Arsonists target Sakonnet River Bridge toll system


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Sakonnet River Bridge bike path; orange barrel marks location of fire
Sakonnet River Bridge bike path; orange barrel marks location of fire

At about 1am Saturday, equipment connected with the Sakonnet River Bridge was “intentionally damaged by fire,” according to an official statement sent to media by the Rhode Island Turnpike and Bridge Authority. In the release, RITBA Chair David Darlington said that the fire was quickly extinguished, and that there was no damage to the bridge structure itself.

Interviewed at the scene this afternoon, Darlington offered no estimate of damage and no comment beyond saying that “the State Police were investigating.”

In the RITBA release, Darlington said that backup systems were in place, and expected minimal interruption. “Thanks to diligent work by repair crews, the main systems have either been restored or will be within the next several hours,” said Darlington. “We expect tolling on the bridge will continue as planned on Monday.”

Location of fire at Sakonnet River Bridge
Location of fire at Sakonnet River Bridge

On scene, Darlington did point out to a reporter the location of the fire, inside a utility tunnel located across the bike path from the small building housing the toll equipment. There did not appear to be any damage to the building itself visible from the bike path.

In the release, Darlington said, “The destruction of state property is a crime we take very seriously; the matter has been turned over to the Rhode Island State Police and will be investigated and prosecuted. We support the right of civil protest. We have no tolerance for vandalism and arson, which puts lives in peril. This act of attempted sabotage is not a victimless form of protest. It poses a potential danger to motorists and first responders, and the financial costs of the crime are borne by toll payers.”

State police gather evidence at Sakonnet River Bridge.
State police gather evidence at Sakonnet River Bridge.

Officers from the RI State Police were on scene, and were searching the area around the bike path. At one point, they retrieved something from the brush to the left of the path, but when a reporter approached to try to get a picture, they were told to “move from the scene.”

John Galt vs. ALEC in East Bay toll debate


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John GaltThere’s an ideological battle going on in the Ocean State concerning the new toll bridge connecting Tiverton to Aquidneck Island. But it isn’t between the left and the right. It’s between the right and itself.

The rest of Rhode Island has moved on; the state said it won’t even collect the toll. But the same folks who once protested the user fee on the basis of it being an economic hardship for the minions of struggling Tiverton and Little Compton residents who need to go to Portsmouth are now protesting it on principle.

Even John Galt himself, the fantasy hero of Ayn Rand’s science fiction novel/small government manifesto, has joined the fray, calling in to one of the local talk radio shows, reports the Providence Journal.

Yes, paper of record in Rhode Island reports on fictional philosophers calling into talk radio shows. I somehow doubt the ProJo would report it if Tom Joad started commenting on RI Future. Nor is it necessarily news if a fake person calls into talk radio. Indeed that may be the only kind of person who has called into talk radio in recent years!

It’s also noteworthy because while the East Bay Galtstapo may hate the idea of toll roads, their ideological kinfolk at ALEC loves them. Here’s the preamble from ALEC’s 2009 Statement of Principles on Toll Roads:

The Department of Transportation projects traffic congestion is costing the U.S. economy as much as $200 billion a year. Because of future deficits in the Federal Transportation Trust Fund, the federal government will be unable to adequately fund needed improvements for our roads. In fact, beginning in 2009 the Transportation Trust Fund is facing a $4-5 billion deficit. Hence, innovative financing methods, such as public-private partnerships, have a vital role to play in solving our current transportation problems. Government policy should encourage a market-driven highway system, one that responds to the needs of users, on a user-pays basis. Private investment in highway projects generates new sources of money, ideas, and efficiency.

And PR Watch reports ALEC this summer is looking at “privatization and outsourcing of toll roads.”

It seems to me that the real John Galt would prefer this solution to sharing the cost of maintenance with his neighbors who don’t use the bridge. But I guess that ignores what objectivism is really all about: doing whatever is in one’s own selfish interest.

Wooly Fair this weekend


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imagesThe Wooly Fair has been a local institution since 2005 and – now bigger and better – will be held at the Steel Yard in Providence, RI, August 16 – 18.

The pop-up, participatory arts carnival is a themed event that features  do-it-yourself arts created by local artists, activists and professionals. The theme of this year’s fair is “Off the Grid and On the Lamb,” focusing on human-generated electricity.

Attendees are encouraged to come in costume and to come baring their own pieces of art and inventions. Live acts such as Ex Reverie, Marvelous Marv, and many others will be entertaining the crowd that is expected to exceed past years. Food and games, including a tricycle race, encourage fair-goes to not only attend the event but participate and be a part of the unique environment. A family-friendly affair by day, “grown-up revelry” by night.

Tickets for the event are here.

Stop calling the pension cuts a ‘reform’


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enron pension“Pension reform.”  It’s a phrase we’ve all heard.  We’ve heard it from right-wing pundits and conservative politicians.  We’ve heard it from ALEC.  We’ve heard it from RIPEC.  We’ve even heard it from labor leaders, progressive politicians, and the august pages of this blog.  I’m embarrassed to say I’ve heard those words tumble out of my mouth.  And that’s a problem.

Rhetoric matters.  Conservatives never say they want to cut Social Security, they say they want to “reform” it.  It’s the same story with Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, and welfare.  And pensions.  At the national level, liberals occasionally slip up and say, “entitlement reform,” but most liberals and unbiased journalists call cutting Social Security “cutting Social Security.”  So it is a touch odd that in Rhode Island we adopted this right-wing phrasing whole cloth.  Somehow, everyone started calling the pension cuts “pension reform.”

It’s time to stop.  A few months ago, the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats made a decision.  We decided we were going to call the pension cuts exactly what they are–pension cuts.  I’m asking you to join us.  Call the cuts cuts.  Whenever you hear anyone say, “pension reform,” correct them.

The correct phrase is “pension cuts.”

Costa crossed line when she asked church to punish pols


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doreen-costaRep. Art Handy is “stunned” that Rep. Doreen Costa thinks Bishop Thomas Tobin should look for ways to punish Catholic politicians who support marriage equality, according to a press release sent out by the Democratic Party this afternoon.

“I am appalled that she is asking the Church to punish so many good Catholic people who support the civil rights of the gay community,” Handy, a Cranston Democrat, said in the release. “Unfortunately, her feelings are very symbolic of the Tea Party and right-wing thinking that is so prevalent within the state’s Republican Party Leadership.

“Although I obviously disagree, I respected the Church’s right to oppose my legislation,” Handy said. “However, it crosses the line for a party leader to call for active involvement of the Church in partisan politics.”

“Representative Costa needs to be reminded that her own Minority Leader, Brian Newberry, whom she supports, voted for marriage equality, as did the entire five-member Senate Republican delegation,” Handy said. “Is she looking for the Catholic Church to punish her own party members who voted in favor of this legislation?”

UPDATE: According to a story in the Providence Journal, Costa said her comments had nothing to do with marriage equality.

 

Six legislators still ALEC members


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ALEC-exposed-logoALEC is still alive in the Ocean State. According to legislative records, there are five members of the House and one senator. Similarly, there are five Democrats and one Republican.

Reps Sam Azzinaro (D-Westerly), Lisa Baldelli-Hunt (D-Woonsocket), Doreen Costa (R-North Kingstown), Jay Edwards (D-Tiverton, Portsmouth), Lisa Tomaso (D-Coventry) and Sen. William Walaska (D-Warwick) are all still ALEC members. Walaska’s two-year membership expires at the end of 2014, the other legislators two-year commitment ends this year.

In 2012, there were 24 legislators who were ALEC members. Many of them either lost their bids for re-election or didn’t run again. There are 10 current legislators who are no longer ALEC members.

UPDATE: The state still pays for legislators’ ALEC memberships, according to Larry Berman, a State House spokesman.

Berman also said Azzinaro said he did not sign up for ALEC. “I just spoke with Rep. Azzinaro and he said he did not sign up to be a member and someone, he’s not sure whom, submitted his name for membership; he said he will not renew his membership after it expires at the end of this year.”

ALEC loves Raimondo


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wall street democratThe pro-big business bill mill known as ALEC released a report this week that not only praises Gina Raimondo and local legislators for what they did to retirees in 2011, but also uses Raimondo’s Rhode Island model for why and how to downsize public sector pension plans.

The new ALEC overview even uses Raimondo’s emotionally compelling words as a visual graphic in its executive summary. Furthermore, the 45-page report is also the same exact game plan she used to sell the state on her plan.

“Legislators should move defined-benefit systems to properly designed alternatives, such as defined-contribution, cash balance, and hybrid plans,” suggests the summary. “They offer increased predictability for the employer and an increased likelihood for the employee that the money promised will actually be set aside.”

ALEC’s report is called “Keeping the Promise” and Raimondo’s legislation was called the “Rhode Island Retirement Security Act.” Both names imply that the effort is on behalf of the employee, but both ALEC and Raimondo are known for championing a much different demographic.

The crux of both is that a defined contribution plan, which is more management-friendly, is more sustainable than a defined benefit plan, which is more retiree-friendly. Rhode Island switched from a defined benefit plan to a hybrid plan.

Using the same pretense of being retiree-focused, the report also cites Central Falls fiscal problems as an example of why pension cuts can be needed.

More than anyone else, though, public retirees suffer from ill-funded plans. For example, in August 2011, the city of Central Falls, RI, filed for bankruptcy protection and went into receivership. As a result, some retirees saw their monthly payments cut in half.

It’s the second reference to financially-struggling cities benefiting from pension cuts. The first page of the executive summary says, “In the most extreme cases of fiscal distress induced by poorly managed pensions, some cities have had to go to court to seek bankruptcy protection and restructuring.”

National media briefly concerned itself with this same topic last summer when Joe Nocera of the New York Times wrote a column saying Woonsocket’s budget problems were more closely related to conservative government-shrinking efforts than to pension obligations. Josh Barro, a conservative columnist who then worked for Bloomberg, quickly fired back that pensions are to blame.

This is at least the second ALEC report to laud Rhode Island for its pension cuts. “Perhaps the biggest pension reform success last year came from Rhode Island,” reads ALEC’s 2012 Rich State Poor State report.

Another local connection to the two ALEC reports: Jonathan Williams, a contributor to the local ALEC-aligned small government group the Center for Freedom and Prosperity, is listed in the acknowledgements of this year’s report and was a co-author of the previous report.

Something else worth noting: Last year (when Raimondo was still known as a “pragmatic progressive” rather than a “Wall Street Democrat”) only RI Future published a report on ALEC’s thoughts on Rhode Island’s pension cuts. This year, it was covered by at least two TV stations, one radio station and the Associated Press. At least three local reports used the word “praise” to describe what ALEC thinks of Rhode Island’s pension cuts. None of the reports call the changes to state’s pension system a “reform.”

Providence Poetry Slam team goes to the Nationals


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slam poetry copySlam poetry, when artists share spoken word with an audience of judges in competition with their peers, is popular all over the country and Providence is one of the most well-known names in the national scene.

Every other Thursday, AS220 holds “Free Speech Thursdays” where brave souls can share their poetry and hopefully qualify for the Providence Slam Poetry Team.

This week, the local team heads to the National Poetry Slam in Boston.

For those unfamiliar with the idea of a poetry slam, this is how it works: A slam consists of 3 rounds. Each poet gets one shot per round with 3 minutes per poem. Five audience members are chosen at random before the slam begins as judges and rate each poem from 1-10 with one decimal point.

Last week, Providence invited the teams from Worcester and Portland, Maine to take part in a “Decathlon Slam” to let off some steam before they reach the national stage.  The ten rounds of this slam ranged anywhere from love poems, poems based upon headlines from that day’s newspaper, and even “Conservative Haikus.” The last time Nationals were in Boston, Providence was the only New England team to make it to the final stage.

megan thoma poetry slam
Megan Thoma

“This year’s team is a very ‘Providence’ team,” said Megan Thoma, the current Slam Master of Providence team. “A lot of members have grown up and live here. It’s a very diverse team with different voices, ages, races and genders. A lot of teams are all in their twenties but ours has a lot of age variation.”

Jared Paul is a nationally celebrated performance poet whose art is deeply rooted in politics and activism. He was one of the independent journalists that was arrested at the Republican National Convention in 2008 and is an active supporter of animal rights, environmental, and social justice activism.

“For me,” said Paul, “the political reality of what’s happening around me is an inseparable part of my life, outlook, goals, and artistic choices.  Everything is political in one way or another. People have been using the oral tradition to organize, create dialogue, and spread political ideas since the very beginning of human interaction.”

Paul’s link to the poetry community in Providence is a strong one that goes back quite a few years. He became involved in the world of spoken word poetry when he was a student at URI and has never turned back. He was a member of the Providence Team from 2000 to 2007, making it as far as the Finals Stage at the Individual World Poetry Slam in 2006 and 2007 representing Providence. Perhaps the most notable impact Paul has made upon the Providence community was by founding the Providence Youth Slam, a team that he coached from 2002 through 2008, during which time they made it to the Finals stage in 2003, 2005, and 2006.

“I believed in the modern performance poetry movement with all my heart— as a means of artistic and political expression, catharsis, self identification/discovery, community discourse, etc.  There was nothing like that in my high school or my town growing up, but I would’ve been all about it if there were!  So many youth were at AS220 all the time.  The interest was there and I knew it would take off.  All we had to do was put the word and engage the community, and it took off.”

He added, “Everyone is an artist. If you have stories that you love, or that are screaming inside your chest, eager to claw their way out, then write them!  And after you write them, come on down to Providence Slam (or any open mic) and share them!”

222597_10150578369920416_2448516_n
Devin Samuels

One of these individuals that found himself drawn into the community that Paul had created and fostered was Devin Samuels, a Cranston native for whom poetry is a passion. Prior to joining the community, “I was kid who kind of liked to do poetry and became a poet – something that defines me. I’m surrounded by people my age who are absurdly talented and love to do what I do.”

Samuels was on the Providence Youth Team in 2009 and 2011, and this year marks his first year as a member of the adult team.

“There needs to be a tension between the respect for art and healthy sharing versus the nastiness of competition,” he said. “Providence doesn’t forsake art for the judges; it’s a safe, wholesome scene. Everyone is here for art – it’s genuine.”

For poetry enthusiasts nationwide Providence is a well-known name, the birthplace of the careers of renowned poets such as Sarah Kaye, Phillip Kay, Taylor Mali, Sage Francis and – of course – Jared Paul.

But the majority of the local population has no idea that the seemingly small community has such a national presence.  According to Samuels, “Providence is not a small fish. We may not be a well known here, but nationally we are known and respected as a force.”

prov_slam_logo

NAACP sponsors bus trip to ‘Dream’ speech anniversary


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march on washingtonIt was 50 years ago this summer that Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. reinvigorated America’s sense of enduring betterment with his game-changing “I have a dream” speech and you can be there for the anniversary in Washington DC with – not only President Barack Obama – but also your sisters and brothers of the NAACP Providence Branch and others in the Ocean State progressive movement.

The NAACP is sponsoring a bus trip, and inviting the greater progressive community, to the anniversary celebration of Dr. King’s inspirational speech on the Mall in the nation’s capitol.

“The COST per person is $50 FOR 50 YEARS!!” said Jim Vincent, chapter executive director in an email. “The true cost is $85 per person but the NAACP Providence Branch will be subsidizing each person who travels wit us on this historic occasion!! IT’S THAT IMPORTANT!!!”

For more information, email Nancy St. Germain at nstgermain3@verizon.net.

The bus leaves from the Stop and Shop on Branch Avenue in Providence on Friday, August 23 at 11 pm and returns Saturday at approximately 6 pm.

Just in case you need a refresher on how truly powerful King’s speech was, here it is in full:

Langevin defends NSA vote, open-minded on Glass-Steagall

langevin eventGive Congressman Jim Langevin credit: he withstood some passionate and intense questioning from his constituency last night, especially surrounding his recent vote against the Amash Ammendment which would have curbed the NSA’s ability to spy on American citizens.

Defending this vote last night lead Langevin to bring up the recently revealed “fact” that 54 foreign and domestic terror plots have been foiled thanks to the NSA monitoring our phone calls, with the caveat that most of these plots are state secrets, and the details cannot be revealed.

rod driver seth klaimanMost in the crowd were unwilling to accept this attitude of “trust us, this is for your own good” and steadily insisted on greater transparency. Langevin countered that he feels that there is a difficult line to be walked between Fourth Ammendment privacy rights and keeping us safe from terrorists. At one point Langevin unwisely brought up 9/11 as the kind of terror plot that might have been averted by the NSA’s new powers, (an idea the New York times called “laughable”) and was called on this by Catherine Orloff of Providence and Rod Driver of Richmond.

It was Rod Driver who made the point that Edward Snowden, who revealed the NSA spying, has been branded a traitor and faces serious jail time if he returns to the US, yet NSA chief James Clapper, who lied under oath to Congress, still has his job (and as of yesterday will be investigating his own potential malfeasance.) Langevin was too quick to make excuses for Clapper’s lies, which was disturbing.

Langevin noncommittal on Glass-Steagall

Langevin was asked questions on a diverse range of issues, including jobs and education, but the other issue that became contentious was Langevin’s noncommittal stance on reinstating Glass-Steagall which would restore the wall between commercial banks and security firms. Langevin has not ruled out supporting reinstatement, but is maintaining a “wait and see” stance, hoping other reforms, like the new Consumer Protection Agency, will be enough to restore and protect the economy.

langevin event2Just as the NSA spying controversy has brought together unlikely allies on the political right and left calling for reform, so has the reinstatement of Glass-Steagall brought together groups as diverse as the Progressive Democrats and the LaRouche PAC.

It was a tough crowd for the Congressman, arguably the most conservative member of Rhode Island’s congressional delegation, but the evening was civil and presented no big surprises or shifts in policy.

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.

 

More RIPTA routes aren’t always better for transit


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Human Transit by Jarrett Walker leads us to some unexpected conclusions about RIPTA

At Transport Providence, we evaluate the book Human Transit by Portland, Oregon planner Jarrett Walker.  We ask whether perhaps RIPTA should cut some routes, and question whether the streetcar plan is really the best option for transit in Providence.  We welcome people to debate in the comments section.

Walker says:

Transit debates. . . suffer form the fact that today, in most of our cities, most of our decision makers are motorists.  No matter how much you support transit, driving a car every day can shape your thinking in powerful, subconscious ways.  For example, in most debates about proposed rapid transit lines, the speed of the proposed service gets more political attention than how frequently it runs, even though frequency, which determines waiting time, often matters more than speed in determining how long your trip will take. Your commuter train system will advertise that it can whisk you into the city in 39 minutes, but if the train comes only once every 2 hours and you’ve just missed one, your travel time will be 159 minutes, so it may be faster to drive, or even walk.

Check out more here. And here’s an excerpt from my post:

…on the West End, we have the 92, the 27, and the 19, and any one of these could be used to get to Downcity–and in fact, these are just the routes I happen to use sometimes.  I’m fairly sure there are even more.

On the map, this looks like lots of options. In reality, none of these options is good though, because they’re all infrequent and unreliable.  The 92 moves at glacial pace through Atwells Avenue traffic, while the other two, although faster, are still fairly infrequent.  It’s like a Sophie’s choice trying to decide whether to risk missing one route for the other, especially when on any given day the schedule may not even hold to be true.

In Pacific Front, means were more memorable than the end


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Mushroom cloud over Hiroshima.
Mushroom cloud over Hiroshima.

It’s great that Rhode Island celebrates a late-summer day off but not-so-great that we chalk it up to winning the war in the Pacific.

Every year I engage in this fool’s errand of seemingly advocating against a day off from the grind that celebrates how great my grandfathers’ generation was. (Last year I wrote about how the two atomic bombs the United States dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki may well have saved his life.) And if there are two things that are undeniably true it’s that the Ocean State is well served by an August holiday and that my grandfather was great.

However, that doesn’t mean we should take the day off because my grandfather and his generation were great. Nor is the US victory over Japan necessarily an example of the Greatest Generation’s greatness. I think the reasons for having a holiday are fairly obvious. The reasons for not bestowing such an honor on the end of our war with Japan are more complex. Both fronts of World War II ended because of two of the most epic battles of all time, and if you ask me one represents the very best of what it means to be an American and the other represents the very worst.

Storming the beach at Normandy represents the very best of what it means to be an American. More Americans were willing to die for other sovereign people’s freedom than the Germans could fire ammunition at. That is, at its essence, how we beat the Nazis.

Conversely, this is the essence of how we beat Japan: we hired a guy – ironically enough, a German – and holed him up in the desert to invent a contraption that would allow us to destroy entire cities with virtually no immediate human risk. We could now kill without consequence. It’s a very efficient way to win a war, but if something is worth killing for it ought to also be worth dying for.

The entire world remembers the end of the war between Japan and the United States as a cautionary tale of just what kind of  unbridled destruction technology can inflict. It’s not so much that it we shouldn’t celebrate World War II and its veterans – there are certainly no shortage of occasions for this – it’s that the tool that brought about the victory is a much more worthy of remembrance than the victory itself.

Sistare says he didn’t deny Pryeor communion


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Father Brian Sistare, the priest at Sacred Heart Parish in Woonsocket, responded during mass on Sunday to allegations that he told gay married congregants they could not receive communion unless they ended their marriages and that he is using his position with the church to campaign against proponents of same sex marriage.

You can listen to him here:

After the service, I asked Sistare if he wanted to talk more about it. He declined, but said he felt it was inaccurate to suggest that he had denied gay married parishioners communion when he had simply told them they could not get communion until they were no longer married.

 

Television, internet, radio up as main news sources


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The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press Main Source for Newsreleased the chart at right detailing the main sources people get their news from, as part of a larger overview of American attitudes towards news and journalism. As you can see, though both T.V. and newspapers are down from 2001, television has started to swing back up, while newspapers continue to crater. Both the Internet and radio are above where they were in 2001.

In response to the popularity of televisions and the Internet, Ted Nesi, of WPRI, posed this idea on Twitter: “TV and Internet arguably have more in common as media (info via screens!) than papers & Internet.

It caused me to pause and reflect about the barrier to use for each of these four sources of news. I think the commonality all three of the rising news sources (television, the Internet, radio) is that you can get them regardless of whether you want to get them for news, and it never has to be a conscious decision.

Virtually every audio system you can buy comes with a radio, they appear in your car, and prior to the rise of MP3 players, radios were installed on every portable audio device. You can listen to music on a radio or fill your ears with news.

Television isn’t as readily available as the other two, but it’s still virtually everywhere, from bars and restaurants to your home. And it’s easy to switch from reality television, to (more) scripted entertainment, to music, to news. Even within a single channel there can be a diverse range of programming.

The Internet is sort of like television and radio in that it tends to have specialized sources for specific genres, but those genres include everything you could ever want. You want to see a dog riding a skateboard? Check. Read up on what that guy you met in college like one time is doing in Malaysia now? Check. No other medium comes close to the diversity and range of the Internet, your all-in-one stop for everything there is under the sun (and everything that avoids direct sunlight as well). Furthermore, the Internet is now virtually everywhere, thanks to smartphones and wi-fi.

And now this brings us to the poor plight of the newspaper. Here’s the thing, newspapers have to be a major network, and in print, and at least a day behind everything else. Furthermore, unlike television, radio, and the Internet where you can just stumble across news, newspapers don’t have that advantage. Few people just “stumble” across a newspaper (well, maybe the Phoenix). You tend to have to make a conscious decision to go get a newspaper, whether its from your front step or the box. And though they often contain sections related to entertainment, culture, lifestyle, etc.; their name says it all. They’re a “newspaper” and its primary purpose is to deliver news to you.

The point here is not to disparage newspapers. It’s to point out that by their very design, newspapers are disadvantaged in simply getting to their consumer in a way other mediums aren’t. Until the Internet became widely available and used, newspapers were doing just fine. Now, their place in the media landscape is shifting so rapidly that their very future no longer seems assured. That said, despite these disadvantages, they have managed to continue beating radio, which of all media has the lowest cost barrier for consumers.

Atheist Ahlquist to speak at Church on Sunday

08009_ahl_topSteve Ahlquist is veering from the blogosphere and taking up the pulpit this weekend as he’ll be speaking on atheism and Humanism Sunday morning, August 11th, at the First Unitarian Church of Providence, One Benevolent St. The talk will outline thoughts on separation of church and state, reproductive justice and LGBTQ rights. The service lasts about 48 minutes and Ahlquist will be speaking for twelve minutes. So only 25% is guaranteed to be controversial.

The church has lots of history, and refreshments will be served at the end. Philip Eil interviewed Ahlquist in the Providence Phoenix about the talk and his work as a Humanist activist.

 


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