East Side Community Wants Its Librarian Back

Community action continues as East Side residents demand answers from the Providence Community Libraries (PCL) over the unceremonious and unexplained firing of popular librarian Tom O’Donnell from the Rochambeau Library in February. Picketing has been scheduled for every day the library is open, (the winter storm due later tonight and tomorrow not withstanding) and O’Donnell has scheduled a hearing with the library’s administrative board for Monday evening.

There are reports that representatives from the office of Mayor Taveras will be in attendance at the meeting, so the phone calls to City Hall are having an effect to be sure. Still, at least two PCL board members have issued statements in support of executive director Laura Marlane’s decision to terminate O’Donnell’s employment, so an uphill battle is expected.

Meanwhile, media attention to the issue continues to grow. Bob Kerr, in his ProJo piece suggests that O’Donnell’s dismissal is the result of “small rivalries” within the PCL. Kerr also gets to the heart of the issue: the secrecy and lack of openness in the way the PCL conducts its business.

It does seem strange that in one of the most open and welcoming places in any community — a place where discussion is encouraged and ideas are the in-house currency — a good man’s dismissal should be shrouded in secrecy.

Ryder Winham, who organized the Friends of Tom O’Donnell Facebook page and chaired Monday night’s meeting of the group sees the situation similarly. In his opinion, it’s not about why Tom O’Donnell was fired, it’s about the PCL conducting its business shrouded in secrecy and with unknown agendas. Such secrecy is anathema to an open society and breeds unfounded rumor and speculation.

Picketing continues today from noon to 2pm and then from 4pm to 6pm. The mayor’s office can be contacted at (401) 421-2489. Also, there is an online petition in support of Tom O’Donnell and greater openness of the PCL board that can be access at CitizenSpeak.

Supreme Court Declines To Hear My RNC Civil Suit


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Jared Paul, at an Occupy Providence event in June. (Photo by Bob Plain)

I was arrested while walking through a park at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota four years ago.  Along with many other alarmed citizens, I was charged with Felony Riot and taken to Ramsey County Jail.  With the support of Minneapolis Hip Hop group Atmosphere and the Rhode Island music label Strange Famous Records, I was bonded out of jail and then hired a private attorney.

We beat the case handily and all charges were dropped.

Police arrested over 800 people in four days at the RNC 2008.  Many of us believed this was not only unlawful but an intentional effort to suppress citizen voices of dissent at the convention.  So we filed a civil suit and took the City to Federal Court for violating our First and Fourth Amendment Rights.  After four years of fighting the case is now over.

In 2010, with trial set for a month away, our first judge granted the City a summary judgement and threw the case out.  Along with our attorney, my fellow arrestees and I found this unacceptable.  We felt it was our civic and patriotic duty to pursue justice and continue doing anything in our legal power to make sure that these violations didn’t go unchecked.  Together, we then appealed to the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals but ran up against a very conservative judge who said that the police should be “praised for their work at the RNC, not sued.”

Having come this far, and being unwilling to give up till all possibilities were exhausted, we took the case to the highest court in the land.  In November of 2012, after examining our case and the previous decisions, the Supreme Court chose not to hear the appeal.

There are no legal options left and my comrades and I are satisfied that we defended ourselves and the constitution to the best of our ability.  After an arbitrary, mass arrest, we were given trumped up charges and threatened with harsh penalties in hopes that we would accept a plea deal for actions we weren’t guilty of, but we didn’t take any plea.  From my vantage point, this is not a defeat, it’s a clear victory.

We beat the city fair and square, and then we went on the offensive.  We refused to allow the City to break the law without impunity.  We took them to court.  And then appealed to a higher court each time we were brushed off.  If all working class defendants had the proper counsel, time, resources, and support to fight all the way through the Trial and Appeals process it’d be significantly harder for police and prosecutors to wrongfully arrest and jail people.

I for one am more than happy to have been a thorn in their side for the past four years and to be part of the recent rising trend of working class people learning their rights, getting help, and fighting back.

My attorney drafted a letter to multiple Minneapolis publications in December and January.  It was never published.  I’ve now been given permission to make the letter public.  His insightful and eloquent words are posted below.

AN UNFORTUNATE LEGACY OF THE 2008 RNC

The City of St. Paul hosted the Republican National Convention four years ago, and most Minnesotans are likely relieved that it is behind us. But there is a legacy from the RNC that most Minnesotans are not aware of. Last fall, the United States Supreme Court signed off on a decision from the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in a mass arrest case arising out of the RNC. That decision in Bernini v. St. Paul diminishes the Fourth Amendment rights of all citizens attending public events.

The Bernini case carved out an exception to the Fourth Amendment to allow officers during demonstrations to arrest every single person in an area for the purpose of identifying alleged lawbreakers. This exception undermines the bedrock principal enunciated by the Supreme Court over thirty years ago in Ybarra v. Illinois that probable cause for an arrest cannot be based merely on “where [a] person may happen to be.”

The facts of the late afternoon mass arrest on September 1, 2008 are as follows: the incident location was Shepard Road, the boulevard that borders the Mississippi next to downtown St. Paul. A group of 10 to 15 protesters attempted to cross Shepard toward Jackson St., an entry point into downtown. Stationed at the entry to Jackson was a law enforcement unit in riot garb.

What happened next was captured on video and has been posted publicly on the internet. The small group shuffled slowly behind two signs. When the small group reached the median of Shepard, the officers launched stinger blast balls at them, followed by smoke and gas. The officers claimed that the group had attacked them with a barrage of rocks, urine, and feces. The video showed no such attack.

Over one hundred officers massed on Shepard and pushed all civilians in the area west, away from downtown. Law enforcement commanders had set up a “blocking line” further to the west on Shepard to corral all civilians being pushed towards them. In carrying out this corral, officers swept up people who had nothing to do with the protesters and those who had been nowhere near Jackson.

Upon completing the corral next to the Mississippi, officers had surrounded approximately 400 confused, peaceful civilians. Officers then announced by loudspeaker, “Ladies and Gentlemen, you are now under arrest.” There was one, huge problem: officers only claimed to have probable cause to believe that a small percentage of the 400 arrested had committed a crime.

The Senior Commander that day was well aware of this probable cause shortcoming and so admitted when testifying in Bernini:

Q. [D]id you know that some of the people who were going to be arrested, you did not have probable cause on?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. [Y]ou knew that you had approximately 200 people in the area within the encirclement who you did not have probable cause on?

A. Correct.

So how is it that the courts gave their imprimatur to the arrests of at least 200 innocent civilians? First, the District Court Judge took offense that throngs of people sought to disturb the RNC. He could not contain his displeasure and declared in open court, “the police force of the City of St. Paul should be commended and not sued… I’m distressed by, frankly, the existence of this case.” So much for the Fourth Amendment.

The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, the court that reviewed the District Court decision, assumed that everyone who was released after being put under arrest

wasn’t really “arrested” and thus had no Fourth Amendment protection. The judges then engaged in the fuzziest of math, to arrive at the proposition that officers can use rough numbers when arresting civilians. Otherwise put, civilians in any given area are interchangeable widgets for arrest purposes. As long as officers arrive at a reasonable ballpark estimate for the number of people to arrest, their actions are constitutional.

Over forty years ago, the Supreme Court cautioned, “we cannot forgive the requirements of the Fourth Amendment in the name of law enforcement.” Bernini tells us the courts can – and have.  -David L. Shulman

Some Wage Theft Doesn’t Get Prosecuted In RI


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Even when wage theft is reported in Rhode Island, it isn’t always prosecuted, says Patrick Pierce who lost $1,000 when he didn’t get paid construction for a job he found on Craigslist

His employer, he told Dave Fisher last night at the State House, had already been extradited from Florida to Rhode Island on similar accusations of wage theft. (Maybe instead of being so worried about Rhode Islanders moving to Florida we should be concerned with the Floridians who are coming to Rhode Island)

But here’s the real kicker. Rhode Island doesn’t seem to care about the crime. Even after doing his own research and trying to use the system to recover his confiscated wages, he was told in a letter that the state won’t prosecute.

According to Amy Kempe, spokeswoman for Attorney General Peter Kilmartin, investigations of wage theft begin with the Department of Labor and Training. It is unclear if the AG’s office has a policy of not investigating wage fraud for less than $1,500, as Pierce says in the video. This post will be updated when we know more.

Fuerza Laboral, a grassroots labor organizing group in Central Falls, is pushing for more awareness of wage theft crimes. Pierce was at a State House press conference yesterday.

Here’s our post from yesterday on wage theft, and how I have experienced wage theft (you probably have too!!). In June, we ran a post on wage theft in the restaurant industry.

If you feel you’ve been the victim of wage theft, please tell us your story in the comment section below.

Beware Recent Grads: Sequester Tolls For Thee


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I’m surprised we haven’t seen more sequester protests from the ranks of the recently graduated given this demographic will likely be most-affected by the long term cuts being rolled out. Here’s why.

Since the recession hit, the number of underemployed college graduates has skyrocketed. According the Associated Press, about 50 percent are either out of work or working in a job for which a college degree is unnecessary. Look across the counter at Starbucks, these days your barista is just as likely to have a college degree as not.

The recession has produced a marketplace where recent graduates are competing with people who have years of experience for the same jobs. Whereas college grads used to exit college to fill entry level jobs, now they are competing for entry level jobs with people who have been working for 5 or 10 years. (Better that than no job at all).

One of my students, who graduated last year, exemplifies this trend. After graduating with honors from URI with a double major in Economics and Political Science, she moved back to Arizona. She completed several prestigious internships while at URI and when she left she got a fellowship to go work in Mexico and learn Spanish. If anyone should have been able to find a job immediately, it’s her. Yet when I spoke with her a few weeks ago, she was perplexed because she could not get even get an interview for a secretarial position.

The situation she is experiencing is one in which she is competing with the recently laid off. Instead of competing for those entry level jobs with other recent grads, she is competing with people who have been in the workforce for 5 to 10 years and lost their job when the economy soured. Experience wins when jobs are scarce and supply is high. It’s a basic law of supply and demand. Right now supply is high but demand is low.

While this is distressing in the short term given the large amounts of student debt most of these college graduates have, the long term earning impact is what has me concerned. If these students take jobs for the next 5 years as baristas and waitresses, then when the economy recovers and there is a demand for entry level workers, they will be at a disadvantage against the students graduating then.

The end result: the college grad who is either unemployed or underemployed for an extended period of time has a more difficult path to gainful employment.

This is where the sequester comes in. Our economy is still quite fragile and the sequester is undeniably going to lead to a new round of layoffs. Layoffs will start with government positions and government contractors but the cuts in spending will reverberate through the economy leading to lower spending and demand for other goods and services which should lead to more layoffs in the private sector.

These new layoffs are going to make the job market for our new graduates even more difficult.

Real Key To Fixing R.I.’s Business Climate


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On Tuesday, amendments to the state’s tax code regarding the corporate income tax rate was reviewed by the Senate Committe on Finance. The amendments, straight from the desk of Gov. Lincoln Chafee, would lower the tax rate on corporate profits from 9 percent to 7 percent over the next three years.

While the proponents of the idea that Rhode Island is anti-business may see this as a way to encourage more entrepreneurism in our state, or to make the state more attractive to business owners that may be pondering relocating to Rhode Island, once you plug in the numbers, the majority of employers in Rhode Island – the small businesses to which our legislators pay much lip service, but don’t offer much else –  won’t see a tremendous savings.

For example, if a small business posts a profit in any particular year of $100,000, at the current tax rate, they pay $9,000. At the 7 percent rate proposed for 2016, they would pay $7,000. A mere $2,000 savings, and given the rate of increase in the overhead of running a small business, this savings amounts to all but nothing in three years. This largely symbolic gesture has very little benefit in the real world. The real killers of small business are the local property, sewer, and tangible asset taxes.

If the state wanted to really promote small businesses and make the business climate in Rhode Island more hospitable to new and existing businesses, they would lower the income tax rate on the middle class, which is the greatest driver of our day-to-day economy.

By putting more disposable income into the pockets of the greatest percentage of our population, who then go out and spend that money on things like food and clothing, more constant commerce occurs, increasing revenue streams for businesses and hence, making the “onerous” 9 percent tax rate a bit more tolerable. Consumers may also opt to save that money to purchase a big ticket item like a car – hopefully an hybrid or electric –  or stash it away for a down payment on a home – hopefully one that has been retrofitted for the highest levels of energy efficiency. In either scenario, businesses benefit.

Even if a majority of the vast middle-class elect to save or invest that extra money, that contributes to consumer confidence, another indicator that is currently in the dumps in Rhode Island.

In the light of so many years of top-down, so-called economic development, and the current fiscal straits in which the state finds itself, you’d think that more legislators and leaders would recognize that the wind has shifted and take a new tack.

House Finance is scheduled to hear the amendment on Wednesday.