RI Council of Churches applauds Boy Scouts

Rhode Island State Council of Churches released a statement today regarding the Boy Scouts of America’s recent decision to allow openly gay scouts to join and participate in the organization:

RISCCResponse to BSA Statement on Gender of Scouts and Leaders

The Rhode Island State Council of Churches applauds the direction taken by the Boy Scouts of America in welcoming openly gay scouts into its ranks. This change in policy moves the BSA in a more inclusive direction, offering their programs to youth without regard to sexual orientation.

We are, however, disappointed that this change did not remove the ban on gay leaders. In the spirit of our recent statement on Marriage Equality, the Council would support a policy that allows each sponsoring agency to make its own determination on the sexual orientation of leaders within their jurisdiction. This would provide adequate protection for those religious bodies that would prefer to maintain the current ban, but also allow others to express their religious convictions by appointing leaders who are gay.

The Rhode Island State Council of Churches has maintained a consistent relationship with the Narragansett Council since the RISCC’s founding in 1937 by providing and supervising the Protestant chaplain at Camp Yawgoog. “As a former scout and a current member of the Executive Board of the Narragansett Council, I am very pleased with the direction of this change in policy and will continue to work within Scouting to encourage a more inclusive policy regarding leadership,” stated the Executive Minister, the Rev. Dr. Don Anderson. Mr. Anderson went on to say that “The BSA can move to a more open policy regarding the sexual orientation of leadership without infringing on anyone’s religious convictions.”

Gist distances herself from ed reform movement


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gistAfter numerous teachers, parents and activists criticized Deborah Gist to the state Board of Education for the heavy-handed ways in which she has brought the so-called education reform to Rhode Island, the embattled education commissioner told me she doesn’t consider herself a member of that movement.

Gist was trained by Michelle Rhee, who is the national face of this movement. She’s a Chiefs for Change board member, which the Washington Post calls the “national education reform leader.”  She’s a also graduate of the conservative Broad Institute, where ed reformers often go to learn the trade. More importantly, her biggest efforts here in Rhode Island have aligned with the signature reforms of this movement across the country: more charter schools, high stakes tests and new and more rigid teacher accountability requirements.

Gist has also implemented the first ever statewide education funding formula, but it slowly phases in over decades. Urban districts – those most affected by her other reforms – have complained that the funding isn’t aligned with the reforms.

She also expressed what I took as genuine concern for the complaints that have been leveled against her by educators recently.

Next: I will post video from our conversation about what she is looking for in a contract extension from the state.

Keep Rhode Island campuses gun free

 

Still before the Rage released at the Board of Education meeting on May 23, 2013.

On April 4, 2013, the University of Rhode Island campus was locked down for hours after, as the Providence Journal reported, “people in a lecture hall said they heard someone say they had a gun. Police found no gun or a shooter.” In response to this event, a URI committee proposed arming the campus police.

At their May 23, 2013 meeting, the Board of Education is expected to voted to allow URI, Rhode Island College and the Community College of Rhode Island, to arm their campus police. URI President, David M. Dooley, endorses the introduction of guns on campus. This and the decision to move URI commencement exercises indoors for security reasons are all symptoms of a society that has lost its way in blind fear, and appoints its university presidents to groups of no academic consequence such as the Homeland Security Academic Advisory Council.[1]

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 30,000 gun related deaths occur in the US each year, while approximately 100,000 Americans are physical victims of gun violence. How do we even begin to quantify the grief caused by guns in this relentless slaughter in our midst?

A decision to introduce more guns fails to acknowledge that fear on the part of armed police leads to the shooting of unarmed people, often people of color. A tragic incident at Hofstra University, just days ago, confirms this pattern.[3] The introduction of more guns ignores the fact that the UK has a mostly unarmed police force and a fire arm fatality rate that is 40 times lower per capita than in the US. A review of the shooting incidents on college campuses shows that armed police responding with weapons of deadly force failed to protect these communities. Arming campus police may, in many, create the illusion of safety but reality belies this perception. The experiment has been done globally, and the results are in: more guns spells more violence, more victims and more fatalities.

We are alarmed by the prospect of armed police on campus with yet more guns to be introduced into our hyper-violent society with the sociopaths it creates in its image. Since the mass killing in Newtown in December of 2013, there have been more than 4,000 gun fatalities in the US[2] This statistic has not penetrated our national awareness. As a society, we pay attention to spectacular events, but we fail to notice the frightening reality of the numbers of fatalities due to violence, and racial, economic and environmental injustice.

In particular against this backdrop, it is an essential function of our educational system to teach non-violent conflict resolution. Arming campus police is fundamentally inconsistent with this critical function of education.

References

  1. URI President appointed by Secretary Napolitano to new to new Homeland Security council
  2. How many people have been killed by guns since Newtown?
  3. Hofstra University student shot and killed by police trying to save her. A Hofstra University student was accidentally killed by a police officer on Friday during a home invasion and robbery, according to reports.

Gist, education reform blasted at BoE meeting


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From left to right: URI President David Dooley, board member and AFT director Colleen Callahan, Board Chairwoman Eva Mancuso, Deborah Gist, RIC President Nancy Carriuolo and board member and Barrington school committee member Patrick Guida. (Photo Bob Plain)
From left to right: URI President David Dooley, board member and AFT director Colleen Callahan, Board Chairwoman Eva Mancuso, Deborah Gist, RIC President Nancy Carriuolo and board member and Barrington school committee member Patrick Guida. (Photo Bob Plain)

Neither Dr. Gist nor the education reform movement came off very well at the Board of Education meeting earlier tonight. She only had one supporter among those who gave testimony. I was unable to speak, time ran out, so later in this post I’ll write what I was planning to say. Before I get to that, a few notes about the meeting.

Important: the BoE is accepting written comments on the Gist renewal up until June 1. No vote was to be taken tonight.  Submit early, submit often.

For those of you who want a blow-by-blow account of the early part of the meeting, look at my Tweets: @gusuht

Those who did get to speak were outstanding. The vast majority of the speakers were teachers with lots to say. Chairman Mancuso, noticing the lack of time, bumped up parents and students to the front of the line. By far the most telling and moving testimony was given by a student who graduated from a RI High School a year ago, and has since been in college. Roughly, he said that in high school, with all of the testing and teaching to the test and test practice he had lost his love for learning. Once in college he was freed from the dehumanizing testing regime and regained this love. The Gist reforms had hindered his learning, not helped it. It had emptied his spirit, not nurtured it. I hope Bob caught his name. Interestingly, he was the only one who came without a prepared text, but I think he had the most impact. Or I hope so.

OK, my almost-testimony. Actually, the major part of it was a Letter to the Editor, by someone else,  in a New Yorker issue late last year. The Letter was in response to an article in an earlier issue (“Public Defender,” by David Denby, the New Yorker, November 19, 2012). That article was about the famous reformed education-reformer Dr. Diane Ravitch. Briefly, up until ten years ago she was a leader of the education reform movement, pushing testing, charter schools, etc. What happened? Ten years ago she looked at the results and they stank. So she switched 180 degrees and is now speaking out around the country against the education reform movement.

Here’s the Letter; it’s from the December 24 & 31, 2012 issue of the New Yorker, in the Mail section, page 8. I have not modified it in any way.

 As Ravitch argues, reform strategies based on extensive reading and math tests, followed by rewards and punishments for teachers and schools based on those test scores, along with the encouragement of vast charter-school expansion, have not brought about significant improvements in student performance. Tellingly, no nation,  state, or district that has gone from mediocre to world-class in the past twenty years — including Ontario, Canada; Massachusetts; Finland; Singapore; and even the Aspire charter schools — has followed this strategy. Successful schools and districts have supported the development of professional teamwork, and have completely revamped how they attract, train, and support teachers. Building the teaching profession around what is known about quality teaching, and allowing teachers the time and giving them the support to continually get better at what they do, has been the secret of educational success around the world.

Bill Honig, Chair, Instructional Quality Commission,  California Department of Education, Mill Valley, Calif.

On an historical note, the New York Times columnist Gail Collins has written in her recent book ( “As Texas Goes….,” Liveright Publishing, 2012) about the origins and history of “No Child Left Behind.” That is/was former President George W. Bush’s signature education reform program that is the major source of all of the fuss today. Bush actually started an equivalent program  in Texas when he was governor there, before becoming president. Going on to Washington he foisted his miracle cure onto the entire nation. Unfortunately, back in Texas they discovered that the program didn’t work. Somehow that never visibly appeared in the national conversation. And the bad idea spread throughout the land.

Angel Taveras reaffirms NECAP concerns


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras delivering his 2012 State of the City address. (Photo by Bob Plain)
Providence Mayor Angel Taveras delivering his 2012 State of the City address. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Providence Mayor Angel Taveras reaffirmed his opposition to using the NECAP test as a graduation requirement, Dan McGowan of WPRI reported this morning. Taveras sent a letter to the state Board of Education he wrote:

“I worry that state leaders have imposed a graduation requirement on our students that is tied to a questionable measurement of individual proficiency and graduation readiness,” Taveras wrote. “Unlike tests designed to measure student achievement, such as the Regents exam in New York, the NECAP test was not designed to say whether students achieved mastery of a body of knowledge.

You can read the entire letter here. (Taveras sent an identical letter to the state Senate Education Committee)

McGowan reported the issue is of particular concern to Providence: “In Providence, more than 80% of students at four of city’s largest high schools—Alvarez, Central, Hope and Mount Pleasant— will have to improve their NECAP score by next year in order to graduate.”

 

Former Gist supporter is now anti-NECAP activist


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Jean Ann Guiliano and her two sons. Photo courtesy of EG Patch.
Jean Ann Guiliano and her two sons. Photo courtesy of EG Patch.

Jean Ann Guliano is the Robert McNamara of the Rhode Island ed reform movement, said our mutual friend Bob Houghtaling. It’s a good analogy. Diane Ravitch works too.

Guliano is a former school committee chairwoman from East Greenwich who ran for Lt. Gov. on the Moderate Party ticket. As chairwoman, she was very fiscally conservative – at one time she tried to outsource school custodians. She was also a big fan Deborah Gist fan and Race to the Top supporter. (who in East Greenwich wouldn’t want to race the likes of Central Falls and Woonsocket to the top).

She also has a son with autism. He’s one of those kids who might not fare so well on a standardized test. But he’s certainly smart enough to warrant a high school diploma.  And Guliano is far and away smart enough to help him through that situation. The issue, as I see it, is not every kid with autism has a smart, politically connected and hard-working mom like Guliano.

Here’s how she put it in a recent GoLocal post:

As a former school committee member, business person and interested parent, I was an early supporter of Race to the Top and Commissioner Gist when she came on board in 2009. I also signed off for my district on the RTTT application. The goals sounded promising. Who wouldn’t want every child to receive an excellent education? Many of the numerous high profile goals of RTTT, especially those that have appealed to the business and political community, have been vigorously addressed. These include areas such as funding reliability, increase in charter schools, elimination of seniority-based promotion, teacher evaluation systems, data gathering, progress monitoring, accountability, etc.

However, with all of these accomplishments, the one thing that has not improved is the outcomes for our most vulnerable students. The original goals of both No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top were not about turning schools into businesses or testing companies into a cottage industry. They were about improving the educational outcomes for those students on the fringe – those who are economically disadvantaged, have limited English proficiency and special needs. These students generally don’t have powerful lobbyists. Businesses don’t necessarily line up to hire these students, and even schools even know that these are the students who bring down their test scores.

Read the whole thing here.

Teacher: Keep Gist and state will see civil disobedience


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“If you want mass civil disobedience from your teachers, go ahead and renew Gist’s contract,” said Brian Chidester, a teacher in the Bristol Warren school district during an impassioned speech at a teacher rally Monday. The state Board of Education begins debating the embattled education commissioner’s contract tonight.

Chidester said he is prepared to lead such an action, if the Board and Governor Chafee renew Gist’s contract. He cited the recent victory for Seattle teachers whose successful boycott of standardized tests led the district to allow high schools to choose whether or not to use the test.

Note that he got some pretty good applause.

He also posted to his blog an ‘Open Letter to Chafee and Mancuso: Dump Gist‘ which was was cross-posted to SocialistWorker.org.

WaPost: Gist controversial on national level too


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ccs-i-am-hereDeborah Gist is not only raising hackles with the education community here in Rhode Island, she’s doing it on a national level too! On Tuesday, Chiefs for Change released a letter attacking labor leader Randi Weingarten for opposing high stakes testing. Gist is on the board for Jeb Bush’s Chiefs for Change group and she co-signed the letter.

Only problem is, according to the Washington Post, Gist and the letter criticized Weingarten for something she didn’t say.

How’s this for a trick? Jeb Bush’s “Chiefs for Change,” a group of former and current state education superintendents, have attacked American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten for something she didn’t say — without even mentioning her name!

That’s right, a Washington Post education blogger – a fairly well-credentialed one, at that – says Gist and Chiefs for Change were being tricky. Valerie Strauss goes on to explain:

Let’s get this straight: Weingarten didn’t argue (as testing experts do) that using student standardized test scores to evaluate teachers and principals is wrong because the results are not reliable. She didn’t call for a permanent ban. She asked for a moratorium to make sure everyone is ready. Given that teachers are being evaluated on the student test scores, it seems only fair to give them enough time to actually learn the standards, develop lessons around the standards, and give students time to absorb them.

I don’t know if she was referring to Tom Sgouros specifically when she wrote that TESTING EXPERTS DO NOT THINK HIGH STAKES TEST RESULTS ARE RELIABLE, but she did give a shout to to the states that are struggling through the politics of it (emphasis mine):

Students in some states this spring started taking standardized tests supposedly aligned with the Common Core and there have been enormous problems reported by teachers and principals.

It’s well worth noting that Sgouros’ loudest criticism’s of Gist have been that the NECAP test isn’t aligned with Common Core. And like this Washington Post blogger, he’s also called her out for being disingenuous, too.

Charter school: site students on toxic waste


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DSC03811Last year the General Assembly unanimously passed the “Environmental Cleanup Objectives for Schools” sponsored by Senator Juan Pichardo and representative Scott Slater. The bill, which took over three years to pass, was signed into law by Governor Chafee on June 6, 2012, nearly a year ago. Commonly referred to as the “School Siting Law,” this was an important and landmark piece of legislation that prohibits school construction on contaminated sites where there is ongoing potential for vapor intrusion.

This common sense piece of legislation, that keeps our children from attending schools where toxic gases can wreak havoc on their health, is doubly important because the bodies of children are still developing, and triply important in poorer communities where children already face greater levels of hazardous environmental poisons such as lead.

It’s therefore even more baffling that this legislation is being challenged and potentially weakened by two new bills that have been introduced to the General assembly, House Bill 5617 and Senate Bill 520. These bills would allow construction of schools on vapor intrusion sites, completely gutting the intent of the original bill. This legislation is being introduced on behalf of the Rhode Island Mayoral Academies (RIMA),which wants to expand a charter school on potentially hazardous land.

RIMA wants to manage the contamination by leaving it in the ground, and then monitoring the vapor intrusion with sophisticated and largely untested technologies that they hope will protect children, teachers and staff from unhealthy levels of exposure to toxins. The technology and monitoring will be an additional expense that the school will have to manage, money that will not go towards education.

DSC03810
Toxics Activist Lois Gibbs

A press conference was held on the RI State House steps yesterday  by Clean Water Action, the Childhood Lead Action Project and the Environmental Justice League of RI that featured Lois Gibbs, renowned toxics activist from Love Canal who famously helped kickstart the United States Superfund Program. Gibbs pointed out that the legislation RIMA wishes to undermine has become model legislation for similar laws across the country, from New York and Massachusetts to Michigan.

“The very thing that they are talking about changing in this bill is what happened at Love Canal,” said Gibbs. “It was vapor intrusion! So why would this group of people want to put Love Canal under the school of innocent children is beyond me.”

This would be a great question to pose to Senator Juan Pichardo, who helped shepherd the bill through the Senate last session and has now introduced the legislation to destroy it. Why Pichardo would stand up for students one year and then seek to allow RIMA the right to ignore sensible safety protocols and endanger our student’s health might be another reason to take a long look at corporately funded charter schools and the ways in which corporate money warps government.

Pichardo’s email is sen-pichardo@rilin.state.ri.us and his official phone number is (401) 461-2389 if you think this is an issue important enough to let him know how you feel.

Why would we want to undo such awesome legislation? Watch Lois Gibbs explain:

Board of Ed begins to debate Gist contract tonight


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eva mancuso
Eva Mancuso. Photo courtesy of EG Patch.

Former CVS CEO Tom Ryan envisioned the arena that bears his name at URI hosting high profile sporting events. Tonight at 5:30 the Ryan Center plays host to a high profile political event as the new state Board of Education begins the process of debating Deborah Gist’s future employment in Rhode Island.

The Board may or may not discuss Gist publicly, but it scheduled an executive session to have its first discussion as a group on whether or not Gist should continue as the commissioner of education. The board, according to its agenda, will also review a report from its personnel committee.

The personnel committee consists of Colleen Callahan, Bill Maaia, Michael Bernstein and Board Chairwoman Eva Mancuso. The personnel committee will make a recommendation to the full board. Gist’s future should be decided in less than a month, people familiar with the process tell me.

Callahan is a former teacher and a current officer with the Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and Health Care Professionals, one of the two state teacher unions vociferously opposed to a contract extension for Gist. Both she and fellow Board of Education member Larry Purtill, the elected president of the National Education Association of RI, both attended an educator rally against Gist on Monday at Cranston West. They sat on stage with Bob Walsh and Frank Flynn as teachers and other educators voiced their opposition.

Bernstein, according to his bio, is a former caseworker and director for the state Department of Human Services. Maaia, according to his bio, is a local lawyer and a former labor relations officer with the Department of Education.

Mancuso has said she and Gov. Chafee continue to support Gist.

When Chafee appointed Mancuso to the Board, he said in a statement, “She agrees with me that our public education system is the key to a stronger economy and brighter future for Rhode Island, and she has both the vision and the dedication to ably lead the new Board of Education on behalf of the students of our state.”

Chafee is expected to play a role in whether Gist stays on, and members of his staff has said he feels a sense of loyalty to Gist. But he must also feel a sense of loyalty to the teachers’ unions who helped to elect him and whose pensions he worked to reduce. Organized labor will of course play a big role in the 2014 governor’s race, and Chafee could mend a rift with organized labor by replacing Gist. Interestingly, Providence Mayor Angel Taveras, Chafee’s chief competition for progressive support in 2014, is hosting a high profile fundraiser tonight as well.

Gist is seeking a three-year contract extension. A one year extension would put her employment in the spotlight again prior to the 2014 election.

Rev. Don Anderson: payday loans are an ‘evil’ product


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The reality is that [a payday loan] targets people at their most vulnerable. It’s reckless lending. This product at its core is evil.

Gina 2
General Treasurer Gina Raimondo

Tara Roche 2 So said the Reverend Don Anderson, who co-chairs the Rhode Island Coalition for Payday Lending Reform along with Margeaux Morrison, director at NeighborWorks Blackstone River Valley. Anderson said this at the end of an information filled press conference held yesterday at the Center for Women and Enterprise that featured General Treasurer and putative candidate for governor Gina Raimondo.

All the speakers at the conference made no secret of the fact that in their view payday loans, with current interest rates as high as 260% or more, are harming our state by targeting the poorest members of our community.

Gina Raimondo, to her credit, has taken a very strong, proactive stand against payday loans, saying, “Rhode Island is trying to grow, there is no place for predatory lending, period. Full stop.” Raimondo went on to compare payday lending to the bank practices that triggered the 2009 financial collapse, and said that if the payday lending companies in Rhode Island determine that they cannot sustain their business at a 36% interest rate then, “Fine. Let them go. We don’t need them in Rhode Island.”

Treasurer Raimondo reached out to Navigant Credit Union to try and develop some alternatives to the usurious payday loans and Fred Reinhardt, chief lending officer of Navigant, was on hand to explain what they developed in response. The timing of the treasurer’s request was good, said Reinhardt, because Navigant was starting to see the electronic debits that payday lenders were hitting customer checking accounts with and even saw some of their own employees becoming victims to predatory loans.

In response, Navigant has developed a $200-$600 loan product that can be paid off over thirteen weeks and requires no credit checks. Unlike payday loan companies, Navigant reports the loans to credit bureaus, something payday loaners do only when the customer is in default, preventing customers from establishing better credit.

Reinhardt finds that a lot of the customers coming in for the new program are doing so in an effort to pay off and get out of the payday loan debts they already have. This new loan program is not a money maker for Navigant, but it’s not being run at a loss either. Reinhardt sees this as a way of serving a need in the community.

Jacky Beshar, Groov-Pin Vice President
Jacky Beshar, Groov-Pin Vice President

Jacky Beshar, Vice President of Groov-Pin, a manufacturer in Smithfield that makes pins and such, knows that many of her employees are only “two paychecks away from trouble. It happens and awful lot.” She sees financial education as a partial solution to the issue, pointing out that financial hardship is as likely to sink a family’s fortunes as a serious health issue. Her company worked with the Capital Good Fund to provide free financial education to those of her employees who want it, and works to help her employees avoid the need for payday loans.

Christopher Lefebvre, a consumer bankruptcy attorney, finds that many people are financially illiterate, whether they are white collar doctors or blue collar workers and many become overwhelmed by debt and seek bankruptcy relief. Payday loans are the “final domino” that brings these people into bankruptcy.

Having dealt with many people Lefebvre is very aware of the collection practices of payday lenders, which he describes as “ruthless.” He has yet to see a client who has had a positive experience with payday loans.

Tara Roche, Pew Charitable Trust
Tara Roche, Pew Charitable Trust

As Don Anderson pointed out at the conclusion of the presentation, the effort to reform payday loans is different this year because “we now have third party data that shows the claims of payday loan companies are a bunch of baloney.” Statistical evidence gathered by Tara Roche, a consumer finance researcher for the Pew Charitable Trust was presented at the conference.

Roche presented data from two recent Pew polls, one conducted in July 2012 and the other in February of this year. Though payday lenders claim that their customers use payday loans for short term emergencies, Pew’s research indicates that 70% of these loans are taken to cover recurring expenses like rent, bills and food. Using payday loans in this way does nothing to get at the customer’s underlying economic difficulties, and payday loans too commonly become traps that burden customers with additional and unnecessary debt.

Other things Pew revealed that payday loan companies are loathe to admit are that, on average, borrowers remain indebted for five months and seldom pay off the loan inside of two weeks. Further, two thirds of borrowers want changes in payday loan legislation. They realize they are getting a terrible deal.

Despite this mountain of evidence, word is that Speaker of the House Gordon Fox is still somehow undecided on whether or not to support H5019, Frank Ferri’s bill to reform payday loans. Fox, who is my representative, replied to an email I sent saying simply that he will keep my thoughts in mind as he reviews the testimony given at a recent hearing. One wonders what he’s waiting to hear.

When I called his office on Tuesday the woman answering the phone told me he was getting a lot of calls on the issue. I found out today that his office received over a hundred calls yesterday.

Will Fox budge on this issue? Payday loans target our poorest communities, and the Hispanic community and people of color are more often victims of this deceptive, dangerous and let’s face it, evil practice. Representative Fox needs to find it within himself to stand up for these communities.

ACLU, others highly opposed to high stakes tests


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high-stakes-testingMore than two dozen community organizations, including the ACLU of Rhode Island, have this week formally asked the Rhode Island Board of Education to rescind the regulation that conditions the receipt of a high school diploma on passing a “high stakes test.” Although the groups have diverse reasons for opposing the measure, they all agree that the mandate is poor policy and will likely have devastating effects for thousands of students who deserve a diploma.

In the letter sent on Monday to the state Board of Education, the groups stated:

“As a result of that high-stakes test requirement, 40% of the Class of 2014 — more than 4,000 students — are at risk of not graduating next year. Immediate action is critical in order to address the uncertainty and anxiety facing these students and their families.”

“Before the fate of these students is sealed, we wanted to make sure you were aware of the impact of high stakes testing, and urge you to find more effective strategies for education reform. Your newly constituted Board has not had the opportunity to consider the full consequences of this previously adopted mandate but, in light of its potentially devastating impact, we believe it is incumbent upon you to do so.”

“…There are other research-proven strategies to improve student outcomes that should be the focus of educational reform efforts. We also take issue with the notion that retests and ‘alternative’ testing will adequately address this problem. In addition, last-minute attempts at remediation by school districts are ‘too little, too late.’ We strongly urge you to reexamine this issue at the earliest possible opportunity before too much more damage is done to our students and our educational system.”

Other signatories to the letter include The Autism Project, College Visions, the George Wiley Center, the NAACP, Providence Student Union, Providence Youth Student Movement, Rhode Island Legal Services, Tides Family Services, and the Urban League of Rhode Island.

RI rent too damn high, says HousingWorksRI report

mass, ri conn aff housingThe rent in Rhode Island is too damn high, according to a new report from HousingWorks RI.

To afford a typical two-bedroom apartment in Rhode Island a renter would need to earn more than $47,000 per year. About half of Rhode Island residents earn less than that.

“What’s more, a quarter of all Rhode Island renter households pay over 50 percent of their income on housing costs,” says the report. “Rhode Islanders who spend more than half their incomes on housing cannot fully participate in their local economies. Quite simply, affordable housing is an essential part of our state’s economic infrastructure and necessary for economic growth.”

renter burden by income

Rhode Island’s paltry investment in affordable housing is a significant stumbling block in improving the state’s economy, the report says. And we’re lagging far behind our neighbors. Connecticut spends $34 per capita on affordable housing and Massachusetts spends $32. Rhode Island, on the other hand, spends only $12 per capita on affordable housing.

Both Connecticut and Massachusetts recognize why affordable housing is essential for a stronger economy,” said Jessica Cigna, the research and policy associate for HousingWorks RI. “As a result, they invest money to build affordable housing and appropriate significant budget dollars that help make rents in those developments affordable to lower-wage workers.”

The report also says that investing in affordable housing is good for the overall economy.

High housing cost burdens are bad for business. An inadequate supply of affordable housing puts Rhode Island at a distinct competitive disadvantage in attracting and retaining workers. Employers from across the country report that a shortage of affordable housing negatively affects their ability to sustain and grow their businesses.”

Category One Memorial Designation Commission?


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Woonsocket Cross 01Where can I find the Category One Memorial Designation Commission? As far as I can tell, it does not exist, despite legislation passed last year mandating the creation of such an authority.

After the Freedom from Religion Foundation challenged the constitutionality of a large Christian cross on public land in Woonsocket, the General Assembly hastily passed, at 2:59am on the last day of the session, an odd and mostly useless bill, H8143A. The bill was originally written with the intent of getting around the First Amendment, specifically the part that says, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;” which the Supreme Court has routinely held applies to the erection of permanent religious monuments on public land.

This bill established the “Category One Memorial Designation Commission,” a body of five nominees who will “hear and make determinations on requests by members of the general public to designate items within the state as category one memorial items.” Category one memorial items are those that have “attained a secular traditional, cultural or community recognition or value,” are located on government owned land, and were in existence prior to January 1, 2012. The hammer drops with this line: “The potential identification of an item or the item having recognizable identification with a known or established religion shall not exclude the item” from being so designated.

Once an item or memorial has achieved “Category One” status, what then? “Upon deliberation, the commission may communicate their majority decision to designate an item as such in written form to the city or town clerk of the municipality wherein the item is located, for recording in the land deeds, and to the chief executive of the municipality.”

That’s it.

Wait.

That’s it?

The original version of the bill, H8143, the one that did not pass, took a much harder stance, and contained the line that, “The state of Rhode Island declares that a category one memorial item shall not be deemed or viewed as the making of a law regarding the establishment of a state religion” and “It shall be the policy of the state to defend against any non-governmental challenge to the placement or continued existence of any category one memorial item on any state or municipal property.” The bill would have established a $1 million fund for the Attorney General to use in defending such items from lawsuits.

Of course this version of the bill, had it passed, would have never survived court scrutiny. The legislature can’t pass a law that violates the Constitution by inserting a clause that says such violations don’t count, so the watered down version was passed instead.

I recently got to wondering what the status of the “Category One Memorial Designation Commission” is right now. According to the legislation, the permanent commission is to be made up of five members, three to be appointed by the Speaker of the House and two by the Senate President. In February 2013, an odd numbered year, the Commission was to “elect from among themselves a chairperson.”

None of this has happened.

According to the Woonsocket Call, as of March 5, 2013 Representative McLaughlin, who authored the legislation, said “he is working with legislative leaders to make the first appointments to the commission.” This delay means that the Commission won’t be able to be established or begin its work until February 2015, since the legislation specifically says, “The members of the commission shall, in February of each odd-numbered year, elect from among themselves a chairperson.”

In the meantime, how is the important work of declaring certain memorials “Category One Items” to get done?

Representative McLaughlin seems to have confused the original, unconstitutional legislation with the declawed and useless legislation that passed, saying, “the law is in place to protect the monuments and others like it.”

Even the Woonsocket Call, which is sympathetic to the Woonsocket Cross, could not help but point out that “As written, the law seems only to define a category one memorial item and create a commission to so designate such structures, but it doesn’t specify any protections from legal challenges.”

I’ve written emails to Speaker Fox, Senate President Paiva Weed, the chairperson of the Rhode Island Historical Society and the the Adjutant General of the National Guard, all of whom are supposed to be involved with the commission member selection process, and to Representatives McLaughlin, Hull, Dickinson and MacBeth who wrote and introduced the bill, asking about the status of the commission.

But so far I have received no response.

With Gist, it’s public sector enemies against the rest of RI


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gist public schoolsThere’s something – if not good, at the very least honest – in getting to see the politics of public education play out publicly this week. As educators, activists and parents across the state are deriding Deborah Gist, the business community has her back.

The so-often-called education reform movement – what progressives know as education deform, or corporate reform – has always been primarily supported by the upper crust and the fiscally conservative. Economists call it a market-based approach to public education reform; of course chambers of commerce, right wing think tanks and tax-hating, small-government conservatives support it.

It is not hyperbole to suggest that that Gist is implementing the kind of reform ALEC would like to see here. In fact, she has some loose connections to ALEC. She is, after all, one of Don Carcieri’s toxic gifts to Rhode Island’s public sector.

But there’s another voice – or, more accurately, voices – that are making themselves heard here in the Ocean State.

According to pollster Joe Fleming, 85 percent of teachers think Gist should be replaced. Getting 9 of ten people to agree on just about anything is noteworthy, when it’s who should be their boss it is damning. I’ve likened Gist to former Red Sox manager Bobby Valentine: she might know the game real well, but she just can’t seem to get this group of players to perform for her.

What’s even more significant is that the education community isn’t simply voicing its concerns anonymously or through its unions. They are also quite literally standing up in public and speaking out against their employer. This is amazingly courageous, I think.

As long as we are keeping score, it’s well worth noting that it’s not simply educators versus business leaders when it comes to how (not if) we reform education in the Ocean State. The ACLU – a staunch supporter of the Constitution, not union members or working class people (see Steve Ahquist’s story on Citizen United from yesterday) – has grave civil liberty concerns about her testing policies. The Autism Project, the Wiley Center, the Disability Law Center and the NAACP, among many others, all have issues too.

Linda Borg had a pretty telling passage in her very well-written story stripped across the top of today’s Providence Journal:

By almost every indication, it would seem that Gist has profoundly alienated her constituents: teachers, students and parents.

But Gist has apparently not lost the support of the people crucial to her re-appointment: Governor Chafee and the chairwoman of the new Board of Education.

We shall see soon enough.

Newport bloggers battle over culture of sexism


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There’s a pretty ugly blogger battle going down around women’s issue in the typically picturesque City-by-the-Sea.

Newport Patch blogger Charity Dash wrote a post about the rampant culture of sexism and sexual harassment that exists in the local bar scene.

“The age bracket the city thrives on (Generation Y), is inherently unsafe for its female inhabitants. As a twenty-three year old woman, I can’t walk to work without expecting street harassment. I can’t go to a bar without the fear of a fifty year old man sitting next to me and chanting demeaning and derogatory terms.

In Newport, it’s okay for the drunk sailor-bros to treat women like blow up dolls.

Newport Buzz Director Tristan Pinnock then published a frankly shocking response to her post. Here’s a sample:

Charity Dash: “We make eighty cents on your dollar. What do we know?”

Newport Buzz response: “That you would rather have children than advance your careers through your 30′s, you’re not really into engineering and you don’t like to negotiate for bigger pay raises.”

Wow. That’s not what Sen. Gayle Goldin said when we asked her the same question. Nor does it jibe with how Carolyn Mark, president of RI-NOW, might see the situation. Or anyone even slightly more socially evolved than, say, Ralph Kramden, for that matter.

Newport Buzz also writes:

I hate to be the one to let you in on this, but gender relations come down to whatever each party is willing to put up with. Men will behave as badly as they can get away with. We’d be living in cardboard boxes if we thought we could bring girls home to them.

If either of these two columns are at all indicative of how men in Newport act, then indeed the city-by-the-Sea has a serious issue indeed.

McDaid honored for pioneering non-linear digital fiction


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mcdaid_johnJohn McDaid, best known for the Hardeadlines blog, has been a digital publisher since the BI era (before internet). Now his pioneering efforts from that era are being curated, and saved for posterity, with the help of a National Endowment for the Humanities grant.

McDaid’s 1993, hopefully-soon-to-be-a-cult-classic “Uncle Buddy’s Phantom Funhouse” is science fiction told through science fiction.

“It was an attempt create a new kind of non-linear fiction entirely through artifacts,” he said. “The premise is that you, as the reader, have come into possession of a vanished science fiction writer’s hard drive, and you need to piece together the story.”

In 1993, it was reviewed by the New York Times.

Here are some screen shots from McDaid’s non-linear science fiction. He explains each below the image.

"The main interface to the fiction," says McDaid of this image. "You enter the story by clicking on one of the windows or doors to open one of the artifacts."
“The main interface to the fiction,” says McDaid of this image. “You enter the story by clicking on one of the windows or doors to open one of the artifacts.”
"This is a page from the digital sketchbook/notebook of vanished writer Arthur 'Buddy' Newkirk."
“This is a page from the digital sketchbook/notebook of vanished writer Arthur ‘Buddy’ Newkirk.”
"A sample page from the digital dictionary of specific terms of art from the story."
“A sample page from the digital dictionary of specific terms of art from the story.”
sample image from the custom Tarot deck
sample image from the custom Tarot deck

Do you care about the show or about results?


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There was apparently quite a party in Cranston yesterday, with several hundred teachers coming together to, well, you wouldn’t say they were there to praise the state Education Commissioner, Deborah Gist. In a poll out a couple of weeks ago, 85% of teachers say they don’t approve of the commissioner or the current policies of the state Department of Education. 

gist in egI think a number of friends I’ve spoken to about this poll don’t appreciate how remarkable a result it is. One of the little secrets of unions is that they don’t usually have unanimous support of their members, and independent polling generally bears that out. It is the rare union that has 85% support on most of what it does. In other words, Commissioner Gist has given a remarkable boost to union solidarity.

On the same subject, there was an interesting letter last week, written to the Board of Education and signed by the directors of 20 different business organizations, like the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce and the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council. The writers praised Commissioner Gist’s “admirable leadership” and begged her contract be renewed in June.

To be honest, I was being kind and it actually wasn’t that interesting a letter. It mostly consisted of the usual boilerplate, reciting familiar facts about our state’s economy and the educational condition of our citizens. Then it goes on to praise Gist for the mere establishment of policies and the winning of grants, and her willingness to “take bold action for reform.”  These are nice things, to be sure, but who would mistake them for actual achievements?  The policies, you might have noticed, are fairly controversial, and the evidence that they will work is, well, thin. Bold action certainly sounds nice, but invading Iraq was pretty bold, too. How did that work out for us?  If you care more about results than about show, the letter showed some curious priorities.

The thing that came closest to being interesting about the letter was that it referenced our lag behind neighboring states on the national NAEP test scores. This is true, but it is not the only thing shown by those scores and I wonder how many of the letter’s signers have spent time examining Rhode Island’s NAEP results.

To review, the national NAEP tests are widely described as the “gold standard” of testing. They are administered nationally and the data are considered quite reliable, largely because no one has an incentive to game the results. They are administered in the 4th and 8th grades, in reading and math. (I gather there will be high school tests in the future, but there is no past data for now.)

naep-plot

NAEP average figures are shown in the figure, where you can see that Rhode Island scores (red lines) have been steadily climbing for several years. For simplicity, these are averages of the 4th and 8th-grade test scores in the two subjects, but there are similar stories in all the disaggregated scores. Yes, Massachusetts students (blue lines) score higher than ours, but are the red lines in the graph a record of dismal achievement rescued by Governor Don Carcieri’s 2009 appointment of Deborah Gist?  That’s not what they look like to me.

To me, the NAEP results seem somewhat encouraging. They say we still have some hard work to do to catch up to our neighbors, but we embarked on an upward path several years ago. The last data point belongs to the current commissioner, but there is no story to tell here of the triumph of her policies: some categories see a slight uptick and some are slightly down. If she wants to take credit for the accelerating improvement in 8th-grade math scores, she’ll also have to take blame for the slowing improvement in 4th-grade reading scores. In all cases, the encouraging trends were underway years before her arrival.

Monday also saw the release of another letter, from 25 community groups, including the Urban League, the ACLU, RI Legal Services, and the Providence Student Union, urging the Board of Education to reconsider the Commissioner’s disastrous revamp of the high school graduation requirements. Unlike the business leaders, who praised the show of establishing policies and talk about “bold action”, this letter focused on a specific policy — the change in graduation requirement — and its bad effects on students. In other words, these guys are paying attention to the facts on the ground, not the nice words about them. Which one matters more?

The truth is that policy is where rubber meets road. It’s not about the show and about who cuts the most vigorous figure as a leader. It’s not about the hair or the smile, the cut of a suit, or the right kinds of friends. Debates like these ought to be about facts and the policies to address those facts. Policy is what the government does — for you and to you. To focus on the personalities behind it is entirely to miss the point. You’d think this is something folks who think of themselves as business leaders would understand, but the evidence is, well, thin.

Teacher: RI biz community is ‘below proficient’


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This was one of the more interesting statements made at the teacher rally last night – and not because it shows why Deborah Gist isn’t an effective education leader. Rather, because it shows the inherent hypocrisy in our political debate and how varying interests can employ widely divergent logic depending on the situation and where they want the blame to fall.

Is a business to blame if it can’t attract customers, or is it part of a larger societal problem? Is a teacher to blame if they can’t reach their students, or is it part of a larger societal problem?

Imagine if your small business could only attract customers from one community: would you want it to be from Barrington or Central Falls? If it was Central Falls, would you want to be held accountable for the same profit margins as the Barrington business?

Rhode Islanders move to end Citizens United

MTAprotestSignRhode Island Move to Amend  held a meeting Monday night at the Warwick Public Library  to discuss ways in which to reverse the Supreme Court’s controversial and unpopular Citizens United  decision. House Bill 6051, introduced by Representative Art Handy, seeks to challenge the Supreme Court ruling by asserting that Corporations are not persons and that money is not speech. Passing such a law, in direct contravention to the Supreme Court could have several effects. The Supreme Court may strike down the law upon consideration or it may use the law to reconsider it’s previous decision. Supporters say that both outcomes will lead to fresh discussions on the corrupting influence of money on our political system.

Over the course of the next several months Rhode Island Move to Amend will be working to engage the public and our legislators over this very important issue. You can help by joining Rhode Island Move to Amend.

Major rhetorical territory was staked out at the House Judiciary Committee meeting held on May 9, to discuss the bill.  Abel Collins, who heads up the Move to Amend Coalition, stated it plainly when he said, “Now is the time to stop [corporations]… which are really just legal fictions, from having the same rights as persons.”

Chris Curry, of RI MoveOn.org, spoke forcefully of the dystopian impact of Citizens United.

Of all the issues we address, nothing even comes close to matching Citizens United’s ability to inspire rage and indignation in just about everyone I talk to. Not because it’s so fundamentally dishonest that corporations are people or that money equals speech, it’s because they consider the five justices of the Supreme Court who made that ruling to have violated their oath of office by unconstitutionally establishing a framework for a takeover of our country by multinational corporations.

A spokesperson for the RI Sierra Club said, “Rhode Island should get in front of this issue our state was founded by thinkers who were not afraid to be contrarians to the dominant paradigms of the time. We should make a stand and say that our country is for the people and by the people and not for sale to the highest bidder.”

In counterpoint, the RI ACLU opposes any legislation that might open the door to restricting political speech, or limiting a person’s right to use money to advance their speech.

“I’ve heard this a lot, that ‘money is not speech,'” said RI ACLU Director Steve Brown, “That’s a very catchy slogan, but it really simplifies a much more complicated issue. Money is not necessarily speech but it certainly facilitates a lot of speech and it is necessary to facilitate a lot of speech…

If you want to prepare a flyer, and get fifty copies made at Kinko’s to express your opposition to this constitutional amendment it costs money. To just say that money is not speech and therefore can be regulated is to say that the General assembly could say, “You cannot spend money if it’s to be used to prepare a flyer on a political issue.”

We think that the State Constitution would be diminished and demeaned by adding a provision like this into a very important document meant to protect all of our rights.

Amplifying Steve Brown’s points and adopting the ACLU’s position as his own was a spokesperson for the RI Tea Party, who said, perversely, “Citizens United struck a tremendous blow for the First Amendment,” and added,

Money is not the problem. Corporations are not evil entities in and of themselves. Corporations are nothing more than collections of individuals and people who are responsible for their own decisions.

Stepping on the First Amendment is a slippery slope that we cannot walk onto. That is the reason why, for philosophical reasons, that we have to oppose this.

John Marion of Common Cause RI struck a mostly neutral tone. The national organization has not yet reached a consensus on the kind of language it would like to see in a bill designed to take on Citizen’s United, and though he appreciated Art Handy and Move to Amend’s efforts, he urged caution.

We appreciate the efforts of Move to Amend and the other groups that have come out with specific language, but as Mr. Brown said, this is very weighty a matter. We disagree with the ACLU’s belief that you shouldn’t tinker because this problem is one created by an interpretation of the Constitution, so it can only be solved by a change to our Constitution.

People talk about Citizens United, Citizens United, Citizens United, but really this is about a case in 1876, Buckley v. Valeo which is the case that basically decided that money is the functional equivalent of speech and therefore since we can’t limit the speech, we can’t limit the money. So I think its really important that we go back and look at that decision and the context of that decision.

Perhaps the most pragmatic and compelling statement came from Jerry Belair, speaking for the RI Progressive Democrats, not because of his politics, but because of his career as a corporate attorney.

I’m a corporate attorney. I can tell you clearly that a corporation is not a person. We establish a corporation for the purposes of making business easy for us. It’s a very successful way of doing business. It’s also a means of limiting our liability… That the purpose for these entities. And to even suggest that somehow a corporation has attained personhood under either the Federal Constitution or a state constitution is insidious. It’s the most insidious attack on our democracy that I’ve seen in my lifetime.

It is clear that money in politics, money as speech and corporate personhood are large issues that demand lots of thought and definitive action.  The ACLU would support a slate of legislation to address these issues, even as it continues to support Citizens United:

…the ACLU supports a comprehensive and meaningful system of public financing that would help create a level playing field for every qualified candidate. We support carefully drawn disclosure rules. We support reasonable limits on campaign contributions and we support stricter enforcement of existing bans on coordination between candidates and super PACs.

Perhaps these concerns can be addressed in the way that the ACLU would like, but even the ACLU sees the prospects of real reform as being rather dim. In the very next paragraph the group opines that,

Some argue that campaign finance laws can be surgically drafted to protect legitimate political speech while restricting speech that leads to undue influence by wealthy special interests. Experience over the last 40 years has taught us that money always finds an outlet, and the endless search for loopholes simply creates the next target for new regulation. It also contributes to cynicism about our political process.

I would suggest that the cynicism is all the ACLU’s. Under their formulation, money is not just speech, money is power, and it will always find a way to corrupt our political system. Anything we do to change this system, the ACLU seems to say, can only potentially make things worse. Such an outlook is the epitome of cynicism.

RI Move to Amend is hopeful in that particular way Rhode Island embodies Hope, and emblazons this word on our state flag. Our state was born out of Hope and has stood up to an enormously powerful enemy with near infinite money and power before. On the issue of corporate personhood Rhode Island can show the way just as we did 241 years ago when the HMS Gaspee burned.

The fight against corporate personhood is the ultimate civil rights battle. With this legislation Rhode Island can once again strike the first blow for freedom and ignite a revolution that can bring an end to the specter of corporate oligarchy.


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