Local American Friends Service Committee Turns 10


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Join in celebrating AFSC- South East New England’s 10th anniversary on Friday, April 19.  Buffet dinner at 6pm followed by performances and remembrances at 7:30pm.

Originally scheduled for March 8 but postponed by snow, we are fortunate to have many of the Woman’s Day performers still able to join us.  They include the Raging Grannies (read an excellent story about them here), Nada Samih (story about Palestine), Judy Perry (music), Ariel Wilburn (poem), Laura Brown-Lavoie (poem), Rachel Miller (music during dinner), and Cathy Clasper-Torch.

The evening will include a participatory look back at the past decade.  Tickets are $15 for dinner ($10 low income) and $20-50 for the performance.  This is an important fundraiser for AFSC-SENE so we hope you will be generous but it also is a celebration of community – so come and pay what you can.  The event will be at the Providence Friends Meeting House, 99 Morris Ave (on the corner with Olney St).  To RSVP call 508-399-6699 and leave a message, or email sene@afsc.org.

Lima, MacBeth Suggest Not Paying 38 Studios Bonds


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Reps. Karen MacBeth (L) and Charlene Lima offer testimony on limiting and/or eliminating payment to 38 Studios bondholders.

The House Finance Committee heard several bills yesterday concerning the operation of the RI Economic Development Corporation (EDC) in the wake of last years 38 Studios fiasco, including two bills  that would prohibit the state or the EDC  from making payments to the bondholders of the failed video game company.

The bills, H5639 and H5888, would stop the state from making any payment to bondholders until all of the bondholders can be identified in the case of the former, and in the latter, would prohibit the state from making payments to the bondholders regardless of whether they can be identified. The bills have been introduced by Reps. Charlene Lima and Karen MacBeth, respectively.

Rep. Lima, growing more upset as she presented her bill, said, “The biggest problem in government is lack of transparency, and this deal was no different. The bondholders did not hold up their end of the bargain.”

Lima contends that, by not filing the agreed upon documentation with the state, the bondholders violated their contracts, and therefore the state has no obligation to repay the debt.

MacBeth testified that the legal definition of a moral bond removes the state’s obligation. “The two criteria for repayment of a moral obligation bond are being the primary bondholder, and ability to pay,” she said, “38 studios was the primary bondholder, and the state does not have the ability to pay.” She added, “These bonds were insured. The insurer knew the risks. Let the insurer pay.”

A representative of the Occupy Providence movement, Randall Rose, also testified in support of MacBeth’s bill. He said that the only reason to pay these bonds is the fear of retaliation by Wall Street. “This was an inefficient way to borrow money, and amounts to an end-run on the Rhode Island constitution.” By Rhode Island law, the public cannot be held obligated to a debt that was not put forth by ballot measure.

A currently unemployed finance director, Brian Kelly, testified that if the bonds were not paid, and if there was a retaliation by Wall Street in the form of increased interest rates to state bonds, “We would have to float $11 billion in bonds at a 1 percent increase in interest to equal the debt from 38 Studios.”

He also indicated that the bonds were insured, and analogized the situation to sports teams that insure players with guaranteed performance contracts who then get injured. “In either case, a claim is filed, and the losses are covered. This is what insurance is for. The insurers knew the risk.”

Rep. Lima called the bondholders  “cowards” for not coming forward, and House Minority Leader Brian Newberry said, “The fact that no one from EDC is here to testify is disrespectful to this committee, disrespectful of the House. The impacts of these bills are at EDC’s feet, and the fact that no one is here to testify is an outrage.”

EDC execs did offer a letter concerning the bills to legislators that all indicated that the letter was received just minutes before the hearing. Rep. MacBeth called the letter incomplete, at best. “It has no fiscal note, and no evidence of future negative impacts to bond ratings. We’re just supposed to take their word for it?”

Other EDC related bills heard at the meeting were H5268 which would cap any one loan by EDC at $10 million, H5463 which would prohibit EDC from making any loan guarantees, H5643 prohibiting the state from paying interest on 38 Studios loans, H5745 imposing a limit of $5 million in EDC loans to any one entity, and H5746 which would impose an aggregate limit of $1 billion on any EDC loans out at one time.

Committee Chair Helio Melo, when asked if he found any of the testimony particularly compelling, and if he thought that an oversight committee would have been a more effective way to ferret out those questions, said “Nothing really jumped out at me, but I think that introducing legislation is a good way to uncover the questions that need asking.”

“In today’s testimony we heard questions regarding the state’s obligation to the bondholders,  the possible effects of non-payment, and the role of the bond insurers. I’m sure there will be many more in the coming weeks.”

David Cicilline Signs Grayson-Takano Letter


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Thank you Congressman Cicilline for standing up against cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security!

When Barack Obama proposed cuts to Social Security in his current budget, progressives were horrified.  Fortunately, in the First District of Rhode Island, we have a congressman who opposes this dangerous unraveling of the New Deal.  David Cicilline has signed the Grayson-Takano letter, formally committing to never voting for cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security (http://act.boldprogressives.org/survey/survey_ss_grayson/#fullletter).

This is a critical move.  As American family budgets continue to be squeezed, and retirement savings continue to dwindle, Social Security is more important than ever.  We cannot afford to lose this fight.

As a member of the Budget Committee, Congressman Cicilline is in a strong position to help defend these core Democratic achievements.  But he needs allies.  Let’s hope more congressmen follow Cicilline’s lead.

Save Ruggles: Iconic Surf Break Is Known Worldwide


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Save Ruggles

The national media has again picked up on the concerns of a vocal minority here in the Ocean State. No, I’m not talking about small government libertarians, this one is a constituency that actually exists in Rhode Island outside of politics. Surfers.

Environmentalists, beach bums, wave junkies and the tourist industry have joined forces recently to “Save Ruggles,” the state’s most famous surf break and one of the best waves on the East Coast. You can sign the petition here.

The Wall Street Journal reports this morning that the Newport City Council “is expected to pass a resolution Wednesday asking the state to modify its plans in order to save the waves.”

The Coastal Resources Management Council, in determining how to repair the hurricane-damaged Cliff Walk, has suggested ruining one of the best breaks on the East Coast, rather than disrupt the lawns of those who own the seaside mansions nearby.

From the WSJ:

The state could do the work from land, but that would mean setting up construction sites in high season on estates that have all sorts of idiosyncrasies, from elaborate shrubbery to underground tunnels, Mr. Smith said.

Some mansion owners, he said, haven’t provided access in past Cliff Walk repairs. So the plan is to bring in the support stones by barge and then build temporary jetties, each 200 feet out into the water, to hold the stones until the construction work is completed in November.

The surfers argue that the jetties, temporary or not, would forever alter the ocean floor and their waves.

Not familiar with the local surf break? Watch this video:

Two Teds On Pension Reform Beat


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Their named may be similar but their coverage of Gina Raimondo is not.

New Ted (Siedle, of Forbes) wrote a post on Thursday saying Raimondo is recklessly investing Rhode Island’s pension fund. Old Ted (Nesi, of WPRI), to borrow a phrase, fired back on Friday. New Ted has since posted twice to accuse Old Ted of having a soft spot for Raimondo and – much more pointedly – accusing her of having a soft spot for Wall Street.

From Forbes.com on Saturday:

The fees related to conservative investing range from 1 basis point (one one-hundreth of a percent) to about half a percent. The high-risk alternative investments you have steered the pension into charge exponentially greater fees—fees of about 2% plus 20% of profits or more. Do the math and you’ll agree, the fees the pension will pay have skyrocketed. Mushroomed. Ballooned. Soared.

That’s good for your Wall Street pals, no-so-good for workers participating in the pension. It’s a little difficult to reconcile your opinion that the state’s pension system can’t afford to pay workers the benefits they were promised but, on the other hand, it can afford to pay Wall Street’s wildest gamblers one hundred times greater fees than it has in the past.

Tell Rhode Islanders precisely how much the fees have increased under your leadership (or give me copies of the money management contracts so I can) and let’s see how they feel about it.

Then yesterday:

Raimondo’s overhaul or reform of the state pension will, in the years to come—long after she’s moved on to higher political office, turn out to be disastrous for taxpayers and state workers, in my opinion. Hail Mary passes and other high risk gambles rarely succeed and, even if they do, are not appropriate for pensions thousands of state workers depend upon for retirement security.

New Ted publicly offered 22 questions for Raimondo to answer about how she has managed the state’s the money. Anyone want to bet her answers, or at least political statements tangentially related to these questions, will appear on Old Ted’s blog?

Rhode Island Religious Leaders Stand Up For Love


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On Sunday Rev. Geoffrey Black, general minister and president of the United Church of Christ, and Rev. Peter Morales, president of the Unitarian Universalist Association spoke at a rally at the First Unitarian Church in Providence on Benefit St. Though opponents of marriage equality often cloak their arguments in dogmatic, Bible-inspired rhetoric it is important to remember that there is another, more progressive religious voice that fully supports marriage rights for all citizens.

Here’s a video from the event, courtesy of Rhode Islanders United for Marriage:

Rhode Island Women Still Fighting For Equal Pay


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Marcia Cone, CEO- Women’s Fund of Rhode Island

When it comes to wages, there’s still a gender gap in Rhode Island.

According to a new report from the Women’s Fund of RI, the median weekly income for a woman in Rhode Island in 2011 was $746, while men earned $917.

The disparity happens in wage growth as well. Increase in median wage for both sexes has  increased, but between 2002 and 2008, mens wages rose by $135, while womens wages rose only $100.

Women also hold a slight majority of the states’ minimum wage jobs (55.6 percent), earn approximately 30 percent less than their similarly educated male counterparts, and overwhelmingly occupy the lowest salaried occupations in the state.

“Women represent the lowest wage earners in the state,” says Marcia Cone, CEO of the Women’s Fund, “we need to close this gap, and also increase access to affordable child care and family leave.”

Here’s Senator Gayle Goldin, the Strategic Initiative Director for the Women’s Fund of RI, on the wage gap, and why it still exists in the year 2013.

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