Sen. Reed Calls For Federal Minimum Wage Increase


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Sen. Jack Reed

Sen. Jack Reed are Tom Harkin of Iowa are sponsoring legislation to raise the federal minimum wage $10.10 in 2015.

“Raising the minimum wage is vital because too many people have been left out of the economic recovery,” Reed said in a press release. “The stagnation of earnings in the face of soaring prices for gasoline, home heating, and health care is squeezing the middle-class.”

The federal minimum wage is $7.25 and Reed and Harkin’s proposal calls for phasing the increase in by $.95 per year.

His press release on the legislation references a report that RI Future reported on January 2. It shows the majority of companies that pay minimum wage are large corporations that have fully recovered from the economic crash.

According to the report, “the majority of America’s lowest-paid workers are employed by large corporations, not small businesses, and that most of the largest low-wage employers have recovered from the recession and are in a strong financial position.”

Reed said in the press release, “Strong productivity has translated into higher profits for companies, but not more take-home pay for employees.”

Rhode Island’s minimum wage is $7.75 and was increased $.35 in January 1.

Cicilline On Sequester


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Congressman David Cicilline was on MSNBC yesterday and spoke about the sequester’s effect on the nation’s economy and politics in the nation’s capitol.

“I think everyone understands this isn’t the way to do budget cuts,” he said.

Watch the whole thing here:

RIPR has more.

Rhode Island Compost Conference Rescheduled


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The 2013 RI Compost Conference and Trade show  was postponed due to Winter Storm Nemo and has now been rescheduled.  It wlill take place on Friday March 22 at the Wildcat Center on Johnson & Wales Universitiey’s Harborside campus in Providence beginning at 8:30 AM.  Cost is $25.00 including a lunch prepared by Johnson & Wales (think culinary school)  The conference is organized by the Environment Council of Rhode Island’s Compost Initiative in partnership with many people in the Compost Industry.
The conference program is nearly unchanged from the original lineup , thereby allowing us to use the original program http://www.environmentcouncilri.org/sites/default/files/2013%20Compost%20Program.pdf    The changes will be a better space, Delany Gym for the trade show and Michael Bradlee replacing Matt Gennuso in one of the workships.  All of the exhibitors are coming and we are looking to add a few more.  If you wish to exhibit please email the Environment Council
Most of the people originally scheduled to come will make it if we do not have another blizzard, but there are 20 open seats.  Please email the Environment Council of Rhode Island  (environmentcouncil@earthlink.net)  to reserve a seat.  They wil go fast.

What Is Wage Theft?


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I’ve been the victim of wage theft at least twice in my career.

In the winter of 2001, I was flat broke hitch-hiking through Big Sur when I picked up some day labor with a local carpenter. After a long hard day of lugging plywood up a ladder and swinging a hammer on a rooftop high above the Pacific Ocean, the contractor paid me some – but not all – of what we had agreed to. The balance he was supposed to give me the next day, and I never saw him again.

Then, in 2005, I was working for a newspaper in Oregon when my editor asked us reporters to “manage” our weekly schedules in a way that equals about 40 hours a week, but to fill out our time cards as if we worked 8-hour days (even though as a practical matter we all worked more than 8 hours a day, everyday!).

If you’re reading this post, chances are you have never even considered not getting paid for your work. But chances are your boss has asked you to work for free, or to violate labor laws. Both are wage theft.

And both varieties go extremely unreported. The kind my editor did never gets reported because we’ve all been trained to believe that the way to advance a career is to let powerful people take advantage of you. The other kind – where, for example, the guy who cuts your grass will simply not get paid because he is an undocumented worker and his boss knows he has little recourse – that rarely gets reported either.

But according to Fuerza Laboral, a grassroots group that organizes and advocates for exploited workers, almost $3 million in stolen wages has been reported in Rhode Island since 2002.

Wage theft is a rampant problem amongst working people in Rhode Island. According to the DLT, $2,967,230 was stolen from working people in RI between 2002 and 2011. Immigrant and homeless workers are particularly at risk for having their labor exploited in this way.

Since many cases go unreported, the amount of wages stolen reported by the Rhode Island DLT is much lower than what is actually experienced by the working people of Rhode Island.

Just between the 32 participants in a study done by Fuerza Laboral, they reported at least $170,500 owed to them in unpaid wages, accumulated over the past 5 years.

Fuerza Laboral is holding a press event at the State House today at 3:30 to unveil its new report on wage theft in Rhode Island called, “Shortchanged: A Study of unpaid wages in Rhode Island.”

Note: The people who tend to get their wages stolen in this way don’t tend to vote, so politicians don’t tend to care about this issue.

Teny Oded Gross’ Unique Look At Gun Violence


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Teny Oded Gross at the State House. (Photos by Ryan T. Conaty – for more, check out his )

Something nefarious happened last week at the State House in regards to reforming the state’s gun control laws, and it wasn’t that an NRA lobbyist came to push his conservative agenda. It’s that Teny Oded Gross was the only member of the public to ask him to take it elsewhere.

‘It’s a deceitful organization,” Oded Gross told me later. “The NRA knows very well that panic and fear is good for business. If you have more deaths, you have more people buying guns.”

Oded Gross is not your typical advocate for greater gun control legislation.

For one, he’s a former Israeli Army sergeant. “I come to liberalism from seeing carnage,” he told me. And for another, he is the executive director of the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, an organization that works with inner city gang members. “I saw and see a lot of violence,” he added.

Teny Oded Gross at the State House. (Photos by Ryan T. Conaty – for more, check out his )

“We respond to the hospital when someone gets shot,” Oded Gross said. “I work with the people who are the shooters.”

The Institute, he said, responded to more than 150 instances of gun violence last year, and they were involved with all 17 homicides in Rhode Island.

He doesn’t buy the NRA talking point that gun control measures will only affect the legal gun owners. He says many guns get to the streets through otherwise legal channels.

“People who are denying gun availability leads to violence are either disillusion or straight liars,” he said. “The NRA has made it so easy to get them. We need to have a better ability to track down and monitor guns. But for some people this is contentious.

“We are reaching out to the people who invited the NRA. If you don’t want more gun control, come and work with us. Roll up your sleeves and help us reduce the violence.”

Teny Oded Gross sounds off to State House reporters. (Photos by Ryan T. Conaty – for more, check out his )