Langevin celebrates tax free art at Shady Lea Mill


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Rhode Island is the lowest tax state in the country … when it comes to art.

We’re the only state in the nation that exempts artistic creations from sales tax. Not unlike in 1996 when we became the first state in the nation to create local tax free art districts in Providence. As of December 1, products like paintings, prints, pictures, sculptures, self-published books, plays, movies and even dances can all be bought and sold anywhere in the Ocean State without the burden giving the government a cut. (And no, you can’t claim your investment fund or new swimming pool is a work of art; artists who want to qualify for the exemption need to apply with the state.)

While such businesses aren’t the type tax foes typically fight for, they are no doubt an important driver in the Ocean State’s economy. There are between 8,000 and 10,000 independent artists in Rhode Island, local arts organizations employ more than 5,000 people and arts related businesses employ 13,000 people in Rhode Island, according to this report commissioned by Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed. And the arts industry isn’t going anywhere; in fact the creative sector grew by 6 percent in 2012, following a seven year growth trend.

This weekend, Congressman Jim Langevin came to the 16th annual open studios weekend at the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown to see firsthand how this slice of the economy works.

From left to right: Tom Sgouros, Jim Langevin, Bob Plain. Kristen Howard, some guy from New York. (Photo by Seth Klaiman)
From left to right: Tom Sgouros, Jim Langevin, Bob Plain, Kristin Howard, some guy from New York. (Photo by Seth Klaiman)

“Small business is truly the foundation of the Rhode Island economy, and lifting the tax on products created by local artists is a boon for business and our state’s economy,” Langevin said. “I hope this boost will help arts-based businesses continue to thrive and grow in the Ocean State.”

The Shady Lea Mill is one of the great quirky and clandestine economic engines in the Ocean State. There are more than 40 artists, artisans, crafters and other various small businesses located in this old mill on the Mattatuxet River, just downstream of Silver Springs and upstream from Gilbert Stuart’s birthplace. As I told the Congressman this weekend, that’s got to be one of the densest clusters of economic development in South County!

reisert family
Lynn Reisert took over the Shady Lea Mill when her legendary dad, Andy, passed away in 2006.

An old-timer by the name of Ambrose Reisert manufactured staples here until Bostitch bought him out in the 1980’s. A few years later a local painter Luke Randall asked if he could set up a studio in the mill, and several other artists followed suit. Today, there are painters, woodworkers, glass blowers, guitar makers, t-shirt designers, soap makers and even an arborist who is starting a forest ecology school. Not to mention this blog!

Reisert had initially wanted to start an assisted living center in the mill, but zoning and the nearby wetlands wouldn’t allow for it. It could easily be argued that an artists colony is better for the economy than an old folks home, so take that those who say environmental regulations stifle business!

Read this recent Wall Street Journal article for more on why old mills are a key lynchpin in Rhode Island’s strategy to slash sales tax on art. Here’s the lede: “Rhode Island, aiming to build on the success of some of its old industrial towns that have reinvented themselves as artists’ enclaves, has become the first U.S. state to stop collecting sales tax on original and limited-edition art sold there.”

Perhaps the best-known small business in the Mill these days is The Shady Lea Guitar Company – where you can make your own acoustic guitar! Ironically, this business is owned by Dan Collins, brother of Lanevin’s one-time primary opponent Abel Collins. Only in RI…

Shady Lea Guitars makes custom string instruments right here in Rhode Island.
Shady Lea Guitars makes custom string instruments right here in Rhode Island.

Langevin also stopped by the RI Future newsroom and said he’d be glad to come back to join Mark Grey and I to record a podcast after the holidays. If and when anybody comes on the podcast, I’ll be happy to show you around the mill … where you can shop sales tax free!

langevin

Bishop Tobin was wrong to critique Nelson Mandela


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TobinBishopThomasEven the staunchest atheists know that upon our deaths a being possessed with absolute moral certitude will stand in judgement over us, and no matter how honorably we serve the best urges of our conscience, we know that unless we align ourselves absolutely with the values of the judge, we will be found wanting, and damned. Fortunately, the judge I am referring to is Bishop Thomas Tobin of the Providence Diocese in Rhode Island, a man with doubtful supernatural and ever waning temporal influence.

In his December 5th “Statement of Bishop Tobin on the Death of Nelson Mandela” Tobin showered the great human rights leader with false praise before calling the deceased leader to task for “his shameful promotion of abortion in South Africa.” Mandela earned Tobin’s admonishment by promoting and signing into law a bill that “replaced one of the world’s toughest abortion laws with one of the most liberal.”

It has long been known that Tobin’s anti-abortion ideology has blinded him to the fact that good and decent people can come to different conclusions as to the morality of abortion. That is why most Americans see the issue as a decision best made by the pregnant woman, in consultation with her doctor, and want to live in a society where abortion and birth control are safe, legal and available.

Further, most Americans recognize that if we as a society really want to decrease the number of abortions performed in this country, then we ought to be working to promote the economic well being of women and investing resources into women’s health initiatives. Instead of championing these common sense ideas, Bishop Tobin and his RI Right to Life puppet show work on reducing the public’s ability to access health care by attempting to tear down HealthsourceRI or engaging in silly and unconstitutional theatrics involving license plates.

A while back, the monomaniacal Christian attitude towards issues like abortion was diagnosed as an “illness.”

The faith becomes ideology and ideology frightens, ideology chases away the people, distances, distances the people and distances… the Church of the people. But it is a serious illness, this of ideological Christians. It is an illness, but it is not new, eh?

The person making this diagnosis was Pope Francis, talking about the extremes of right wing religious ideology. Francis opined that such attitudes are worse “when this Christian is a priest, a bishop or a Pope.”

Not that the Pope is above reproach. His recent statements on economic inequality, as welcome as they are in many ways, still ignore one of the greatest obstacles towards the elimination of poverty in the developing world, which is women’s inability to access decent reproductive healthcare, including abortion. As long as women are shackled to the demands of unwanted childbirth, they are less free to pursue economic wellbeing for themselves and their families. Francis might want to take some of his own advice, and reevaluate the Church’s stand on important reproductive rights issues. Even a softening of the rules on condoms and other forms of birth control would have amazing and positive repercussions world wide.

No human is perfect, even a person as universally revered as Nelson Mandela has faults, failings, misdeeds and wrongs easily attached to their legacy. But Mandela’s support for abortion rights in South Africa is not one of them. Guaranteeing South African women access to reproductive healthcare has freed countless families from the kind of crushing poverty large families might face and saved the lives of thousands of women who might have died accessing illegal abortions.

The South African law, according to the NY Times, assures that, “women and girls will be entitled to a state-financed abortion on demand during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy if they have no private medical insurance, and, subject to widely defined conditions, for a further eight weeks.” Even minors are allowed to access abortion under this law, without being mandated to gain consent from their families or, as is the case in Rhode Island, from a judge.

In South Africa, because of Nelson Mandela’s forward thinking respect for the rights of all persons, the decision as to whether or not to have an abortion lies solely with the pregnant woman (or girl).

This is as it should be.

Catholic parishes punish two state legislators


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TobinBishopThomasTwo Rhode Island Catholic legislators told Mike Stanton, reporting for the Boston Globe, that they were asked to step down from positions in their churches because they supported same sex marriage.

Stanton, a former Providence Journal investigative reporter reports that House Majority Leader Nick Mattiello and Senator William Conley were both punished in their parishes for their legislative positions on marriage equality.

Representative Nicholas Mattiello of Cranston, the Democratic House majority leader, says that he was asked to take a break from serving as a lector at his church after changing his position and publicly supporting same-sex marriage.

“I do think it’s time to concentrate on what unifies and brings us together, what makes us merciful rather than judgmental,” Mattiello said. “The pope’s views are more appropriate than what I’ve been hearing for years.”

State Senator William J. Conley Jr. of East Providence, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which approved the marriage bill, says a diocesan official asked him to resign as a trustee of La Salle Academy in Providence. The pastor of the East Providence parish where he was baptized, Conley says, denounced him from the pulpit as a “Judas.”

Stanton’s blockbuster report on Tobin also has gems like this:

Meghan Smith of Catholics for Choice, calls Tobin “one of the more rightwing bishops” in the United States. His style is at odds with the new pope, she says, as well as his flock in the one of most Catholic states.

Earlier this year, RI Future reported that a Catholic church in Woonsocket had asked gay married people not to receive communion.

President Obama eulogizes Nelson Mandela


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obamaPresident Barack Obama says of Nelson Mandela: “Mandela taught us the power of action, but he also taught us the power of ideas; the importance of reason and arguments; the need to study not only those who you agree with, but also those who you don’t agree with. He understood that ideas cannot be contained by prison walls, or extinguished by a sniper’s bullet. He turned his trial into an indictment of apartheid because of his eloquence and his passion, but also because of his training as an advocate. He used decades in prison to sharpen his arguments, but also to spread his thirst for knowledge to others in the movement. And he learned the language and the customs of his oppressor so that one day he might better convey to them how their own freedom depend upon his.”

You can watch POTUS’ entire eulogy here:

Celebrate Nelson Mandela, in PVD and on the internet


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mandela-cardThere are (at least) two ways you can celebrate the life of Nelson Mandela today. At 5pm, the People’s Assembly is hosting a candlelight vigil in front of Central High School (the corner of Fricker and Broad Street in Providence).  If you can’t wait until tonight, you can watch his funeral live here:

RIF Radio: Remembering Nelson Mandela, JP Morgan screws RI, RI screws foster families, NECAP forum in EG


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Or listen here.

Tuesday Dec 10, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. That was Nelson Mandela in 1964 telling the South African court that sentenced him to life in prison, that he was doing the right thing by fighting oppression with every and any available tool, even his own soul.

nelson mandelaThis is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

It’s Tuesday, the 10th of December and the world says goodbye to Nelson Mandela today, one of the bravest and most principled people to ever walk the earth. Nelson Mandela did whatever it took to fight for equality, and he willingly suffered any consequence of his actions. He started by practicing the law, and when that proved ineffective, he turned to Che Guevara and tried his hand at terrorism, that tack landed him in jail for 27 years. But he served his sentence with a smile, knowing that the righteous path is not always the comfortable path. When his white oppressors visited him in jail, he treated them like guests at his home. These incredible show of grace and dignity changed the world.

Our song of the day, a little later on in the program will be Mandela’s famous “I am prepared to die” speech…

Well … JP Morgan evidently isn’t too big too fail in Rhode Island … the big bank makes the debit cards people use for SNAP benefits and some other social services, said people’s personal data was hacked between July and September. The state is just learning about it now, and Rhode Island officials seem furious about delay. The multi-national bank said that was the extent of the breach, but – you know what – I don’t trust JP Morgan … if you’re too big too fail, I generally don’t trust you any farther than I can throw you.

The average foster family needs 72 percent more financial aid than they receive from the state, according to Mark Reynolds of the Providence Journal. Said another way, the state only pays for about 28 percent of the cost of caring for a child in state custody; the rest we job out to volunteers… As a former foster parent, I can attest that the state doesn’t offer anywhere near enough to actually raise a child … Taxpayers, activists and elected officials, we should be ashamed of ourselves for allowing this to happen. I really want to hear what every candidate for governor thinks about this.

There will be a forum on high stakes testing at East Greenwich Town Hall tonight. Organized by local drug councilor and RI Future correspondent Bob Houghtaling, he’s been trying to get the rest of the state to listen to the concerns coming from the kids and activists in our inner cities.

Nelson Mandela’s funeral will be live-streaming everywhere today, and as I said earlier, our song, if you will, of the day, is the epic speech he gave when he was sentenced in life in prison in 1964.