Rep. Maria Cimini on new post-grad NECAP grad requirement


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cimini_mariaAfter reading our post from late last week about a new NECAP graduation requirement waiver for students accepted into a four-year college, Providence Rep. Maria Cimini writes to say there is also a “second item that is now considered sufficient to receive a high school diploma without meeting NECAP standards: acceptance into AmeriCorps, City Year or the Peace Corps.”

She continues:

“These three programs seem arbitrary to me.  If one of the goals of the NECAP was to be an indicator of college and career readiness, being accepted into a college or university seems in line with that.  By including the National Community Service programs as appropriate alternatives, makes me question the rationale of those making this decision.  Why isn’t acceptance into the military also sufficient?  Commissioner Gist has testified before HEW that our students are ill prepared to join the military just as they are ill prepared for college.  If the deciding body’s rationale was based on a student showing readiness for being successful beyond high school, shouldn’t showing that s/he had enlisted be similar?  Why not allow students who can prove they’ve secured employment be allowed to graduate without meeting the NECAP requirements?

“I’m glad to know that RIDE is reviewing their guidelines and making changes.   I am happy to learn RIDE has decided to grant diplomas to students who’ve been accepted into a college or university.  I believed that such students would exist and we do them, their families and the community at large a disservice by being denied a diploma based on one standardized test that their college of choice didn’t require for admission.

“I wonder, however,  about the likelihood of lower-income students being able to take advantage of this new waiver.  If I’ve read NECAP data correctly, there are more students from low-income communities at risk of not meeting the NECAP requirement than those from middle class or affluent communities.  This policy impacts those students going to college, which may be out of reach for low-income families, or those students able to live on a poverty-level stipend for a year.

“Further, I’d be interested to know how these changes were communicated to high school students.  I hope it was done early so that the students and their families can plan their futures with all pertinent information available to them.

“Finally, if awarding high school diplomas is going to be based, to some level, on the preparedness of a student’s life post-graduation, perhaps we should spend money on guidance counselors, college and career planning rather than standardized testing.”

RIF Radio: Mayor Fung’s accident, ProJo on pot, Paiva Weed on poverty, McCarthy marches for campaign finance reform


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Monday Jan 13, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. This 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.

waterfall 1_12_14It’s Monday, January 13 … and while last week we wondered if Rhode Island was the only state in the nation to have a governor who surfs, this week we’ll be wondering if we’re the only state to have a gubernatorial hopeful responsible for a traffic fatality.

The Providence Journal reports this morning that in 1989, a 19-year-old Allan Fung, now mayor of Cranston who is running for governor, was arrested for the death of a man after a car accident he caused on Interstate 95. The charges were later dropped. Fung was coming home from college for the weekend and he allegedly lost consciousness, or maybe he fell asleep at the wheel, crossed three lanes of traffic and hit and killed a man who was changing a tire in the breakdown lane.

Wow … what a life-changing event for Mayor Fung. A lot of folks wouldn’t have the courage to enter public service after such an experience. I applaud him for telling this story, and more so for being able to move on from it.

That said, Sam Howard penned an important piece about both Republican candidates for governor late last week … both Fung and Barrington millionaire Ken Block agreed to boycott John DePetro and/or WPRO, but quickly abandoned their commitment as soon as the hateful shock jock’s month in exile was over.

On NBC 10 News Conference this weekend, we debated the merits of legalizing marijuana. Justin Katz, the ostensibly small government libertarian-leaning conservative, said he’s afraid it will lead to a government monopoly over drugs and prostitution. Ironically enough his opposition to marijuana smacks of paranoia.

I can’t believe I actually have opportunity to say this, but the ProJo editorial page has a more nuanced and reasonable reason for opposing legalization this morning. They write the legalization could increase use among kids. Experts don’t necessarily agree.

In December, East Greenwich school drug counselor Bob Houghtaling joined Jared Moffat and Rebecca McGoldrick of Regulate RI here in the RI Future newsroom to talk about just this topic. Houghtaling thinks it will be easier to teach kids how to make healthy choices about pot if we take a less punative approach.

In other news about potentially progressive legislation this year from the State House … Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed said last week that her chamber will focus on addressing poverty this session as a means to fixing Rhode Island’s ailing economy.

And in New Hampshire this week, the talk is about campaign finance reform. Harvard professor and Rootstriker Lawrence Lessig organized, with Demand Progress and Rhode Island’s own David Segal, a two week march through the Granite State to get residents to demand presidential candidates take a stand against money dominating politics.

Friend of RI Future Mike McCarthy is there for the entire two weeks and we hope he’ll be checking in with us on occassion. In the meantime, here’s my interview with McCarthy from Friday … he stopped by the Hideaway to borrow my sleeping bag for his trip. Listen to our conversation about his adventure here.

Bill Murphy representing former state senator accused of embezzlement


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Former Speaker of the House Bill Murphy is a lobbyist who opposes payday lending reform. (photo by Ryan T. Conaty. www.ryantconaty.com)
Former Speaker of the House Bill Murphy is a lobbyist who opposes payday lending reform. (photo by Ryan T. Conaty. www.ryantconaty.com)

Bill Murphy, the right-wing former House Speaker, the lobbyist for the gun people and the payday lenders, and the man at the center of Rhode Island’s conservative movement, is standing up for one of his own.  He’s defending Patrick McDonald.  McDonald, the former South County state senator who was defeated by Jim Sheehan in 2002, is perhaps most famous for topping the unpaid campaign fines list.  For not making the required financial disclosure statements, the Ethics Commission slapped him with another fine.  Now, he’s facing embezzlement charges.

Also representing McDonald is Norman Landroche, a right-wing former representative from West Warwick.  Let me be clear:  I have no problem with conservative ex-politicians representing another conservative ex-politician.  Nor do I think it is fair to assume that McDonald is guilty, since we really do not know.  What really impresses me about this story is that it provides a tiny glimpse into the often-hidden world of the right-wing Democratic* machine that runs our state.  It reveals a surprising feature of the Rhode Island right, one vital to their unparalleled success–the deep network of strong personal loyalty that binds them all together.

It would be easy for the right to get bogged down in personal fights, for vendettas and drama to seethe beneath the surface, occasionally exploding across the pages of newspapers and blogs.  During the tumultuous period from 2002 to 2004, when Bill Murphy rose to power, there was ample room for a divided coalition to emerge.  Instead, the conservative movement grew even tighter.

When John Harwood resigned the speakership under the cloud of scandal, he is widely understood to have pulled the strings to have Bill Murphy to replace him, with Murphy’s core support coming from Harwood’s right-wing committee chairs (like Brian Kennedy, who is still in power today).  Crucially, Frank Anzeveno, Harwood’s chief of staff, kept his position as the Speaker’s top aide.  Gordon Fox, who had served as Harwood’s Finance Chair, became Majority Leader.  Deputy Whip Rene Menard moved up to Whip.  The core team remained in place.  In a feature from the Phoenix, Steven Stycos quotes one of my favorite representatives, who sums it up perfectly:

Voicing an opinion shared by many others, state Representative Edith Ajello (D-Providence) says Murphy and Fox “are not outsiders, they’re insiders.” And she adds that their election has “the appearance of a hand off” from Harwood.

So when Harwood backstabbed Murphy, deciding he wanted the Speakership back, and Murphy said no, the stage was set for an epic battle, one that threatened to rip apart the Rhode Island right in a fury of nasty, internal squabbles.  Instead, Frank Anceveno remained loyal to Murphy.  The team closed ranks.  Harwood’s bid fizzled.  Providence conservative John DeSimone became the face of the leadership challenge.  The challenge met with relatively little support, although it gained steam when Menard endorsed it in August.  But only a few weeks later, when Paddy O’Neil defeated Harwood in a primary challenge, the revolt died altogether.  When the dust settled, Murphy, Fox, and Anceveno were safely enthroned as the leaders of one of history’s most successful political movements.  Relatively unimpeded by internal squabbles, aided by a friendly Senate and Governor, the House conservatives were able to pull off a bold, audacious, improbable goal–the imposition of much of the national Republican Party’s agenda in an incredibly liberal state.  The rich got their tax cuts.  Government jobs were cut to the bone, giving our state the second lowest percentage of public sector employees.  To help protect local conservatives and give ammunition to national Republicans, they passed the voter ID law.  Unsurprisingly, Rhode Island’s economy collapsed.  (For more, I suggest reading this blog.)

It would have been easy to pursue retribution, but Murphy’s team largely folded DeSimone into the machine.  Although DeSimone mounted an unsuccessful challenge when Fox succeeded Murphy, Fox was quick to mend fences.  Murphy even got the state to reimburse Harwood for the money he spent defending against an ethics complaint.  Menard remained on the outside as a principled, if very conservative, critic of leadership until moderate Mia Ackerman defeated him in 2012.  Charlene Lima, a Cranston moderate and Harwood critic who been brought on as Deputy Whip in a concession to the sensible wing of the House, left leadership to become one of its most strident and passionate opponents.  But Lima was never part of the conservative establishment.  Inside the core right-wing network, there were very few defections.  They all became Murphy men.  (Or in rare cases, Murphy women.)

None of this would have been possible had the conservatives not bound themselves together in a web of friendship and loyalty.  I may fundamentally disagree with their politics.  I may fundamentally disagree with their ethics.  I may fundamentally disagree with how they use their power to squash dissent.  I may fundamentally disagree with how they have governed Rhode Island.  But I have to respect their personal loyalty.  Without it, even with their undisputed political talents, they would never have been able to get as shockingly far as they have.

So I am not angry that Murphy and Landroche are representing McDonald.  Indeed, it speaks to one of their (few) good qualities.

*In fairness, I should note that the machine is somewhat bipartisan–by all accounts, the lobbyist Bob Goldberg, a former Republican senator, plays a vital role.

Wingmen: Should Rhode Island legalize pot?


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wingmen

Justin Katz and I square off over legalizing marijuana on the most recent installment of the 10 News Conference Wingmen Segment. I think it should be legal because it would raise new revenue and create new jobs. I still don’t quite get why Justin Katz doesn’t support this. But you can watch the reasons he cites here:

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