Providence Cross Moved to Private Property


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A Constitutional and community crisis has been averted as the cross on public property in Providence has been moved to private land. Peter Montequila, owner of Finest Car Wash on Pleasant Valley Parkway who erected the religious symbol on the city-owned road median, moved it Friday morning, his wife Doris said.

The cross, which Montequila put up on an Adopt-a-Spot median he takes care of, is now in front of his nearby gas station and car wash. The cross gained attention when Steve Ahlquist, president of the Humanists of Rhode Island, wrote a letter to Mayor Taveras and then blogged about in on RI Future.

Montequila, who said he put up the cross in part to show solidarity with other religious symbols on public property that have been in the news as of late, could not be reached for comment. His wife said the plan was always to remove the cross from public property after July 4, though Montequila had not said that in any of the interviews he had given.

Providence Mayor Angel Taveras visited the car wash this morning, as the cross was being removed, said Doris Montequila.

David Ortiz, a spokesman for Taveras, said in a statement, “The owner of Finest Car Wash, who has maintained and cared for the median in front of his business for 16 years, agreed to move the memorial off the public median and onto his private property across the street.”

Ortiz said City Solicitor did not feel the cross violated the Constitution. But, he added, “allowing it to remain on city property would require the city to allow other individuals or organizations to adopt spots in the city and erect any symbol or sign.”

“The current Adopt-a-Spot regulations permit applicants to post a sign indicating that they have adopted the spot,” Ortiz said. “The city will update the regulations to specifically provide that no other signs or symbols will be permitted on adopted locations.”

The Montequila’s are giving away t-shirts commemorating the cross to customers who support them, Doris Montequila said.

Stories from Rhode Island’s Unemployment Crisis II

In case you missed my last piece, I’m posting a new series as part of the Where’s the Work? initiative that’s focused on getting past the statistics that dominate coverage of the unemployment crisis and putting our attention back where it needs to be–on the real Rhode Islanders facing real challenges as they try to weather this Great Recession.

Our second story comes from Richard, who lives in the West End neighborhood of Providence.

Richard Herranen has been working in human services for more than 20 years, most recently at the Urban League of Rhode Island, where he did HIV prevention programming. Richard, who has a master’s degree and is credentialed and licensed in substance abuse treatment, loved his job. And he was good at it. But when funding from the Center for Disease Control dried up, he found himself unemployed at the age of 69.

After losing his job, Richard underwent some serious health problems and spent a difficult year recovering. But now he’s healthy again, and has been looking for work for the past thirteen months. He’s applied for every position he could find in his old fields, but so far has had little success. “I’ve had a few interviews,” he says, “but nothing ever materialized. That’s the most frustrating part. You go in for the interview, and then you never hear a word.”

Richard is convinced it’s a question of age. “I’ve gotten roundabout feedback from colleagues. ‘He’s just too old,’ they say. I just turned 71.” But Richard is physically, mentally, and intellectually fit. And he loves working. “I’m not ready to quit working. Even if my wife and I were well enough off that we could afford to retire, I would still want to work. I’m younger than Jerry Brown. I’m about the same age as Bob Dylan and Mick Jagger and Paul McCartney. And they’re all very active and doing well at their respective professions.” He understands that some agencies are reluctant to hire older people because they do not want to invest in training for an employee who might be retiring soon. But Richard already knows the field very well. “The positions I’ve interviewed for, I’d hardly require any training at all.”

Richard has also looked at part-time work. “Even the somewhat lower-paying jobs are attractive,” he says. “I’ve applied to work at Starbucks. Whole Foods. To work on the ferry to Martha’s Vineyard. I even thought about joining the Peace Corps, but I couldn’t leave my wife Barbara and our black lab Sophie.”

For now, Richard is committed to continuing the search. He got his last unemployment check two weeks ago, so he now has no income but Social Security. “We had money invested, but like most people we took a hell of a big hit when the recession started. Still taking a big hit.” He shakes his head. “I never thought it’d be this difficult to find work.”

 

Where’s the Work? is an initiative of the Ocean State Action Fund. You can share your own unemployment story  or ask your elected officials to listen to Rhode Island’s unemployed workers by clicking here.

The False Neutrality of Education Reform


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Maryellen Butke (Photo courtesy of RI-CAN)

Mr. Plain recently received some pushback from commenters about his recent article, Butke’s Campaign Puts Focus on Education ‘Reform’. I’m not going to recount the slightly convoluted backstory (read the above-linked article, the preceding article about Senator Perry’s retirement, and especially Ms. Butke’s post to Mr. Nesi’s blog), but here is the key quote:

My feeling is that Regunberg, Crowley and Bukte somehow need to reconcile their somewhat disparate points if Rhode Island is to holistically improve the education it offers. We need to offer a better education to all students without making life any tougher for our hard-working teachers, who hold one of the most important jobs in our community. That’s the progressive solution to reforming public education.

On its face, there is very little to disagree with. Hell, I support both those things too! Right?

Ehh, no. This quote (which certainly was written without ill-intention) hints at the brilliant and subversive rhetoric that conservative corporate education reform has been pushing for years.  It reinforces false idea that education can be improved while simultaneously devaluing labor. In the quote above for example, “Offering a better education to all students” becomes positioned as the priority for education reform groups like Ms. Butke’s RI-CAN distinct and against the labor movement’s priority of respecting “our hard-working teachers.” Claiming the progressive solution is a compromise between two opposing points reinforces the myth that labor is not focused on providing an excellent education.

I’d strongly argue teachers unions and other labor groups are largely looking out for the students’ best interests, directly or indirectly, but others can engage in that debate. I instead want to direct attention to the false claim that improving education is a pursuit that should be above the fray of politics.

We should all be on the same page by now that we need to do better by our youth. If you disagree, you haven’t been paying attention. But this deliberately inoffensive claim is as about as far as Ms. Butke will go in her public rhetoric—the how is harder to come by. In her response featured on Nesi’s Notes she “welcomes debate on the how” but offers no answers. However she does claim no less than 6 times that reforming public education means setting aside politics. Others can attest to how political RI-CAN’s work beyond the op-eds has actually been, as there are enough tricks and ploys to fill multiple articles.

This would-be neutral stance ignores that there is nothing more political than educating a child. If you disagree, ask yourself why RI went without an equitable (but imperfect) funding formula for over a decade, why public school students in RI pay for transit and private school students don’t, or even why some textbooks cover evolution and others don’t. I may be accused of begging the question, “education is political because it’s political,” but the fact is these the answers to these questions will always be determined by the relative power of the groups involved, and students’ learning experiences can vary wildly across communities as a result. That people and power necessarily determine what our children learn should be undeniable. Still, Ms. Butke denies:

I have never considered my views on education liberal or conservative. Though a lifelong progressive, it never occurred to me that teaching and learning in public schools was a partisan issue. At its core, education reform is about improving educational outcomes for kids. How could anyone – Democrat or Republican – disagree with that?

I have no clue what “improving educational outcomes” actually means, so I guess I’m the lone dissenter. What I do have a clue about is that in a field like education, moves like these to depoliticize and take the “neutral” high ground are themselves politically charged maneuvers. Relentlessly asserting political neutrality performs two functions for the education reform movement:

1)   It builds the myth that the inverse is also true — that engaging in political work means opposing educational advancement. So, in a mind-bending twist of logic, teachers unions and other groups must defend themselves against the absurd charge that they don’t care about education.

2)   It allows the Gates, Waltons, and Broads of education to throw their hands in the air, claim innocence in the current state of education, and bestow themselves license to privatize schools and dismantle public education’s most promising aspects—democratic control, universal access, standard-setting fair and inclusive labor practices, etc.

When we consciously or subconsciously suggest education and politics are two different issues, we perpetuate the narrative. I believe this was the concern shared by the commenters above.

However, I do side with the overlooked conclusion of Mr. Plain’s last article: this is an opportunity to debate our most important but most frequently back-burnered issue, education. Let it be established that by declaring for political office, Ms. Butke no longer has grounds to claim the solutions to our educational woes are neither Democratic nor Republican. Platitudes like “Great teachers and great schools” won’t cut it when it comes to an up-or-down vote on school funding or collective bargaining.

Exactly how will you fix schools once in office Ms. Butke? (Of course, this goes for other candidates as well.) It is up to voters in District 3, myself included, to ask questions that push past the sterile rhetoric, and it is each candidate’s responsibility to answer those questions, in detail. If we ask often enough and listen hard enough, I’m confident voters will learn some things they don’t want to hear.