Rhode Island’s climate has changed already


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And here's downtown as seen from behind the Field's Point windfarm.According to a White House fact sheet on how climate change will affect Rhode Island, we “can expect more … significantly more days above 90 degrees and flooding from sea level rise and extreme precipitation events.”

We’re actually seeing all of this already.

Rhode Island has been experiencing many more 90 degree days for decades now – about three times as many. Since 1904, we’ve had an average of 4 days a year where the mercury hits 90, according to Glen Field, a meteorologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Since 1980, according to his data, there have been on average 12 days a year 90 degrees or hotter. This year there have already been 15 days 90 degrees or hotter and in 2012 there were 12, he said.

Annual precipitation rates haven’t risen as drastically, but Rhode Island has seen more than five more inches of rain and snow since 1980 than the state had since 1904.

As such, the Obama Administration is sending Nancy Sutley, chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, to the Ocean State on Wednesday to discuss these and other issues related to climate change.

According to a press release she “will join Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Representative Jim Langevin, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 1 Administrator Curt Spalding, and local residents in Providence for an event hosted by the Rhode Island Public Health Association to discuss the public health impacts of climate change, which include higher risks of asthma attacks and heat-related illnesses, prolonged allergy seasons, and more frequent extreme weather.”

Providence students sit in at Ed Dept., wait for Gist


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Members of the Providence Student Union are staging a sit in at the Department of Education until they get a meeting with Commissioner Deborah Gist, according to Aaron Regunberg.

UPDATE: The students saw Gist and they scheduled a meeting for Thursday, said Regunberg.

Here’s the full release:

Around forty Providence students have sat down in the front office of the Rhode Island Department of Education, saying they are willing to wait as long as necessary until Commissioner Gist will come down to talk with them. They have been waiting close to two hours. “We’ve come here today to share with the Commissioner some new information regarding the economic impact of the NECAP graduation requirement on students,” said Tim Shea, a Providence high school student. “We only wanted a few minutes of her time. But when she refused to come down and even speak with the students she’s supposed to be representing, we decided to just sit down and wait for her.” Students, members of the youth group the Providence Student Union, say they have asked for the Deputy Commissioner, the RIDE Chief of Staff, and other RIDE officers and none are willing to give even a few minutes of their time.

Developing….

ride sit in

big action ride

Sheldon to Colbert: Beltway paralysis will break soon


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sheldon colbert

Rhode Island’s own Senator Sheldon Whitehouse took on the most famous fake conservative in the country last night to hype his great new book: “On Virtues: Quotations and Insight to Live a Full, Honorable, and Truly American Life.”

For those Flash player-impaired readers, here’s the highlight:

Sheldon: “I think that Washington right now is a little short on some of the virtues and I’m not even the senior senator from Rhode Island but I want to do what I can to try to push a different debate into the discussion and look back and see what people have said and done at the most important times in history… ”

Colbert: “Do you think this is an important time in human history?”

Sheldon: “I do”

Colbert: “Then why is nothing happening then?” (applause/hoots/laughs)

Sheldon: “Because we are at a junction and the fight is where do we turn what direction to do we and pretty soon I think the paralysis in Washington is going to break. I think the grip of the tea party on the Republican Party is going to diminish. I think a more moderate Republican is going to be able to appear and then we will be able to work together and move forward … As Winston Churchill said, ‘to broad and sunlit uplands.'”

Colbert: “Really? That is nice. You’ve got these things in your pocket all the time.”

Poor cities appeal for more education money


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Mayor Grebien Gov Chafee
Mayor Grebien Gov Chafee
Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien pleads for the municipal aid package as Gov. Chafee listens.

Pawtucket and Woonsocket school districts are appealing a joint lawsuit to the state supreme court which argues that “the State’s 2010 funding formula leaves a severe funding gap.”

The suit contends that because Rhode Island for years operated with a state education funding formula, that it is now implementing the recently-enacted formula too slowly and to the detriment of students and education in these two poor urban school districts.

“There is not enough money for children to take their own textbook home, and the textbooks in question are decades old,” according to the brief. “Children come to school with issues they are dealing with at home, but the schools cannot afford to have enough school psychologists, guidance counselors or other support resources to help children be ready to learn.”

Jason Becker, a former RIDE analyst who helped craft the new formula, says Pawtucket and Woonsocket have themselves, not the state, to blame if students are not receiving an adequate education. On Twitter this morning, he said a Carulo Action, a proceedure in which a school committee can appeal to the state for more education funding from its corresponding town/city council.

The filing lays out in very stark terms the achievement gap so prevalent in Rhode Island public education. You can read the entire filing here. But the introduction gives a great sense of the social implications that the lawsuit is trying address:

Imagine it is a Spring morning in 1996.  Two mothers with healthy newborn baby girls rest in adjacent rooms at Womens and Infants Hospital.  Mother A and Baby A are part of a middle-class family in Narragansett.  Mother B and Baby B are from a Pawtucket family that lives in poverty and does not speak English.  In the hospital, Baby A and Baby B receive the same, high quality medical care, and each has the same prospect of a healthy life.

Once the babies leave the hospital, however, their future prospects will diverge sharply.  Baby A will receive the best public education money can buy, in a program that spends more $15,000 per child of State and local funds each year, $2,000 above the State average. contrast, Baby B, who has greater needs due to her poverty and lack of spoken English at home, will attend overextended programs in decaying and demoralizing facilities, in a learning environment continually compromised by inadequate resources of less than $11,000 of combined State and local funds ($2,000 below the State average) even while Pawtucket’s tax rate for public schools is higher than Narragansett’s.

Today (in the summer of 2013) Girl A is 17 years old and probably looking forward to her senior year at Narragansett High School, where she will earn a diploma and go on to college.  In contrast, if Girl B has not yet dropped out of school, the odds are she will not receive a diploma, even if she passes all of her high school courses.  Girl B will face these added risks because of the introduction of “high stakes testing,” which the great majority of Pawtucket 11 grade students failed this year.  In many ways, each girl’s future was determined at the time she left the hospital in 1996.  To add to the tragedy, the two girls’ diverging futures would have been exactly reversed had the hospital mistakenly sent Baby A home with Mother B, and vice versa.

This imagined story reflects an underlying reality in Rhode Island today.  Every day, the children with the greatest needs in Pawtucket and Woonsocket strive to get the best education they can under desperate conditions.  The privations that ravage the Pawtucket and Woonsocket public schools are far from inevitable; in fact, many Rhode Island public schools offer a vastly superior learning environment.  Wealthier communities offer superior public education because education is a basic right, and because they have sufficient local resources to guarantee that right.

In contrast, Woonsocket and Pawtucket are two of the State’s four poorest communities, and the State’s funding, even under the much-celebrated 2010 school aid funding formula, does not come close to providing what their children need.

In this way, Rhode Island’s public education today fails to meet our most deeply held values, both as Americans and as Rhode Islanders.

Progressives ‘confront’ Langevin tonight at town hall


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Congressman Jim Langevin at his Warwick office. (Photo by Bob Plain)
Congressman Jim Langevin at his Warwick office. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Progressives will “confront” Congressman Jim Langevin at a town hall meeting he is hosting in Cranston tonight at 6:30 for his support of the NSA spying on Americans.

“It’s time for him to hear from his constituents,” said David Segal, a former Rhode Island state representative who is the executive director of Demand Progress, a nationally-known advocacy group that supports civil liberties and internet freedom. The Rhode Island Progressive Democrats and other left-leaning groups are also planning on attending the town hall.

“The tide has turned: Americans are no longer willing to sacrifice their constitutionally enshrined civil liberties,” Segal said in a statement released this morning, “Yet Rep. Langevin steadfastly supports the monitoring of nearly every American under these secret programs, instituted under a secret process, justified by a secret interpretation of the Patriot Act.”

In a post on this site on July 25, Segal thanked his former opponent David Cicilline for supporting legislation that would “curtail the NSA’s regime of domestic surveillance,” he wrote. “Meanwhile, Rep. Langevin took a disappointing vote, as activists came up just short of overwhelming the efforts of the NSA, White House, and others to continue collecting Americans phone records and other data.”

Many progressive Democrats and civil libertarians are extremely upset with Langevin for not supporting what is known as the Amash Amendment, legislation sponsored by Rep. Justin Amash, R-Michigan, that if passed would have stopped the “National Security Agency’s secret collection of hundreds of millions of Americans’ phone records,” according to the AP.

In response to his vote, Langevin said in a statement “…while I respect the deeply-held convictions of those who disagree, I could not support the Amash Amendment. This amendment would have undermined a valuable intelligence collection tool that was initiated in 2001 and reauthorized by Congress multiple times with bipartisan support, most recently in 2011.”

Langevin is a moderately-liberal Democrat who has been moving to the left in recent years. He has long showed a progressive streak on economic issues and has shifted to the left on social issues, such as abortion and same sex marriage. Cyber-security has been an important issue to Langevin.