National wingmen: Sheldon takes on Ted Cruz


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crossfireRhode Island progressive hero Sheldon Whitehouse took on Texas tea party scourge Ted Cruz on Crossfire last night debating the merits – or, more to the point, the lack thereof – of the government shutdown.

“Everyone that I know in Rhode Island knows the difference between negotiating and negotiating while holding hostages,” Whitehouse said. “I really think it is important that we do our level best to both take away the threat of the debt limit  and reopen the government then everything is on the table, of course it is, but we want to negotiate like Americans without guns to our heads.”

For a local version of this very same debate, Justin Katz and I will be squaring off on the same topic today on the Wingmen segment of 10 News Conference. I’ll post that later today, in the meantime, enjoy the national version via CNN:

PSU’s Cauldierre McKay takes to MSNBC


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ed nationClassical High School student and Providence Student Union member Cauldierre McKay has gone national. He and other members of Student Unions from around the country appeared on MSNBC’s Education Nation this Sunday.

“Education reform has become a prominent debate across the country, but the students who are impacted by its result are rarely invited to weigh in,” according to the MSNBC blog. “This year, there has been a surge of students determined to disrupt that standard and make their voices heard to advocate for education reform that makes sense based on their own experiences with hot-button issues like high-stakes testing.”

Here’s the post from the Providence Student Union blog.

Here’s a great segment of McKay talking explaining how the PSU parlayed a zombie march, it’s first direct action, into an adult test taking session and national notoriety:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

And here’s the first segment of the special:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Let the Taveras, Raimondo horse race begin!


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Gina Raimondo and Angel Taveras supporting payday loan reform. (Bob Plain 5/18/12 Click on image for larger version)
Gina Raimondo and Angel Taveras supporting payday loan reform. (Bob Plain 5/18/12 Click on image for larger version)

The Taubman Center’s recent poll is probably the ultimate kick-off of horse race coverage of the 2014 campaign for governor. In a somewhat regular occurrence for Director Marion Orr, the poll’s methodology was called out almost immediately. WPRI’s Ted Nesi has an interview with Orr explaining the methodology; here on RI Future our editor Bob Plain has a quick list comparing the actual results of elections versus Taubman’s predictions.

Polling is great for horse race coverage, and shoddy polling is politically dangerous. A year out, with the primary candidates for governor as yet undeclared, we don’t care much for talking about the issues the next governor will face; even though recent history suggests the decisions made in this next year will likely have great impacts on the next administration. Thus the polling provides a simple narrative for who has the “advantage” going into the actual race.

That narrative is something to be cautious about, especially in Rhode Island. What the media is saying is not necessarily what is happening. Sometimes, unfortunately, media outlets can fall too much in love with the narrative they’ve created. 2012 should remain a sobering moment; the narrative (based largely on polling) was that Rep. David Cicilline was in for one of the closest races of his political career. On the eve of the election, WPRI showed Cicilline with a 1-point lead over challenger Brendan Doherty. A month before, both the Taubman Center and WPRI had Cicilline with a 5- or 6-point lead. Cicilline went on to win by an unexpected 12.2% margin.

The Taubman Center’s polling also shows where the narrative is going. Included is a question comparing a 4-way race between Gina Raimondo, Angel Taveras, Allan Fung, and Ken Block. The operating theory is that Raimondo will choose to skip the Democratic primary, run as an independent and Chafee her way to victory. But here’s the thing; she’s already told NBC 10’s Jim Taricani that she won’t run for governor as an independent. Why does this narrative persist? Because people want it to.

In the meantime, there are strong questions to be asked. For instance, how does the next governor fix the state’s economy? Can they, considering the office’s major policy-making ability is as a leader in budget creation and through the bully pulpit? For the Democrats, we have to ask ourselves what the General Assembly does if the governor is no longer a useful foil to play off of? How do the candidates view the office they’re running for? There are social issues that are going to come up during the next term; will gubernatorial candidates protect the recent advances, or will they roll back progress? What are their educational policies?

David Preston has a great review of the usefulness of polling, and how to watching a political campaign without using numbers that are either unreliable or meant to manipulate.

Meet Janet Yellen: Keynesian economist, Brown grad


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yellen hopeNot only should progressives be happy with President Obama’s choice of Janet Yellen to chair the Federal Reserve, so should all Rhode Islanders. She’s not only a Keynesian economist, she’s also a 1967 graduate of Brown University, tweets her alma mater.

And, it turns out that Yellen was a lefty even before enrolling at Brown. According to Business Insider, a high school classmate described her as “a classic ’60s liberal. She has great faith in education as an answer to a lot of societal problems.”

As for her policies and priorities, the Wall Street Journal reports she “focused much of her academic research on the costs and causes of unemployment, has consistently called for the Fed to respond forcefully to high joblessness” and “she said the Fed might need to require the nation’s largest, most complex banks to carry even fatter capital cushions against losses than required by new rules set out by international regulators, a prospect hotly contested by big U.S. banks.”

Sounds pretty good to me. Even better, here’s what the New Yorker wrote about her policies in April:

In a field noted for its conservatism and adherence to free-market orthodoxy, she has long stood out as a lively and liberal thinker who resisted the rightward shift that many of her colleagues took in the eighties and nineties.

And last but certainly not least, here’s what our own progressive Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said about her nomination:

“Janet Yellen is highly qualified to serve as our next Fed chair, and I look forward to supporting her nomination in the Senate. At a time when our economy is still struggling, Ms. Yellen will bring the right priorities, and a lifetime of experience, to help us create jobs and provide a fair deal to the middle class.”

 

PSU hosts a talent show to upstage high stakes tests


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Photo by Sam Valorose.
Photo by Sam Valorose.

Enter the arts community into the ever-escalating debate over high stakes testing in Rhode Island. The Providence Student Union is holding a “talent show” in front of the Department of Education on Friday, and several prominent artists are supporting the student group’s effort.

“The Providence Student Union’s Citywide Talent Show is a great venue to show the world that young people aren’t the leaders of tomorrow, they are leaders today,” said Elia Gurna, executive director of the New Urban Arts. “While the current educational culture seems to value only that which is easily measured by scores and grades, PSU is giving young people a chance to find and raise their voices through collaboration and creativity, which we should value just as much (or more) as any academic skills or achievements.”

The show starts at 4 pm on Westminster Street across from the Department of Education. According to a press release, members of the Board of Education have been invited, as well as other public officials.

“Providence students will take an afternoon off from standardized test­‐taking to appreciate another important component of education: the arts. The Providence Student Union will hold a free variety show adjacent to the Rhode Island Department of Education to showcase the talents of students from across the city. The event, held in the middle of three weeks of NECAP testing, features more than twenty performances by Providence public school students.”

What do the arts have to do with high stakes testing, you ask? Well, this is what AS220 founder and artistic director Bert Crenka said:

“Art is about self expression, a sure path to self realization. We need more of it in our schools, not less. Enough said.”

Toxic schools in Rhode Island still a concern


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Lois Gibbs of Love Canal

Because of Rhode Island’s industrial history (we invented industrial industry, after all) we’ve inherited a wealth of old mill and factory sites that are loaded with toxins and contaminants. Such land is very difficult to develop or sell, because the cost of cleaning up these sites can be extraordinary.

One solution to this problem is to pretend the contaminants don’t exist, and then erect schools on or near the site of the extinct factories. The land is cheap and no one would want to build their home or business there, so it makes perfect sense to turn the places into schools, right?

And if people are still worried about contaminants and toxins, we can install elaborate chemical detection systems that might not actually do anything, but will mollify the parents. These chemical detection systems are expensive to install and tricky to maintain, which eats up a lot of the money saved in placing schools on such land in the first place, but what the heck, it’s only our children and those valueless public servants we call “teachers” who are put at risk. No big deal.

I covered this issue back in May when the Environmental Justice League of RI brought Lois Gibbs, renowned toxics activist from Love Canal, to speak out against weakening a recently passed bill that protects schools from being built on toxic sights. Now a great video from PressPassTV talks about this problem and highlights the actions of the Environmental Justice League of Rhode Island to combat it. Check it out:

Do cellphone-less polls have a conservative bias?


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Gina Raimondo and Angel Taveras supporting payday loan reform. (Bob Plain 5/18/12 Click on image for larger version)
Gina Raimondo and Angel Taveras supporting payday loan reform. (Bob Plain 5/18/12 Click on image for larger version)

A new Brown poll has the quarterback of pension politics football team leading Providence’s most oft-plagiarized mayor in a likely Democratic primary for governor in 2014 with 24 percent still undecided. But it’s at least worth noting that the Taubman Center has often been off mark with election forecasting.

“A new Brown University survey of Rhode Island voters finds Democratic State Treasurer Frank Caprio has widened his lead over Independent candidate Lincoln Chafee in the race for governor,” an October 2010 press release says.

The Taubman Center predicted Caprio would win by 7 and he lost by 13 – that’s a 20 point swing. Sure, Caprio then told off the president on hate radio, but Brown botched other races that year too: It said David Cicilline would win by a whopping 39 to 20 margin and he won 50 to 44. And Ralph Mollis only beat his Republican challenger by one point, not the 11 point swing Brown predicted. In 2006, a Brown poll thought Governor Don Carcieri would hold on to his office by 12 points. He won by less than two.

In 2012, Abel Collins own internal poll was almost as accurate as the Taubman Center in predicting his electoral results, only in the opposite direction.

It’s no secret that polls can get it wrong, and a huge reason for this is they don’t often account for those without landlines. What’s interesting is that, at least with 2012 presidential polls, the ones that got it wrong tended to anticipate a more conservative electorate.

Here’s hoping that’s the case with this Brown poll.

On pensions, political hypocrisy worse than football


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raimondo pension pol quote“It is time to stop using pensions as a political football,” said the person who has used pensions as a political football more and more successfully than perhaps any other human being this century.

While many loath Gina Raimondo’s vociferous Wall Street-over-Main Street approach to finance and politics, there’s also her sheer hypocrisy to dislike too. After riding the pension political football to millions of dollars in donations, reams of positive publicity and praise from some of the most pro-Wall Street people, political organizations and news outlets in the nation, she all of a sudden thinks we should change the topic.

Who can blame her. Even fellow Wall Street Democrats such as Frank Caprio, who works for an investment firm and considered running as a Republican, are critiquing her hedge fund heavy approach to pension investment.

On the other hand, changing the truth isn’t the same as changing the subject. Raimondo also told the Providence Journal:

“If the General Assembly had not passed the reform legislation, it is likely that some cities and towns would have gone bankrupt and that down the road pensions would have to be severely cut.”

I don’t believe state pension cuts saved any cities (and certainly no towns!) from filing for bankruptcy. Gene Emery?

Midwestern superintendent plagiarizes Mayor Taveras


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras delivering his 2012 State of the City address. (Photo by Bob Plain)
Providence Mayor Angel Taveras delivering his 2012 State of the City address. (Photo by Bob Plain)

While many Rhode Islanders wish the state would have followed Providence Mayor Angel Taveras’ lead on pension politics, at least one man in Indiana surely wishes he would have strayed from the progressive mayor’s message. That’s because the Indiana school superintendent is accused of plagiarizing from a letter Taveras wrote about teachers.

“At least three memos or emails released to staff and the school community by [the superintendent], appear identical in many parts to communications from other school districts and, in one case, a letter from the office of the mayor of Providence, R.I.,” reports the Journal and Courier of Lafayette, Indiana.

The superintendent, who was fired, apologized to Taveras on Tuesday, though in the article he denied plagiarizing from him.

According to the article, the superintendent wrote this in a letter for Teacher Appreciation week this year:

“Public school teachers have played a pivotal role in my life. As a fourth grader at Washington Elementary School, it was my teacher, Mrs. Diane Lane, who encouraged me to work harder towards my education than my social life. I know first-hand how a public education and quality teachers can change a life. It changed mine!”

This is the very similar words that Taveras wrote for Teacher Appreciation Week last year:

“Public school teachers have played a pivotal role in my life. As a third grader at Mary Fogarty Elementary School, it was my teacher, Mrs. Dorothy Donaldson, who encouraged me to join a gifted program and chase my dream of becoming a lawyer. I know first-hand how a public education and quality teachers can change a life. It changed mine.”

Mayor Taveras’ letter comes up on the first page of a Google search for “teacher appreciation letter.”

Some may find irony in a midwestern superintendent copying Taveras’ words on teacher appreciation since the one chink in the popular mayor’s progressive resume is that he sent lay-off notices to public school teachers. Taveras has also supported charter schools, which effectively funnel already-scarce resources for education away from traditional public schools and the vast majority of students and teachers.

Meet the Young Pros of Planned Parenthood


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PPYP ToastThe Planned Parenthood Young Professionals (PPYP) team has made great strides to build our presence in the state over the last year.Led by Planned Parenthood Votes! RI advocacy staff, six local volunteers are spearheading a team to promote the importance of reproductive health and education around the state. Unlike many other young professionals groups in and around the region, PPYP strives to further an incredibly important mission. We seek to “advocate for the mission of Planned Parenthood of Southern New England (PPSNE) and Planned Parenthood Votes! RI through volunteerism, outreach, education and social functions.” PPYP promotes the work of Planned Parenthood to the Rhode Island community and government and builds networks of young supporters throughout the state.

 Over the last year we’ve hosted several activities with the goal of building a regular space for us to interact, build our work and recruit new voices to weigh in on the challenges and opportunities facing reproductive rights and health in Rhode Island. A sampling of this year’s events include:

  • “Sex Trivia on Tap” night at Café Tazza in Providence
  • “How to Have the TALK with Your Legislator” in Rhode Island
  •  “Cover Your Cannoli” lobby day at the RI State house
  • “Drinking Liberally” with the Young Democrats of RI

We are excited to partner with Trinity Brew House to Toast Reproductive Justice on Thursday, October 10, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Enjoy a beer tasting of Trinity Brews, plus appetizers for just $15. You may become an annual PPYP member and enjoy the perks of planning and attending other member only events.

We hope you’ll join us on October 10 to raise a glass to reproductive justice, meet new people and learn about a growing organization focused on volunteerism, outreach and education through political and social functions.

Jennifer Peters, a lifelong resident of Rhode Island, currently works as a legal assistant to a bankruptcy lawyer in Providence, is chair-elect of the Project Committee for the Junior League of Rhode Island and a volunteer at the Women’s Center of Rhode Island. She is a member of Planned Parenthood and the ACLU. She lives in Bristol with her husband.

Pacheco has two no-cost, pro-small business ideas


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pachecoEd Pacheco, Democratic candidate for Secretary of State, outlined some of his no-cost ideas for growing businesses in our state at a meeting of the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats.

One is to establish a list of micro-lenders that will be able to advance promising businesses the money they need to get started, as is currently the case in New York. The other is to work out a public option so that people looking to retire from their successful, established businesses will be able to sell their business to their employees.

“We’re not only saving jobs, we’re keeping that business open,” said Pacheco, “and that would be at no cost to the taxpayers.”

Catholic priests exempted from government shutdown


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Cardinal DolanHow wonderful would it be for the tea party if, as has been suggested, the Obama Administration were threatening Catholic priests with arrest if they attempted to conduct mass during the shutdown. “Military chaplains,” says Justin Katz, are “being ordered not to give Mass, even on a volunteer basis.”

It turns out that the shutdown, engineered by the religious right (and at the behest of Catholic Bishops) has an unintended side effect, at least according to John Schlageter, General Counsel of the Archdiocese for the Military Services. According to Schlageter,

With the government shutdown, many GS and contract priests who minister to Catholics on military bases worldwide are not permitted to work – not even to volunteer.  During the shutdown, it is illegal for them to minister on base and they risk being arrested if they attempt to do so.

I would wager that prior to Schlageter’s op-ed, no reasonable person would have considered arresting a Catholic priest for volunteering to conduct mass. No prosecutor would bring charges, no judge would allow such a charge to stand, and no jury would convict. But we shouldn’t be surprised: religious conservatives often become agitated over imagined controversies like government funded abortions (which are illegal under federal law) and the manufactured “War on Christmas.”

There is simply no way a Catholic priest is going to be fined or imprisoned for conducting a mass on a volunteer basis, despite Schlageter’s protestations. So why do religious conservatives continue to press this issue? I would suggest two reasons.

The first is the advancement of religious privilege. During the shutdown all government services and contract priests were effectively laid off. Under the Antidefiency Act, a law passed in 1870, the federal government is prohibited from incurring debts Congress has not approved. This is the kind of prudent legislation that Congress passed in the good old days when the institution was not dysfunctional due to Tea Party infestation. Contract priests are like any other “non-essential” government contractor, and they are not technically permitted to work during the shutdown. But because of the First Amendment, there’s a perceived difference between being a priest and being a janitor.

Shlageter’s op-ed was less than four days old before the House of Representatives passed a resolution, by a margin of 400 to 1, encouraging the military not to cancel religious services during the shutdown. Unlike every other government services and contract worker, priests and ministers will be rendered special, exempt from a law that affects the rest of us. In the United States, everyone is equal, except for Catholic Priests and other holy ministers, who are more equal. Schlageter’s letter and the House action reinforces clerical privilege.

The second reason for Schlageter’s op-ed and the reason why the story has been given such special attention in the right-wing press is due to the continued efforts of the United States Conference of Bishops to apply any and all pressures on the Obama Administration to alter the Affordable Care Act. As alluded to above, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) wrote to House members urging the government be shutdown “unless religious employers were given a special right to deny birth control coverage to their employees.

As Adele Stan puts it so well in her piece:

The bishops want to be on the record as champions of health care for the masses, food for the hungry, and shelter for the homeless—things the government, when operational, helps to provide. But they’re happy to block access to such services for those in need of them unless Congress agrees to block women of all faiths or none, on the whim of an employer, from receiving prescription birth control as part of the preventive care benefit in the Affordable Care Act.

Schlageter works for the Archdiocese for the Military Services which is part of the USCCB. Conservative Catholics and Christians desperately want to convince us that due to Obamacare, their religious liberty is at stake, contrary to all evidence. In this context, Schlageter’s op-ed becomes another weapon to beat President Obama and the ACA with.

As the world falls under the spell of Pope Francis, who seems so forward thinking and genial, especially when compared to his predecessors, we forget that the Catholic Bishops are still working to strip women of their reproductive healthcare rights, still opposed to virtually all forms of birth control, and still advocates against LGBTQ rights here and abroad. Despite his words, Pope Francis has not altered one jot of Catholic dogma and one of Francis’s closest advisors, Cardinal Dolan of Boston, continues to lead the USCCB on an all-out assault on Obamacare.

That assault includes urging the USCCB urging Congress to default on its obligations by not raising the debt ceiling, which could, economists warn, plunge the world into a depression that will make the 1930’s look like the 1950’s. Millions could be plunged into poverty, starvation and disease because the Catholic Church opposes women’s reproductive rights.

Jesus supposedly said, in Matthew 26:11, “The poor you will always have with you…” The Catholic Church, it seems, is willing to do everything in its power to make sure Jesus didn’t get that wrong.

Bill McKibben debated divestment at Brown U. last week


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mckibbenIn case you missed it, the nation’s leading climate activist Bill McKibben was at Brown University last week to debate divesting from oil and coal companies that contribute to environmental degradation and man-made climate change. He was challenged by a former CEO of one of the coal companies Brown is considering divesting from.

“The conversation was fascinating, but this conversation isn’t new to campus,” said student Rachel Bishop in an email. “Brown Divest Coal has engaged in discussions with the administration and students for a year now. In fact, Brown has an entire committee charged with considering the ethics of Brown’s investments, and they endorsed Brown’s divestment back in April. I hope the Board of Trustees listens to the message coming out of these conversations and vote yes to divestment.”

Here’s the entire video of the debate:

More silliness from Barth E. Bracy


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DSCF1248Barth Bracy of the Rhode Island State Right to Life Committee is at it again. From his half-cooked story about Occupiers in armbands engaging in military style condom drops on Catholic schoolgirls to his “mostly false” ranking at Politifact Rhode Island, regarding the public’s attitudes about reproductive rights, Bracy seems to maintain a cordial, if distant relationship to the truth.

Now he’s complaining about HealthSourceRI, the web portal through which thousands of Rhode Islanders will finally be able to access decent, affordable healthcare for the first time in their lives. Bracy’s complaint is that his “layman’s reading” of the Affordable Care Act suggests that HealthSourceRI is somehow out-of-compliance with federal law.

Tax dollars sent to help cover plans that offer abortion will be separated from accounts used to pay for abortion services.  Federal law prevents the use of any federal money from being used to access abortion, except in the case of incest, rape or danger to the life of the mother. This is the Stupak-Pitts Amendment, and was inserted by President Obama into the law through an executive order.  Bracy’s claim that there will be “government subsidies for insurance plans that cover abortion-on-demand” is conspiracy minded foolishness, and false.

Bracy’s complaint seems to stem from the fact that right now all of the 28 plans being offered on the exchange cover abortion. For those interested in such a plan, I would suggest waiting a bit. The law mandates that at least one such health care plan be included on the exchange by 2017, and most likely, before that date rolls around, there will be more than one such plan to choose from.

In the meantime, Bracy might want to calm down and think carefully before making any more outrageous claims.

How the Koch brothers planned and parsed the shutdown


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Koch-Brothers-ExposedIt’s not hyperbole to say the Koch brothers and the tea party are systematically working together to defund the American government. According to an article in the New York Times, that’s exactly how the government shutdown happened: wealthy Republicans, well-financed Super PACS and stink tank leaders got together with tea party members and planned it out at the beginning of President Obama’s second term in office.

“I think people realized that with the imminent beginning of Obamacare, that this was a critical time to make every effort to stop something,” former Ronald Reagan staffer and friend Edwin Meese told the New York Times.

According to the very insightful Times article:

Groups like Tea Party Patriots, Americans for Prosperity and FreedomWorks are all immersed in the fight, as is Club for Growth, a business-backed nonprofit organization. Some, like Generation Opportunity and Young Americans for Liberty, both aimed at young adults, are upstarts. Heritage Action is new, too, founded in 2010 to advance the policy prescriptions of its sister group, the Heritage Foundation.

The billionaire Koch brothers, Charles and David, have been deeply involved with financing the overall effort. A group linked to the Kochs, Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce, disbursed more than $200 million last year to nonprofit organizations involved in the fight. Included was $5 million to Generation Opportunity, which created a buzz last month with an Internet advertisement showing a menacing Uncle Sam figure popping up between a woman’s legs during a gynecological exam.

The Times even dug up a a Defunding Obamacare Toolkit that was put together for astroturfing (astroturfing is when in politics something appears to be a grassroots effort but it is really being funded and formulated by powerful political players).

It seems Justin Katz got some material from the toolkit for our appearance on 10 News Conference this weekend. I asked him if we both agreed that everyone should have insurance and he replied that everyone should have health care (3:00) but not necessarily insurance. Here that is, right on page 11 of the toolkit, right under “Suggested Responses to Congressional Offices & Members of the Press about Defunding Obamacare.”

NK spent $450,000 on forcing 24 hr fire fighter shifts


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nk fireThe town of North Kingstown has already spent $450,263 in legal fees trying to force 24 hour shifts upon its fire fighters, according to documents shared today by Town Manager Mike Embury. A court has ruled against the new shifts, but the town is appealing that decision and trying to remove a Carcieri appointed judge for being biased.

“The issues are very involved and important,” Embury said in an email. “The unions from around the state are watching this closely.”

According to the document from Embury, the town spent $200,927.79 in 2013: $84,674.83 was for work on contract arbitration; $29,932.40 for “declaratory judgment work”; and $18,696 for unfair labor practices. In 2012, the town spent $155,641.232 on legal fees concerning the 24-hour fire fighter shift. Embury said the town has already spent $93,694.24 for 2014.

All but $277 of the half million dollar sum, which went to the American Association of Arbiters, was paid to legendary anti-organized labor lawyer Dan Kinder and his firm. Kinder famously made millions defending pay cuts in the East Providence school district. Kinder won that case, but labor responded by supporting a reform slate for the school committee, which beat the group that supported the cuts.

Look for labor to focus on local elections in North Kingstown in 2014 in a similar style.

Embury noted that it was much easier to win concessions from the local police union.

You can read the entire report issued by Embury here.

Amnesty International USA has a new exec director


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Steve Hawkins-jpeg
AIUSA Executive Director Steve Hawkins

Last Wednesday I was in Boston to meet the new executive director of Amnesty International USA, Steven Hawkins. Hawkins is a lawyer with a lifetime worth of experience working for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund where he “represented African-American men facing the death penalty throughout the deep south.” From the NAACP he worked as the executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty before landing at AIUSA. When I met the man, he had been on the job for about six days, having already met people throughout the Amnesty International USA network in something like eight cities. He really hit the ground running.

The death penalty is not something we give much thought to here in Rhode Island, given our state’s proud history of having abolished the practice in 1852. Though our state had a death penalty statute “on the books” from 1872-1984, we haven’t executed anyone since 1845. Recently Governor Chafee took a stand against a federal death penalty case being brought against the murderer Jason Pleau, for which he faced some hard criticism. Occasionally some member of the General Assembly introduces a bill to bring the death penalty back, but the reality is that the death penalty is gone from Rhode Island, and in this way, as in others throughout our history, our state is a national leader.

Executive Director Hawkins was very direct about the challenges facing Amnesty International USA. The organization has gone through some hard times in recent years but it is hoped that new leadership can instill renewed vigor. Hawkins believes in AIUSA’s ability to fight for Human Rights both here in the United States and internationally, writing,

Amnesty International USA is uniquely positioned to connect discrimination against the LGBT community here in the United States to the discrimination and the LGBT community in Russia, Uganda, and Honduras experiences. We can connect police torture and illegal surveillance that occurs in the United States to similar abuses occurring in China, Egypt and elsewhere. We can connect a young woman in the U.S. fighting for reproductive freedom to women in El Salvador, Ireland and other countries who are fighting for the same rights.

I have been a proud supporter of Amnesty International for many years, and have participated in the annual Global Write-a-Thons, which take place in December, sponsored by the local Amnesty International Group 49 out of Providence, which was founded in 1976! This group has work tirelessly for the release and fair treatment of prisoners on conscience for over thirty-five years, with active members who have been there from the beginning.

In the meantime, consider spending $30 to participate in AIUSA’s Northeast Regional Conference, to be held at Boston University on November 9th.

Throughout the day you will learn about human rights violations taking place throughout the world and what we can do to stop these violations. Participants will learn new organizing skills, how to take actions and will ultimately be inspired by many of our featured speakers and workshops.

Some of this year’s focus will be on human tracking, human rights in Russia and what we can do in the lead up to the 2014 Olympics, and US Security Issues.

More public discussion on NECAP, sans Board of Ed


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eg-student-letterCoaching a fantasy sports team is much different from being at the helm of a real club. One deals solely with statistics while the other has to factor in people. In addition, fantasy sports are guided by yesterday while real teams have to confront the here and now. If you believe that folks running fantasy teams are ready for the National Football League, you may be disappointed. The same argument is in play when it comes to standardized tests and educating young people. Are we running a fantasy league here where points mean more than people? Are we on the verge of drafting superintendents whose districts have the highest NECAP scores for our fantasy school systems? This might be fun for some, but for many kids it’s a disaster.

On Wednesday, October 2nd a number of folks from around the state met at Warwick City Hall to participate in a forum concerning the NECAP and standardized testing. Opinions were offered, PowerPoints were discussed and there was plenty of passion to go around.

But the big thing that occurred was that the general public got to participate. No two-minute time limits and audience members actually got responses to their questions. This allowed for lively discussion and an opportunity to hear both sides of the issue.

And guess what? We’re not done. Following the forum, numerous people came forward and requested that additional forums be conducted around the state. Sounds good to us.

At this time, Providence and Newport will be sites for future discussions and others will be added as requests come in. The Providence Student Union, the RI ALCU and other advocacy groups have done a wonderful job bringing this issue to the forefront. We believe that their concerns need to be discussed on a statewide level. In short, we are looking to take the discussion out of the Board room and bring it to Main Street. Stay tuned for further details.

Pensioners pay more taxes than hedge fund managers


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Taibbi cartoonRegardless of whether you worship at the church of Rolling Stone or the Manhattan Institute, Matt Taibbi brings up a very good point about transferring wealth from local public sector retirees to hedge fund managers in his second critique of Rhode Island pension cuts.

Not only are states like Rhode Island paying millions in fees to outrageously expensive money managers, but those millions will be taxed at a rate far below what the teachers and police and sanitation workers who are being forced to swallow cuts in those states pay on their dwindling incomes. This is thanks in large part to a tax loophole preserved for years by cowardly Wall Street-supplicating politicians hailing, as Henn correctly notes, from both parties, Republican and Democrat.

Sam Bell, of the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats, tackles the part about Taibbi going soft on Democrats here:

Most out of state pundits forget this, but the legislature that so gleefully passed the pension cuts is the same legislature that passed a voter ID law.  These are the people who gave us a D+ rating from NARAL Pro-Choice America–the worst of any solid blue state.  It was these so-called Democrats who pushed through the steep 2006 tax cuts for the rich that blew up the budget in the first place.  The top four leaders of the Democratic caucus in our state legislature–House Speaker Gordon Fox, Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed, House Majority Leader Nick Mattiello, and Senate Majority Leader Dominick Ruggerio–have each taken thousands of dollars from the NRA.  And I believe those contributions were illegal.  (The Board of Elections is still deliberating on my complaint.)

PC Faculty Senate chides provost for Corvino cancelation


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Providence CollegeUnder the leadership of Dr. Fred K Drogula the Providence College’s Faculty Senate has passed a resolution by “an overwhelming majority” that takes to task Provost Hugh Lena’s recent cancellation of LGBTQ advocate and philosopher John Corvino’s scheduled talk at the college.

The resolution is a stirring defense of academic freedom, free inquiry, and LGBTQ person’s rights and dignity. The resolution reads:

Whereas, the Providence College Administration: cancelled an academic talk with no consultation with the organizer and used a non- existent college policy as justification;

publicly asserted that the organizing faculty member knowingly violated the non- existent policy:

publicly undermined the academic reputation of another faculty member without any consultation with said member as to her readiness to offer a response in the academic talk;

damaged the academic reputation of the college by portraying us as intolerant of our LBGTQQIAA students and unwilling to have an open discussion of these issues on campus;

by its actions have called into question academic freedom on this campus.

Resolved, the Faculty Senate demands the following: that the PC Administration publicly retract their decision and restore the academic talk according to the best judgment of the organizer, Dr. Christopher Arroyo, and his sponsors;

that the PC Administration publicly apologize to Dr. Corvino;

that the Administration abide by the Faculty Handbook statement on academic freedom at Providence College;

that the Administration work to restore the academic reputation of Providence College and the reputations of Professors Christopher Arroyo and Dana Dillon.

I recently called Providence College to task over this cancellation, publicly questioning whether or not an institution can be both religiously orthodox and maintain a dedication to free inquiry. Some objected to my analysis, suggesting that I was being religiously intolerant.

The passed resolution champions academic freedom over religious orthodoxy and in doing so seeks to refute the implication that Providence College’s professors are not up to the task of presenting cogent, scholarly arguments. I am glad to report that Providence College Faculty Senate has chosen to defend a “well rounded” over a “religious” education.


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