Doherty Was For Paul Ryan Before He Was Against Him


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Brendan Doherty praising Paul Ryan

After pretty much declaring himself president of the local chapter of the Paul Ryan fan club, conservative congressional candidate Brendan Doherty is now trying to distance himself from Ryan’s plan to slash medical benefits for retirees. Democrats don’t buy it, though.

“Paul Ryan may not be a household name to everyone in Rhode Island, but if you’re a senior citizen who relies on Medicare, you should know who he is and what he stands for, because these are the types of Republicans Brendan will be standing with and voting with, if elected to Congress,” said Bill Fischer, a spokesperson for the state Democratic Party in an email today. “Mr. Doherty’s statements on Monday supporting Medicare are simply not credible after he clearly supported Congressman Ryan at a tea party gathering in May.”

In May, Doherty said told an East Bay Tea Party group the opposite: “I had a great opportunity to meet with Paul Ryan about a month ago and that’s his position and he’s digging his feet in and I applaud him for that and I support him.”

Here’s the video:

Doherty was talking about Ryan’s budget proposal, which would indeed slash Medicare benefits. So which is it Brendan? Do you stand with Rhode Island retirees and the elderly or do you stand with Paul Ryan.

This is how Washington – and politics in general for that matter – works. Whatever Brendan Doherty might say to you while he’s on the stump, you can bet he’ll be voting in lock step with the most conservative Beltway Republicans in the country just as sure as his political mentor is former governor Don Carcieri.

Maura Kelly: Why I’m Running for State Senate


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Maura Kelly

In order for our community to thrive, we must invest in the working families who are its core. Our leaders in the State House have forgotten that we are strongest when we empower all people – not just the privileged and connected. This is why I am running to represent District 5 (Armory, Olneyville, Federal Hill, Mount Pleasant, and Elmhurst) in the Rhode Island State Senate.I have worked as a community organizer to empower workers, immigrants and small businesses throughout my professional career.

I have experienced the power of organized people in action while advocating for parent voice in public schools, access to English Language classes for immigrants, and fair housing policies that project families targeted by predatory lenders and unscrupulous banks.

I love this city. The creativity, diversity and underdog spirit of the state make it a wonderful place to live and work. Despite these tremendous qualities, it is all too evident to me that the “Providence Renaissance” has left too many members of our community behind. We have not experienced the economic or educational renaissance that we need to create well-paying jobs in the 21stcentury.

As I campaign across the West Side of Providence, I have met incredible people who are worried about what the future holds and are afraid that their leaders have lost touch with the communities that entrusted them with elected office. I have spoken with recent immigrant families who are struggling to pay the bills, small business owners who feel crushed by the inflated property tax burden, and parents worried that our schools are not providing their children with the same skills and opportunities as those in the wealthier suburbs. At the same time, we all read about the constant barrage of scandals and insider deals at the State House – from 38 Studios to the revolving door between the General Assembly and the judicial system. Too many legislators have forgotten who they were elected to serve.

As a State Senator, I will remind my colleagues that the only path back to prosperity is through investment in the working people of our state. I will fight to make our tax system more progressive, to reward small businesses who put Rhode Islanders back to work and to ensure that our schools are dynamic enough to serve students with diverse language backgrounds, family situations and learning styles. I will support the right to unionize and will represent the unheard voices of working women and their families. I will support making the DREAM Act state law and will oppose misguided policies like e-verify that divide our community. I will also staunchly support marriage equality and a woman’s right to make her own health decisions – two fundamental rights opposed by many at the State House, including my opponent.
From the independent dissidents who founded Providence, to the generations of Irish, Italian, Portuguese, African and Latino immigrants who built Rhode Island, our state has always been at its greatest when it embraced the exceptional strength of all of our community members. We need leaders who remember this lesson. We need leaders who will work to ensure that all Rhode Islanders have the opportunity to thrive; we need new energy, new ideas, and legislators who aren’t afraid to challenge the status quo. We need accountable, open, honest, and transparent government. Our families deserve better opportunities and we must come together to demand them.
Visit: maurakelly.com, call (401) 654-1304, or visit http://www.facebook.com/maurakellyforRI to join this movement for change!

Progress Report: WPRO Ignores Environment; Hinckley Video Gone; Highest Paid CEO’s; RIP Gore Vidal


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Camp Cronin in Narragansett, just southwest of the Point Judith Lighthouse. (Photo by Bob Plain)

When I worked at WPRO, I remember everyone thinking I was some sort of freak because I would take an afternoon break to hang out on Hundred Acre Cove, the brackish tidal marsh behind the Salty Shrine on Wamponoag Trail while I thought everyone else were the freaks for not recognizing the value in this natural habitat we had right in our backyards. Similarly, I was perplexed yesterday listening to my good buddies and right wing ideologues Matt Allen and Dan Yorke perplexed as to why Barrington would consider banning plastic bags.

You guys! How can you possibly not realize the benefit of protecting our environment from pollution??? Those plastic bags are destroying Narragansett Bay … please, please, please go hang out on Hundred Acre Cove – just up stream from Barrington, by the way – before you again proclaim plastic bags more important that our natural world again.

A video showing Senate candidate Barry Hinckley saying more business people should use the political process for their own personal purposes is mysteriously gone from Youtube. Hinckley’s campaign said it has no idea what happened to the video … must be that Hudson Hinckley (remember when his video was the worst thing this campaign had to worry about?) made the call to have it pulled.

Hard not to love the way the “GoLocal Business Team” led into its story this morning on the highest paid Rhode Island CEO’s: “With the Presidential campaign being defined by a political battle over how much the 1% should pay in taxes, the AFL-CIO is weighing in with its own insights into how much corporate CEOs are paid.” But we liked the story better when we wrote it way back in April.

Speaking of taxing the rich, a new study shows that by and large Americans not only think taxing the rich is fair but also economically advantageous.

First Sakonnet Vineyards and now the Wilson’s building in Wickford? Soon enough Alex and Ani will own this entire state.

Rest in peace, Gore Vidal, the self-proclaimed populist died last night. Highly quotable, he once famously pointed out the future of politics was less substantive candidates and more like Ronny Reagan: “As the age of television progresses the Reagans will be the rule, not the exception. To be perfect for television is all a President has to be these days.” More great Gore Vidal quotes here.

RI Teaching Fellows Program Exposed?


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Just saw thisfrom Diane Ravitch’s blog and wanted to post. It’s an email sent to Ravitch from a former participant in the RI Teaching Fellows Program. And it does not paint a pretty picture of the organization. Kudos to Theresa Laperche, the writer, for opening up about her experiences.

There has been so much debate about educational reform and about Michele Rhee and her Students First organization. I am compelled to describe my experience this past June with the Rhode Island Teaching Fellows Program, a Rhee brainchild. The Teaching Fellows work along the same lines of The New Teacher Project but the Teaching Fellows is an alternative route to teacher certification. The premise is to attract people from the public sector and after 5 weeks of training they will be employed as first year’s teachers in high needs urban schools. The catch phrase is “Let’s close the achievement gap” and get your teaching certification in an alternative route program-well yes I know all about the achievement gap and only starting to realize all the components at work and I decided to re-enter school to become a teacher and this program sounded perfect. I could not have been more wrong!   We start week one learning this militant type tactics of behavioral control-such as “Do it again” “Do it now” and “Slant” to name just a few-we practice this over and over again in a highly structured environment where our every move is scheduled and monitored. We are told where to sit, when to stand and when to speak-they occasionally mix up the tables I believe so friendships are not formed and “talk” starts.  We have lunch in groups with our coaches. We are actually scheduled to meet with our coaches for “debriefing” where we are told not to talk and only answer with yes and no. We watch videos of children in which these tactics are employed in other States. Students are drilled on how to line up, hands by side, mouths closed-told which way to turn and what muscle to move next. They are instructed like they are in the military or prison. All the kids in the video are of course black-these behavioral control tactics are of course not utilized in white schools. A strict agenda is posted in the morning requiring us to adhere to it without question. We are at this point working 16 hours a day and not thinking clearly at all. We are then told to start working on lesson plans that we will implement in the field experience component in the evening and e-mail them to our coach for a review. This lesson planning has to be evidently self-taught as I have taken no education courses, which is one of the requirements of the program. The second week of the program we begin the field experience component is a 4 week 2.5 hour class consisting of students requiring summer school to recover credits. These are the very students we are supposed be so concerned about with the achievement gap. After 1 week of training we are individually thrown in front of this class of 22, still being monitored by training team members. I will argue that I am NOT an effective teacher after one week of training and these kids WILL suffer because of it. By the third day, 6 of my students were not in class and I believe they will ultimately drop out and as an inexperienced RI Teaching Fellow I am completely responsible; it is reprehensible what we are doing to these kids. At the end of this 5 week period we are then placed in an urban school where we are allowed to teach under an emergency teaching certification. At this point we are required to join the TNTP academy where throughout out the year we attend classes and workshops to get our own teaching certification after one year. So the premise is that to qualify for the $5500 educational grant through AmeriCorps you must work in a high need urban school in Rhode Island, what is called the urban4-Providence, Pawtucket, Woonsocket, and Central Falls. These are exactly the only districts we are allowed to apply to. We are also enrolled in AmeriCorps and will receive our educational grant of $5500 after one year of service. The cost of this TNTP academy is $6ooo-hmmm…so I will argue that the Teaching Fellows Program doesn’t care one bit about closing the achievement gap but in fact victimizes our low income minority students to achieve their own agenda which is enrollment in the TNTP academy and to fill their own pockets with outlandish salaries. . I saw advertisements on employment agencies sites for jobs within the Teaching Fellows organization paying anywhere between $60-and $78,000.00 per year-a lot of income to certify perhaps 20 teachers a year in the State of Rhode Island and my guess is less than half of those will stay in the high needs urban public schools. When I began the program there where 28 fellows; I was the fourth to drop out by the eighth day. I believe this organization is syphoning money from public education grants to serve their own purposes and the students that are being harmed are the low income black and brown students in these high needs urban schools. Michelle Rhee and this organization need to be stopped. I have decided to continue on and obtain my M.A.T. and become an effective teacher the proper way in two years and not destroy the lives of unsuspecting students on my way. I am continually looking for ways to expose this organization for what it is and hope it’s days are numbered before any more harm is done to these students. –Theresa Laperche