Ravitch responds to ProJo


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diane ravitchThe Providence Journal published a highly misleading op/ed by Deborah Gist, that was discredited here, here, here and here (among some examples). So naturally, ProJo’s Politifact team responded by fact checking Gist’s biggest and most well-known critic, Diane Ravitch.

Politifact wrote: “Education critic Diane Ravitch said, ‘Test scores had gone up steadily for 40 years until No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top.’ There are a few problems with her statement. First, the time spans for the scores she cites are 32 and 38 years, not 40. Second, while the scores increased overall, there were a few dips. And for 17-year-olds, the overall increases were insignificant. Finally, despite her implication that the increases stopped after No Child Left Behind, scores actually rose for all age groups in 2008 and for nearly all in 2012, the next two testing periods.”

Ravitch, a blogger, wrote a lengthy response today saying that Politifact “misinterpreted what I said or misunderstood what I wrote.”

I contend in the book that test scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress are at a historic high point for white students, black students, Hispanic students, and Asian students. Nothing in his article disputes those facts. It seems that his goal is to defend the high-stakes testing and accountability regime created by George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind law, passed in 2001 and signed into law in 2002.

You can read the whole thing here.

 

Block eliminates own relevance, Moderate Party in one fell swoop


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Ken Block

Ken BlockBreak out the dirges, Ken Block put the nails in his own political coffin with the announcement he would become a Republican and run in that party’s primary for governor.

Block has been saying for months that he would only seek the office of governor if he saw a clear path to victory. That path for victory did not lie in the political party he’d spent the last half-decade building and advocating for. This does two things. First, for everyone who ever accused Block of being a Republican in sheep’s clothing, it confirms that their suspicions were reality. Second, it makes it appear that Block is less dedicated to his causes and more dedicated to himself. Switching affiliations from Moderate to Republican doesn’t further the causes Block has championed. It only furthers his own career.

Republicans should no doubt be both happy and annoyed about this latest shapeshifter in Rhode Island’s political landscape. They should be happy because it removes Block as their personal gadfly; GOP partisans have long suggested Block’s candidacy is what prevented a Gov. John Robitaille from being inaugurated in 2011. Now, come September 2014, Block will either be their standard-bearer or defeated. The smart money is on the latter.

But therein lies the problem. Until now, it seemed as though Cranston Mayor Allan Fung was going to have a easy waltz to the nomination, leaving him free to beat up on the Democratic candidates. Now he has a contested nomination. Resources that otherwise could’ve gone toward tamping down the Democratic nominee’s inherent advantage are now going to have to go to fending off Block’s challenge.

For the Moderate Party, this appears to be its death knell. It never existed much outside the persona of Ken Block. This is exactly what I wrote about in March of last year; that the Moderate Party has an issue of a lack of identity. Block has been very successful at garnering media attention. But that attention has never translated into much support for the Moderate Party. It’s not even clear if there are other Moderates beyond Block. It seems likely the Moderate Party will end its existence as a second most successful third party in modern Rhode Island politics; right behind the Cool Moose Party.

Whether Block will become the new Robert Healey is anyone’s guess.

PVD mulls divesting $10 million from fossil fuel co’s


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providence divestEven though Brown University has decided not to divest from the coal industry, the Capital City is still considering taking its pension investments out of companies that profit from fossil fuels.

While Brown decided against divesting about $1 million (or 1 percent of its endowment) from 15 coal companies Sunday, Providence is considering moving more than $10 million of its $283,294 million pension nest egg from 39 fossil fuel companies to more socially responsible funds. What those new funds might be has yet to be determined.

Wainwright Investment Counsel produced this list for the city in August:

Equities
BP ………………………..$1,180,601
Chevron Corp ………..$692,395
Conocophillips ………$479,964
Energen Corp ………..$131,459
Eni Spa …………………$835,907
EQT ……………………..$191,165
Exxon Mobil …………..$646,875
Gdf Suez ………………..$1,244,539
Lukoil ……………………$612,200
Marathon Oil ………….$298,152
Marathon Oil Corp ….$154,712
Marathon Petroleum .$102,295
Mitsubishi ………………$544,447
Noble Energy ………….$143,102
Occidental Petroleum.$59,664
Questar Corp …………..$52,492
Sm Energy ………………$151,550
Southwestern Energy .$196,665
Swift Energy ……………$71,790
Total SA ………………….$1,253,430
Total equities ……..$9.043,403

Fixed income
Alcoa ………………………..$108,665
Anadarko ………………….$118,718
Arcelormittal …………….$18,113
Chesapeake ………………$152,600
Continental ………………$58,350
Encana Corp …………….$123,921
Newfield Exploration ..$108,150
Occidental Petroleum ..$240,890
Peabody Energy ………..$76,688
Petrobras ………………….$189,128
Questar Corp …………….$145,636
Rio Tinto ………………….$129,038
Rio Tinto ………………….$88,621
Sm Energy ………………..$15,900
Statoil Asa ………………..$160,545
Teck Resources …………$5,100
Teck Resources …………$117,627
Total ………………………..$1,857,689

 

 

 

NYPD comish at Brown after losing ‘stop/frisk’ suit

786699_300 Hon  Raymond W  Kelly.jpgIn a sign of either Brown University’s ignorance of reality, or their support for oppressive practices, (or love of causing a stir), they will host the controversial Commissioner Ray Kelly tomorrow at 4pm, at List Art Building.  Naturally, Kelly will explain that in order to make an omelet, you have to break a few eggs.  In this case, he will proclaim that making New York City safe for “us” is the primary concern.  The eggs in this case apply to people who are Black, Latino, and/or Muslim.  These groups have been subjected to heightened surveillance and harassment programs that violate the 4th Amendment, as well as a rash of recent high-profile killings by NYPD officers.

Kelly has proudly supported his “Stop and Frisk” policy over the years- even in the face of massive disapproval.  I studied this issue intensely and created a series on Unprison that uses statistics to denounce the claims of Kelly and Mayor Bloomberg.  A summary of the series is also available in The Guardian.  Tomorrow, oral arguments are being heard after Kelly’s NYPD lost the class action lawsuit Floyd v. New York.  They are seeking a stay of execution in the Second Circuit. A complete overview of the case can be found here. Indeed, Kelly’s NYPD has prompted many millions of dollars in litigation.

Who should properly be credited when something doesn’t happen?  There has been no repeat of the 9-11 attack in New York City… nor in any other American city.  Commissioner Kelly claims it is the vigilance of his 35,000 troops that stands between civilization and mass destruction.  Perhaps Mayor Angel Taveras, Dean Esserman, Hugh Clements and others should be receiving annual awards in Providence?  Others might thank foreign security forces, American troops, Navy Seal Team Six, their chosen deity, a collapsed economy, border and TSA agents, or even the disinterest of would-be terrorists.  But Ray Kelly wants you to thank him, and to forget about the constitution in the process.

I’m personally very curious how this stop on the Ray Kelly Victory Tour goes down at Brown.  Someone please report in.

Why red states love voter ID


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Voter-ID-4A North Carolina Republican, who declines to distance himself from racism, admits that voter ID laws are designed to give Republicans an electoral advantage. Which, I suppose makes some strategic sense for a Republican-leaning state with a recent history of racism like North Carolina. But why does Rhode Island have a voter ID law?

Watch the not-funny-because-it’s-true Daily Show segment here, in which Aasif Mandvi suggests Democrats level the playing field by suppressing Republican turnout with, among other ploys, “Jesus didn’t vote” bumper stickers.

The segment also features Civil Rights hero and Georgia Congressman John Lewis who will be in Rhode Island later this week for the Providence NAACP’s 100th Annual Freedom Fund Awards Dinner.

This Daily Show segment on voter repression is pretty good too:

Both party primaries for governor come into focus


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Gina Raimondo, Linc Chafee and Allan Fung at the unveiling of the Truth in Numbers report.
Gina Raimondo, Linc Chafee and Allan Fung at the unveiling of the “Truth in Numbers” report.

The calendar may still say 2013, but the 2014 election year kicked into high gear this weekend. Providence Mayor Angel Taveras said he will announce his candidacy today at 10 am at Meeting Street School in Providence; General Treasurer Gina Raimondo told WPRI Newsmakers if she does run for governor, she will do so as a Democrat; and “moderate” Ken Block finally admitted he’s really a Republican.

Progressives have reason to celebrate all three announcements.

Angel Taveras is the most obvious, as many local liberals are hoping he becomes the first Democrat elected governor since Bruce Sundlun was 18 years ago. He’s won praise for winning concessions from a wide swath of special interests and more recently he’s been panned for not cow-towing to neighborhood interests (and astroturfing Republicans) who want their public sector pool re-opened. More than anything, I think, progressives hope Angel can usher in a new era of working across the aisle without giving in to influential and often discreet out-of-town corporate forces.

To that end, with Raimondo almost certainly commanding the most out-of-state super PAC support in 2014, the left will be lucky if it has to face those influential and often-discreet corporate forces in a primary rather than the general election. Perhaps. At least there will be something refreshing about seeing the Citizens United approach to campaigning square off with real grassroots, boots-on-the-ground organizers.

Raimondo probably has the best shot of winning a general election, but because she has a wider appeal among all Rhode Island voters than she does among Democrats. But since she will need party support if she ever wants to run for national office, she’ll remain a Democrat.

While Raimondo’s career aspirations keep her in one mainstream political party, Ken Block’s has him joining the other. Now, instead of siphoning off votes from Republican Allan Fung in a general election, he’ll compete against him for the nomination. That, too, will likely be a bruising primary – if for no other reason than both Fung and Block are hot-headed and argumentative politicians. I think Fung will prove victorious and the more moderate of the two. More importantly, a contested GOP primary will be an interesting look at the right wing in Rhode Island.

Then there is Clay Pell, the grandson of former Senator Claiborne Pell who is flirting with the idea of making his foray into politics by injecting himself into an already divisive Democratic field. His family fortune and connections make him an instant contender, and he sent shivers down the spine of some Taveras supporters when he showed up at an NEARI event last week. While political operatives might not like the prospect of a three-way primary, political philosophers can ask for a lot worse than to get to see a Latino from South Providence take on a Wall Street Democrat and a registered member of the 1 percent.

RIDE rep: reasonable people disagree on NECAP policy


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andrea castenadaThe state Department of Education has been a strong advocate against public debate about high stakes testing as a graduation requirement, but it hasn’t been silent. Earlier this month Andrea Castaneda, chief of Accelerating School Performance for RIDE, spoke at a forum in Warwick earlier this month.

“I view this as our absolute responsibility,” she said about being a part of the public debate Rhode Island is having largely without RIDE and the Board of Education over high stakes testing and using the NECAP as a graduation requirement. “This is a really important piece of public policy and I think it’s a piece of public policy that well-informed, reasonable, thoughtful people disagree on.”

This is a stark contrast to how Castaneda’s boss, Deborah Gist, has parsed political debate concerning the NECAP test, who has said people should not encourage or participate in political actions related to high stakes testing and authored seemingly simple but patently false op/ed pieces in the Providence Journal.

The parents and educators who organized this forum are planning several more such forums in November. While this one focused on the negative ramifications high stake testing graduation requirements have on students with disabilities, future forums will include the Providence NAACP, church leaders and will focus more broadly on civil liberties. Castaneda, despite saying such public debates are RIDE’s “absolute responsibility” to particpate in, has declined to participate in future forums. Forum organizers say Castaneda wants a say in how future meetings are structured.

Sorry, Andrea … I think RIDE lost the right to dictate the structure of the debate when it decided not to facilitate the public conversation. Watch Castanada address a group who held a forum at Warwick City Hall earlier this week below. See if you think her words are consistent with RIDE’s actions: