Warwick Legislators Run Unopposed, For Most Part


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Laura Pisaturo is challenging Michael McCaffrey for his seat in the state Senate. She’s one of the few people challenging incumbents in Warwick this year.

Does Warwick suffer from a lack of people willing to represent the state’s second largest city in the General Assembly? Or is the citizenry just really happy with the delegation it has? Either way, of the nine seats the city has in the state legislature only three are being contested this campaign season, according to a list compiled by WPRI’s Ted Nesi.

Of the six seats on the House side, none are really contested. Five incumbents are running unopposed and Rep. Bob Flaherty, who has been a legislator since 1990, isn’t running. This means Gina Raimondo campaign manager and payday loan profiteer Joe Shekarchi pretty much gets to run unopposed against relatively unknown Republican John Falkowski.

But there’s some good news for lefties in the lack of local candidates for House seats, as well. Two of the unopposed seats belong to liberal legislators Frank Ferri and David Bennett Ferri, by the way, sponsored the payday loan reform bill (and Raimondo backed it!) making for an interesting point of contention here.

On the Senate side, only one of the three seats held by Warwickians will go unopposed. That one belongs to moderate-to-liberal Democrat Erin Lynch.

There’s some good news for progressives here, too – namely that Senator Michael McCaffrey, a conservative Democrat, isn’t running unopposed. He’s one of the major impediments to marriage equality in the Senate and will have to defend those views against Laura Pisaturo, a pro-choice and equality Democrat who runs the Rhode Island Children’s Advocacy Center and is a former assistant attorney general.

Here’s a bit more about her from a press release from her campaign:

Pisaturo is a former legal instructor at the Rhode Island State Municipal Police Academy and Providence Police Training Academy, and serves as a member of the Rhode Island Bar Association House of Delegates. She is an active member of the Civil Bench/Bar Committee and LGBT Legal Issues sub-Committee and previously served on the Criminal Bench/Bar and ad hocChildren at Risk Committees of the Rhode Island Bar. Pisaturo was recognized by the first Providence Business News “Forty under 40″for her career achievements and community service.  In 2010, she was appointed by Chief Justice Paul Suttell to the RI Supreme Court Disciplinary Board. In June 2011 she was appointed by Mayor Scott Avedisian to the Warwick Planning Board.

This one is a race to watch for progressives as Pisaturo has an excellent political resume.

The Influence Trap


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

Whenever a government makes a decision to spend money, or designs a regulation to right a wrong, it creates a business opportunity. If you reject, as I do, the Tea Party trend toward “all government taxation and spending are bad,” then you are left with a few questions.

  1. How do you protect the system from corruption and undue influence?
  2. How do you maximize value for taxpayers?

Over the past few years (decades?), Rhode Island’s legislature has done a poor job on both counts. In this article, I’ll focus on the first question.

Don’t re-elect corrupt officials

Every day new fingers are pointed about improprieties and influence on everything from auto body regulation to contract steering. Some legislators appear to profit directly. Others direct state dollars to their partners and acquaintances. Others win friends and get financial contributions and other forms of support from vested interests in exchange for line items, sweetheart contracts and back room deals.

It’s revolting.

On a Federal level, much of this institutionalized corruption is legal. Peter Schweitzer, in his disturbing book, Throw Them All Out, outlines the methods that the so-called, “The Permanent Political Class” use to generate personal wealth for themselves and their friends. According to Schweitzer, there are no solid rules against United States senators, representatives, and even the president, from using their advance and insider knowledge of federal government legislation and regulations. Schweitzer goes into detail about deals made by Democrats and Republicans alike that include advanced IPO purchases, land buys relating to federal funding and so on. It’s pretty horrifying stuff.

Schweitzer also talks about how businesses leverage their profits based on advance knowledge, insider knowledge and the simple massive power of Federal spending to “earn” billions of dollars. The equation is simple. Businesses with ties and links and lobbyists earn a better return than those who operate on a “level” playing field.

Here in Rhode Island, we seem particularly inept and vulnerable to these sorts of machinations. We are a small state, so it’s almost a certainty that a legislator proposing a bill will hear from the constituency who will benefit from it. Indeed, where else ought a legislator turn to learn about a particular regulation?

It’s almost inescapable. For example, when I was discussing the challenge the state faces dealing with the decades of politicians granting union benefits in exchange for union support, my wife, who is a teacher and a union member said, “Don’t touch my pension!”

I think that constitutes “influence”, don’t you?

Subversive “Support”

But other forms are more insidious. As a newly declared candidate, I began to receive “questionnaires” from organizations asking if I wanted their support. The first two that came in,  Planned Parenthood and the Sierra Club, were fairly easy to answer.

I’ve always been a 100% supporter of a woman’s right to choose, a proponent of education, and an opponent to government imposition of will on a person’s body. I’ve always been a believer that one of the jobs of government is to protect, nurture and restore the environment.

But I noticed that these letters were lobbying me before I was even elected. I learned, for example, that Rhode Island law requires notification of a husband, if a wife wants an abortion. Planned Parenthood asked if I would try to change that. I said I wasn’t sure, yet. I later learned that how the organization avoided that situation was to not ask women if they were married.

A few days later, the Right to Life questionnaire came in, and I pitched it in the trash.

I’ve gotten a few Union questionnaires, too. In general, I’m a huge supporter of trade unions. I believe that workers have the right to organize and bargain collectively. But my opinion on some issues is nuanced. One political adviser suggested that I avoid using these questionnaires to address subtle issues, but I had already sent in one:

5)    Would you support standards that would link public economic development assistance to companies that create good jobs, pay fair wages, provide decent benefits and comply with environmental, labor and other laws?  (Development Assistance is defined as abatements, loans, grants, contracts, tax breaks, etc).

COMMENTS: YES. However, as the 38 Studios and so many other failed initiatives show, I am wary of providing economic development assistance to companies who are only moving here because of that assistance.

More and more questionnaires. One lured with the promise that all of the people they supported won their elections. Another flat out threatened…

The day after the recent massacre in Colorado, I got a flier from the NRA asking me to support their agenda and warning me that, “If you choose not to return a questionnaire, you may be assigned a ‘?’ rating, which can be interpreted by our membership as indifference, if not outright hostility toward Second Ammendment-related issues. (boldface theirs!)

My position? Guns do kill people. I oppose assault weapons in the hands of insane people. The culture of handguns in this country is killing people in Providence every month. Is there anything good about this? I don’t think so. (Although I have to admit that in the darkest days of the Bush administration, I could understand the idea of buying a gun to protect yourself against the government.) If I’m elected, I’ll consider increasing gun regulation and limiting the purchase of devastating weapons. Make of that what you will, NRA, I will not be returning your form.

Vigilance, Integrity and Mindfulness

I am not running for office to make a buck. I want to make our state better, and one of the most powerful ways is to get the corruption out of government.

When that legislator makes (or protects) a buck for himself or his family or his business, or receives a campaign contribution – or the promise of votes, volunteers and support at the polls – the vote is plainly unethical.

The next question people ask is, “How will you avoid that yourself?”

It’s a challenge. Any vote for a tax cut could benefit me. A tax break for the arts would benefit my friends. Any vote for increased funding for education will benefit my family — and certainly benefit my children, who are in the public schools.

I can only promise that I will pay attention and always ask, “Who profits? Who loses?”

And be very very very public about the process.

Progress Report: Hinckley Says Campaigns Good Business PR, RI Conservatives and the Second Amendment


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Pew View in Jamestown. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Why is Barry Hinckley running for Senate? Probably for the same reasons he told others they should run for office:

“This is one of my wackier ideas but run for office,” he told a group he was speaking to in 2009 (watch the full video here, the good parts start at about 6:40). “Even if you lose running for office you actually win because you get tons of free pr. You can actually raise money from friends, co-workers, people who support your candidacy. Run on as jobs platform – I will create jobs – that will get free press.”

Hinckley tells Tim White and Ted Nesi that despite telling others to run for office for selfish purposes, that’s not why he is doing it. It’s hard to believe, given that his entire campaign playbook seems to mimic this 2009 speech – right down to where he advises listeners to exploit family and young children to help gain campaign attention … something that will probably be Hinckley’s most enduring political legacy.

Speaking of Republicans running for office … I can’t really tell if Brendan Doherty thinks assault rifles should or should not be protected by the Second Amendment based on his comments in this Projo article. Hinckley didn’t really give a clear answer either but I wasn’t expecting one, given safety issues have little ability to help his personal career.

It’s actually pretty entertaining some of the excuses conservatives are offering up in an attempt to not have to take a stand on gun control right now.

Ian Donnis raises a good question: why won’t Anthony Gemma appear on RIPR’s Political Roundtable? The irony here is he did go on Buddy Cianci, who beat the heck out of him and even sandbagged him with a question about a fake issue. Donnis, on the other hand, is well-regarded as one of fairest political reporters in Rhode Island. So the answer is probably nothing personal against public radio, just another miscalculation by the Gemma campaign…

Prolepsis aside, it’s fair to call Rhode Island’s own Roger Williams the first progressive in the New World.

Did you hear that the CEO of Lenovo donated his $3 million bonus to lower-paid employees?

Welcome to downtown Providence, HousingWorksRI.

 

Tales of the Unemployment Crisis: Esther Battles On


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In this crisis, workers’ leverage is gone. “When you’re a dime a dozen, there’s nothing you can do.”

For the past couple weeks I’ve been sharing a series of stories from unemployed Rhode Islanders engaged in the Where’s the Work? initiative, an Ocean State Action Fund project that’s trying to highlight the human side of the Great Recession, which often–crazily enough–gets ignored or marginalized.

In this installment, Esther C. was kind enough to describe her experiences with joblessness and give an incisive perspective on the ways the unemployment crisis is hurting all Rhode Island workers, jobless and employed alike.

Esther grew up in Central Falls. Her parents labored in factories, and Esther began working at a young age. For the last 30 years Esther has been a medical assistant, and has a great deal of experience working in both private practices and public clinics in a number of states. Several years ago she returned to Rhode Island, moving back to her hometown to help care for her elderly parents when they took sick. But a year and a half ago Esther was laid off from her medical assistant position, and though she’s been trying to find another job ever since, securing employment has been very hard.

“For every job,” Esther explains, “there’s ten or twenty people applying. So what do you?” She bites her lip. “You get frustrated. Nothing comes through.

Esther has been doing her best to survive on unemployment insurance. “You cut back and you cut back and you cut back, but there’s only so much you can cut. You have to be so careful about budgeting—you budget rent, gas, electricity. My phone is disconnected. Disconnecting the cable isn’t so bad; I mean, if you’re out all day looking for a job, you’re not watching TV. But losing my phone and internet is tougher.”

Esther works hard to save money. “I live off the dollar store. I’m all over the place. I go from store to store to find the very, very cheapest necessities, just to make ends meet. I have to give credit to my parents—they showed us how to survive on a minimum.”

“My problem,” she continues, “is I have a lot of experience. And nobody wants to give you what you should be earning. With my experience in the medical field, I should be earning at least $16-18 an hour. But there’s so many people out there trying to get jobs, employers aren’t willing to give you what you should be earning. They can get someone younger, with less skills and experience for $10, $8 an hour.” Esther sighs. “I’m not a dumb person. I know what I should be making with my qualifications. When you go into an interview, even if you should be earning much more, you have to ask, ‘Can you give me at least $12?’ But even then that’s asking for too much, because they want you to work for nothing, and no health insurance, no benefits. It’s very stressful. You have to accept that you’ll have to take a job for $10, even though you know you’re worth more.”

Not only are wages being decreased, Esther explains, but employees are being asked to work harder for that lower pay. “For example,” she says, “I’m bilingual. People want you to be an interpreter for the office, running around half the day translating for everyone while doing the same amount of medical work. But are they willing to pay you for that, for doing two jobs in one? They’re not. But you have to take it cause there’s nothing else, you have to take what they dish to you.”

And that’s not all—in Esther’s experience, basic employee rights are also falling by the wayside. “Once you get a job nowadays, you have to do whatever they tell you. You have to keep your mouth shut, you have to be a humble mouse.” She shakes her head indignantly. “I don’t want to bring up slavery, but really, sometimes that’s what the system feels like. You work harder, and you’re making less, and you’ve got no dignity anymore. There are some places where you can’t even smile or laugh, you have to be so rigid in their control system. You can’t take time off for a sick child or a sick parent. You can’t speak your mind, you can’t imply in any way that you deserve to be treated better than you’re being treated. They’ll just throw you right out. Cause we’re a dime a dozen in this recession. When you’re a dime a dozen, there’s nothing you can do, cause they can hire someone for less.”

Esther does have plans for the future, but they’re complicated. “I’m trying to go back to school,” she says. “The problem is that classes are expensive, even online. You’re at this age—I’m gonna be 50 years old—and you ask, should I go back to school and get in debt for $80,000? You have to get yourself in debt to get yourself a job.”

After a moment, she continues. “I guess it’s like they say, the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. There’s no more middle class, there’s either rich or poor. And I don’t think there’s a way to get from one to the other.”

“Still, I’m optimistic,” Esther says. “It’s tough. But I’m a strong person. I’m going to come out one way or another. Whether they like it or not, I’m gonna come out of this.”

Board of Govs Should Treat Grad Assistants Fairly


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Graduate Assistants UNITED, a union for graduate assistants at the University of Rhode Island, will be paying close attention to decisions made tonight by the Rhode Island Board of Governors for Higher Education. After an upsetting and unexpected rejection of their contract as well as all other contracts related to higher education this past Spring, the Board of Governors have decided to reconsider GAU’s contract in an executive session tonight. I’m the GAU’s newly elected President and a graduate student in political science at the University of Rhode Island and here’s the letter imploring the board to decide in their favor.

Ladies and Gentlemen of the Board of Governors,

My name is Danielle Dirocco. I am a graduate assistant at the University of Rhode Island and the new President of Graduate Assistants UNITED (GAU) at the University of Rhode Island.

It is with great hope and anticipation that I write to you today, the day that the Board reconsiders the contract for University of Rhode Island’s Graduate Assistants UNITED. First and foremost, thank you for doing so. The GAU is a unique organization that at first glance may appear to some to be a sub-group of the professor’s union, but this is not the case. The GAU is an independent union that is comprised of nearly 600 graduate students who provide services to the University in exchange for the opportunity to attend graduate school that, for many, would otherwise be inaccessible due to the barrier of rising tuition costs.

I am one of those very students. My stipend, (roughly equivalent to minimum wage), is what I depend on to stay afloat while I attend school. I am proud to say that I am a lifelong Rhode Islander, a first generation college graduate, and a single mother.  Without a reasonable stipend, graduate school would simply be impossible for me to attend. I realize that $5-600 dollars may seem like nothing, but I assure you, it makes an enormous difference to a student like me. Every little bit counts. It could contribute to the cost of childcare so I can attend class. It could be used to mitigate the cost of textbooks in a semester. It could put a dent in transportation costs to get to and from class and to the recitations that I teach as part of my responsibilities associated with my assistantship.  It could even go to the ever-increasing budget necessary to begin paying down over $60,000 in student loans that I incurred as an undergraduate and in the first year of graduate school here at the University of Rhode Island.

I implore you to recognize that GAU students provide vital educational services to fellow students, faculty and the administration at the university. We are proud to be considered a critical component to many departments on campus. We teach recitations, grade papers and examinations, provide direct support to students, and generally act as intermediaries between the faculty and the student body.

As I am sure you are aware, our funding comes primarily from grants and from departmental budgets. Approving our contracts will not cost the state of Rhode Island a single additional cent.  We simply need your approval to release funds that are already set aside to provide this modest increase in wages to our aspiring students who go above and beyond the call of duty to contribute to the university.

As you know, it is becoming more and more difficult for students to find their way to a better, brighter future through higher education. Tuition hikes, decreased funding and skyrocketing student debt have left many of us wondering if we’ll ever be able to gain access to the same opportunities of those who came before us.  This small increase that the GAU has worked so hard for would cast a small light of hope into the darkness that has descended upon higher education in America today. It would show that the Rhode Island Board of Governors of Higher Education recognizes that the GAU is an independent organization whose interests simply address the needs of graduate students who are trying to do the right thing and get a fair shake.

Thank you to all of you for reconsideration.

Danielle Dirocco

President, Graduate Assistants UNITED

Graduate Assistant, Political Science

University of Rhode Island

Olneyville Unidos Voter Registration Week!


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Wondering what to do this week to support democracy?

Join us this tonight to kick off Olneyville Unidos (Olneyville Together) voter registration week! Meet fellow activists, enjoy a popsicle and sign up for a voter registration shift this week. If you can’t make Monday’s fiesta, contact Kristina Fox Kristina@oceanstateaction.org to sign up for a volunteer shift to register voters Tues-Thurs 6pm-8PM this week.

Help Olneyville make sure its voice is heard this election and many more to come!

  • Olneyville Unidos Voter Registration Kick Off!
  • Olneyville Square, Providence RI (next to Citizen’s Bank)
  • Kick Off: Monday July 23 @ 6PM Volunteer Shifts: Tuesday – Thursday 6-8PM
  • Contact Kristina@oceanstateaction.org for more details

Democracy starts at the voting booth. Let’s make sure everyone get there this fall!

Peter Green and the Raptors of Downtown PVD


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People often think they have to go to far flung locales like Acadia, Ninigret or Pardon Grey to see some of Rhode Island’s most exotic birds of prey. Not Peter Green, whose favorite place to look for raptors is right in downtown Providence.

Almost every day, he takes a short walk from Burnside Park up to the State House and back looking for some of falcons, hawks, kestrels, merlins, osprey, owls and even the occasional bald eagle who live and or hunt right in the center of the Capital City.

A falcon in flight over downtown Providence. (Photo courtesy of Peter Green)

As you can see by the photo he took, his pictures are professional grade – for many more like this, I highly recommend checking out his blog Providence Raptors, which has some of the most amazing bird pictures I’ve seen anywhere, and they are all from either Providence or the surrounding area.

But while he’s easily the most well-known local urban wildlife photographer, when he moved to Providence four years ago he was neither a birder or a shutterbug. But when he moved to a downtown loft that gave him a daily view of peregrine falcons he figured “it was time to invest in a better camera,” as we both lugged our big lenses around downtown the other day in search of birds.

He got a better camera and quickly learned that red-tail hawks would hunt for pigeons right in Burnside Park. “I started getting these pictures and I couldn’t believe they were mine.”

He has pictures of hawks picking off pigeons in Kennedy Plaza, falcons attacking a man on top of the Superman building and some other amazing raptors from in and around the city – a bald eagle over the East Side, a very rare albino hawk in Lincoln and, of course, the snowy owl who was here earlier this year.

If you enjoy the pictures, you spend some time on Tuesday with Green in Burnside Park where he’s leading a raptor spotting/photographing talk as  part of Providence’s Public Square Day at 1pm.

It’s not too uncommon for Green to spot birds, too … on the day I went with him he saw a falcon having breakfast and later we saw a falcon on the side of a building and another two soaring up above.

Peter Green, looking for raptors near Waterplace Park last week. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Coming Soon: ALEC Enters the Ed Reform Debate


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Now that the American Legislative Exchange Council is distancing itself from Stand your Ground voter ID laws, the next area of policy we are likely to see it rear its ugly head might well be what is alternatively described as either the education reform movement or the education privatization movement – pick whichever monicker suits your point of view.

Back in February, EducationWeek published this piece on how and why ALEC plans to enter debate on education policy in states across the country. But for a simpler version, watch this youTube video Diane Ravitch recently posted to her blog:

It’s worth noting that Mitt Romney is pushing an ALEC-approved platform on education reform, not at all unlike the one often defended by Maryellen Butke, a state Senate candidate and former RI-CAN lobbyist.

Before Josh Barro gets all worked up, I should note that this isn’t to say that Butke – or Romney, for that matter – has been secretly recruited by ALEC to clandestinely do its bidding … but sometimes it’s worth noting who ones’ allies are, if for no other reason than to shed a little light on the playing field.

Progress Report: The Geography of Shooting Sprees and the Politics of the Second Amendment; Veggie Medicine


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There are just too many unanswerable questions in the case of the Colorado theater shooting … one that I keep going back to is why did two of the deadliest shooting sprees in the nation’s history happen so close to each other. Unlike any other place I know of out west, the front range area of Colorado seems the spot where modern society begins to clash with the wild west of yesterday, where our cultural mythology tells us the heroes (or anti-heroes, depending on your point-of-view) would bust into the saloon and either challenge someone to a duel or simply shoot up he joint. Based on population alone, one would think more massacres would occur in urban areas simply based on sample size alone … but according to this list it seems all too many of them have happened where the old west and the new west collide.

Few of the liberties guaranteed to Americans in the Bill of Rights are absolute, and the Second Amendment certainly isn’t one of them – we no more have the right to possess rocket launchers than we do have the right to yell fire in a crowded movie theater. But is this the right time to have a national debate about gun control, as Bill Kristol suggests Democrats should do? The AP reports that both Obama and Romney “have softened their positions on gun restrictions over the years.”

Ian Donnis has a fascinating interview with Bob Walsh of NEA-RI on the Rhode Island Public Radion airwaves this morning … here’s his post from Friday, and here’s hoping he posts the audio from the interview too. Walsh says the state got bad legal advice and should have negotiated with unions about pension cuts like Mayor Angel Taveras did in Providence.

Whether or not the state or municipality have been better at funding public schools in Woonsocket, the simple fact is there isn’t enough money there to properly educate the kids. The Projo reports that teachers haven’t gotten raises in four years and we know that property taxes were raised as much as the General Assembly would allow during that time period … so, given that the objective is to educate students not assess blame, what do we do to ensure that Woonsocket students get the education they deserve?

“Take Two Tomatoes and Call Me in the Morning” – ecoRI reports Woonsocket and West Warwick farmers’ markets that are giving .

Interesting, from Barrington Patch: “Michael Messore, Barrington’s new superintendent, is married to the head of the foreign language department at the high school. So, Messore would be directly involved in negotiating a new contract with the teachers’ union that would have an impact on his wife’s compensation.”

It seems to me he should recuse himself from these negotiations. Thoughts commenters?

Anthony DeRose, chairman of the Democratic LGBTQ Caucus, is profiled in GoLocal today … here’s hoping he’s successful in his goals for this election season.

RIP, Alex Cockburn: Your Star Carries You Elsewhere


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Rest in peace, Alexander Cockburn. The legendary leftist-journalist died of cancer on Saturday. (Photo courtesy of The Nation)

All writers I suspect have their mentors. Without doubt mine is Alexander Cockburn, the legendary leftist journalist who wrote for The Nation and before that The Village Voice, and used to boast that he had “all the right enemies.”

Alex, as I knew him, died Saturday in Germany after a two-year battle with cancer that he told almost no one about. Although he filed stories right up until his death, he said he didn’t want to blog his own death as his friend, frequent adversary and fellow lefty Christopher Hitchens had done. It was the perfect way for this highly intelligent, acerbic and introverted man to leave this world; just as he lived; alone and throwing punches disguised as prose at the establishment.

It’s no coincidence if that sounds a bit like what I do on RI Future. Alex, as progressive in his personal life as in his professional politics, was more prone to attacking political centrists and the fringe left than the wing-nut conservatives. He had a special place in his heart for taking on America’s most sacred cows: among his favorite targets were the media, corporations and Israel – topics that often divide moderate liberals from their more radical counterparts.

“No one could skewer the banksters, the robber barons and the crony capitalists of this broken era quite so ably as Alex,” wrote John Nichols, his comrade at The Nation, this morning about his friend. “His last column for The Nation was a delicious takedown of all the dark players involved in the scheme by the biggest bankers in the world to fix rates. The bankers got their due, of course, but so did the regulators and, of course, the pliant media.” (For those of you not familiar with Alex’s writing, here’s a link to his last column … all of his columns are so beautifully written)

The Mattole Beach, where I was camping when I met Alex Cockburn in September 2001. Alex lived a few miles up the Mattole River. (Photo by Julie Munafo)

While I love nearly everything about his writing, elegant, acerbic and intelligent all at once, I knew Alex as a person before I knew him as a journalist. In the autumn of 2001, shortly after the attacks of September 11, he hired me to help build a rammed earth cider shed on his idyllic hidden home on the banks of the Mattole River on the rugged Northern California coast about halfway between San Francisco and the Oregon border.

I was hitch-hiking from Seattle to San Diego and looking for day labor to help me get down the road. I had already set up camp on the nearby beach for a few weeks (and managed to find some decent work) when, hitching back to the beach one afternoon, I was picked up by a local, of course driving an early ’70’s Volkswagen Bus, who said he might have some additional work for me.

He knew I was a journalist on furlough to live deliberately but neglected to mention that the job in question would be working for one of the most famous leftist columnists in the country. People in this part of the country are notoriously private.

A few days later, he introduced me to Alex, who liked to employ some of the local hippies and pot growers (really the only option in Humboldt County) to help him spruce up his property – a gorgeous couple acres on the banks of the one of the prettiest rivers I’ve ever seen. There were some fruit trees, a couple classic cars from the ’50s and ’60s, a quaint little house with a writer’s studio out back and a few horses in a stable.

A farm just downstream from Alex’s house. (Julie Munafo)

We were to construct another building on the property – a small rammed earth shed for making cider and partaking in other agrarian activities. Think of a cross between a southwestern adobe and English cobb. As we shoveled and compacted the locally-harvested dirt between forms, Alex would drop in leaves, stones and other artifacts he wanted fossilized in the walls.

I learned of Alex’s career over the lunches he would make for the work crew. We were a motley crew of dirty, tie-dyed Peter Pan-types – most of whom were living off the land and growing obscene amounts of marijuana as their only substantial source of income aside from the few carpentry or sustainable forestry projects going on around the Mattole Valley. But the daily feasts Alex would create for us were extravagant affairs. Depending on the weather we would either dine in his living room or on his deck and eat duck, or some other delicacy, after a fresh salad harvested from his garden. Usually, there were several courses, all fit for a gourmet restaurant. It was more a siesta than a lunch break, and we’d typically drink several bottles of wine and talked philosophy for sometimes hours before returning to work the afternoon shift.

Alex offered me an internship, and found me a horse farm to live on up the road from him in exchange for help with the chores. All of a sudden I had a farm to live on and a journalism gig with one of the most esteemed progressive columnists in the country, it seemed that my crazy idea to hitch-hike across the country actually proved to be not a complete disaster after all.

Me, in the Mattole Valley, years later. (Julie Munafo)

But back then in my youth, I was even harder to hold down than I am now, and longing more for wanderlust than career advancement, I instead decided to beat it on down the road once and for all with a girl I met on the beach during a meteor shower.

At the time, it seemed like a good enough reason to go – the Mattole Valley, also known as the Lost Coast, is not at all easy to find and it turned out the same fellow who had given me directions while I was still up near the Oregon border had given this woman directions. We met randomly and discovered the coincidence as we watched shooting stars all night long from outside her tent that we set up a few thousand vertical feet almost directly above the Pacific Ocean. She was on her way to have Thanksgiving dinner with our mutual friend in Nevada City.

I’ll never forget what Alex said to me as he dropped me off on the beach the morning I was leaving behind his generous offer and the Mattole.

“Alright then, Bob, your star carries you elsewhere.”

And now I get to return the glad tidings he left me with. Your star carries you elsewhere, Alex … I look forward to not only carrying forth your legacy but, maybe, supposing your old friend Christopher Hitchens was indeed as wrong as you often thought he was, maybe we’ll eat duck and drink wine someday again at the great newsroom in the sky.

Inside Capco Steel


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Capco Steel is the latest company to default on an EDC-backed loan … Here are some pictures I took for an assignment a while back…

-RTC

Is Chris Young More Relevant Than Gemma?


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Chris Young – THIS GUY submitted more signatures than Anthony Gemma

Despite Anthony Gemma’s hundreds of thousands of fake Facebook fans from India and Pakistan, he was only able to muster 700 signatures on his nomination papers. Not exactly a groundswell of support for Gemma. Perhaps after spending so much money buying fake Facebook  fans (and fake Twitter followers), Gemma couldn’t afford to pay more than 700 people to sign his nomination papers?

Meanwhile, perennial nutcase Chris Young, who loves to sing and is best known for flipping tables, submitted 846 signatures!

RI Baseballers Win International Competition

 

Rhode Island teens win international baseball event in Cooperstown, NY.

In a dramatic comeback victory, the Rhode Island Baseball Club Under 14 AAU team took the title at an international competition, the Cooperstown Baseball World Tournament, this week with an 8-7 win in the bottom of the seventh inning against a team from Indiana.

After a scoreless first inning and giving up seven runs in the top of the second inning, the Rhode Island team got shutdown pitching from reliever Andrew Frey (two innings), and eventual game-winner Ryan Quirk; while chipping away at the 7-0 lead and tying it in the bottom of the fourth. Then in the bottom of the seventh, the RI team loaded the bases with three straight singles by Kyle Barbato, Nick Pietrantozzi and Andrew Frey before MJ Notorianni stepped up to the plate and hit a walkoff single, scoring Barbato and giving his team the championship.

In the first round of pool play, the Rhode Island team went 4-1, beating Israel 3-2 on a walkoff single by Jimmy Gianquitti in extra innings; losing to Colorado 4-1 in extra innings, and then beating New York 14-4, and Ohio 10-0 on a no-hitter by Liam Vetter, before ending pool play against Indiana with a 3-2 win.

By virtue of their 4-1 record, the Rhody team was the top seed and earned a bye in the first round before having to face the team they lost to in pool play, Colorado. However, they were up to the task, defeating the Coloradans 7-4 with Ryan Quirk earning the win in a game that Matt Sweeney started and starred offensively by knocking in three runs.

The team is made up of middle and high school players from throughout Rhode Island, Matt Sweeney, Matt O’Rourke and PJ Hazian from Western Hills Middle School, MJ Notorianni and Andrew Frey from Immaculate Conception, Tyler DiPetrillo and Jimmy Gianquitti from Bishop Hendricken, Kyle Barbato from Toll Gate, Ryan Quirk from La Salle, Liam Vetter from Portsmouth and Nick Pietrantozzi from Scituate. The team is managed by Mark Cahill with coaching assistance from Tom O’Rourke and Brendan Barbato.

 

ONA Says Business Stole Rather Than Wired Money


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A previous action by the Olneyville Neighborhood Association.

Saying the owner of a local money-wiring business stole thousands of dollars from them, a group of Olneyville residents who frequently send money to family  members in other countries will hold a rally at near the corner of Chalkstone Boulevard and Academy Avenue Saturday at 2pm.

“I work two jobs- usually 16 hours a day- just to support my family. Losing my hard-earned money had a huge impact on my family,” Eduardo Gonzalez, a customer of the business and event organizer, said in a press release. ” I am working with other … customers not only to get my money back, but to make sure that no one else goes through what we went through.”

The owner of the business could not be immediately reached for comment.

Susan Beaty, of the Olneyville Neighborhood Association, which is helping to organize the action, said some people have lost as much as $5,000 and others between $1,000 and $2,000. She said it’s hard to quantify the number of victims – which is one of reasons for the protest – but the group has held three informational meetings since learning of the potential crimes about a month ago and each meeting has attracted about 20 people.

Olneyville residents with family in other countries often utilize such businesses as a way to send money to their families back home. Undocumented workers often pay in cash. This makes them an easy target because they may fear going to the police with their problem because it could spark questions about their immigration status. Police have not been contacted yet.

“Many of these customers are Latino immigrant who used the service to send their hard-earned dollars home to support their families in Guatemala, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and elsewhere,” according to the press release.

Progress Report: Helping Homeless Good for Taxpayers, Protect Block Island from Projo, Bain Debate Comes to RI


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Mohegan Bluffs Block Island (Photo by Bob Plain)

It’s actually cheaper for the taxpayer to take care of our least fortunate residents than to let them live in squalor on the streets. A new study from Providence College professor Eric Hirsch shows that the state spends upwards of $60 million a year providing medical services to homeless people and that the state could save millions annually by offering housing to even just 67 of these people. That’s right, if we provided housing to just 67 homeless people the state would save millions of dollars.

It’s actually some pretty basic logic: if you invest in something it will generally take less overall resources to take care of.

But don’t expect such economic logic from the Projo editorial board … instead, today the tackle the (much less) important issue of making it easier for the affluent to fly to Block Island. They write: “Until now, most Rhode Islanders eager to partake of Block Island bliss have had to drive to the ferry terminal at Galilee and, all too often, tried to dodge seasickness, and the occasional inebriate, aboard the ferry.”

Stop the presses. Rhode Islanders have to endure seasickness to get to an island. What a crisis.

They go on to write, “We suspect that those who fly to Block Island will be considerably less overtly colorful than those on the Block Island Ferry. Indeed, that’s one reason the proposal for service to Block Island from Green sounds so appealing to some folks, especially to the affluent who can afford it … even if leveraged-buyout specialists planning to build gigantic summer houses might rival people behaving badly on the ferry as threats to Block Island’s allure.”

In other words, making it easier will likely destroy Block Island’s natural beauty, but that’s worth it if rich folk don’t have to deal with the rest of society when they are making their way out to the island they are destroying. Perhaps we should also invest in special highways for the affluent so they don’t have to see colorful jalopies some of the rest of us drive…

I’d like to invite the Projo editorial writers vacation on Martha’s Vineyard, or perhaps Kennebunkport. Vail and Aspen are lovely, too, as is Malibu. These places are already designed for your pretty snobby logic. But, please, as a former Islander (my first job in journalism was with the Block Island Times) please do not come to the Block. It’s one of the “last great places” and some of us would like it to stay that way.

The number of jobs in Rhode Island continues to decline …. how could this be after we slashes income tax rates for the so-called job creator class??? Oh wait, I forgot … people don’t create jobs just because they have extra money in their pocket, they only do so when they think hiring can make them more money.

The Bain outsourcing debate comes to Rhode Island!! It seems Brendan Doherty doesn’t think politicians should criticize those who give them money … I actually think this is something we should encourage.

I’m completely confused by why WPRI is trying to smear Congressman David Cicilline for supporting Capco Steel, the second (at least?) company to default on an EDC loan. The story says he helped the company secure state and federal funding. Cicilline started a jobs program for low-income residents that Capco took advantage of. It’s unclear from the story how he helped secure state dollars.

Speaking of strange reporting, GoLocal dubs Barry Hinckley as being “hot” because he held a press conference this week. Meanwhile, he raised half as much in donations this quarter than he did last quarter and his campaign is becoming increasingly dependent on personal loans from the candidate. But he held a press conference.

Someone should make a GoLocal-to-journalism dictionary. Exclusive = bi-lined story; top secret = found on the internet, etc…

Good news for the local Democratic party: Bill Fischer.

7 People Gemma Is More Popular Than On Twitter


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Anthony Gemma
Anthony Gemma is running for the Democratic nomination to Congress in Rhode Island’s U.S. Congressional District 1.

I hesitate to spend any more time on Anthony Gemma. I think we know his story; plumbing business, runs for Congress like he’s running for Governor, good breast cancer foundation, bad candidate virtually self-financed, surrounded by a diverse team of folks.

But then I see this from WPRI’s Ted Nesi: Anthony Gemma’s new twitter feed has already collected 13,600 followers in only nine days. Which makes this new Twitter account more popular than Sheldon Whitehouse’s, Jack Reed’s, Jim Langevin’s, and David Cicilline’s; combined. Now, maybe, our congressional delegation just sucks at this whole social media thing. That’s always a possibility.

Or perhaps, if we scratch the surface; we’ll discover that some of these names are just plain fake. In fact, a huge swathe, maybe 90% of @Gemma4Congress’ followers are dummy accounts who have never tweeted once. They just follow a couple of thousand people apiece. They have weird names (not as weird as the Facebook subscribers, but pretty weird). All of them have a basic first name-last name setup, virtually none are companies.

You’d think the Gemma for Congress team would’ve learned their lesson after the last time this was exposed. You’d think they’d take a more organic approach to social media; especially when their candidate faces questions of authenticity about his positions. But clearly, they’ve chosen not to go that route.

So, in honor of this new account:

7 People/Things Anthony Gemma Is More Popular Than on Twitter

Mr. Gemma’s account (@anthonygemma) clocks in at 970,942 followers. That’s our mark.

T. Boone Pickens: The Texan billionaire is a well-known corporate raider, and avid advocate of the natural gas industry (read: fracking). But the 328th richest person in America (the 1% goes and protests about wealth disparity on his lawn) has a piddling 62,288 Twitter followers; making his Twitter-worth equal to about 1/16th of Mr. Gemma’s.

Sweden: The country famously gives out its Twitter handle to a new citizen every week, and was apparently considering handing it over to Stephen Colbert to run. But this Scandinavian nation, with more than 9 million citizens, plus all those people who keep citing it as the premier example of either a) the functioning welfare state, b) socialism, or c) both just can’t hit 70,000 followers.

Joe Biden
Vice President Joe Biden

Joe Biden: The Vice President of the United States’ official twitter account has about a tenth of Mr. Gemma’s followers. Keep in mind, this is Joe Biden. Famously, The Onion has run a series of hilarious stories detailing his life as VP. He’s “gaffe” prone (such as his famous “this is a big fuckin’ deal”). But the incredibly viral VP and his opposition to the White House’s Afghanistan policy isn’t more popular than a former CEO of an advertising company whose business plan is “annoyingly run a bunch of billboards around on flatbed trucks.”

Mad Men: The hit AMC show, which features smoking, drinking, and screwing (not necessarily in that order) with some vague references to advertising squeezed in between has a meager 100,000 followers. I guess nostalgia, universal critical praise, and strong writing for the purposes of entertainment just doesn’t do as well as whatever Mr. Gemma’s strategy is.

Bob Dylan: Star of a Martin Scorcese documentary, a biopic about his life featured an ensemble cast and an ensemble soundtrack; oh, and did I mention? He’s Bob Dylan! The Elder Statesman of Rock, “voice of his generation”, conscientious folksinger, living catalog of American music. But Bob’s crap at this social media thing, he can’t pull in more than 121,686 followers. Maybe 140 characters can’t contain his brilliance.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt: Star of the hit indie film Brick, the thinking-man’s summer blockbuster Inception, the romantic comedy 500 Days of Summer; Tommy from Third Rock from the Sun. People want to be him or be with him. Founder of the “open-collaborative production company” hitRECord, where you get to help create anything you want. But poor ol’ Joseph Gordon-Levitt isn’t much more than 500,000.

Jesus Christ

Jesus Christ: The Son of Man, the Son of God, our Lord and Savior, the Messiah. No fewer than 1.5 billion people believe this man is their personal savior. He’s conducted literal miracles. There are multiple genres of music almost entirely committed to praising his works. He died to save our souls. But his most popular Twitter account (and he has many) can’t pull in but a bit more than half a million followers. C’mon, Mr. Gemma, show Jesus a little love, send a few followers his way. But I guess you can always pull a John Lennon and be absolutely truthful when you say you’re more popular than Jesus. PolitFact has conclusive proof for a “true” rating.


Interestingly, Mr. Gemma only follows Mad Men and Joseph Gordon-Levitt out of these.

Gemma’s Flip-flop Speaks to Broader Problem


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Anthony Gemma

Anthony GemmaAfter taking a lot of heat for refusing to back fellow Democrats in a recent interview with Buddy Cianci, Anthony Gemma has reversed his position and now says he will support Senator Whitehouse and Congressman Langevin in the general election, although he still won’t support Cicilline if he happens to win the primary.

In the interview, Gemma refused to support Sheldon Whitehouse because, in Gemma’s words, Whitehouse “has not done what’s right for me.” Essentially, because Whitehouse is supporting Cicilline, Gemma refused to support him. Edited highlights of the interview can be seen here:

This rejection of his party prompted a flurry of condemnations from fellow Democrats. The former occupant of the seat, Representative Patrick Kennedy called Gemma’s statements “deeply disappointing.” Buckling under the pressure, Gemma backed down. Campaign spokesman Alex Morash announced that Gemma would vote for Whitehouse and support Langevin. However, Gemma has yet to retract his refusal to vote for David Cicilline if he winds up winning the primary.

This episode may be part of a broader problem for Gemma. Even with friendly audiences, he does not interview well. Buddy Cianci is hardly a fan of Cicilline or Whitehouse. In fact, he made fun of their names during the interview. Cianci started the interview very friendly to Gemma, but Gemma was so evasive in handling questioning that by the end Cianci was complaining that getting answers out of him was “like pulling teeth.” The full interview can be viewed here.

I had a similar experience when I interviewed Gemma in June. After refusing to answer a number of relatively simple questions—like whether he supports single-payer healthcare—Gemma wound up saying this about intervening before Pearl Harbor to stop the holocaust:

To put it mildly, this is probably not the best thing to say when you are being interviewed by a Jew, especially one whose great-grandfather narrowly escaped being sent off to the concentration camps well before Pearl Harbor. To be fair to Gemma, who has not apologized to Rhode Island’s Jewish community for his comments, I am willing to believe that he is not actually anti-semitic. Instead, he may just be a weak interviewer who winds up saying things he later regrets.

Chris Herren Talks About Substance Abuse Saturday


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Chris Herren in his Celtics playing days. (Photo from the Boston Herald)

Former NBA player, Chris Herron, will be the guest speaker this Saturday (7/21) as Rhode Island Sports Heroes holds their annual Summer Outing Event at Camp Westwood in Coventry from 9 am-3:30 pm.

More than 160 kids from various nonprofit groups throughout the state, including Big Sisters/Big Brothers, Seven Hills, Ocean Tides, Youth Rap, Adoption RI, Child and Family Services, Gateway Healthcare, Perspectives, and Davey Lopes, Sackett Street, have been invited to enjoy an old-fashioned fun day, participating in camp activities, canoeing, swimming and volleyball.

Herron, the subject of the ESPN documentary, “Unguarded,” will speak about his ordeals with substance abuse and educate the attendees on the consequences of drug use.

An all volunteer organization, RISH caters to groups statewide, striving to enrich the lives of “at risk” youth through their” involvement in all types of sports.The group uses the philosophy of “Spectate, Educate and Participate,” to engage youth in life enhancing positive experiences.

The event is free to all pre-registered RISH kids and lunch will be provided. To register, call Tom Bauman at Rhode Island Sports Heroes, 401—523-0786 or email: tbauman@risportsheroes.org

RISH is a 501C3 organization established in 2004 that services hundreds of local youths every year.

Please check out our promotional video here .

And our website at www.risportsheroes.org


Progress Report: Alex and Ani Invest in Local Agriculture


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A great blue heron flies over Greenwich Cove. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Sure Rhode Island has its share of business failures, but it’s also got some success stories – none bigger in recent memory than Alex and Ani, the Cranston-based jewelry company that bought Sakonnet Vineyards. The company employs almost 300 people, almost as many jobs as 38 Studios was supposed to bring to the Ocean State. We’re impressed that the company chose local agriculture as part of its expansion plans as it shows genuine business acumen. Good luck!

Speaking of local businesses, Senator Jim Sheehan raises an important point in a GoLocal article about the EDC and Capco: “This may or may not have been a bad decision by EDC, but, the lack of transparency about Capco Steel’s default makes one question the wisdom of the initial decision.”

Notice the map Ted Nesi posts this morning showing which states get more federal dollars than they send to Washington … at a quick glance it looks as if the more conservative the state, the more money they get from Washington. Ironic, or just plain dumb? We report, you decide…

Welcome to Rhode Island, Craig Shwalb, you’ve got big shoes to fill … Here’s hoping Paul left you the referee uniform, you might just need it!

Congrats to progressive Portsmouth blogger John McDaid, who just got his press credentials to cover the Democratic National Convention in September … we look forward to your reports!

Not so fast, Republicans, you can’t have it both ways … either government spending creates jobs or it doesn’t.

 

 

Union Grievance Filed Against NK Outsource Co.


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Justice for Janitors

The SEIU filed a grievance against the private sector custodial business hoping to ink a deal with the North Kingstown School Committee. The union says the company violated their New England-wide contract when it failed to apprise them of the deal it entered with the school district.

According to the grievance, GSA, the outsource company, had a previous contract with the SEIU that stipulated the company is “required to notify SEIU Local 615 ‘as soon as (your company) receives notice that it has been awarded a new job location.'”

“Failure to do this can result in a misapplication of contract standards which may subject your company to monetary damages and penalties,” read the grievance.

While a deal has yet to be signed between North Kingstown and GSA, the company is already doing business in the local schools.

Rachel Miller, of the SEIU 615, said the contract requires GSA to negotiate a contract with the custodians who will have the option of organizing under the SEIU. The NK school custodians are currently represented by the NEA.

“The starting point for negotiations would be no cuts,” she said. “It is also my understanding that they misled- at least by omission- the North Kingstown school committee, never mentioning that they are parties to the agreement with Local 615.”

A provision in the contract, she said, stipulates  that working conditions and wages cannot be reduced.

In other words, the company might not be able to negotiate any better deal with the custodians than did the School Committee. In fact, the new union might have more negotiating power because it would have greater leeway to strike given that it might not be bound by the same state labor laws the current union is.

Meanwhile, Rhode Island custodians are holding a 24-hour strike at TF Green Airport in solidarity with Houston area janitors who are holding out in hopes of winning a modest pay increase.

“Just like here in Rhode Island, Houston janitors clean the offices of some of the richest corporations in the world yet they struggle to make ends meet,” according to a press release about the strike. “Despite record profits and inflated CEO pay, janitors who clean Houston’s office buildings are paid just $9,000 a year. When janitors refused to accept this offer, they were met with harassment and intimidation by their employers.”

North Kingstown school custodians are standing in solidarity with the strikers at the airport and will a representative will be speaking with the media there at 11 am.


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