Celebrate Earth Day again tomorrow with OSA


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earth day breakfastPlease join Ocean State Action and Clean Water Action tomorrow, April 26, to celebrate Rhode Island’s Environmental Innovators at the 11th annual Earth Day Breakfast of Champions! The event goes from 8:30am-10:30am at the Aspray Boathouse (2 E View St, Warwick, RI 02888), a place so beautifully Rhode Island you’ll feel like you’ve stepped into a postcard.

As we reflected on the past year, we were inspired to look back and see the progress of the environmental movement in Rhode Island. This year’s honorees have played integral roles in preserving, protecting and cleaning up Rhode Island’s environment.

The 2013 awardees are:

  • Deanna Casey, Associate Director of Advocacy for the AARP of Rhode Island. Deanna was instrumental in passing the 2012 Complete Streets legislation.
  • The Brown Divest Coal Campaign. This campaign has shown the power of student organizing to stop Brown University from investing in fossil fuel companies.
  • Providence Mayor Angel Taveras. For making Providence a national leader in sustainability.
  • Dave McLaughlin, President of Clean Ocean Access. Dave has successfully organized volunteer coastal cleanups and water quality testing across Southern Rhode Island.
  • Nicole Pollock, RI Dept. of Environmental Management. Nicole has spent her last two years pushing DEM’s legislative agenda and driving the environmental movement from within state government.

Tickets start at $50. You can purchase tickets online here. Full breakfast (with vegetarian/vegan options!) will be provided by fabulous caterer The Dinner Dame.

See you bright and early tomorrow morning!

Power concedes nothing — not even time


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mancusoEver since I wrote my letter to Eva Mancuso, the Board of Education chair, a month ago, I have hoped to have some other forum than this one in which to find a hearing for these concerns. (Since it seems clear I’m never going to get an actual reply.) I had a minute or two on Buddy Cianci’s show, after 45 minutes on hold, and about 20 minutes on Dan Yorke’s show.

After that, I tried to speak at a state Board of Education meeting, but Mancuso limited public comment to 30 minutes and allowed the first 15 of it to be used up by witnesses complimenting the board on opening up a charter school that already had majority support. Along with me, there were dozens of people left unheard at that meeting: angry parents, students, professors of education.

Last night, I tried to speak at a Senate hearing before the Education Committee, about a bill sponsored by Harold Metts that would forbid using the NECAP as a graduation test. I gather that something else was going on in the Senate yesterday afternoon — though how important could it really have been? — so the hearing didn’t get started until after 6pm.

At the outset of the meeting, the chair, Senator Hanna Gallo (D-Cranston), said that because there were so many people who wanted to speak, she was going to limit speakers to 2 minutes each. She opened the meeting by inviting Commissioner Gist to speak, and offered a double-ration of time: four minutes. Aided by friendly questions from the committee, Gist took somewhat longer.

Over an hour later, the next person got a turn. (Well, not counting a mother and daughter whose voluble objections couldn’t be suppressed when Gist was talking about the wealth of accommodations for kids with IEPs.)

When it came my turn to speak, while I managed to make the skeleton of my point in the allotted two minutes, I was unable to describe any of the evidence for it, to explain its consequences, or to list any of the support I’ve received from experts in the past month. Better than nothing, I suppose, but without any questions from the panel, it was two minutes and out. Of course it was after 8 o’clock by then, so I was starving and grateful to be done with the waiting, but how much good did it do?

What have I learned?  That there is essentially no forum in the state of Rhode Island in which one can address the kinds of technical concerns I have aired about the state Department of Education’s misuse of the NECAP tests. The people who are interested have no power to change the situation and the people with the power to change the situation apparently have no interest in hearing about it. The reporters dutifully report both sides (sometimes), but the conventions of modern journalism, along with the need to write for an audience who isn’t really familiar with the statistical issues involved mean that articles can’t even rise to the level of he said/she said.

I have two daughters, five grades apart. Comparing their experiences is instructive. My town has a relatively high-performing school department. There have been several changes in our schools between my first and second daughter, and as far as I can see, they fall into two categories: budget cuts and NECAP prep. Before my younger daughter entered seventh grade, the school department did away with seventh-grade foreign language instruction in favor of a second period of reading — to address NECAP deficiencies. While in the eighth grade, part of her shop class was turned over to NECAP prep for math. In the ninth grade, she is not taking a year-long biology, chemistry, or physics class, but a year-long science survey class that hopes to touch on all the topics covered by the science NECAP. Have any of these changes actually improved her education?

Remember, this is a relatively high-performing district, but RIDE rules demand improvement every single year, even for districts that are already doing fine. It is a truism of policy studies that a regulation that sounds good — demanding constant improvement from everyone — can have seriously counter-productive results, but the evidence is rarely as stark.

Along with the NECAP adjustments, budget constraints have had the music program cut back in the elementary grades, the high school has reduced the number of AP classes, and there are fewer buses to accommodate after-school activities. And much more.

So far as I can see, not a single one of the changes in my town’s schools over the past five years between my children has had anything at all to do with improving the quality of the education, and the changes to accommodate the NECAP test have been every bit as destructive of my daughter’s educational opportunities as the budget cuts.

So, buckle up everyone. The destruction of public education wrought by misguided RIDE testing policies has only just begun. Some people apparently buy the argument that simply demanding results gets results. For those of us who think this a dubious strategy, there is no real reason — beyond the personal promise of Deborah Gist — to think that these policies will improve education in Rhode Island and quite a number of reasons to think it will get a lot worse before it gets better. But if you want to bring these matters to anyone’s attention? Talk to the hand — for no more than two minutes.

Update: Hanna Gallo is from Cranston.  My apologies to her and to you.

ProJo typo: paper of record misstates marriage vote

“The eyes of the nation are upon us,” said Senator Donna Nesselbush about Rhode Island’s historic vote for marriage equality last night. Too bad for the Providence Journal, which made an awfully unfortunate typo in a headline on the historic vote today:

projo a1 vote

As you can see in two other instances on the front page – in the story and in the photo – the vote last night was actually 26 to 12, not 24 to 12 as the headline indicates. Full front page here.

If anything, this is an indication that a shrinking newsroom is degrading our once-great paper of record. But it’s also just a sign that human beings sometimes screw up…

A proud day to be a Rhode Islander


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What a wonderful afternoon it was yesterday in Rhode Island. It was warm and sunny and flowers were bursting through the dirt and blooming from the branches of trees, and the tide was high as a full moon began to rise over Narragansett Bay. And, at long last, the state Senate gave its blessing to marriage equality.

All across our great state, gay men and lesbian women dropped down on one knee and proudly proposed to their partners. The entire LGBTQ community was made more whole in the eyes of the law. We put another nail in the coffin of discrimination, and took another big step towards equality. Love won.

If a picture tells a thousand words, then this picture Ryan Conaty took for his blog at the hearing the day before sums up how progressives feel today:

nesselbush kissing