Valicenti New WPRO Host, Gobeil Has Been Fired


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Gene Valicenti

The WPRO Morning News Show will have a new face in the near future. Gene Valicenti, a news anchor with NBC 10, is taking over as the host, sources confirmed, while Andrew Gobeil was fired earlier today and Tara Granahan was reassigned off the air. She will become the assistant program director who will work on special projects.

“I’m going to direct you to program manager Craig Schwalb for any comment on my future with the station,” said Valicenti, when contacted on Thursday night.

Valicenti has long hosted a Saturday afternoon radio show on WPRO, and he has been with NBC 10 since 1992. He declined to comment on whether he would be leaving the TV station, or working there at night and at WPRO in the morning. He will become the highest paid on air personality at WPRO, earning more than Buddy Cianci.

Gobeil, also reached Thursday evening, declined to comment. He has worked at WPRO for about a year-and-a-half. Prior to that, he worked for ABC6.

Rumors have circulated for months that WPRO wanted to replace Gobeil with Valicenti, but no one would fault Gobeil for not seeing the move coming after the work week he recently put in.

He was asked to work Christmas day and only one day before being fired was asked to fill in for John DePetro, who didn’t show up for work on Wednesday. DePetro thought he had the day off, though it wasn’t marked on management’s calendar. Schwalb asked Gobeil to fill in for DePetro Wednesday morning, and then fired him the next day.

53 Legislators Co-Sponsor Marriage Equality Bills


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Rep. Art Handy and Senator Donna Nesselbush introduced bills today that would legalize marriage equality in Rhode Island.

53 of Rhode Island’s 113 legislators co-sponsored the bills; 42 from the 75 member House and 11 from the 38-member Senate. Sen. Chris Ottiano is the only Republican to co-sponsor the legislation in either chamber. Others, such as Sen. Dawson Hodgson, have said they would support the bill if asked to vote on it, but did not sign on as a co-sponsor.

Here’s a list of the legislators in both chambers who are co-sponsoring the bills…

In the House:

  • Rep. Arthur Handy (D-Dist. 18, Cranston)
  • House Speaker Gordon D. Fox (D-Dist. 4, Providence)
  • Rep. Grace Diaz (D-Dist. 11, Providence)
  • Rep. Elaine A. Coderre (D-Dist. 60, Pawtucket)
  • House Majority Leader Nicholas Mattiello (D-Dist. 15, Cranston)
  • Rep. Edith H. Ajello (D-Dist. 1, Providence)
  • Rep. Frank G. Ferri (D-Dist. 22, Warwick)
  • Rep. J. Patrick O’Neill (D-Dist. 59, Pawtucket)
  • Rep. Deborah Ruggiero (D-Dist. 74, Jamestown, Middletown)
  • Rep. Anastasia P. Williams (D-Dist. 9, Providence)
  • Rep. Larry Valencia (D-Dist. 39, Richmond, Exeter, Hopkinton)
  • Rep. Thomas Palangio (D-Dist. 3, Providence)
  • Rep. Teresa Tanzi (D-Dist. 34, South Kingstown, Narragansett)
  • Rep. Eileen S. Naughton (Dist. 21, Warwick)
  • Rep. David A. Bennett (D-Dist. 20, Warwick, Cranston)
  • Rep. Karen MacBeth (D-Dist. 52, Cumberland)
  • Rep. John G. Edwards (D-Dist. 70, Tiverton, Portsmouth)
  • Rep. William O’Brien (D-Dist. 54, North Providence)
  • Rep. Marvin L. Abney (D-Dist. 73, Newport, Middletown)
  • Rep. Christopher R. Blazejewski (D-Dist. 2, Providence)
  • Rep. Lisa P. Tomasso (D-Dist. 29, Coventry, West Greenwich)
  • Rep. Agostinho F. Silva (D-Dist. 56, Central Falls)
  • Rep. Donna M. Walsh (D-Dist. 36, Charlestown, New Shoreham, South Kingstown, Westerly)
  • Rep. Katherine Kazarian (D-Dist. 63, East Providence)
  • Rep. Mia Ackerman (D-Dist. 45, Cumberland, Lincoln)
  • Rep. Linda Finn (D-Dist. 72, Middletown, Portsmouth)
  • Rep. Cale P. Keable (D-Dist. 47, Burrillville, Glocester)
  • Rep. Gregg M. Amore (D-Dist. 65, East Providence)
  • Rep. Scott A. Slater (D-Dist. 10, Providence)
  • Rep. Dennis M. Canario (D-Dist. 71, Little Compton, Portsmouth, Tiverton)
  • Rep. Peter F. Martin (D-Dist. 75, Newport)
  • Rep. Scott J. Guthrie (D-Dist. 28, Coventry)
  • Rep. Joy Hearn (D-Dist. 66, Barrington, East Providence)
  • Rep. Jeremiah T. O’Grady (D-Dist. 46, Lincoln, Pawtucket)
  • Rep. Maria E. Cimini (D-Dist. 7, Providence)
  • Rep. Kenneth A. Marshall (D-Dist. 68, Bristol, Warren)
  • Rep. Robert E. Craven Sr. (D-Dist. 32, North Kingstown)
  • Rep. Donald J. Lally Jr. (D-Dist. 33, South Kingstown, Narragansett)
  • Rep. Joseph S. Almeida (D-Dist. 12, Providence
  • Rep. Mary Duffy Messier (D-Dist. 62, Pawtucket)
  • Rep. K. Joseph Shekarchi (D-Dist. 23, Warwick)
  • Rep. William San Bento Jr. (D-Dist. 58, Pawtucket)

And in the Senate:

  • Sen. Donna M. Nesselbush (D-Dist. 15, Pawtucket)
  • Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski (D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown, New Shoreham)
  • Sen. Joshua Miller (D-Dist. 28, Cranston, Providence)
  • Sen. Juan M. Pichardo (D-Dist. 2, Providence)
  • Sen. Christopher Scott Ottiano (R-Dist. 11, Portsmouth, Bristol)
  • Sen. Erin P. Lynch (D-Dist. 31, Warwick)
  • Sen. Gayle Goldin (D-Dist. 3, Providence)
  • Sen. Catherine Cool Rumsey (D-Dist. 34, Exeter, Charlestown, Hopkinton, Richmond, West Greenwich)
  • Sen. Adam J. Satchell (D-Dist. 9, West Warwick)
  • Sen. Ryan W. Pearson (D-Dist. 19, Cumberland, Lincoln)
  • Sen. Stephen R. Archambault (D-Dist. 22, Smithfield, Johnston, North Providence)

Community Inequality Is Biggest Economic Obstacle in RI


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Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien pleads with the members of the Senate Finance Committee to pass legislation that would have helped struggling cities in Rhode Island as Gov. Chafee looks on. (Photo by Bob Plain)

The biggest problem affecting Rhode Island’s economy is not high taxes, pension benefits or special interests. Not even close. It’s the income inequality that exists between the affluent suburbs and the depressed urban areas.

An extremely important post in Pacific Standard today highlights this, in part, by pointing out that while Providence is closing schools and libraries Barrington is increasing funding for both.

In Providence, where I live, the median household income is about $37,000. In Barrington, it is more than $90,000. Housing values mirror the money residents have at their disposal, and as a result Barrington can afford to invest heavily in all sorts of programs that benefit residents and the local (and national) economy. Providence, on the other hand, is facing a dire revenue shortfall and has taken drastic measures to save money, providing only basic services to those in need.

But wealthy or poor, people always seem to think that governments serving poor populations are somehow screwing up; few recognize that communities that are poor or have significant economic inequality (like Providence) are simply being screwed.

I made a similar sort of comparison last year in noting that East Greenwich, the other educationally superior affluent suburb, is considering getting iPads for all of its high school students while in Central Falls, Woonsocket and Pawtucket many students are sharing textbooks.

Much of this inequality is due to Rhode Island’s over-reliance on regressive property taxes and years of using a failed education funding formula. But the problem was inextricably exacerbated when former Gov. Don Carcieri cut state aid to cities and towns in his 2008 budget proposal. It’s literally bankrupting the state’s most struggling communities.

Sam Bell did an excellent seven-part series that dealt a lot with this dynamic in December, and Tom Sgouros has frequently touched upon this issue in RI Future posts. Last year, Libby Kimzey did a public presentation about it. Even RIPEC alluded to it in a report released in April:

Policy choices made by the state – specifically without accompanying mandate relief, and a provision for increasing state intervention for fiscally-stressed communities – increased the responsibility of municipalities to make changes to their fiscal structure. In some cases, municipalities were able to effectively balance their budgets despite cuts to local aid. In other cases, however, municipalities made policy decisions to bridge budgetary gaps that did not result in long-term structural change.

Gov. Chafee is one of the few Rhode Island politicians to pay much attention to this systemic failure. In March, he told me, “It’s no wonder Providence is in trouble, it’s no wonder Pawtucket is having a trouble making payroll, it’s no wonder Central Falls went into bankruptcy. They just couldn’t sustain those kinds of cuts. There is no property tax base to transfer those kinds of cuts onto.”

Last year, he wanted to address the issue by giving struggling cities exemptions from some state mandates. This year, I suspect he will try to affect this problem in a different, more comprehensive manner.

Additionally, it seems to me that state legislators from urban areas could easily form a pretty powerful caucus to advocate for their shared self interest, which in this case amounts to a little less inequality.

Regressive Taxes Now Defines Progressive Victory


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President Obama makes his case for re-election at DNC. (Photo by John McDaid)

Progressives, liberals and Democrats have been getting their political butts kicked for so long that marginal defeats are starting to feel like victories. Such can certainly be said about Obama’s compromise on tax policy.

The president campaigned on reversing tax breaks on those who make more than $250,000 a year. Instead he settled for increases on those who make more than $450,000 and less than $113,000 (yeah, that’s who pays payroll taxes).

According to the New York Times, those who earn between $450,000 and $1 million will see an average income tax increase of about $6,700. Those who earn less than $50,000 will see an increase of about $1,000 in payroll taxes.

While taxes went up on 77 percent of Americans, the roughly 1 percent who makes between $250,000 and a half million were not asked to sacrifice to help the country avoid the fiscal cliff.

I spoke with someone in the enviable position yesterday. It didn’t really occur to them that the fiscal cliff deal had broken in their financial favor. That’s because it won’t have any impact on their spending; when one clears a cool quarter million every year, financial planning about how large you want to live in retirement compared to how much you want to leave to your kids to spend – not about how much or little you will participate in economic transactions.

I’d be willing to bet that the vast majority of Rhode Islanders who were spared a tax increase this week will not notice it one way or another. They will go on vacation, or out to dinner, or renovate their kitchens, or start a small business with little to no regard for what happened – or didn’t happen – in Washington D.C, just like the person with whom I spoke yesterday. I’d also be willing to bet that the vast majority of Rhode Islanders who earn more than $250,000 don’t objected to paying higher taxes, as is also the case with the person I spoke with yesterday.

Renewable Energy, Climate Change Drive R.I. Policy


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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)

Renewable energy isn’t just wind turbines and solar panels. There also is loads of politics, planning, economics and science involved with any green power project. The state Office of Energy Resources (OER), under the guidance of director Marion Gold and Office of Administration director Richard Licht, intends to harmonize these sometime discordant forces.

The Renewable Energy Coordinating Board (RECB) recently addressed several of these issues:

Offshore wind. Leases for the offshore wind farms proposed for 164,750 acres off the Rhode Island and Masachusett coast is unexpectedly subject to a live bidding process. This bidding makes it easier for developers to surpass local construction jobs, as well as the use of the wind energy. This new multi-factor bidding format allows developers with greater resources to build and assemble the turbines in another state or country. The green electricity might also bypass Rhode Island if a larger pool of developers bid for the power-purchase agreement.

“It’s not a good situation,” Licht said. He said he met with Senators Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and Jack Reed, D-R.I., to discuss the unfavorable lease-auction agreement. He also plans to address the issue during a public seminar in Narragansett on Jan. 15.

Less gas. Natural gas supplies 98 percent of Rhode island’s electricity supply. The state goal for renewable energy aims for 16 percent renewable electricity by 2019. “How do we address the fact that we have a lot of natural gas but we know that natural gas is not the be-all and end-all,” Gold said. “We don’t want to be 100 percent reliant on natural gas.”

A RECB subcommittee is reviewing the existing legislation and setting targets for renewable energy and emissions. A report is expected in March.

“We have to look at this in an integrated way,” Licht said. “Recognizing that we do have the concern for economic development and the cost of energy in the short term, but there are long-term costs to natural gas.”

Renewable Energy Certificates. REC prices have soared during the past year. RECs are purchased by electricity generators in order to meet annual renewable energy production goals. Since December 2011 REC prices have jumped from a range of $15-$30 to $64. Each REC represents 1 megawatt-hour of electricity generated by a renewable energy source.

Nicholas Ucci, a policy analysts for the state Public Utilities Commission (PUC), attributes the increase on the low price of natural gas. Low prices have reduced production of more expensive biomass power, which burn landfill gas, clean wood and agricultural waste. Natural gas, Ucci said, “pushed these other resources off the margin in the energy market.”

Other factors in the price increase include fewer RECs available for purchase from hydro and wind power produced in other states; increased demand from state renewable energy mandates; fewer new renewable power sources due to the economic slowdown; and uncertainty about expiring federal tax credits.

Some at the meeting asked if moratoriums and public opposition to wind energy have also slowed development.

“Everything hinges on Washington,” Ucci said. “If they can get their act together. If they don’t pass or extend the production tax credit — it already has a chilling effect on development. I’m really not sure where that industry goes without that, outside of significant state-level subsidies, which the industry is already receiving.“

Higher REC prices have increased funds for the state’s Renewable Energy Fund (REF), which funds local green energy projects. Traditional energy producers have bought less-expensive alternative compliance payments instead of RECs. These payments added $4.5 million to the REF in 2012.

Ucci said the PUC has a strong relationships with similar entities in the Northeast. The groups are collaborating on improving their energy buying power, enhancing power transmission and finding suitable locations for new renewable energy projects. Maine, which has paused new wind projects, offers the best locations for new wind turbines.

Climate change. Grover Fugate, director of the state Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC), reminded the committee that renewable energy is needed to temper the impact of climate change. Recent findings from Hurricane Sandy revealed that offshore storm waves reached 47 feet in height, when waves of a maximum of 30 feet were predicted.

“Climate Change is something that’s going to come in play more and more in this whole arena,” Fugate said. “And I think it’s going to force (development of) a lot more renewable energy.”

By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI News

ecoRI News is a Providence-based nonprofit journalistic initiative devoted to educating readers about the causes, consequences and solutions to local environmental issues and problems.