Busted!


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plainThere is no shame in being shamed by Justin Katz, Doreen Costa and John DePetro.

It rather feels like a badge of honor. Or at least a testament that the work we are doing at RI Future matters for something. If nothing else, we’re at least getting under the skin of the most mean-spirited minds in Rhode Island politics. The irony is that they each probably oppose seat belt laws and marijuana prohibition, but why let principles get in the way of a good political smear.

Here’s some of my favorite coverage:

Katz deserves credit for breaking the story by tweeting a picture of the police log from The PendulumNorthEast Independent, a newspaper here in East Greenwich. The Pendulum Independent, on the other hand, published at least two inaccuracies in their story. The newspaper said I was arrested for marijuana, which I wasn’t, and it said car smelled like “burnt marijuana,” which it didn’t. The actual police report didn’t say anything like that and I’m not accused of such things. Whatever the reporter smelled, it wasn’t coming from my car.

I was given a ticket for not wearing my seat belt and having a small amount of marijuana in the car. I’m pretty embarrassed about not wearing my seat belt, because I think it’s kinda dumb not to do so. The marijuana, on the other hand, was entirely legal: my spouse has a medical marijuana card and we switch cars all the time.

I’ll probably have to pay a fine for not wearing my seat belt and the judge will hopefully dismiss the marijuana ticket. I’m hoping the misunderstanding might lead to some reform in RI’s medical marijuana statutes: spouses shouldn’t be punished for transporting their loved one’s medicine.

I also missed a court appearance for having a suspended license because of an unpaid ticket. These aren’t victimless actions, as they each cost the system, and thus my neighbors, but it’s really more a comedy of errors than an actual crime. None-the-less, judges don’t like to be blown off and getting caught missing a court date means an automatic night in a jail cell.

If there was a silver lining in any of this, it would be the eye-opening experience of getting to see the very first layer of onion skin in our criminal justice system. I’m still working on a separate post about that.

Protest for South PVD pool at $500 fundraiser tonight


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Summer may be gone but the controversy over closing the Davey Lopes pool in Providence seems poised to follow Mayor Angel Taveras into campaign season. Supporters of the south side public pool that was shuttered this summer will be protesting a $500 a plate fundraiser for the potential gubernatorial candidate tonight.

“Lets see if we can get some of the $500 donors to make the check out to keep the pool open, instead of the mayors campaign account,” Anthony Sionni wrote on a Facebook event he created Sunday. “Make a protest sign and bring it with you and your family, we will meet in front of 50 Weybosset st at 5pm!”

Despite its importance to families in South Providence, the pool was closed this summer. Some people say it was closed for financial and attendance reasons while others say the closure was largely political punishment because Providence Councilman Davian Sanchez didn’t support the municipal budget.

The loss of the pool was felt hard by the the South Providence this summer. Leah Williams wrote about it for RI Future:

As a child, I learned how to swim at Davey Lopes pool. I enjoyed hours and hours of free daily swim. As a teenager, I worked there as a lifeguard and volunteered after hours as a swim team coach, rather than become part of the cycle of violence, drugs and promiscuity that’s so prevalent among our youth. I’m quite certain that the experiences and memories drawn from those days kept my path straight and contributed greatly to the positive and productive person I am today.

However, this year, there was no laughter, no smiles, and no direction provided by the pool that was such an important part of my summers growing up in South Providence. Instead, there’s a neglected, decaying shell, and a City government that, save a few clarion voices, seems more interested in spouting hot air, than providing cool water for their citizens. In a bloated city budget of over $650 million, it astonishes me that city officials cannot allocate .0001%, or roughly $50,000, to repair and revitalize this local treasure. At its most basic level, local government should be a place for people to come together, and not to be left behind as is the case with South Providence.

davey lopes pool

Call to Worship: Where peace must be practiced


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Bell Street ChapelThe following reflection was delivered by Kate Gillis, a retired educator and life-long Unitarian. Gillis asks, us to consider those who are seekers.  She writes, “The path to truth is not well lit. We move in and out of illumination as we go and we see our way more clearly sometimes than others.”

“Love is the spirit of this church, and service is its law. This is our great covenant: to dwell together in peace, to seek the truth in love, and to help one another.”

Each week I join with all of you in saying the Unison Affirmation. Since I have it memorized, I am free to look around while I am saying the words.

By the time we are halfway through saying the affirmation,  my eyes have usually centered on the large painting that is behind the pulpit.  I am almost always drawn to looking at it by the time we are saying the last three phrases of the Affirmation, the part that says “To dwell together in peace, To seek the truth in love, and to help on another.” As I say the word “dwell” I look at the building or house that is in the middle of the picture. “Dwell” — dwelling. That house represents someone’s home – my home, other people’s homes. That is where peace must be practiced. I can focus on that house in the picture and fill it with energy to radiate peace to all who enter. If that house represents all the houses in the world and they were all filled with peace, then maybe we could all dwell together in peace.

As we recite the next phrase, “To seek the truth in love” my eyes go to the figures on the road. From a distance and even close up it is not possible to really see any details in these figures. So again they can represent all of us, all people who are seekers. The two people and the horse and cart are moving towards us. They are in the sunlight but have just left the shadows and will soon move into the shadows again. The path to truth is not well lit. We move in and out of illumination as we go and we see our way more clearly sometimes than others.

And then the last phrase “To help one another” brings my eyes right to the two people. Each of them is  traveling along the road with the other. They have each other to help carry their burdens and to share riding on the horse. They can talk to each other and offer encouragement and comfort as needed as they proceed on their journey.

In the Unison Affirmation, the three phrases about dwelling, seeking and helping, are the supporting details for the initial statement – “Love is the spirit of this church and service is its law”. In the painting the people and house are also the details of a larger painting.

The main object in the painting is the snow covered mountain. It is a massive mountain that reaches up into the clouds. For me this is a perfect symbol for love, for the divine spirit. People have always been drawn to mountains as the homes of the gods. Often temples have been built on the highest location possible. When I am standing on top of a mountain with a cleared peak, I can see for miles and soak up the majesty of the ongoing land and the vastness of the sky. It can feel like a love that encompasses all.

The other objects in the painting represent some suggestions of what else is part of our world. On the left is a second path. The people are traveling on one road but the presence of the second path suggests all the many possible roads there are to travel. There is also a substantial rushing stream or river. Water. I am so glad water is in the painting. We cannot live without water. Our lives are entwined with the salt water of the sea. In the foreground of the painting are boulders, rocks – the holders of the memories of the earth. There is also a meadow and some trees, homes for some of earth’s creatures.

All of these things call out when I say the phrase “And service is its law.” If I love all these things, want a healthy vibrant earth, want peace, want to be free to seek the truth and live with other people then my law must be service. I must consciously act in ways that work to preserve our beautiful blue-green planet home, the earth.

 

Wingmen: Should child care providers unionize


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wingmen2To organize or not to organize, that is the question before Justin Katz and I on NBC 10 Wingmen this week.

I can hardly think of any sector of the Rhode Island economy that needs a raise more than the childcare providers who take care low-income children while their parents go to work. They make about $20,000 a year.

Katz, on the other hand, thinks it will be some sort of economic catastrophe if these 600 people can bargain collectively. At least he didn’t call them babysitters! Watch this week’s episode of NBC 10 Wingmen to see our relatively contentious debate on the issue:

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

RI has not moved needle on poverty, uninsured


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new england poverty rateRhode Island hasn’t moved the needle for people living in poverty, according to an analysis of new Census data by the Economic Progress Institute.

The Ocean State still has the second highest poverty rate in New England, behind only Maine, with 13.7 percent of residents living below the poverty standard. There are nearly 140,000 Rhode Islanders who earn less than $19,090 in 2012 and more than 62,000 Rhode Islanders earned less than $10,000.

Neighbors Connecticut and Massachusetts boast considerably lower poverty rates at 10.7 and 11.9 percents respectively.

“Stagnant income and unchanged poverty rates underscore the need for Rhode Island to do more to improve the economic vitality of our state and its residents, especially our African American and Latino neighbors,” said Kate Brewster, executive director of the Economic Progress Institute.

One third of Rhode Island Latinos were living in poverty in 2012 as were more than one-fourth of African Americans. Less than 10 percent of White Rhode Islanders were impoverished.

Rhode Island should make educating its current and future workforce the cornerstone of its economic development strategy,”  Brewster said.

Affordable housing, childcare assistance, support for the food bank and payday loan reform are also needed to reverse this trend, Brewster said.

Similarly, the number of uninsured Rhode Islanders remained stagnant with some 125,000 residents without health coverage in 2012. The Ocean State has the highest rate of uninsured residents in new England. Massachusetts has the lowest rate of uninsured residents in the nation at 4.3 percent and Connecticut has the fourth lowest at 9.4 percent.

 

 

Evaluating Eva’s op/ed


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mancusoEva-Marie Mancuso’s recent (9/18/13) op-ed piece in the Providence Journal “Testing helps R.I. students achieve” offers a disingenuous rational for not discussing the current NECAP testing requirement. Her piece attempts to build a case for the Board’s exit-test policy by stringing together a series of misleading and vacuous statements that do not hold up to critical review. Here are some of the most blatant:

“We want to prepare all of our students for success, and we want to make Rhode Island’s public schools and higher-education institutions among the best in the country.”

No one engaged in the current debate about the exit-testing requirement disagrees with this goal. The disagreement is around the policies that determine how Rhode Island will use its scare resources and regulatory authority to achieve this goal. And, it should be noted that Mancuso does not have a Board united behind the current policies. On September 9 that Board voted 6-5 not to accept a petition that would have opened up the testing policy to discussion and public examination.

“The vote [by the Board not to discuss the graduation requirements] was not about the merits of any of our battery of state assessments; it was about starting the debate again about whether or not to have state assessments.”

In fact, the debate has all along been, in part, about the merits of the eleventh grade math test. This test fails a far higher proportion of students than the 11 of reading and math assessments, whether it be the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) or the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) shows such a huge disparity between the performance standards for reading and math. So the debate has included fundamental questions about the performance standards the Board has endorsed for graduation.

“the New England Common Assessment Program (NECAP), is not the be-all, end-all — but it is one valid measure”.

I don’t know what evidence she uses to assert the NECAP is a valid measure because the NECAP technical report does not provide any credible validity study. Consequently, we do not know whether the NECAP predicts college or career readiness any better than family income, mother’s education, or number of books in the household. And, if it doesn’t, which is very likely, it is a huge waste of very scarce resources.

“[the NECAP] shows us that too many students…have not attained the knowledge and skills they will need upon graduation.”

Yet, RIDE already knows this—they know, for example that many students taking the NECAP math test have not had a geometry course and, since geometry is required on the NECAP, how could these students pass the NECAP? Making sure all schools provide the curriculum necessary to pass the NECAP is a prerequisite to implementing an exit-test requirement and one of the things Massachusetts did in their ten-year preparation phase. By rushing to implement “high standards”, the Board is already harming students unfairly.

“We don’t have to look far for support for a state assessment. Massachusetts implemented an even more stringent standard more than a decade ago, and, though assessments alone do not account for the improvements in Massachusetts, today Massachusetts ranks first among states in student achievement.”

I agree that assessments alone do not account for the improvements we see in Massachusetts. It is far more likely that they reflect a decade-long preparation, adequately financed by a state funding formula that built capacity in the poorest districts. Adequate funding means a district can conduct intense professional development, build its infrastructure, and provide supportive programming for its vulnerable students. It also means the district can maintain courses in art, music, and vocational training. Lacking a funded formula, these are things Rhode Island’s poorest districts cannot provide.

“every high school in Rhode Island offered students additional instruction and support during the school year and over the summer, in a commitment to improve mathematics achievement”.

Not true. Most high schools only passed along the state sponsored ‘math module’ which was an online test prep course with a ‘virtual’ teacher. Most students did not receive any additional instruction from the schools last year or over the summer – unless they were enrolled in those test prep courses. Already, one of the concerns of those of us who question the wisdom of this policy has become reality–districts have been forced to dedicate extremely scarce resources to providing test-prep courses that have almost no lasting impact on students’ learning.

“I have been moved and troubled by the concerns many students, educators and family members have raised regarding our diploma system.”

Perhaps, but Mancuso has remained steadfastly unresponsive to the concerns raised by parents and advocates for students with Individual Education Plans (IEPs). The NECAP failure rate of these students in math is astoundingly high—over 80% failed. Furthermore, ten years of exit testing in Massachusetts has resulted in more students with IEPs failing to get diplomas, not fewer. This long-term failure of a testing policy to close achievement gaps in Massachusetts is reflected in their being ranked as having among the worst NAEP achievement gaps. Since Rhode Island is having no success in reducing achievement gaps, the exit-exam policy seems like a bad choice.

Finally, Mancuso concludes with a plea for support, “Let’s take all of the energy that has gone into opposing statewide testing and focus it where it belongs — on improving opportunities and outcomes for our students.”

Yet the policies Mancuso asks us to support have not been defended in transparent public discussion that addresses the relevant evidence. It will do our students no good for us to blindly support a policy based primarily in ideology.

Pope Francis: ‘I have never been a right-winger’

Pope_Francis_in_March_2013In an almost direct rebuke to critics, including Rhode Island’s own Bishop Thomas Tobin, leader of the Providence Diocese, Pope Francis, in his first extensive interview since being elected to the head of the Roman Catholic Church, has said,

We cannot insist only on issues related to abortion, gay marriage and the use of contraceptive methods. This is not possible. I have not spoken much about these things, and I was reprimanded for that. But when we speak about these issues, we have to talk about them in a context. The teaching of the church, for that matter, is clear and I am a son of the church, but it is not necessary to talk about these issues all the time.

Note that just about a week ago Bishop Tobin said, in an interview in the Rhode island Catholic, the diocesan newspaper Tobin controls,

I’m a little bit disappointed in Pope Francis that he hasn’t, at least that I’m aware of, said much about unborn children, about abortion, and many people have noticed that. I think it would be very helpful if Pope Francis would address more directly the evil of abortion and to encourage those who are involved in the pro-life movement.

In covering the story the New York Times directly contrasted the Pope’s words with the Bishop’s, placing the Bishop clearly in the “church’s theological or political right wing.” The Pope insists that he was never a “right-winger” saying,

My authoritarian and quick manner of making decisions led me to have serious problems and to be accused of being ultraconservative. I lived a time of great interior crisis when I was in Cordova. To be sure, I have never been like Blessed Imelda [a goody-goody], but I have never been a right-winger. It was my authoritarian way of making decisions that created problems.

In Rhode Island the Tea Party, conservative Republicans and DINOs have a distinctly Catholic flavor and many, including the odious radio show host John DePetro, the barely literate Travis Rawley and the frankly embarrassing Representative Doreen Costa attempt to use their Catholic faith a weapon with which to promote their divisive and mean-spirited political agenda, inspired in part by Bishop Tobin’s longstanding support culminating in his recent and public alignment with the Republican Party.

I suspect that under the present Pope “ultraconservative” “right-wingers” will find it more and more difficult to justify their compassionless views in theological terms, and will be forced to confront issues such as economic inequality, poverty, gun violence, immigration and even abortion and LGBTQ rights through the lens of a church that forswears the evils of unbridled capitalism and Randian Objectivism and embraces nonjudgmental compassion and peace.

This is a Pope who speaks of a church that “is poor and for the poor” and who says “one cannot speak of poverty if one does not experience poverty, with a direct connection to the places in which there is poverty.” These are powerful words that even a godless, progressive, secular humanist atheist like myself can respond to favorably.

EG students not happy about NECAPs either

It’s not just inner city kids like the members of the Providence Student Union who are speaking out against the NECAP test. East Greenwich High School Principal Michael Podraza tweeted a picture today of a school notice about the high stakes test that he suspects a student added some choice words.

“I am an individual,” was written on the Principal Podraza’s note about the NECAP requirement. “I am not defined by a number. Stop pigeonholing us. What about the others.”

Podraza tweeted: “Dear #EGHSRI student who left this behind, I would love to talk to you & discuss b/c you & #EGHSMatters pic.twitter.com/NBlqyWF2Nz

And here’s the picture of the handout, which says, “As you know, the NECAP has become even more important, in that all students are required to demonstrate at least partial proficiency on the Math and Reading portions of the exam in order o graduate from high school.”

eg student letter

Cicilline is serious about background checks


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Stephen Colbert may have had some fun with David Cicilline last night, but Rhode Island’s most progressive congressman is serious about his supporting background checks for gun owners.

But first, Colbert:

The Colbert Report
Get More: Colbert Report Full Episodes,Video Archive

Now, make sure you watch Congressman Cicilline being quite serious about the issue in giving this address from the House floor yesterday:

cicilline

Eva Mancuso: chairwoman or columnist?


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Eva Mancuso is to be commended for finally addressing the highly-charged concern over high stakes testing in Rhode Island public schools, though it’s unfortunate she did so as a pundit instead of a public official. The chairwoman of the Board of Education has rebuffed widespread appeals from parents, students and activists to address the NECAP test and instead penned an op/ed in today’s Providence Journal about it.

“We need to change the outcome of the test,” Mancuso wrote, “not the tests.”

The truth is that Rhode Island needs to change both the outcome AND the test – this is demonstrable by the fact that Rhode Island is changing the test, next year.

I can’t think of any reason not to hold off on implementing this very controversial state mandate until at least the state’s preferred test is in place – other than that it may put federal funding in jeopardy. In other words, the NECAP graduation requirement isn’t about testing or math. It’s about budgets.

UPDATE: A spokesperson for the Department of Education tells me there are no Race to the Top implications tied to using the NECAP test as a graduation requirement … In that case, I can think of NO reason not to hold off on implementing this controversial policy!!

mancuso

 

Is capitalism moral? Who wants to know?


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Capitalism is exactly as moral as the actors exchanging goods. That’s why, in my opinion, it’s more important to ask why the Charles Koch wants to sponsor a talk on the morality of capitalism at Providence College than it is to wonder whether or not capitalism is good, bad or indifferent.

moral capitalismJames Stacey Taylor is best known for writing the book “Stakes and Kidneys: Why markets in human organs are morally imperative” in which he argues that people ought to be able to sell their non-essential living organs if they see fit. He does not argue for an unregulated kidney market, as would the Koch brothers.

This piece from the Washington Post pretty well explains why conservatives such as Charles Koch are beginning to beg this question:

…more recently, we’ve seen another side of free markets: stagnant incomes, gaping inequality, a string of crippling financial crises and 20-somethings still living in their parents’ basements. These realities are forcing free-market advocates and their allies in the Republican Party to pursue a new strategy. Instead of arguing that free markets are good for you, they’re saying that they’re good — mounting a moral defense of free-market capitalism.

It’s long but well-worth reading. Including gems like this:

A useful debate about the morality of capitalism must get beyond libertarian nostrums that greed is good, what’s mine is mine and whatever the market produces is fair. It should also acknowledge that there is no moral imperative to redistribute income and opportunity until everyone has secured a berth in a middle class free from economic worries. If our moral obligation is to provide everyone with a reasonable shot at economic success within a market system that, by its nature, thrives on unequal outcomes, then we ought to ask not just whether government is doing too much or too little, but whether it is doing the right things.

And for contrast, here’s how NOT to engage with conservatives on the morality of capitalism.

The myth-making generation


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gi generationMoaning about the succeeding generation is a pretty common pastime in America, with a long and storied history. But just because something already’s been done doesn’t mean it won’t be done again. Enter “Why Generation Y Yuppies Are Unhappy“, a new entry into the “Next Generation Sucks” genre; but with stick figures! It’s obvious, says the author, that Millennials have false expectations and “think they’re special.” Pictures of unicorns and flowers abound, just to really rub in the mockery.

But while there’s plenty to pick apart and criticize (Mother Jones reporter Adam Weinstein has a critique well worth reading), I want to focus solely on the claims about the G.I. or “Greatest” Generation:

Lucy’s parents were born in the ’50s — they’re Baby Boomers. They were raised by Lucy’s grandparents, members of the G.I. Generation, or “the Greatest Generation,” who grew up during the Great Depression and fought in World War II, and were most definitely not GYPSYs.

Lucy is the author’s fictional Millennial, and GYPSYs is the delightfully offensive term the author has cooked up for Lucy and her cohorts (I have my own acronym for the writer and their peers: Whiny Authors in Need of a Kick).

The so-called “Greatest Generation” is the recipient of a lot of rose-tinted glassed stares of longing these days. Apparently people dream of the time when men were men, women were meek, black people were free to be openly oppressed, and Indians were undergoing cultural genocide. But while the obvious flaws with the 1940s are well known, the idea that the Greatest Generation struggled through the Great Depression and stepped up at our hour of need to topple fascism and then build this country into a world superpower is a cultural touchstone.

Let’s get rid of that touchstone, because it’s a complete crock. All of those required massive government intervention, directed and conceived by the two generations before them, the Missionary and the Lost Generations. Without the leaders in Congress and the White House who ushered in the New Deal, the G.I. Generation wouldn’t have had work during the Great Depression. Without the re-implementation of the draft, not only would the G.I.’s not had work, but there wouldn’t have been a labor shortage that required women to enter the labor force. And without a war fought abroad that devastated all of America’s competitors while leaving U.S. industry unscathed, the G.I. Generation wouldn’t have found it as easy to sell American products to the world (and let’s not forget that servicemen were offered cheap homes and education/training after the war).

It’s important to look at the draft aspect of this, since much of the myth of the “Greatest” Generation is tied to its service in World War II. The Selective Service System reports that during the course of the war, over 10 million men were inducted into the military. Gen. William Westmoreland placed this number at about two-thirds of the military of World War II. Of those 10 million+ inductees, . In a tour of duty, the average World War II soldier saw 40 days of combat in the whole war.

Compare this with their children (the Baby Boomers) who fought in the Vietnam War. 1.8 million were inducted. Westmoreland put the figure of drafted soldiers at one-third of the military of Vietnam. Of all of the potential draftees (not those actually inducted), 100,000 fled the country. Finally, thanks to the helicopter, the average tour of duty exposed a soldier to 240 days of combat; many soldiers did multiple tours.

Currently, the entire military is volunteer, and the average tour of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan saw 310 days of combat, often tours of duty were extended. In case you’re unclear about what a “day of combat” is, it’s a day on during which the continuation of life is uncertain.

But Millennials suffer from false expectations and think they’re special. This isn’t about soldiers, this is about our poor deluded, entitled children.

I bring up the military comparison to show just how different the way each generation is perceived. The G.I. Generation saw the least amount of combat, was strong-armed by the government to serve, and today are hailed as heroes. The Baby Boomers stepped up, were exposed quite often to completely new type of war, and today are remembered as an army of unwilling draftees. The Millennials and Generation Xers who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan are praised for their service or touted by wannabe patriots, but are largely ignored otherwise.

The reality is that the Millennials have suffered through the most debt-leveraged time in American history, and one of its greatest economic crises. It is the most unequal time on record. Where American leaders of the past dealt with such crises with large encompassing platforms, with radical changes to the shape and fabric of American society, the simple fact of the matter is that the generations currently in power refuse to do what the grandparents and great-grandparents did before them.

When I see these articles that lambast my generation, I recognize them for what they are: expressions of guilt. It’s no secret that the Millennials and our successors are inheriting a country that is adrift. The economy is unrecognizable from the one Boomers and the predecessors grew up with. They’re hesitant and unwilling to act, thanks to a venomous orthodoxy that tells them government is bad, business is good. The very future of the world is uncertain.

It’s clear to me that Millennials cannot rely on their predecessors for assistance. We’re going to have to solve this world’s problem on our own; unlike the preceding generations, we can expect only diminishing assistance. And hopefully, when the next crisis hits, there will be enough of us in power that we won’t make the mistakes our predecessors did.

Time to overhaul adult entertainment employment laws


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Photo from Cheater’s Facebook page

The Providence City Council, under the leadership of Council President Michael Solomon, is missing a chance to enact real reform in the wake of the revelation that a 15 year old girl was working as a stripper and prostitute at the now closed Cheaters strip club. Solomon recently proposed a plan that would require “strip clubs do criminal background checks on any new hires, so nobody under the age of 18 gets a job.”

This bill seeks to prevent underage girls from getting jobs as sex workers, which is something every decent person fully supports. An intended secondary benefit of the bill is that it protects strip clubs and strip club owners from minors attempting to secure jobs with phony identification. NBC News reports Solomon as saying, “For the most part, I think they’re looking to run an honest establishment and I don’t think anyone’s looking to hire 13 year olds to strip.”

That this legislation will benefit strip clubs was also mentioned in the GoLocal piece on Solomon’s legislation, where the Council president said, “Requiring background checks for all employees, as a condition of the license for an adult entertainment venue, will allow owners and managers to obtain reliable information, so that they can be sure they are not violating city and state law by hiring minors.”

Under this revision, performers under the age of 18 will be prevented from securing jobs as sex workers in strip clubs, described by Solomon as “an environment that places them in harm’s way—physically and emotionally.”

What kind of physical and emotional harm is Solomon referring to? For that we should go to a Rhode Island Hospital study on female adult entertainment club workers that ran in the Women & Health medical journal. Here, the physical and emotional harm is defined. “The nature of their work makes them easy prey for repeated unwanted sexual advances and behavior. Add in the prevalence of risky sexual behavior and substance abuse and you’ve got a perfect storm for unchecked health risks.”

The final report was much worse than the researchers expected it to be:

“We went into the study expecting the incidence of substance abuse and other risky health behaviors to be relatively high,” [Esther] Choo [M.D.] said, “but we didn’t expect that many of the women surveyed had never been tested for HIV and in fact were not well educated on the risk factors.”

Many adult entertainment club workers don’t have access to basic healthcare, said Choo, “meaning they do not have routine physicals, and they don’t have access to physicians for sick visits, tests or preventative measures that could help to mitigate their health risks.”

The amount of protection adult entertainment performers receive in the workplace is already practically nonexistent. While waitresses and bartenders might make minimum wage the onstage performers in Rhode Island strip clubs are considered independent contractors, and pay the club for the privilege of being on stage and collecting tips. A ProJo article from 2002 mentioned that performers pay “$25 for a night shift; $15 for a day shift” for “the privilege to disrobe in front of ogling men.” That was 10 years ago.

The advantages of hiring performers as independent contractors to the owners of the strip club are many. It has the advantage of reducing “expenses, payroll, benefits and other overhead.”  Under this system employers avoid  providing their workers health benefits. They can also cut or add performers as needed, meaning that performers have no sense of job or economic security. Also, the performers in strip clubs are not eligible for worker’s compensation coverage, because the law does not require employers to purchase coverage for independent contractors.

Council President Solomon is proposing to close a loophole to protect minors from a “physically and emotionally” harmful environment, but has proposed nothing that would protect women from the economic predation of the strip club owners. If Solomon and the Providence City Council are serious about protecting the public, they could do so by making sure that performers working at such clubs are treated as employees, and mandate decent payment, TDI and comprehensive health care, “as a condition of the license for an adult entertainment venue,” to quote the City Council President.

Of course, strip club owners will balk at such a suggestion, but if the economics of the local strip club economy are to be believed, they can well afford it. Cheaters, the strip club at the center of this controversy, is on the market for $8 million. Part of the advertising says, “This is an outstanding business opportunity that offers cash flow in excess of $2.5 million!”  That’s $2.5 million annually. If, as Solomon says, these business owners are interested in running “an honest establishment” their outcry should be minimal.

The strip clubs can afford this, the performers at the clubs need this, and our citizenry should, out of decency and fairness, demand this.

Two Rhode Island business stories


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Photo courtesy of EcoRI.org. Click on picture for more.
Photo courtesy of EcoRI.org. Click on picture for more.

A story in today’s Providence Journal would seem to confirm that Rhode Island is indeed an unfriendly place to do business. But wait. A story on EcoRI.org today would seem to confirm that, contrary to the popular narrative, Rhode Island is indeed a friendly place to do business.

One story is about a pharmecutical company and the other story about making energy from food waste. Is it possible both narratives are true, and that this is a good thing?

According to the Providence Journal story, it took the drug company 7 months and $100,000 to apply for a license to have an employee administer pain medicine into an internal pump surgically located in the body of a patient with multiple sclerosis. This might not be a terrible thing to regulate, especially given that the company in question gets bought and sold by private equity firms more often than it invents new products. I’m concerned with how each new owner increases the profitability of this product.

I’m also concerned that a medical procedure for an active patient took more than 7 months to approve. Why? (the story doesn’t say). I do hope Rep. McNamara, who seems most concerned with how the business was treated by the state, also asks for a decision to be expedited for the patient’s sake (ie the consumer).

I’m also interested in why it cost so much money. According to the ProJo story, Pentec, spend $1,000 a month on rent when it seems like it only needed a PO Box. Perhaps Pentec had overspent in other areas as well? Or maybe it is factoring in lobbying fees?

In any case, the EcoRI story painted a very different picture of state regulation. In this case, regulation helped bring a New Hampshire company to the Ocean State to make energy and fertilizer from food scraps.

At a Sept. 10 meeting with members of the House Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources and the North Kingstown Town Council, Callendrello credited the state’s fixed-price energy program, known as distributed generation, for making the project doable. In 2012, anaerobic digesters were added to the list of qualifying energy sources for the DG program.

Callendrello also noted that Rhode Island has a better regulatory environment than Florida and Texas, two states where NEO has biomass facilities. “I think, on balance, it’s probably a better permitting atmosphere,” Callendrello said.

On balance, these might both be instances of the system working.

* It’s well worth noting that the ProJo covered the biomass story on September 10.

Hector Perea says he’s no sideshow


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providence student unionHector Perea, a member of the Providence Student Union, takes issue with being called a sideshow by Eva Mancuso. Here’s what he wrote in an email today:

My name is Héctor Perea, and I am a proud member of the Providence Student Union.

As you know, the Providence Student Union is a group where students like me can work together to make sure we have a fair say in our education. But we learned this past week that some people still don’t understand the importance of student voice.

Last Monday the Rhode Island Board of Education voted 6-5 against a proposal to have open, public hearings to allow the community to finally weigh in on the use of a high-stakes test as an obstacle to graduation. My friend and fellow PSUer Cauldierre McKay summed up the unfortunate situation in this blog post – check it out to hear how the Board opposes allowing students (not to mention parents, teachers, and the community) to fully participate in an open and transparent public debate of this crucial issue.

Even more disappointing, however, was what happened afterwards, when Board Chairwoman Mancuso dismissively announced that she’s “not going to get involved with sideshows with 16-year-olds” like me. As I told the Providence Journal, “The future of Rhode Island students should not be seen as a sideshow by the very people in charge of our education.”

Then, a Saturday opinion piece by a conservative commentator once again said it was time for students to sit down and shut up. The piece even personally insulted me for speaking out on this issue, saying, “Perea is obviously struggling with the reading comprehension portion of the NECAP exam.” This is especially ignorant because I actually scored the highest possible score on my NECAP reading exam. But I am more than a test score, and so are my friends who are being hurt by this policy.

The attacks on my character aren’t important – I can take it. What does matter is that some adults feel they can shut down the voices of students like me, just because we are young or because they don’t like what we have to say. I think we should be celebrating student voice, not belittling it.

Fortunately, we aren’t on our own; we are so proud of the outpouring of support we’ve had here in Rhode Island and across the country.

Student voice is always stronger when it has the support of people like you. If you agree that students deserve a voice in their own education, please take a second to forward this email to 5 people who may not have heard of Providence Student Union’s mission to give students a fair say.

ACLU: Board of Ed. violates open meeting law again


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Colleen Callahan Deborah GistEva Mancuso’s secrecy sideshow continues as the ACLU says the Board of education has again violated the state open meeting law.

“This latest lawsuit, an expansion of one filed in July, challenges the Board’s debate and vote in secret last week to reject a petition by seventeen organizations for a public hearing on repealing the “high stakes testing” graduation requirement,” according to an ACLU press release sent today. “…the secret discussion violated the Open Meetings Act, and asks the court to declare the vote null and void, impose a $5,000 fine against the Board for willfully violating the law, and require the Board to consider the petition on its merits.”

In the first open meetings lawsuit the ACLU brought against the Board of Education, a judge prevented the Board from discussing the ACLU’s request to revisit the issue in public. The Board responded by discussing the merits of the issue itself in private and determined it deserved no extra public debate.

According to the press release:

The Board finally placed the petition on its September 9th meeting agenda. Before getting to that item, however, the Board went into closed session, purportedly to discuss the ACLU’s underlying APA lawsuit. Immediately upon reconvening into open session, however, Mancuso announced that the Board had not only discussed the lawsuit, but had also discussed the petition itself in its closed session and had voted, 6-5, to reject the petition.

Gist won’t meet with students, will meet with GOP


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gist memeThe Providence Student Union, a group of inner city high school students who have made national news organizing against high stakes testing, have begged Deborah Gist to engage them and she has systematically rebuffed their requests. She’s even has gone so far as to publicly encourage others to ignore them.

On the other hand, she’ll gladly make time for the Rhode Island Young Republicans.

Ignoring student activists and engaging conservative politicians is just one of the many ways Gist continues to be a divisive force in public education. On Friday, she claimed to have not read a report that was critical of teacher evaluations, a major initiative of hers and, not to mention, the subject of her PhD thesis.

Yesterday on Twitter her disdain for her detractors was more subtle but still present. Providence mayoral candidate Jorge Elorza said he disagreed with the NECAP but not high stakes tests in general. Gist felt that was “Excellent news!” for her. It was disturbingly more political than that of the candidate’s. More worrisome is that Gist missed the gist of the tweet – yet another public voice against the NECAP test. She’s seemingly deaf when it comes to any and all disagreement.

The Rhode Island Progressive Democrats and/or the Young Democrats of Rhode Island ought to ask her to come talk to their groups as well.

Thoughts concerning bishops and bears


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TobinBishopThomasBishop Tobin has politically positioned himself as a Republican and a Catholic, and his recent criticisms of Pope Francis, though mild to my ears, continue to provoke discussion among the faithful across the nation. Most of the discussion seems to revolve around Tobin’s politicization of his position as the Bishop of Providence Diocese.  I originally covered the National Catholic Reporter’s take on the issue here, along with Tobin’s comments.

Todd Flowerday, writing on the blog Catholic Sensibility, thinks that Tobin might be thinking locally while the Pope thinks globally:

Perhaps Bishop Tobin, recent Republican convert, is thinking too much in terms of American politics. US Catholics make up a single-digit percentage of the flock Francis now pastors. Is it realistic to expect that the man will conform to the American values of the political pro-life movement: confrontation, contention, fundraising, deception, and the striving to yell louder than the other side?

Supporting Tobin, Fr. Z’s Blog goes after the National Catholic Reporter writer Michael Sean Winters saying that “you don’t have to protect Popes from criticism” and “were the Michael Sean Winters types in charge, the college of bishops around Pope Francis would look like a meeting of North Korea’s Communist Party.”

David Cruz-Uribe, writing for Vox Nova, runs down some of this and also notes that some conservative Catholic blogs are seeing Tobin’s statements as a sort of conservative backlash against the current Pope.  However, the main point of the Vox Nova piece is that Tobin has essentially opened the floodgates for sending criticism up the Catholic hierarchy. Cruz-Uribe thinks this is an unintentional and positive development of Tobin’s comments, noting that not inviting open, constructive and respectful criticism smacks of obsequiousness, saying “we can criticize someone even if we love and respect him/her.”

The Vox Nova piece ends with “Let us pray that all bishops have both the courage to speak openly and respectfully, and that they have the humility and openness to listen and reflect when they are on the receiving end of similar critiques.”

Will Tobin be open to such criticism from the priests under his leadership? Tobin, in some way, seems to consider himself a prophet, and prophets historically are good at giving criticism, not taking it. Responding to a question about the heat he took in the aftermath of the passage of marriage equality on the opening episode of Dan Yorke’s State of Mind Tobin said,

Yeah, I did take a lot of heat but that’s part of the challenge of being a prophet. In some ways that is the prophetic role of the church to challenge evil where we find it, where we see it, to challenge those in positions of political leadership. The church has a long history even going back to the Old testament where prophets challenge the kings of Israel, and John the Baptist and Thomas More and many of the great apostles and prophets and saints throughout history have played that role of challenging evil where we think it exists.

I’m reminded of Second Kings, 2:23-24, when the Prophet Elisha was insulted by some children for being bald.

And he went up from thence unto Bethel: and as he was going up by the way, there came forth little children out of the city, and mocked him, and said unto him, Go up, thou bald head; go up, thou bald head.

And he turned back, and looked on them, and cursed them in the name of the Lord. And there came forth two she bears out of the wood, and tare forty and two children of them.

The lesson? Watch what you say about prophets or you might be targeted by wild bears.

What Mancuso sees as sideshow is the main event


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Photo by Sam Valorose.
Photo by Sam Valorose.

I believe the best thing happening in Rhode Island recently is the public debate about the education reform/deform movement and, in particular, using the NECAP test as a high stakes graduation requirement.

Eva Mancuso may think this is the sideshow, but I think this is the main event.

This morning there were several very constructive discussions among journalists, teachers, candidates, experts and concerned citizens about how high stakes tests play into education disparity as well as a host of other education-related issues. Noticeably absent was anyone from our government, which has in no uncertain terms communicated it doesn’t want to discuss this issue any longer.

That’s too bad, for us and them. Prior to the NECAP flap, both the Board of Education and Deborah Gist have – at best – flawed reputations with students, teachers and the public. And the ACLU announces another lawsuit over this matter on Monday. Hosting a discussion about high stakes tests is not only in everyone’s best interest, but it would also be a great opportunity to repair some of that damage to their collective credibility with the community.

Congressman Jim Langevin recently won the respect of many liberals and hard-line progressives not be acquiescing to the left, but rather by engaging with us. He took an unpopular position on NSA spying and then called together a town hall and listened and engaged with his detractors. Eva Mancuso and the Board of Education should follow his good example and engage the community about its concerns.

Call to Worship: ‘That urggh feeling’


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Bell Street ChapelAudrey Greene, coordinator of the Worship Committee at Bell St Chapel,  asks, “Maybe, we just have to learn to live without answers. To think of the questions as an end in themselves. Is that possible?”

Drift

I like to sing and dance. Aside from sitting with my children at the kitchen table and watching them eat, singing and dancing are the closest thing to heaven for me. But there’s this point. Not always, not every time, really only when I’m learning, when urrrrrgh. The timing is not there, the note won’t come, the feet are not connected to the brain. Granted, being 6 feet tall, my feet are quite a ways from my brain and that may be part of my problem with dancing.

But I’ll bet each of you has experienced a moment like this, many times. You’re learning a language, or taking your first fencing class, or trying water color painting, when you’re reaching, you’re struggling for the right way, the answer, and it feels like it’s never going to happen. You feel unmoored, uncertain, even afraid. I see little kids deal with this every day and it is interesting to see which ones keep trying and which ones throw themselves into fits of weeping and which ones just walk away.

Honestly, I’ve often been the type who walks away. I think this is because my mother told me I was smart. So I thought anything I didn’t know instantly and without effort wasn’t worth learning. This is not a good mindset for a child entering first grade, and I can tell you it didn’t win me many friends. My mom was doing the best she could, but I wish she’d told me I would sometimes fail, mess up, feel frustration. I’m still working on this.

Someone told me that that uncomfortable feeling is actually your brain growing dendrites, new connections between cells. This is a very good thing, especially for folks of a certain age. Actually, I think uncertainty, that urggh feeling, is a good thing for everyone.

Yes, we are a meaning-making species, we love answers. But answers for their own sakes, especially when it concerns the vast messy problem of people living together in peace, can be limiting and dangerous. Sometimes it feels to me like many Americans would love to have any answers at all, even very outdated ones from 250 years ago, just so long as they are answers. And it seems there are plenty of people willing and eager to provide those answers, even if they have to make them up.

Maybe, we just have to learn to live without answers. To think of the questions as an end in themselves. Is that possible?

Here is where I think Unitarian Universalism and especially Bell Street can lead the way. Although even in this congregation, we can get a little squirrelly (which, parenthetically, is a great image; a little wild-eyed animal clutching her precious nut of truth, her eyes darting this way and that) when things are in flux. I think we are uniquely qualified to open, examine, and live with life’s pressing questions. Where are we going? Who are we? Why are we here? Who knows? We are okay being unmoored, a little scared. We know we have each other. I say, let’s continue to drift together.

– Audrey Greene


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