Pell announces run for governor


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Clay Pell announces candidacy for governor at RI Convention Center.
Clay Pell announces candidacy for governor at RI Convention Center.

In a 25-minute speech to a standing-room-only crowd at the RI Convention Center this morning, Clay Pell, grandson of the US Senator, announced his bid for the Democratic nomination for governor.

“I have the values, the skills, and the experience to lead our state to a better future,” said Pell, saying his aim was to, “bring a fresh perspective and new approach to government, to put an end to cronyism and insider politics, and to make the economy work for all Rhode Islanders again.”

Among the 100+ attendees were a handful of state legislators and representatives of several unions, in addition to a large contingent of Providence media. Sharing the dais with Pell were Johnston mayor Joseph Polisena, Victor Capellan, Deputy Supt. of Transformation at Central Falls high school, grandmother Nuala Pell, and his wife, Michelle Kwan, now a senior advisor to the State Department.

Nuala Pell said of her grandson, “Clay, in many ways, is defined by how much he cares.” Kwan introduced the candidate, saying, “We share the same devotion to public service,” and praising his “quiet courage.”

Early in his speech, Pell spoke about the values passed on to him by his family. From his grandfather, he learned “You don’t need to be the loudest voice. You just need to speak for those without a voice at all.” From his father, he learned “to dream and never to fear.” He talked of the difficult times when his father’s businesses were driven to bankruptcy during the S&L crisis, and his difficult battle with cancer. “He never gave up,” said Pell, “And his values brought me here today.”

Pell spoke about the challenges facing the state: challenges of economy (“50,000 Rhode Islanders are looking for work,” he said, “and thousands more will report to their second or third job of the day.” Too many, he said, have been “squeezed out of the middle class.”), government (“Businesses are burdened with process, and state government is often seen more as an impediment than a partner.”) and confidence (“A loss of hope that the next generation will be able to build a career or family here, and a loss of faith in the ability of our government to lead.”)

Rhode Islanders, he said, “no longer feel invested in.”

Pell promised a “comprehensive approach” using the “big picture strategy that Rhode Island needs now,” and laid out several policy priorities, first of which was economic growth and job creation. He stressed the importance of investing in education (including affordable higher education and a strong school-to-work pipeline) and infrastructure (ports, bridges, the I195 corridor, and parking and transit terminals at the Garrahy complex and the train station.)

And while he called for a focus on science, technology, engineering and math, he said that must be paired with languages, physical education, and the arts, “areas that are too often pushed out and forgotten in public education today, but they are essential to the growth of our students.”

To help create new jobs to keep students in Rhode Island when they graduate, Pell proposed a $10 million loan fund, “where small businesses and entrepreneurs can access grants or loans ranging from $2,500 to $25,000”

In what appeared to be a swipe at the EDC’s 38 Studios debacle, Pell said, “Four hundred grants of $25,000 is a much better investment of taxpayer money than spending $12.5 million dollars bailing out someone else’s mistake.”

Pell promised to reverse the decline in direct aid to cities and towns, which he said had fallen by more than 70% in the last five years. “I pledge to renew the state’s commitment,” he said, “so they can support the schools our students deserve and provide the property tax relief our taxpayers need.”

Finally, he said, “as someone coming to politics from public service,” he promised an “accessible and transparent” government that would serve “all Rhode Islanders, not just the chosen few.”

Clay Pell talks with local media after announcement.
Clay Pell talks with local media after announcement.

“That’s why,” he said, “I will not accept contributions from PACs or state lobbyists. I want to send a clear signal to Rhode Islanders that my office as governor will be open to everyone, not just the best connected and the most powerful. That is my pledge to the people of Rhode Island. And that will be my first step in restoring faith in state government.”

The event closed (played out by Springsteen’s “We Take Care of Our Own” booming over the big speakers) with Pell taking questions from reporters for at least another twenty minutes, looking calm and unruffled at the center of his first local media scrum.

Poll: majority of Rhode Islanders support marijuana legalization


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rhodeislandmarijuanaA majority of Rhode Islanders said the state should legalize marijuana, according to a poll conducted by the Public Policy Polling earlier this month January.

Respondents were asked: “In 2012, two states — Colorado and Washington — changed their laws to regulate and tax marijuana similarly to alcohol, for legal use by adults age 21 and older. Would you support or oppose changing Rhode Island law to regulate and tax marijuana similarly to alcohol, so stores would be licensed to sell marijuana to adults 21 and older?”

53 percent said yes and 41 percent said no. 58 percent of men surveyed thought marijuana should be legal and 46 percent of the women asked thought so. 60 percent of Demcrats who responded to the poll questions thought pot should be made legal and 45 percent of the Republicans did too.

Click on the poll results here.

“Rhode Islanders realize that it’s past time we stop funneling all of the proceeds from marijuana sales to criminals,” said Jared Moffat, executive director of Regulate Rhode Island. “We need to put marijuana in the hands of responsible businesses, creating hundreds of legitimate jobs and tens of millions of dollars in tax revenue.”

The General Assembly is expected to again debate a bill that would legalize and tax marijuana in the Ocean State. Advocates say the move would save the state tens of millions of dollars in costs to prosecute minor drug offenses and the tax revenue would far surpass that and become a new source of economic activity for the struggling state.

But politicians have been reluctant to push for legalization this year, fearing it could be used against them during the upcoming campaign.

“A clear majority of Rhode Islanders realize that marijuana is safer than alcohol and does not contribute to violent and reckless behavior,” said Robert Capecchi, deputy director of state policies for the Marijuana Policy Project. “We should not be wasting limited law enforcement resources to punish adults who choose to use the less harmful substance. Prohibition is a terribly misguided policy. It is time to make marijuana legal and regulate it like alcohol.”

Clay Pell clears first hurdle: crafts excellent announcement


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Clay Pell has already proven he knows how to run for governor, extending his announcement over not just days but weeks. Here’s the highly-produced video from his highly-produced announcement:

Pell has attracted some powerful political support so far. He’s been all but endorsed by Bob Walsh of the NEA-RI and Sam Bell of the RI Progressive Democrats, as well as hiring well-liked and respected pr flack Bill Fisher. And in the interviews he’s granted so far (Fisher tells me a sit-down with RI Future is imminent) he’s been pretty pitch-perfect as far as progressive messaging.

clay pellBut then, the very idea that the 31-year-old grandson of legend can employ the best talent and instantly become a viable candidate for governor despite never having held a local office (or even a local job?) before is somewhat of an affront to progressive values.

But I come to his campaign with an open mind and wearing my biases on my sleeve … and look forward to meeting him. If he’s anything like his grandfather, and he certainly wants Rhode Island to think that he is, he’s probably going to do some pretty amazing things.

Rest in peace Pete Seeger, thanks for making Rhode Island a better place


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Petes_banjo_headPete Seeger did have a hammer.

It was a five string banjo that had this message on it: “This machine surrounds hate and forces it to surrender.”

And with that machine he spent his entire life hammering out danger, a warning and the love between his brothers and my sisters all over this land.

And he hammered out these values right here in Rhode Island.

Newport Folk Festival/NPR
Newport Folk Festival/NPR

Pete Seeger, who died yesterday in New York at age 94, is the world’s best-known pure folk performer and was an undisputed leader of the movement for social change in the 1960’s and beyond. According to his New York Times obituary: “His agenda paralleled the concerns of the American left: He sang for the labor movement in the 1940s and 1950s, for civil rights marches and anti-Vietnam War rallies in the 1960s, and for environmental and antiwar causes in the 1970s and beyond.”

seeger singingPete Seeger, wrote Rolling Stone, never had a top 40 hit, but he wrote some of the most popular protest songs of the sixties like “If I Had a Hammer,” “Where Have All The Flowers Gone” and he’s the first (not the Byrds) to put the book of Ecclesiastes to music with “Turn, Turn, Turn.” He is literally the link between Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie.

But perhaps he’s best known for playing folk music in Newport, Rhode Island. In 1959, The Newport Folk Festival was spun off from the Newport Jazz Festival and Seeger was on the Board of Directors of the new all-folk (but not for long!) show.

The Newport Folk Festival has a great ongoing tribute to Seeger this morning on their twitter feed this morning, including this: “can’t sum him up in a headline: Folksinger Troubadour Activist. Instead we prefer Pete Seeger, amazing human being, died today. aged 94.”

Here he is playing with the Newport Folk Festival Allstars in 1959:

My step-dad, Don Wilkinson, was a Weavers fan back then and didn’t miss a Folk Festival until he went to Vietnam. I called him this morning to offer my condolences and he bent my ear a little about the earliest days of the Newport Folk Festival.

“I was in high school, I was looking for girls,” he told me. “It was the thing to do in Rhode Island. They literally shut down Aquidneck Island at 2 in the afternoon. I bought a Vespa because you couldn’t get a car over on the ferry.”

About Pete Seeger in particular he said, “You’ve got to remember, they all sang together back then.” But he said Seeger’s story telling left an impression. “He would play Eerie Canal, but he would have a five minute introduction … why they wrote it and why they sang it they did. He probably talked just as much as he sang.”

weaversIn 1961, he saw Seeger at Edwards Auditorium as a freshman at URI (the same place I would see the Samples my first year at URI a generation later!)

“He was fantastic. It wasn’t even sold out,” Wilkinson told me this morning. “I went away wanting to play all of his songs.”

Willkinson remembered almost every detail about that Pete Seeger show at Edwards. “He was dressed like he was a farmer, he wore a plaid shirt.” This was, my stepdad tried to explain to me once again, a radical statement in and of itself in 1961. “He had a whole bunch of instruments behind him – two or three banjos, a couple guitars. It was just a one-man show. He played all those old Weaver songs.”

Truth is, I’ve been hearing tales about Rhode Island Pete Seeger performances from this particular source for as long as we’ve known each other (1988). “He’s in everyone’s life now,” my step-dad said when I asked him if he was sad to see Seeger go. “He will always live on through his music.”

mikaseegerBut Pete Seeger also leaves Rhode Island an even more tangible legacy. His daughter, Micah Seeger, is an artist in Tiverton, where she paints and works with clay. And Micah’s son Tao Rodriguez-Seeger has become an accomplished folk singer in his own right and still plays community centers and house parties in and around the Sakonnet peninsula, as did his more grandfather. Blogger Michael Leddy writes this morning:

“Pete Seeger was the first musician I saw in concert. I was all of twelve: my dad took me on a Monday night, all the way from New Jersey to Queens. Years later I heard Pete Seeger sing from the porch of a house in Little Compton, Rhode Island.”

Mika Seeger and her husband Joe Bossom turned their farm into the now famous Sandywoods development – arguably the most sustainable and progressive residential real estate project in Rhode Island history.

Sandywoods4x6frontThere is still a working farm there, but now there is also a clustered, 50-unit development of mixed-use and live/work apartments and single-family dwellings. There is an art gallery, a commercial component, affordable housing and a thriving Saturday night live music performance. Mika still live in the old farm house. Sandywoods is essentially people of all incomes living and working together, and creating art and playing music and working the land together – and it was started by a Seeger.

There will be a memorial concert at Sandywoods for Pete Seeger on Feb. 14.

Pete Seeger’s music lives on for the entire world, passed on from folks like Don Wilkinson to me. And his dream of a more utopian society is being realized at Sandywoods in Tiverton. Maybe, just maybe, by wondering aloud where all the flowers had gone he helped bring them back.