Reps, Save The Bay sound alarm over beach closures


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Stormwater runoff, filled with non-point source pollution, is spilling into Greenwich Bay.
Stormwater runoff, filled with non-point source pollution, is spilling into Greenwich Bay.

State legislators from around the West Bay and Save The Bay are holding an event Wednesday to bring attention to the high number of beach closures this year and the potential of another devastating fish kill in Upper Narragansett Bay and Greenwich Bay this summer.

“Beach closures are running at a record-breaking pace this summer. Growing dead zones are setting up the Bay for a low-oxygen event as severe and widespread as the Greenwich Bay fishkill that occurred 10 years ago,” according to a press release from Save The Bay. ”

Tom Kutcher and Jonathan Stone of Save The Bay will be joined by progressive state Reps. Teresa Tanzi, of Narragansett, Frank Ferri, of Warwick and Art Handy of Cranston at Oakland Beach on Greenwich Bay in Warwick, not far from where similarly hypoxic conditions in 2003 killed more than million fish.

Hypoxia is the scientific term for low oxygen levels in water. In Narragansett Bay, it is caused when lawn fertilizer pet waste and other non-point sources of nitrogen leach into The Bay and cause rapid plant growth that starves fish and other sea creatures of oxygen.

“Rhode Island depends on Narragansett Bay for recreation and commerce,” said the release. “An unhealthy Bay limits economic and recreational opportunities.”

RI Future early last week that beach closures “have been alarmingly high this year.” We also reported last week that DEM officials were concerned about the potential for another fish kill, like the one that happened in 2003.

Climate activists protest Brayton Point power plant


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hljkhjh Hundreds of climate activists, (including members of Keepers of the Mountains, Fossil Free RI, and 350.org), marched on the Brayton Point Coal Plant yesterday; I counted myself lucky to be among them. The action began with Saturday’s 6 hour long training, and resulted in 44 arrests on Sunday afternoon- (and more than a few sunburned faces).

Louis Alstadt, (former Vice President of ExxonMobil), recently told the world: “It will take masses of people demanding action from politicians to offset the huge amount of money that the fossil fuel industry is using to influence lawmakers.”  This statement reflects our reasons for taking to the streets, demonstrating passion and perseverance, in such great numbers.  The shared beliefs which brought us together were summarized by one of the rally’s first speakers: “Their vision of profit by coal or petrol is wrong.”  The industry has abused Appalachian workers, leveled mountains, and impacted our environment from West Virginia to Massachusetts, and remains the largest single source of global warming pollution in the world.

brayton point“We believe that climate change is an absolutely urgent and pressing threat that will kill people,” said Craig Altemose, director of the Better Future Project.  Yet he also noted that this isn’t really just “climate change” – it is, more specifically, “global warming.”   We must call it what it is.  He described Russia’s heat wave in 2010, which claimed the lives of 15,000, and discussed the global impact of that season.  With coal comprising one-third of all CO2 emissions, we have no choice but to end our consumption within the next 30-40 years.  To ignore this fact (or to buy the myth of ‘carbon-free coal’) is what one speaker jokingly called “wicked stupid.”

ResizedImage_1375045185756Dominion Energy, the owner of Brayton Point, has invested $1 billion to make the plant more “environmentally friendly.”  This is laughable when it contributes to higher rates of asthma and cancer, and tops the EPA’s list of “most toxic emissions” in Massachusetts.

And what did we face, as peaceful protestors looking to gain Gov. Deval Patrick’s attention?

One hundred law enforcement officials from the Somerset Police Department, Massachusetts State Police, the Massachusetts Environmental Police, the Southeastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council, and members of the Bristol County sheriff’s office. Those arrested were taken to a makeshift jail set up by the sheriff’s office at a National Guard armory in Fall River.  However, our criminal (in)justice system is not enough to stop many folks who see this as an urgent life-or-death matter.

ResizedImage_13750451849348According to the FB page of 350 Massachusetts, Turner Bledsoe (79 years old) had this to say, regarding his arrest: “This is the most important thing we can do at this time. We’re on the tipping point. Emissions must go down. If we don’t do something about it, we’re in the soup.”

One protestor I spoke with said she appreciated everyone shouting “Thank you, We love you!” at the arrestees.  The gratitude and beauty was indeed palpable, and I left with a renewed sense of purpose.  It isn’t that we “should” do more; we must do more.  When lives and ecosystems are at stake, it is an obligation- to the earth and to each other.

Rep. Ferri and his husband Tony ready for big wedding day


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You know your wedding is a big deal in Rhode Island when reporters from NBC 10, RIPR, WPRO and the Associated Press all want to interview you about it. Such is the case for state Rep. Frank Ferri and his longtime husband Tony Caparco, who are re-affirming their wedding vows to one another now that their home state recognizes their legal right to do so.

The big day is Thursday, August 1 – for both Rhode Island and Ferri and Caparco.

“We’re very excited,” Tony told me on the phone today and Frank fielded a call from another local reporter. “It just means so much to us.”

Ferri and Caparco have been together for 32 years and they were married in Vancouver in 2006. It was their 25th anniversary together.

“That was a more simple ceremony,” Caparco said. “It was more low key and emotional.”

frand tony first weddingTheir second wedding on Thursday, they both said, will be more of a celebration of their right to marry in Rhode Island – an effort that both were an instrumental part of.

Ferri was politically active in the campaign for marriage equality when they married in 2006, but he was still 14 months removed from declaring he would run for elected office. Fast forward to 2013 and, as a high-profile and highly respected openly gay legislator, Ferri was a crucial part of the very successful campaign to pass same sex marriage rights in Rhode Island this year. House Speaker Gordon Fox, who is also gay and was perhaps even more instrumental in marriage equality, will marry Frank and Tony on Thursday.

While the whole affair has the feeling of a royal wedding, Ferri said it doesn’t seem so from he and Tony’s vantage point.

“It’s a little bit stressful,” he told me when he got off the phone with another reporter. “We’re still pulling all the details together.”

The rehearsal dinner is tonight for the 35 person wedding party. And as Ferri and I chatted, yet another reporter called. In the background I could hear Tony tell him a TV crew would be at their house in 45 minutes.

“45 minutes,” Ferri said to his fiance, “I’m not even shaved yet.”

 

 

Celebrate the session with RI NOW tonight


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If you’re already missing law-making season on Smith Hill, or if you simply want to celebrate that legislators are finished making the sausage for the year, the Rhode Island Chapter of the National Organization for Women is hosting a post-session party tonight in Providence.

Check out the Facebook event here.

It was a long session with amazing wins such as marriage equality and temporary caregivers insurance. But we have many challenges to take up again, now is the time to unwind, reflect and recharge. Join the ladies of the RI NOW board, legislators, and fellow advocates for happy hour as we review this year’s success and future challenges. Free appetizers, cash bar. Please join us on the back patio of India Restaurant – 1060 Hope Street in Providence. Sliding scale donation – $5 and up.

Come party with the members of RI NOW tonight at 5 pm at India Restaurant on Hope St tonight.
Come party with the members of RI NOW tonight at 5 pm at India Restaurant on Hope St tonight.

Same sex couples begin applying for marriage license today


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Marriage equality for all might not become the law of the land in the Ocean State until this Thursday, but in Providence same sex couples can begin the paperwork part of the process starting today. The Capital City has set up  special preregistration process for the flood of same sex couples applying for marriage licenses on Thursday.

In anticipation of the first day that Rhode Island’s marriage equality law goes into effect, the City of Providence will hold a three-day pre-registration next week for all couples who plan to obtain marriage licenses at City Hall on Thursday, August 1.

The City’s Department of Vital Statistics, on the first floor of Providence City Hall, will accept pre-registrations for marriage licenses from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. on July 29, July 30, and July 31. If proper documentation is completed, marriage licenses may then be picked up at the Department of Vital Statistics during normal business hours on August 1 from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

“Municipalities that celebrate and cultivate diversity are the places where creativity and ideas thrive,” said Mayor Angel Taveras. “I am excited to offer all loving, committed Providence couples the chance to celebrate their right to marry on August 1.”

Couples with at least one party who is a resident of Providence, as well as couples who are residents of another state but who will be married in Providence are eligible to receive marriage licenses and to pre-register at City Hall.

To pre-register and pick up marriage license on August 1, the City of Providence requires the following documents from both parties:

Certified Birth Certificates – birth certificates must include parent(s) name(s)
Valid Photo I.D. – government-issued I.D., passport or driver’s license
Proof of Residency – parties must present a utility bill, bank statement, car registration, tax return or pay stub with current address
If this is not either party’s first marriage, a certified final divorce decree or a death certificate from the previous marriage must be presented.

All documents must be original and in English. If the documents are not in English, a certified translation must be presented and accompanied by the original documents. These documents must be notarized by a notary public.

Both parties must be present at the time of pre-registration and when picking up marriage licenses on August 1. There is a $24 license fee; it is advised that couples pay the fee during pre-registration (check or money order only, made payable to: City of Providence.)

Couples will be required to complete a Rhode Island Department of Health Certificate of Marriage Form, available in hard copy at the City’s Department of Vital Statistics or online at: http://www.providenceri.com/vital-statistics.

Limitations of an MMP alternate history (Part 10 of MMP RI)


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The biggest limitation of looking at all this is it’s trying to fit a square peg in a round hole, so to speak. First Past the Post requires voter to vote strategically. It’s simply not worth the risk to vote for the candidate you truly believe in in a three-way race if it means a higher chance that the candidate you despise will win.

So the district results aren’t the best way to figure out how voters would’ve selected candidates in an MMP election. The best way would be to actually run an MMP election. But that’s a constitutional amendment and referendum away.

Another limitation is thinking about this as a series of MMP elections rather than what would be different if each election was the first MMP election ever. It’s not so much a problem with the results, it’s an issue with how the results might have been effected.

For instance, the list candidates would be campaigning all over the state, raising their profiles tremendously. They also are more beholden to the party, making internal party politics incredibly important to voters. In an MMP election, non-district candidates are ranked by their party on a list, in the order that the party wants to be seated. So a party’s number one selection is a person they’ve marked as someone they really want to be in the chamber. This means these top candidates are reflective of the party’s general principles.

Figuring out how this would change things is very difficult. I have no idea how crucial the 2002 election might’ve been, when over half of the General Assembly could have been new members with little understanding or care for the various stupid customs the General Assembly operates on. Would these new Reps and Senators have transformed the GA? Or would they have been totally consumed by its workings? And would the split between list candidates and district candidates have caused fissures in the parties during general election campaigns?

A final thing is the number of times the Democrats lose their veto-proof supermajority in the MMP system. It happens in 2004 and 2010, when they underperform with voters. They regain it in two years, but those four years when they lose it could be crucial. The General Assembly may have been far more conservative in the years immediately after 2004 if Gov. Carcieri could’ve vetoed legislation and made it stick. Gov. Chafee might be more popular if he’d been more assertive as a result of his veto power. We talk about the weakness of the governor in Rhode Island, but in this case the Governor has been weakened by circumstance rather than by design.

Beyond this, we really don’t have much of a party system in Rhode Island beyond the Big Two. Most parties can’t pass the threshold for state recognition, which means they don’t get the advantage of appearing at the top of the ballot or on voter registration forms. Smaller parties also suffer far worse from the recruitment problems that all the parties have to some extent.

 

This is Part 10 of the MMP RI series, which posits what Rhode Island’s political landscape would look like if we had switched to a mixed-member proportional representation (MMP) system in 2002. Part 9 (the Election of 2012) is available here. Part 11 is another look at the Election of 2010.