbeatable at Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point game.

We are debating yet another MacBeth amendment, this one limiting the use of tax credits to the party they were granted to. It fails, 48-15.

12:40 a.m.: To answer a question a composing room foreman at The Woonsocket Call used to ask me around this time of night, we’re not gonna make last call.

The Baldelli-Hunt amendment goes down, 42-27.

12:32 a.m.: Amendment from Lisa Baldelli-Hunt (D-Woonsocket) would eliminate pet grooming tax and eliminate annual $10 fee for retail permits. Also, the $42 right-to-know fee for businesses that maintain hazardous chemicals would be removed. To pay for it, $14 million would be raised from a revision of property tax relief for renters.

 

 

12:28 a.m.: From Laurence Ehrhardt (R-North Kingstown), a 14-page amendment revising state business tax credits. “It’s less than the million we came up with for the car wash folks,” he admits. Fails, 48-19.

12:20 a.m.: MacBeth amendment would push back implementation of new taxes from Oct. 1, 2012 to Jan. 1, 2013. It fails, 49-18.

12:15 a.m.: Finally, someone actually proposes a tax: Menard’s amendment would tax school housing facilities rented for purposes other than housing students, families of students, faculty members or school staff.

Menard to Fox: “For someone who believes in transparency, you’re allowing this to run amuck. This is a fairness issue. To lay it on the table like this is a cowardly vote.”

Amendment tabled, 45-23. We’re all up past our bedtime.

12:10 a.m.: Chippendale’s amendment is tabled, 49-20.

12:06 a.m.: Michael Chippendale (R-Foster) is going “there.” His amendment would exempt pet care and pay for it by cutting $1.3 million in legislative grants. In this chamber, cutting legislative grants = fighting words.

12:03 a.m.: The hacks stay under the proposed sales tax, 41-27.

Midnight: Trillo: “Taxi drivers are the working poor. They don’t get pensions or the things other people do. We’re cutting into their tips. What the governor has done is try to expand the sales tax into the service industry. It’s a slippery slope. If we were going to tax a group, the first on the list should be the lawyers, but we’ve got enough of them working in here right now!”

That is how you ring in the new day, the kind of late-night oration budget session buffs crave.

 

11:55 p.m.: Newberry offers an amendment to remove the taxi sales tax, which would generate $960,000. He points out the average meter fare from downtown to T.F. Green Airport is $26.50, with the average passenger giving the cabbie $30 (which also includes the $1.50 Public Utilities Commission fuel surcharge).

11:50 p.m.: Dickinson: “How many people have ever filled out a sales tax form? How many people have gone out of business because they decided it wasn’t worth the trouble?”

Amendment is defeated nonetheless, 47-23.

 

11:40 p.m.: Menard: “We’re supporting this (original) amendment in a year when we have a $100 million surplus?”

 

11:32 p.m.: A MacBeth amendment would remove all other services from the proposed tax hikes (charter buses, taxis, limos, pet grooming, etc.). Disclosure: as the proud owner of a Maltese-Shih Tzu that requires more grooming than the average dog, and also a former taxi driver, I’m not quite objective on this issue.

 

11:29 p.m.: Mic check! From the west gallery (behind me), OP lets loose with a brief vocal demonstration. Speaker Pro Tem Elaine Coderre (D-Pawtucket) gavels them down, and Fox orders their removal.

Meanwhile, the car wash lobby wins unanimous exemption from the proposed sales tax.

11:25 p.m.: Melo offers an amendment removing car washes from the additional items being taxed, saying people who wash their cars at home use 80 percent more water than a wash.

 

11:18 p.m. Big one: Removal of state education mandates finally passes, 49-23. Tomorrow will be a happier day for mayors, town managers and school departments. That, along with the earlier passage of the combined Board of Education, concludes the educational portion of our program.

 

11:12 p.m.: MacBeth: Woonsocket is considering cutting busing because they can’t afford the monitors. “They’re having to put students in harm’s way because of what we’re doing here.”

Menard: “We have been discussing this amendment for four years. This is a cement shoe, not a sledgehammer.”

Occupy has left the gallery. Minority Leader Brian Newberry (R-North Smithfield) disagreed with the banner confiscation, since it did not block other spectators’ view.

 

11:01 p.m: Rene Menard (D-Lincoln) offers an amendment repealing unfunded state educational mandates…one of the issues at the heart of the municipalities’ demand for help from the state. Jon Brien (D-Woonsocket) backs him up.

Meanwhile, upstairs, Capital Police have confiscated the OP banner. The delegation of about a dozen has remained orderly, however.

 

10:55 p.m.: Judging from the, well, casual dress of the folks filing into the East Gallery, some elements of Occupy have arrived.

 

10:45 p.m.: You can almost see the sweat rolling off Melo as he’s working his arguments. Given the bipartisan arguments against the one-board plan, though, we might finally see a leadership amendment defeated (or at least a close vote). Fox is actually enforcing time limits now.

 

10:33 p.m.: In one of the evening’s most rousing speeches, Spencer Dickinson (D-South Kingstown), whose district includes URI,  argues against the combined board: “You’ve got people advocating for kindergarten on the same board with (URI President) David Dooley, who is running an economic engine for this state. He needs his own board.”

10:25 p.m.: While Melo and DaSilva debate boards of education, almost half the reps are out of their seats chatting…at least until Fox’s patience with DaSilva ends and he hands Frank Ferri (D-Warwick) the floor. The late-night punchiness is setting in.

 

10:11 p.m.: Melo has spent the past 15 minutes or so defending the amendment creating one state Board of Education (and ending the Board of Higher Education and boards of regents for elementary and secondary education) from accusations that it’s not germane to the budget. This is exactly why the budget session causes you to miss David Letterman AND Jimmy Fallon (this debate is turning into a slow jam).

9:51 p.m.: Cut into three pieces, the East Bay Bridge System amendment finally passes. Adjust your E-Z pass budget accordingly.

9:46 p.m.: The Speaker has laid down the law: he’s ready to use parliamentary procedure. Bob Plain’s warning that I might see dawn when I leave here looks a little more realistic.

 

9:42 p.m.: The Pawtucket Times’ Jim Baron: “Bridge toll discussion going on for so long, I’m looking for one to jump off of.” https://twitter.com/#!/search/jim%20baron

 

9:30 p.m.: An amendment from Karen MacBeth (D-Cumberland) to reimburse residents and business owners in towns at either end of a toll bridge for debits from their E-Z pass accounts, money which Roberto DaSilva (D-East Providence) called “a $700-$800 tax hike,”  was defeated 48-24.

    

9:06 p.m.: Gordon, pleading on behalf of an elderly constituent who will have to pay to cross Sakonnet River Bridge for medical appointments, waxes biblical: “Let my people go!”

Fox: “If you can channel Moses, we don’t need that bridge.”

 

8:58 p.m.: Two failed amendments to the Finance Committee amendment on bridge tolls: One by John Edwards (D-Tiverton) to change the composition of the Bridge & Turnpike Authority for more local representation (currently gubernatorial appointments) and exempt Newport County from collecting gas tax, and one by Daniel Reilly (R-Portsmouth) to allow toll money to be used only in Newport County. The original amendment would also distribute money to Bristol County.

The car wash delegation, prominent in an upstairs gallery earlier, has departed. Meanwhile, according to its Facebook page, Occupy Providence has planned a march to the Statehouse if a floor amendment repealing for wealthy residents is heard tonight.

 

8:41 p.m.: Revised health fees pass 48-21 as we finally get some juices flowing in here. Citing rises in chiropractic license fees from $120 to $210, manicurist licenses from $130 to $170 and physicians’ licenses from $570 to $1,090, Doreen Costa (R-North Kingstown) calls it “a job killer. This is the worst amendment to the worst budget I’ve seen here in some time.”

 

8:30 p.m.: We’re back in session. Before we get to tolls, we review language in state Department of Health fees.

 

7:15 p.m.: But before we cross that toll bridge, Speaker Fox calls recess for dinner. Back at 8.

 

7:08 p.m.: We’re on the 19th amendment, involcing Medicaid global waivers. Coming up next: an amendment which would put the Jamestown-Verrazano and Sakonnet River bridges under the R.I. Turnpike and Bridge Authority. The tolls themselves would not be created until at least FY 2004, and would require federal approval.

The jocularity and bonhomie of two hours ago has faded. We’re battening in for a long night, folks. I sure hope the press row passer-by here who hoped to get home for the second half of Celts-Heat set up his VCR.

 

6:20 p.m.: We’ve just had a lengthy debate over the leadership-sponsored school aid amendment, which passed easily after discussion of maintenance of (local budget) effort provisions and maintenance of state school building assistance at 35 percent of construction cost.

With this, we have gone through 12 of the 23 amendments recommended by the House Finance Committee.  Many involve minor changes in wording or typos.

 

5:35 p.m.: We’re back…on a largely party-line vote, all referenda are approved for the November ballot. The breakdown just brought the pages handing out chocolate chip ice cream sandwiches to the floor a little early.

 

5:05 p.m.: In the midst of the bond debate, the voting machines crash. The proceedings take a break while the tech staff tries to fix the glitch – otherwise, we return to the thrilling days of yesteryear: voice votes.

The referenda slated for the November 2012 ballot include $94 million for a new veterans home/assisted living facility and renovations to the existing home, $50 million for building renovation/modernization at Rhode Island College, $25 million for affordable housing projects, and $20 million each for DEM watershed protection and Clean Water Finance Agency infrastructure loans.

 

4:55 p.m.: First good rejoinder of the day, from Joseph Trillo (R-Warwick) during the debate on $209 million in bond referenda. As Finance Committee Chairman Helio Melo (D-East Providence) was researching figures on state debt, Fox joked about “having someone entertain us.” Dan Gordon (R-Tiverton) angrily replied, “We don’t need an entertainer.” Trillo turned around and said, “You’re gonna have to sit down, then, because you’re the best entertainer in the room.”

 

4:28 p.m.: Fox gavels the House to order.

 

4 p.m.:  The bell! Speaker is in the House! We may actually be under way shortly, although anybody who took the under on the estimated start (mostly during the 3 o’clock hour) has lost.

Former Minority Leader Bob Watson (R-East Greenwich) may keep his 70-page amendment to abolish the Economic Development Corporation (EDC) sheathed, however, He indicated he may yield to a similar amendment proposed by Charlene Lima (D-Providence).

 

3:25 p.m.: The buzz in the building increases, but still no sign of House Speaker Gordon Fox (D-Providence) – we’ll be here awhile.

The lobbying activity continues out in the hall, with the car wash trade very well represented. Dean Perdikakis, owner of Freeway Car Wash, closed all four of his locations today to bring 15 employees, complete with blue uniform shirts and posters, out to the Statehouse Rotunda to lobby against the addition of a 7 percent sales tax to his business.

Freeway Car Wash employees outside the House chamber lobby for the removal of a new 7 percent sales tax from their trade from the proposed fiscal 2013 state budget.

“Three of our locations are right on the state border,” he said, adding that representatives from eight other car washes were represented outside the chamber.

2:05 p.m.: Looks like we’re running a bit late. Pages and various Assembly functionaries buzzing around the chamber doing their business in good spirits, a few legislators seated or on cell phones, and some idle chatter out in the hallway. (But really, you thought this would actually start on time? This is Rhode Island!)
 

Noon: Hello, regular RIF viewers, our Netroots Nation visitors, and anyone else interested in Rhode Island finances. Welcome to our live blog of today’s R.I. House of Representatives budget session, where the reps will debate nearly 150 amendments to the proposed $8.1 million budget for fiscal 2013. While not all will make it to the House floor, those expected to receive some lively debate include a proposal to roll back a tax cut given to the state’s wealthiest residents six years ago, an extension of the state’s 7 percent sales tax to include clothing items exceeding $250 and services including car washes, pet grooming, taxis and limousines, and increased aid to municipalities.

The session should start at approximately 2 p.m. and is expected to run late into the night, when the debate really gets lively and unpredictable. Stay tuned and/or check in with us throughout the afternoon and evening, whether you’re out at an NN function or home watching Game 6 of Celtics-Heat. Enjoy Rhode Island’s edition of the MDA telethon (alas, without Jerry Lewis, but with more entertainment value).

What Do We Do When We Win?


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Dan Choi salutes Sen. Harry Reid at NN10

As we kick off Netroots Nation 2012, we have some progressive wins to celebrate: halting Keystone XL, defeating SOPA/PIPA and a nasty anti-union bill in Ohio, changing the economic conversation in the country and gaining advances on marriage equality, to name a few. But throughout the past year, we’ve also witnessed some aggressive and reckless conservative attacks on the middle class, immigrants, women and voters as a whole. You’ll find many of these issues addressed throughout our programming this year.

Heading into the 2012 election cycle, the stakes are higher than ever. Conservatives aren’t going to back down, so there are real consequences in every race, from the Presidential all the way down the ticket. And while we may still have to play defense, we need to be more proactive about taking the offensive position.

What I’d like to challenge you to think about this weekend is this: What do we do when we win?

If you look around today the movement that’s gained the most over the past 3 years is the LGBT movement. And it’s worth examining how that happened.

Back when the vast majority of us were celebrating our hard work from 2008 (literally, Netroots Nation hosted a “Yes We Can” party for 900+ people in DC for the inauguration), the LGBT movement went to work. Bloggers were hitting the not-yet-formed Obama administration on their selection of Rick Warren to give the opening prayer at the inauguration. Activists were getting arrested at the White House pushing for DADT. Donors shut off the ATM until they saw tangible results. And even when the community made progress, they didn’t quit—they moved on to the next fight and focused their efforts in a concentrated way. They worked at the state level, and they worked on influencing federal agencies. It wasn’t an easy fight (and it’s still not over), but their work has resulted in tangible and positive outcomes for LGBT individuals across the country—and likely the highest level of progress of any community over the past few years.

There are some lessons we can learn from them and other successful endeavors over the past year:

It isn’t just about the presidency
Sure, there are things presidents can do that other branches can’t, and sometimes things a president says matter a great deal. Obama’s support for marriage equality is a good example of that (no conservative president would have signed the repeal of DADT). But if your theory of change starts and ends with “Make the president do X,” it’s probably flawed.

Drive the agenda by focusing on Congress and State Legislatures
We have to drive the agenda in other ways too: by focusing on Congress, by pressuring federal agencies and by working to retain our majorities in State Houses across the country to make sure we aren’t constantly fighting the right. And while re-electing Obama is an important part of fighting for a progressive future, it alone is not enough.

A tale of two bills
One bill we passed and one we didn’t may provide some insight and inspiration for future campaigns.

The first is a bill we didn’t pass–the American Clean Energy & Security Act, or ACES. House Democrats burned a lot of political capital trying to pass something that even divided many within the environmental movement. But in the time since the bill failed, activists worked locally to block 166 new coal plants–something that wiped out 60 to 70 percent of the emissions that were predicted to be reduced with the ACES bill had it passed.

The Dodd-Frank financial reform bill did pass, however, yet got largely dismantled by Wall Street in the days and months after its passing. This piece in Rolling Stone gives some background on how bankers are all but nullifying the law. This should serve as an example of how we must stay on guard even after a bill passes to ensure that hard-won progress isn’t undone by the opposition.

Greatness isn’t achieved by asking for permission
If there’s one thing the Occupy movement has taught us as activists, it’s that you’re not protesting if you have to ask for permission. Many of us forgot that somewhere along the way; but thankfully, this fearless approach to activism is popping up again and again.

We all have different roles in this movement
Some of us play the inside game; others are born to push boundaries. Some are meant to build bridges, develop infrastructure and collect resources. To be effective as a movement, we have to understand that just because someone doesn’t have the same role as us doesn’t mean they’re the enemy.

So as you’re out there attending one of the 70 panels or 30 training sessions, chatting in the hallway with friends or having an intense brainstorming session over drinks, keep some of these lessons in mind.

Progress Report: Budget Day at State House, Projo Welcomes Netroots, Influx of the Earls


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What a day for Rhode Island … up at the State House, they will be debating the annual budget bill and the big question is whether or not an amendment calling for the richest Rhode Islanders to pay more in taxes has more juice with rank-and-file legislators than it does with leadership. A concerted effort by the Netroots crowd and Occupy Providence could surely sway the debate in favor of the people.

Meanwhile, Netroots kicks off in earnest at the Convention Center … the Projo runs a somewhat unwelcoming editorial purportedly welcoming the conference of progressive journalists and activists to town writing, “…in recent months state and local leaders in this almost one-party polity have worked hard to address our budget crises with prudentially rigorous steps that might discomfit keynote speaker Paul Krugman, the Nobel economics laureate and New York Times columnist. So our esteemed visitors should not leave with a simplistic image of Rhode Island.” Translation: don’t let all the “D” after our local politician’s names fool you, this state isn’t nearly as liberal as you might think. Don’t worry, Projo, Netroots already knows this … in fact, there’s a panel to discuss as much.

But back to the budget bill for a minute … if you have to wonder why a proposal to merge the committees that oversee high school and elementary public education with the higher education board is in this year’s spending plan then you don’t understand local politics here. The reason is so the issue can receive as little public scrutiny as possible. Indeed, the idea has not one thing to do with the budget – it wouldn’t even take effect until 2014. The idea, which may have some merit, should be separate from the budget and debated in full next session. Both citizens and students deserve at least that.

While local conservatives will tell you that the so-called “job creator” class is fleeing the state to avoid paying taxes, it turns out the opposite is true with the population of people who earn more than $200,000 grew by almost 60 percent between 1999 and 2009. Of course this is the case … people have always, and probably will always, relocate here primarily for the quality of life and those who make that decision tend to have the money to do so. It’s high time we start making them pony up for the amenities they are moving here for.

Another untruth local conservatives are trafficking in: the Wisconsin recall election was about democracy vs. organized labor. Yes, the Wisconsin recall was about democracy and people power, but one side or the other didn’t have a monopoly on this. The divide was between labor’s organizing power and corporate America’s financial prowess. As is so often the case in this country, money won.

It’s frightening how much power Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt has over the future of Woonsocket.

Netroots Guide for Providence, RI

“Get your head outta your ass!”

I’m not telling you to do that, but I can guarantee at least a few Netizens in town for  Netroots Nation 2012 will hear that shouted at them during the time they’re in Providence. This is especially true when driving. Providence has some of the most aggressive drivers on the planet and if you’re not moving fast enough, unsure of where you are or lolly-gagging on the phone while driving, I can promise you’ll earn a disdainful honk of a horn.

The best thing about Providence though, is you don’t need a car to get around, the city is very walkable and should be enjoyed on foot. However, referencing the paragraph above, please look both ways before crossing the street; even if you’re certain that the street you’re on is one way. Also, once you’re in a crosswalk, don’t assume you’re safe there.

Providence is a historical city, you should definitely do some exploring. Walking up the hill from the Convention Center will get you to the State House. It has the fourth largest self-supporting marble dome in the world, that some would say is needed to contain the egos therein.

Heading in the other direction from the Convention Center, you’ll find Federal Hill. Once heavily populated by the city’s Italian residents, Federal Hill is now extremely diverse but the main drag on Atwells Avenue is still heavily influenced by that Italian Heritage and some of the best dining establishments in the Northeast are contained in a very small strip. A night in DePasquale Plaza listening to karaoke at Gepetto’s is something to consider.

The  East Side, mainly centered around College Hill and Thayer Street are also “must do’s” while visiting the city. Getting breakfast at Café Choklad at the corner of South Main and Thomas Street, catching an indie movie at the Avon Cinema or eating dinner at Andrea’s are all recommended. And of course, no trip to Providence would be complete without a sandwich for lunch from Geoff’s on Benefit Street. Jusr be careful with your conversation while in line, the staff at Geoff’s are famous for their collective wit and a careless comment can be seized upon by that staff for the entertainment purposes of the rest of the clientele.

Some of the local delicacies you may want to try are New York System hot weiners, a culinary delight you can find on Smith Street, about a half mile up the street from the capital; or you can make a trip to Olneyville to the restaurant there. Besides Choklad, Providence has some great bakeries too. La Salle Bakery, about a mile further down Smith Street from the New York System is one; as is Scialo Bros. Bakery on Atwells Avenue on Federal Hill.

So, be careful but enjoy your stay in Providence, the people here have great senses of humor and I can guarantee you’ll take home at least a few funny stories from your stay in my hometown. Also, plan to gain a little weight while visiting here, the food is just too good and with Johnson & Wales University’s culinary arts program located here, there are so many talented chefs and chefs-in-training that its hard to keep from sampling a little bit of everything.

And if you have any questions, you can always feel free to tweet me at @thom_prov or if its work-related, tweeting @Working_RI will work as well. Thanks for participating, enjoy your stays and when you get home, tell your friends how much fun you had here.

 

 

Netroots Itinerary, Day 1


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Of course everyone talks about the parties and the networking opportunities, but the real action at Netroots Nation is in the panels and speakers. Each day of the big progressive get together I’ll be posting a little bit about some of the panels and speakers I’m looking forward to sitting in on. Look for posts on these throughout the day and for a complete list of all the action, click here.

8:15 a.m. – Morning News Dump with Lizz Winstead, Shannyn Moore and Cliff Schecter: This is the first official event of the conference, and it’s being held every morning, so it makes sense to start here …. Netroots bills is as “sorta like ‘Morning Joe,’ minus the guests who have gotten everything wrong for the past 10 years. Each morning these three will also welcome some of your favorite bloggers and politicians as well to give you a download of the days news before you hit the Netroots ground running.”

If you don’t know who Lizz Winstead is, read Dan McGowan’s profile of her from when he was an RI Futurist.

9:00 a.m. – Data-Driven Design for Progressive Organizations: They can’t all be about saving the world, and the first panel I’ll be attending is more geared towards making RI Future more useful to you the reader. “We’ll share 10 often overlooked web, social media and email metrics you can use to improve your social bottom line (in terms of actions taken, money raised, etc.).”

10:30 a.m. – Beyond Occupy: What Does a New Economic System Look Like?: Okay, Occupy Movement, you got the nation’s attention … now what do we do with all that energy? This panel will help us imagine a new economic paradigm. “In this session,” according to Netroots, “we will explore how Occupy has changed the game in the fight for economic justice and how progressives might start to invest in earnest in building a real alternative economic and political system that works for us.”

Noon – Organizing Tools Shootout: Seems like I’ll be able to learn a few new tricks here, too. “Data and online tools are a big part of progressive organizing, and keystones in building from the netroots base out wider into our communities. New tools like LoudSauce, DS Political and POPVOX and many others are the building blocks of the shift from top-down and broadcast models to a distributed, participatory and more deeply democratic future.”

2:00 p.m. – Rhode Island Caucus: “Connect with activists in Rhode Island and discuss issues facing the state,” is how Netroots describes these sessions designed for people with regional ties to meet up … for us Ocean Staters, we usually do it at the State House before and after the legislative session; today we’ll do it at the Convention Center.

3:00 p.m. – Whose Law Is It Anyway? ALEC’s Influence on State Legislatures and What We Can Do About It: After all the ALEC reporting we did recently, how could we miss this one. “The American Legislative Exchange Council has been behind virtually every major right-wing state law in the past two years, including union-busting, teacher-bashing, voter suppression, attacks on immigrants, privatizing basic public services and gutting environmental and health regulations. Learn more about ALEC, who backs them and what you can do to stand in their way.”

4:00 p.m. – Not sure which one of these I’ll hit up, but the titles seem pretty self-explanatory: Social Media Strategy for Advocacy or Investigative Reporting for Bloggers with Joe Conason. Though this one could be fun too: Emerging Movements: The Face of New Progressive Online Communities.

6:00 p.m. – Phew, finally a little break … a dinner reception courtesy of Planned Parenthood.

7:00 p.m. – Opening keynote featuring Eric Schneiderman: “We’ll kick off Netroots Nation with an opening keynote from New York’s Attorney General and the man the American Prospect calls The Man Banks Fear Most, Eric Schneiderman. Other speakers will include: Providence Mayor Angel Taveras, environmentalist Bill McKibben, Planned Parenthood’s Cecile Richards, NEA’s Lily Eskelsen, and Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin.”

And if I’m still standing after all that, I might just take in some political comedy at 9:15 or the legendary Netroots Karaoke Party, this year sponsored by SEIU and held at The Dorrance starting at 9:30.

As Legislature Spends Money, Cities Feel Pinch


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Woonsocket High School (photo courtesy of Woonsocket School District)
Woonsocket High School (photo courtesy of Woonsocket School District)
Woonsocket High School (photo courtesy of Woonsocket School District)

I see from the Providence Journal that the new state-appointed budget commission has decided that the city council and Mayor Fontaine were exactly right to request permission from the state to impose a supplemental tax increase on their citizens.

Last week, after an impassioned speech by Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, the House rejected Woonsocket’s request.  This week, the state-appointed budget commission asked that the request be reconsidered.

For some reason state legislators seem to get this idea in their heads that though they were elected on promises of fiscal responsibility, and intend to carry through on them, city council members and mayors get elected by promising to spend like drunken sailors.

This is not only bizarre, but entirely backwards.

By almost any measurement you care to make, it’s the state that has been the fiscal problem child over the past couple of decades, not the cities and towns. The difference is that the state has power over the cities and towns: they have more money, and stand uphill in a legal and constitutional sense, too.  But the General Assembly continues to resist the appeals of the duly elected leaders of our cities and towns, feeling that they know better.

This year, Governor Chafee infuriated organized labor by offering several “tools” to municipal officials to help them control pension costs.  I tend to agree with the labor folks here, that the state should stay out of these issues, and that passing state laws to trump local bargaining agreements is only a good idea in a very limited short-term sense.  But the Assembly has shown no interest in believing Mayors when they complain about financial stress, so if you don’t want more bankrupt cities, what should you do?  It seems to me that Chafee wasn’t so much sticking his thumb in Labor’s eye as making a realistic assessment of the Assembly and acting accordingly.

Or maybe not.  It appears that the Assembly leadership isn’t interested in Chafee’s suggestions, and pretty much none of them were put into the House budget.  This reminds me of the time in 2005 when the Carcieri administration came up with some personnel reforms that might have saved around $32 million.  They were the usual sort of benefit cuts, limits on vacation time and sick time and an end to “statutory status” which is a kind of state employee tenure.

Whatever you think about the wisdom of those reforms, it’s hard to praise the Assembly for what happened next.  The legislature rejected the reforms — but left the $32 million in savings in the budget.  So the administration was faced with finding $32 million in savings, but without the law changes to do it.  How, exactly was that responsible?

So now the Assembly is poised to do the exact same thing, and act to increase the pressure on cities and towns — not enough money to support their commitments, but no relief from those commitments, either.  The only difference this year from previous years is that now we have some Assembly appointees joining the Mayors in the hot seat, begging that they not be put in the same position as the Mayor and City Council of Woonsocket.  Mayor Leo Fontaine and the Council have failed to keep Woonsocket solvent, but a new budget commission won’t do any better unless the conditions change.  Right now, the only way the conditions will change is through the bankruptcy court, so mark your calendars.  I simply can’t agree with the people who imagine that dragging each of our cities into bankruptcy is a sensible strategy — in either the long or short term — for our state.

The Assembly can act here.  Sensible options are available, that take into account the actual realities facing our cities.  But will it?  So far, it does not appear likely.

Netroots, Occupy Should Protest State Budget Bill


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Sometimes the stars align for good things to happen. Here’s hoping such is the case with the seemingly-destined convergence of progressive events to play out in Providence Thursday afternoon.

Netroots Nation will be in the middle of its first day inside the Convention Center. Occupy Providence will be protesting economic inequality outside on Sabin Street.

And, meanwhile, just up the hill at the State House, they will be ensconced in the biggest and most important night in local politics, debating the budget bill. This year’s spending plan – in spite of a high-profile campaign led by elected officials, organized labor and community activists – will likely not include income tax increases on Rhode Island’s richest residents.

It’s ironic to say the least. While literally thousands upon thousands of activists in and around the Convention Center will be pondering new ways to foster progressive change in America, less than a mile away local leaders will be ignoring calls for progressive change to Rhode Island’s tax code.

Imagine if Netroots and Occupy joined forces on Thursday and marched up to the State House to call upon the General Assembly to balance the state’s ailing budget by asking those who have benefited the most to pay their share?

Progressive legislators put forward bills this session that would have rolled back the tax cuts instituted under the previous governor Don Carcieri, a Tea Party supporter. But despite being supported by almost half of the House of Representatives, leadership didn’t like it and they never made it out of committee.

On Thursday, there will likely be tax-increase amendments proposed that will finally, if nothing else, force a floor debate on the issue. And given that very few politicians want to roll into election season saying they supported tax cuts to the top 2 percent of Rhode Islanders, a vote could be closer than otherwise expected.

Imagine if Netroots and Occupy could turn our State House into something like what happened in Wisconsin?

It would be a statement not just to the powers that be here in Rhode Island, but across the country. What media outlet could resist Occupy and Netroots in sleeping bags on the marble floors as the supposedly liberal legislature sided with the affluent?

The annual budget debate is famous for going all night. Reporters and legislators often see the sunrise on Smith Hill before the bill is finalized.  Tax equity will be one of the most hotly-debated topics of the night.

Imagine of Netroots and Occupy could work together to tip the scales towards a more progressive Rhode Island?

Occupy Providence Picks the Wrong Target


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Occupy-Providence
Occupy-Providence
Occupy Providence in Burnside Park last fall.

In case you haven’t noticed, there will be two different types of occupations in Providence this week. Netroots Nation will be inside the convention center and Occupy Providence will be outside.

David Segal has a piece on this site pointing out why that’s perfectly legal. And it’s good Providence has such a strong protection for protests.

Yet I have to disagree with Occupy Providence’s tactics here. Reading through the Occupy Providence Google group, you can see the ambivalence towards Netroots Nation displayed by Occupy Providence’s most vocal members. A few think it’s nothing more than establishment, Democratic Party hacks (in this telling, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse is a “staunch militarist” and this article in the Phoenix is proffered as proof of Netroots Nation’s lack of ideological alignment.

Others believe that the bloggers attending will be more than neoliberal sheeple, capable of calling the President out on his failures over the past two years and supportive of fighting Wall Street.

Regardless of where you believe Netroots Nation falls on Occupy’s wonky sellout scale, the occupation’s location doesn’t connect well with the demands being made. They are as follows:

  1. No taxpayer bailout of 38 Studios.
  2. Tax the wealthiest in Rhode Island and nationally.
  3. Solidarity, not austerity, locally, nationally and internationally.

The attendees of Netroots Nation will be in a position to deliver a total of zero of those demands. The first is next to inapplicable to the vast majority of conference goers. Indeed, a taxpayer bailout of 38 Studios seems unlikely. Going into an election season, no RI politician wants to be seen as throwing more money into 38 Studios’ burning, sinking ship.

Congratulations Occupy Providence, your first demand is met.

The third seems intentionally vague. (Solidarity with what?) However, anti-austerity forces will find their man in Paul Krugman, though some in attendance might’ve moved passed him to Modern Monetary Theory which posits that national debts don’t matter (this school of economic thought seems to be strongest at the University of Missouri-Kansas City of all places).

So this leaves us with the second demand: tax the wealthiest. While a few of the politicians in attendance may have the chance to act on that demand come next January, for Rhode Island, the pressure needs to be applied Thursday at the State House. As the House of Representatives takes up the budget bill, a document which will impact the lives of all Rhode Islanders; Occupy Providence will be in the wrong place, protesting people who will only be impacted for a few days. Thursday, at least, should be devoted to the General Assembly. Then Occupy Providence can head over to Netroots Nation for a weekend protest of the convention’s enablement of the great Democratic Party sellout.

Progress Report: Woonsocket Needs Money, Not a Receiver


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The state budget commission appointed to help Woonsocket with its finances says it needs a supplemental property tax in order to make ends meet this year. Such a tax would need to be approved by the General Assembly, but the House won’t vote on it until it has the support of the Woonsocket delegation, which it doesn’t – local legislators would rather have a receiver appointed than add a new tax.

So, to make a long and politically complicated story short, three Woonsocket legislators hold the financial fate of the city in their hands – and there is nothing Mayor Leo Fontaine, the city council, the budget commission or to some degree even the governor can do about it … unless the House decides to vote for the tax over the objection of Reps. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt and Jon Brien.

Speaking of Woonsocket, Bill Sequino is an excellent choice to serve as chair of the budget commission … He’s the longest serving municipal manager in the state and knows the budget process backwards and forwards. East Greenwich, where he has served for more than 20 years, may be known as a haven of conservatism but its local pols actually spend public money like drunken sailors (EG is again raising property taxes this year to help pay off debt service on huge spending projects) and then look to Sequino and his staff to make it all work.

Interestingly enough, Sequino’s former adversary on the town council, Vince Bradley, is now serving on the West Warwick School Committee, reports EG Patch.

No wonder Curt Schilling’s $75 million loan guarantee was so easily approved by the EDC – he was doing business with one of the board members who voted in favor of the deal. The Projo reports this morning that when the EDC was voting on the Schilling deal, the ex-Red Sox was also developing board games for Hasbro, whose chairman of the board Al Verrecchia was one of the EDC board members who voted for the deal. Verrecchia is also a good friend and close ally of former Gov. Don Carcieri.

The Patriot Ledger takes RI to the proverbial woodshed for the 38 Studios deal.

Ian Donnis on the efforts to reform payday lending.

It was a bad day for organized labor across the country … not only did Wisc. Gov. Scott Walker survive the recall election waged against him, two California cities voted to cut pension benefits to public sector retirees.

The good news coming out of Wisconsin: Democrats regained control of the state senate.

 

 

Sheldon, Taveras, Cicilline Eagerly Await Netroots


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Senator Sheldon Whitehouse announced Netroots Nation 2012 would be held in Providence at the 2011 event In Minneapolis.

With literally thousands of progressives from across the country descending on Providence for Netroots Nation, it’s important to recognize the local progressives who brought the annual conference of lefty activists and journalists to the Ocean State: Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse and Mayor Angel Taveras.

The three lobbied hard to host the 2011 event in Providence. But Netroots felt it couldn’t come as employees of the Westin Hotel were mired in a contract dispute with management. But when the labor dispute was resolved, the conference agreed to pay Providence a visit.

“Providence is a beautiful city. It is as blue as the waters of Narragansett Bay,”Whitehouse said in announcing the news that Rhode Island would host the 2012 event at last year’s in Minneapolis. “You progressives will feel right at home.”

So far, so good. I met with Mary Rickles of Netroots on Tuesday and she said the city has been great to them so far, and the local amenities have been outstanding.

Taveras isn’t surprised the Netroots crowd is already enjoying the city. “Providence is the perfect place to host Netroots,” said the progressive mayor, noting that their stay will likely only get better.

“I can’t wait to see the bloggers reaction to Waterfire,” he said. “They are going to promote in nationally.”

Waterfire, for those new to the area, is a downtown tradition that centers around a series of seemingly floating fire pits in the Providence River.

Whitehouse agreed, saying Netroots is “a chance for Providence to come out as a hip, attractive destination.”

While both recognized it as a great opportunity for the city, they also said it is a great opportunity for local progressives.

Taveras, who will give a welcome address to the conference, called it an opportunity for “the great minds and great thinkers” from all over the country to co-mingle with us local progressives for “an opportunity to talk about the future of our city, our state and our country.”

Whitehouse said Netroots Nation is important too to his fight in Washington D.C.

“If you look at it from 50,000 feet when you look down what you see is immensely powerful special interests,” he said. “One of the most effective way of fighting those special interests is through the grassroots, internet community that Netroots represents.”

Whitehouse will speak on two panels at Netroots: one on tax fairness and another concerning Citizens United. Fitting, in that he authored the Buffett Rule bill in the Senate and is also sponsoring the DISCLOSE Act, which would require Super-PAC TV political ads to list those who paid for the message.

Another progressive Rhode Islander, Congressman David Cicilline, will also play a key role in Netroots Nation’s visit to Providence. He’s participating on two panels: one on gun safety and another on reinvigorating the manufacturing sector of the economy. He’s also giving the closing speech.

“I think it’s going to be a lot of good communication, incubating new ideas and learning how to challenge the staus quo,” he said. “The only thing better would be if everyone stayed here and became Rhode Islanders.”

Punishing Pot Possession With Only a $150 Ticket


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Possession of less than an ounce of marijuana could become punishable by a $150 ticket, rather than $500 and potentially jail time, if Governor Chafee signs into law a bill passed by the House and Senate Tuesday.

The bill would decriminalize possession of small amounts of pot in Rhode Island – as is the case in 13 other states, including not only our neighbors Connecticut and Massachusetts but also typically conservative-leaning states such as Mississippi and Nebraska.

Decriminalization means, in part, that offenders would not have a black mark on their permanent record if caught with small amounts of pot. It will also save the state millions of dollars, according to lawmakers, in cutting down on court and law enforcement efforts in processing crimes involving only small amounts of cannabis.

The bill passed the House by a 50 to 24 vote, after a contentious debate in which some lawmakers, either on accident or perhaps on purpose, confused decriminalization with legalization. In the Senate, the bill passed 28 to 6. In previous years, the bill has not made it out of committee in either chamber.

Gov. Chafee has not said whether or not he will sign the bill into law.

Here’s more on the vote, and the debate, from the AP’s David Klepper.

Three Local Authors, RI Futurists Present At Netroots


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Three Rhode Island progressive authors will “battle it out” at Netroots Nation in what is being billed as “an idea free-for-all.” The meeting of the minds will take place at 2 p.m. on Thursday in the fifth floor Rotunda of the Convention Center.

Not only are all three published by Light Publications – billed as a “fiercely independent” publishing company, but all three are also correspondents for RI Future.

According to a press release:

“In one corner, John Speck, author of ‘Yesterday on the Internet’ will lay out his take on the endless war machine that seems to be running America. In another corner, Mark Binder, author of ‘Stories for Peace,’ will share his view of harmony and cyber-bullying. And in the third corner, Tom Sgouros, former candidate for RI Treasurer and author of ‘Ten Things you Don’t Know About Rhode Island,’ will offer his extraordinary calm, and rational take on what’s really going on.”

The authors will be signing copies of their books, and available for question and answer following the presentation. You can also catch them at the Working RI/RI Future happy hour on Wednesday night at the Convention Center.

Here’s a brief bio on each of them:

Tom Sgouros is a freelance researcher and writer about public policy, statistics, software and assorted other technical topics. His clients range from candidates for office, to advocacy groups and Fortune 500 companies. In Rhode Island, he has done policy work with Ocean State Action, Working Rhode Island, and the Sierra Club, among several others. He edits the Rhode Island Policy Reporter, and writes a newspaper column that appears regularly in ten newspapers around the state, and irregularly in several others. He has also worked as an an engineer, videographer, fire-eater, circus producer, and robot impresario. He lives with his wife and two daughters, by the seashore, on RIPTA’s number 14 bus line.

John Speck, aka Frymaster, was born in a working class New Jersey town, raised in a “snotty, white, Connecticut suburb” and brought to life on the streets of San Francisco,John Speck is a living contradiction; whatever he does, he most likely does the opposite. An inveterate punk rocker, he took a degree from Oberlin College Conservatory of Music. His interests circle the globe, are fiercely local but also include the entirety of the universe and all of history, especially the part we don’t know about.

His complete resume includes abject failure as a criminal and a rock star, average results in business and ringing success as a changer of people’s minds. He describes himself variously as a “one-man socialist revolution”, an “entrepreneur from the future”, a “PowerPoint performance artist” and a “general-purpose genius”. One press release claimed he has worked as “a gopher, a toady and an elf”.

He is currently in charge of publicity for an internationally famous multinational corporation that specializes in making noise.

Mark Binder is a former candidate for US Congress, an author/storyteller and a student and teacher of martial arts. An award-winning book and recording artist, he travels the world, sharing his work at festivals, theaters, schools, libraries, churches, synagogues and other community centers. He holds a third-degree black belt in Aikido, the martial art for peace. He promises not to throw anyone across the room.

 

Budgeting for Disaster: Like What We’ve Got? Good


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As has been amply reported by other writers here and in other places, the state budget has emerged from the mists of the Finance Committee, and will likely be voted on and passed this week. It contains no broad-based tax changes, though there are small increases in cigarette taxes, and small expansions of the sales tax, and tolls, to cover restoring 40% of the money cut from care to the developmentally disabled, and to fund the state’s education funding formula — the one that the legislature’s own study shows is inadequate. Due to more encouraging revenue projections than were the case last fall, some money has been restored to important places, but it’s just a bit here and there.

This graph is still the policy of the state:

That lower line is the effective tax rate on the median taxpayer. The blue line is the rate on the top 1%, and the red line is just thrown in there to show there is no relationship between taxes and unemployment.

The message overall from the legislature is that the cities and towns be damned. There seems no willingness to acknowledge that the fiscal crisis in the cities is largely the result of state policies. Tremendous cuts in state aid in 2008-2010 to both the municipal and education sides of city and town budgets brought fiscal havoc everywhere, and last week we had the spectacle of Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, a representative from Woonsocket, begging her colleagues in the legislature not to allow Woonsocket to fix the problems caused by her colleagues. Oddly enough, they complied, and now we have two more cities half a step from joining Central Falls in bankruptcy.

The sad fact is that by and large the people in charge of our cities and towns have actually been more fiscally responsible than legislators in the General Assembly, but they have less power, and so the Assembly leadership can pretend otherwise.

That’s quite a claim, isn’t it?  How to back it up?  How about this: as of 1990, Rhode Island cities and towns collected about $1.3 billion, between state aid, property taxes and various municipal fees. In 2008 — before the worst of the state aid cuts — they took in a bit less than $3 billion. This does not count the car tax payments from the state, which only offset taxes that towns would have collected from their residents. If you’re keeping score, that’s growth of about 1.9% per year — after correcting for inflation. This is troubling, but it’s not necessarily evidence of mismanagement. Inflation measures the price of goods and a few services, while towns spend their money on services and a few goods.

So how best to measure this if not against the inflation rate?  If you want a yardstick with which to measure a service-oriented enterprise like a town, how about a private-sector service like Federal Express? Fedex is fiercely competitive, I hear, and non-union, to boot. How did they do?  In 1990, it cost $11 to send an overnight letter across the country, and today it’s about $25.50 for the same service. After correcting for inflation, that’s up about 2% a year.

What about the state?  After accounting for inflation in the same way, the state’s general revenue has gone up 2.4% per year since 1990, and overall expenses are up even more. (That’s the structural deficit and the rise in state debt you’re smelling.)

So who is being more responsible with tax dollars?  The General Assembly, with members like Baldelli-Hunt who give lectures to municipalities, or the towns, who have controlled costs not only better than the state, but better than Fedex. But it’s the towns who get cut while the state basks in the adulation of business leaders who praise legislators for their tax cuts.

The main message of this budget bill is continuity. This is a budget motivated by policy choices virtually identical to the ones of the previous year, the year before that, the year before that, and so on. The idea is to squeak through another year with minimal pain to everyone, especially the wealthy. But it was to a large extent that very set of policies that brought us to the status quo: high unemployment, bankrupt cities, ever-rising tuitions at the state colleges, and lower taxes on rich people.

Do you like the way things are going around here?  Hope you do, because the legislature is voting this week to give you more of the same.

RI Progress Report: Carcieri, Fox Should Face Public, Anti-Union Manipulation, How Central Falls Made Budget


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With regards to the 38 Studios debacle, Gov. Chafee is just about the only Rhode Island politician who has respected the public’s right to know what happened. Former Gov. Don Carcieri and House Speaker Gordon Fox – who shepherded the failed deal – ought to follow his lead. It may not be in either of their best interest, but public servants aren’t supposed to act in their own best interest but in the best interest of the people.

Projo columnist Ed Fiztpatrick writes this morning, “Fox needs to stop hiding in plain sight, and former Gov. Donald L. Carcieri needs to emerge from the bunker. After putting $100 million at risk, elected leaders better be ready to defend what they did — or apologize to the taxpayers.”

Speaking of Projo columnists, union-basher Ed Achorn writes about today’s Wisconsin recall election and, in doing so, gives a clue as to why he so often-confuses his anti-labor crusade with the public interest. He cites a poll that he says indicates “90 percent of employers believe the state is on the right path” and concludes that “All this seems to have been in the public’s interest, though not perhaps in the unions’ special interest.” Ed, just so you know, employers are a special interest, too.

For a more intellectually honest look at the Wisconsin recall vote today, the Associated Press runs an informative Q&A.

The AP, by the way, has an interesting paragraph about how Central Falls is able to balance its budget this year: “The plan … balances the budget for this fiscal year and the next five fiscal years but does not factor in the millions the state wants the city to pay for the costs of the receivership.” If this were a pension cost, conservatives would call this kicking the can down the road and there would likely be a bi-partisan effort to retroactively reduce these costs … not when the recipients are wealthy and connected lawyers though…

The state GOP’s local legislative caucus got a little smaller with Rep. John Savage of East Providence announcing he will leave the party … but remember, this won’t make the General Assembly any less conservative. It simply waters down the difference of local party affiliation.

While we’re on the topic of the State House … this Red Sox banner really shouldn’t be hanging above the entrance:

Activist Abel Collins Challenges Langevin


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Abel Collins feels he hasn’t heard enough about financial reform from either U.S. Rep. James Langevin (D-R.I. 2nd District) or his prospective Republican challengers in November’s election.

The program manager for the Sierra Club’s Rhode Island chapter is unhappy enough about the situation to jump into the race himself as an independent candidate. The 2000 Brown University graduate and lifelong South Kingstown resident will officially announce his candidacy Wednesday at 3 p.m. on the south steps of the Statehouse. (In case of rain, another location will be announced. The campaign’s website is electabel2012.com.)

“It’s not about challenging Langevin,” Collins says. “It’s about challenging the two-party structure.”

Collins hopes to bring the issues of Wall Street malfeasance and campaign finance reform to the fore, which hasn’t happened yet in either of Rhode Island’s congressional campaigns.

“Both parties’ hands-off approach caused it, and the legislation they’ve enacted has done nothing,” he says. “There have been no prosecutions, and the total lack of responsiveness made me want to get involved.”

While admitting “I never stayed overnight,” Collins assisted with last year’s Occupy Providence action.

“I was one of the moderate voices,” he says.

Collins seeks greater enforcement of existing financial legislation and RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) prosecutions for insider trading, in addition to the restoration of the Glass-Steagall Act limiting interstate banking and the promotion of community and state banks. His platform also includes promoting public financing of campaigns, green initiatives and fair trade policies.

A graduate of South Kingstown High School before majoring in political science at Brown, Collins lives in the Matunuck area with his family and credits growing up around a beach with farmland nearby for his lifelong interest in environmental issues. With the Sierra Club, he has lobbied for public transportation improvements and the encouragement of walking and bicycling in local communities.

“I tried a lot of different jobs after college,” says Collins, who worked as a letter carrier, in construction and as a poker dealer before turning to environmental activism six years ago. “With the position at the Sierra Club, I really found my home.”

He has also served as a field manager for Clean Water Action, and membership and outreach coordinator at Apeiron Institute.

Collins says his campaign’s biggest goal is to bring a voice from outside the two major parties into the political debate.

“I want to demonstrate that it’s possible to campaign as an independent using the community tools available now,” he says.

General Cable Lauds Employees, Then Cuts Benefits


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Greed, pure and simple. How else can one describe what’s taking place at General Cable in Lincoln, RI right now? A company that is making money hand-over-fist for its investors, because of the hard work of its employees; decides those employees are owed nothing in return when it comes to raises, and even feels they should pay more for their health care.

In its annual report, General Cable touts how operating income grew by 12 percent to $248 million last year, on the strength of almost $6 billion in sales; with all of this taking place during a down economy.  Also in that report, the company boasts how the plant in Lincoln received a “Best Plant Award” from Industry Week magazine.

When it’s convenient for them to do so, like in the Industry Week article, management at the plant lauds the employees and all they’ve done to make the Lincoln plant a stand out.

Manufacturing manager John Tremblay emphasizes that the buy-in of the workers and the local United Steelworkers union has been key to the success of the switch to cellularization.

“You can make the physical moves with the equipment, but the real benefits come when you get the associates engaged,” Tremblay says.

However, now that the contract for the members of USW Local 4543 is up for renegotiation, plant management conveniently forgets everything the employees and union have done to make the plant successful. Instead, they offer minimal wage increases, which barely keep up with the cost of living, while at the same time insist on employees paying more for health and dental coverage that in effect wipe out any wage increase and actually lead to a decrease in take-home pay.

Is this the way a responsible company, which says it values its employees, shows its gratitude?  With a little digging though, finding that what management at the Lincoln plant says publicly isn’t anything like how they actually treat their employees on site.

From what was said at a recent (May 19) solidarity rally outside the plant, attended by most of the members of Local 4543 as well as other local community and labor activists; conditions at the plant are nothing like the picture painted in the annual report and the Industry Week article.

The Industry Week article detailed human resources manager, Mary Igoe, bemoaning the fact that under the old system of doing things there was no camaraderie among the workers.

“They didn’t even talk to each other,” Igoe says. “They were just making wire and pushing it along to the next operation.”

At the recent rally however, it was clear that protecting the company’s human capital always takes a back seat to protecting the company’s bottom line. Along with the HR manager, the maintenance manager, process engineer and other managers all have charges pending for continued harassment of employees. The employees they all claim to revere.

An investigation conducted at the beginning of April looking into some of these charges can hardly be viewed as impartial, as Ms. Igoe brought in a human resources manager from a neighboring plant in Willimantic, Conn.; one of five facilities also under the direction of vice president and team leader, Mike Monti.

It seems that for a global company like General Cable, to avoid the appearance of impropriety, it might have been better to go outside the immediate sphere of local management to get an objective opinion. However, Ms. Igoe decided to forgo the appearance of any conflict of interest and brought in the HR manager from a neighboring facility. It just so happens one of the principals under investigation used to work at that neighboring facility.

Mr. Steele has also been less than diligent in his investigations, interviewing fewer than half the witnesses to a particular incident involving Local President, Ed Matias. From their point of view, the members of Local 4543 feel that no one less than Stephen Roush, General Cable’s Vice President, North American Human Resources should be the one to investigate recent developments at the Lincoln plant.

However, when reached, Mr. Roush offered the quote, “We appreciate your inquiry, but the Lincoln plant is currently engaged in labor negotiations and we have no comment at this time.” Again demonstrating that the corporate policy is to use the employees as a showcase when they can; but take advantage of them at the bargaining table and retaliate against them for demanding their fair share of the profits they help the company derive.

People are powerful drivers of General Cable performance. Our organizational strategy is built on the belief that people are the differentiating element in gaining a competitive advantage. We recruit and develop talented people who bring special knowledge in such areas as manufacturing excellence, technology, quality, safety, management, purchasing, sales and accounting.

Across the global enterprise ― on the job and on the team, on task and on time ― we would not be in our current position of strength without the individual and collective efforts of the more than 11,000 General Cable associates who come to work every day to make a difference.

It actually seems a little strange he didn’t reference the company’s corporate citizenship policy towards its people, stated in the above text box and at: http://www.generalcablecsr.com/citizenship/people/

In another troubling example of how the company says one thing publicly but acts completely differently in its management policies, the company leads off its summary of financial and operating highlights in the annual report by pointing out how they, “Further improved one of the best safety records in the industry.” However, that statistic may be misleading, especially at the Lincoln plant when health and safety manager, Rick Flaxington, routinely encourages employees not report injuries, or directs them to the company doctor rather than have them seek treatment from their own physicians or at an emergency room. In certain instances, employees were threatened if they sought medical treatment and one was even fired for getting hurt on the job. After an 18-month battle he was reinstated.  The company doctor, Dr. Steven G. McCloy, received poor ratings on vitals.com, a clearinghouse for doctor reviews: http://www.vitals.com/doctors/Dr_Steven_Mccloy#reviews . The doctor also has no website and no one answered the phone at his office.

So, now that the members of Local 4543 are standing up for their rights and voting down a regressive contract proposal by a margin of 115-8, Ms. Igoe isn’t exactly looking for members to be so comradely. All along the company has been trying to divide and conquer; pitting older versus younger employees by trying to change contract language regarding seniority.

The membership stands firm though; showing that a group of workers from disparate backgrounds, from the old French Canadian and polish populations to longtime transplants from Portugal and the Azores and newer immigrants from Latin America, the Caribbean and Africa all have the same thing in mind – being rewarded for the hard work that helped the company they work for become one of the best in its industry.

For more info on working conditions at the plant, watch this YouTube video:

Occupy Prov Plans Sidewalk Protest During Netroots


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Occupy-Providence

Occupy-ProvidenceNetroots Nation won’t be the only progressive group taking Providence by storm this weekend. Occupy Providence, the activists that protested economic inequality by turning Burnside Park into a tent city in 2011, plans to re-occupy the city in honor of Netroots.

Local poet and activist Jared Paul, one of the original organizers of Occupy Providence, said the group plans a four-day, three night occupation of the sidewalks near the Convention Center during Netroots starting Thursday and lasting through Sunday.

“We believe our occupation will show that the voice of the 99 percent is present and active at this political convention,” he said. Besides, he added, the action will make a good alternative to those “who don’t have the money for the registration fee.”

Paul stressed that Occupy isn’t protesting Netroots Nation – while he said some of the high-level political operatives and beltway Democrats involved with Netroots don’t always have the best interest of the 99 percent in mind, he added, “many of the people there are our allies, and we look forward to making more of them our allies.”

Mary Rickles, a spokeswoman for Netroots, said the annual conference is on the side of the Occupy movement in general and Occupy Providence in particular.

“We stand with the 99 percent too and welcome the conversation they want to have,” she said. “We’ve been supportive of the Occupy movement from the get-go. Last fall, we publicly petitioned Mayor Taveras to not evict the protestors from Burnside Park. And, we’ve got a number of Occupy folks on panels during the conference. We look forward to working with them on pushing out the message that our leaders must stand for the 99 percent.”

Netroots has planned several panel discussions on the Occupy movement, such as: Beyond Occupy: What Does a New Economic System Look Like? on Thursday at 10:30 and That Will Never Work: What Progressives Can Learn from OWS, on Friday at 4:30. Here’s a full list of the OWS-related panel discussions at Netroots.

Outside of the convention, Occupy Providence’s Facebook page says there will be, “Rallies, marches, sign and banner making, workshops, teach-ins, poetry, music, general assembly, working groups, chanting, dancing, art-o-lution, radical games, and more!”

Here’s a link to the full schedule of events for Occupy Providence’s sidewalk protest this week.

In a press release sent out today, Occupy Providence detailed its demands for the sidewalk occupation:

  1. No 38 Studios bailout: The 38 Studios debacle illustrates how our local government recklessly gambled on the notion that the “job creators” are the 1% rather than investing in small business development, micro loans, or the expansion of public works projects that helped pull us out of the last Great Depression. Now, to add insult to injury, Rhode Island taxpayers are being asked to bail out this insider deal or face financial blackmail from Wall Street rating companies that were co-conspirators to begin with.
  2. Tax the 1%:  We need proven solutions not gambles. The top marginal tax rate was increased to 63% during the Great Depression and steadily increased, reaching 94% (on all income over $200,000) in the following decades.  OPVD believes tax rate increase for the wealthiest Americans during the Great Depression set a precedent, and that similar measures are now needed to pull us out of the current crisis that is again the product of Wall Street greed.
  3. Solidarity not austerity, locally, nationally and internationally: The third anti-austerity demand reflects the desire of working people around the world that our governments stop punishing the victims of this Grand Theft by Wall Street and instead hold the perpetrators accountable.

Local Progressives Toast Netroots Wednesday Night


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What would Netroots Nation in Providence be without a toast from the local progressive community?

The annual conference of lefty journalists and activists kicks off here Thursday morning, but the party starts the night before. RI Future and Working RI, a coalition of local labor unions and community activists, is hosting a happy hour from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday in the Convention Center Rotunda.

The Netroots staff will be putting the finishing touches on the big three-day event of progressive speakers and panels and networking opportunities, and it’ll be a great opportunity to welcome them to the Ocean State.

Called “one of America’s fastest rising progressive voices in radio, “Jeff Santos, of Revolution Radio in Boston, will be opening his Real Romney Tour then too. Come see the first night of his eight city tour exposing the hypocrisy of Mitt Romney. His live broadcast, featuring live music and comedy, starts at 5 pm and it would be great to have a crowd for that.

Plus, you can have a drink with me, labor leader George Nee, organizer and former congressional candidate David Segal, progressive legislators Art Handy and Teresa Tanzi, Pat Crowley, who has done a fantastic job putting the party together, and many many more.

Here’s the Facebook invitation (in case we forgot to send it to you personally). Please let us know you’re coming.

We’ll be posting a lot more on Netroots this week so stay tuned … for an overview, check out their site here, and for a list of speakers check out the preview the Netroots staff recently posted to RI Future.

Here’s a compilation of some of the panels that will speak to local concerns we posted way back in April. And here’s the complete list.

We also set up a page with a Netroots-centric Twitter widget so you can keep abreast of all the action live.

Hope to see you all Wednesday night for a toast … and then at the conference the next day through the weekend!


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