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.

Sojourner House’s Vanessa Volz on domestic violence and Reproductive Justice


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vanessa volzAt the legislative launch for the Rhode Island Coalition for Reproductive Freedom, Vanessa Volz, executive director of Sojourner House, talks about the intersection of domestic violence and reproductive justice.

You can see Vanessa Volz’s full talk here.

Jim Vincent: 40 percent of ‘youth of color’ ages 18 – 24 are unemployed


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jim_vincent

“Over 40 percent of the youth of color between the ages of 10 and 24 are unemployed,” Jim Vincent, executive director of the Providence branch of the NAACP. “That’s a recipe for disaster.”

Because of this, the lack of good public schools in the urban core and the general feeling that the streets there have become less safe has inspired he and others who fight for social justice to hold a press event today at 4:30 in front of the Garrahy Judicial Complex in Providence today.

Vincent told me some 12 community organizations are coming together to advocate for a safer city, better education and a firmer commitment that Rhode Island’s urban core will not be left behind.

Listen to our conversation here:

EG Town Council might shut down a 50 year old Main St small business


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normansHere’s the story of a man who has run a small business in downtown East Greenwich for more than 50 years who may lose his livelihood – a local institution and one of the hallmark properties on Main Street – because he fell behind on his sewer bill.

Norman Harris owns a dive bar/greasy spoon diner right in the heart of historic downtown East Greenwich and he is three-years delinquent on his sewer bills to the tune of $32,000. Some of that debt belongs to his business but the bulk of it comes from the five apartments connected to the restaurant that are occupied by family members.

The Town Council is threatening to revoke his liquor license if he can’t pay the debt in one lump sum.

Sharon Hazard, who runs the restaurant for her elderly father, told the Town Council that tough economic times plus a major money setback as a result of identity theft has left the family finances in shambles – and that they are even willing to remortgage their property to make the town whole. Still, she was berated by two of the elected officials.

Councilor Mark Gee lectured Hazard about how he too had faced hard times and never fell behind on his taxes. “To me it’s almost a little abusive to the town,” he said to her at a public meeting two weeks ago. Councilor Jeff Cianciolo forced Hazard to come back in two weeks with a title search, even though she told the Council she had already paid for one to be completed within the next two months. He wants the debt paid off in one lump sum. Council President Michael Isaacs was more understanding. He said, “We should exhibit some flexibility on this. I think they do need some time to work this out.”

Some see the Harris’ plight as just the cold, harsh realities of an unfriendly economy, and the delinquent sewer bill is the straw that broke the Harris’ business model. Others, like Councilor Gee, see it as a fairness issue; if you don’t have enough money to pay the town for your real property, you don’t get to keep your real property (unless you might turn it into a science center someday, more on this coming up).

And in the parts of town where Norman’s customers still live, a world away from the expensive track homes that constitute most of East Greenwich’s affluence, there are those who think it’s latent racism, class intolerance and a blatant attempt to socially engineer the Harris family off of Main Street.

The Harris’ are known locally as “the only black family in East Greenwich.” Of course this isn’t true, but it can certainly seem that way in lily white suburbia. As a point of fact, the Harris’ are bi-racial, and trace their roots back to the pre-Columbus Narragansett Tribe. (And other black people do live in town.) Perhaps more relevant than their skin color is their style. Many of the Harris’ just don’t look like modern day East Greenwich: think Swamp Yankee rather than soccer mom.

And their business attracts a rough crowd to an otherwise very gentrified center of commerce and community. I’d even go so far as to say the Harris’ can be a rough bunch themselves, and their tavern can be downright dangerous late at night. There’s a pool table, an ashtray out front and it serves cheap beer right across the street from a hotel that rents rooms by the week and/or month. People down on their luck get a room at the Greenwich Hotel, and find some friends across the street at Norman’s Tap. But that tale doesn’t always end well. The police are there frequently on Friday nights to break up fights.

It’s well worth noting that while Norman’s is a rough bar, it is not the roughest one in town. Some of the newer upscale bars and restaurants also draw a police presence on the weekends. The waterfront bars, which attract more affluent out-of-towners than the crowd that stay at the Greenwich Hotel, require multiple officers be stationed there throughout the evening (for parking and crowd control). And the only assault with a deadly weapon in recent years, a stabbing with a fork, happened in one of Main Street’s more posh eateries.

And as far as their debt is concerned, or it being some sort of affront to the community that they have let it fester for so long, I was personally more offended when Don Carcieri left vacant for 12 years (and counting) a piece of prime real estate the town gave him because he said he would turn it into a science center. No public lecture for the Republican former governor from the all GOP Town Council though.

So why do the Harris’ receive such harsh treatment from some on the town council and many more on the internet? Why would the Town Council consider destroying a local business that has been operating on Main Street for 50 years because of the three years of debt? What public good would be accomplished by taking away their liquor license?

There is absolutely a number of very influential local conservatives who think Main Street and the downtown economy would be well served if Norman’s Tap would just go away. Whether or not they are right is beside the point. A delinquent sewer bill should not be used as a tool to take away someone’s livelihood simply because some influential Republicans think more gentrification will make for a better community.

RIF Radio: NAACP’s Jim Vincent doesn’t feel the urgency; Woonsocket’s Mike Morin ready to work with Baldelli Hunt


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Monday Jan 27, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Happy Monday morning, Ocean State Futurists. 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 12714Our show today is brought to you by Largess Forestry. Seriously folks … winter is the best time of year to care for trees – so if you’ve got some projects you’ve been putting off, give Matt Largess a call at 849-9191, or friend them on Facebook.

This morning we speak with Jim Vincent executive director of the Providence branch of the NAACP about a press conference his group is hosting today to call attention to the growing sense of fear and frustration in the inner cities. The NAACP and some 12 other community groups will be meeting outside the Garrahy Judicial Complex in Providence today at 4:30 to announce an effort at working together to call attention to these issues….

We’ll also catch up with probably-soon-to-be Woonsocket state Rep. Mike Morin. Morin just won the Democratic primary to fill Lisa Baldelli-Hunt’s old seat in the State House. Assuming he wins the general election Feb 25 – and I think this is a safe assumption given he’s the only name on the ballot – that will mean the Woonsocket House delegation will be 2/3 fire fighters!

It is Thursday, January 24 and before we hear from Jim Vincent and Mike Morin, let’s see what else is going on in the Ocean State…

“Providence, Rhode Island, is the coolest city in New England. I would even put it on the shortlist of coolest small cities in the United States,” writes Pamela Petro in Travel Magazine.

Elizabeth Harrison of RIPR wrote this about cheating on high stakes tests in Rhode Island public schools: “I have heard whispers about changed answers on tests in Rhode Island, but my efforts to get the booklets in question ran into a roadblock. Education officials cited the state’s open records law, saying it does not require test booklets to be made available to the public.”

The New York Times editorial board wrote this about school evaluation systems: “Historically, the rankings compared a school’s test scores with those of the district as a whole. But under that system, demographics ruled the day; wealthy schools invariably were ranked at the top and poor schools at the bottom.”

This was on the front page of the ProJo this morning but Sam Howard also tweeted about it last night: 1 out of 7 Americans use food stamps, the majority of them are of working age and the cost of the program has doubled in the last five years. How’s rampant income inequality working out for you again, America? Because for at least 14 percent of the country it sucks, and everyone else is paying for it.

A former Hasbro employee is suing the company saying she was discriminated against because she is a lesbian. According to the Providence Journal, she was fired for making “a sexually inappropriate comment.” The Department of Labor and Training awarded her full unemployment benefits … and they don’t usually do that if you’ve been fired….

And this just in: Speaker Gordon Fox could buy my house in East Greenwich and probably still have enough money left in his campaign account to run for and win reelection. Large amounts of money in politics, I am coming to believe, is the biggest danger to our democracy. RI Future would like to see the ProJo op/ed page and Ken Block devote the same veracity to this issue that they teamed up for on the master lever. Common Cause RI and Demand Progress are both working on this issue this year too….

The desire to return to Bubblenomics, and why that’s a bad idea


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Housing Bubble Chart

Our own Frymaster made a good point in the comments of Ted Nesi’s blog:

…it’s unlikely that RI – like Nevada which shares our fate – will recover back to those levels [of pre-recession economic indicators] because they were essentially bubble driven.

Let’s take a look at the housing bubble again.

Housing Bubble Chart (via http://www.jparsons.net/housingbubble/)

So that massive bubble from 2001 to 2006 should be the major thing that everyone thinks about when we consider the Great Recession. Houses were tremendously overvalued, and when they crashed, the mortgages didn’t disappear. For a lot of homeowners, it’d be really great if we could return to the bubble, because then they’d no longer be underwater.

Of course, if we made it back there, we’d suffer another crash that would be disastrous for the the state. It’d be really bad to return to the boom-bust cycle that existed in this country prior to the creation of the Federal Reserve system. And given the shakiness of housing prices, it’s possible we’ll go through another crash in the near future.

The question Rhode Islanders need to ask our policymakers is this: how do we return to bubble-era economic conditions without the fundamental instability that created the bubble in the first place?

“But you don’t have children”


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In my latest post on Providence’s dysfunctional transportation plans, I respond to the allegation that car-free lifestyles are only for the carefree (note the extra “e”) and childless.

Of course, the official knew something I didn’t know. Before 1950, there were no children. Everyone was born fully grown with male pattern baldness and interesting moustaches They wore trousers made of scratchy wool and rode velocipedes and trolley-trams and never had to pick anyone up from school or buy groceries or do anything stressful. It was a Victorian Paradise. And then cars came, and people suddenly had someplace to conceive, and so children came onto the scene.

Check out more at Transport Providence.

If you’re looking for a way to influence this spending issue in the state budget, there’s a $45 Million request in the governor’s budget, so there will be hearings coming up. I’m following closely to find out any dates. I’ve been told that our friend Rep. Art B. Handy will be taking on the issue.

~~~~~

Global warming…? It’s freezing!


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nam_sfc_4panelOver the past several years, right-wing news talkers have made a winter ritual out of ridiculing global warming whenever there’s a big snow event in the mid-Atlantic or a major cold wave that reaches the South.

“Global warming…? It’s freezing!” they spew.

Except this kind of winter weather is, in fact, a result of global warming. What’s worse is that it’s going to be like this for a long, long time.

Global Warming, Climate Change and Weather

The best way to make yourself look like an ignoramus on this topic is to equate surface air temperatures with global warming. If it’s hot in the summer, it’s not necessarily global warming that’s making it hot. Summer is hot, right?

You have to ask, “Why is it hot? Is it that much hotter?” It may be that global warming is making it hotter than ever, or it could just be a hot summer.

Air gets hot; air get cold. Water, on the other hand, gets less hot and less cold. Water is a far more stable repository of heat than air. That’s why it’s cooler at the shore in the summer when it’s hot in the city. And warmer at the shore in the winter when it’s cold inland. Water temperature resists the day-to-day vagaries of air temperature.

And, mostly, air moves around a lot. Water moves, but much more slowly than the air, so it’s more stable in that regard as well. Unless it’s moving as vapor in the air.

Climate is the basic conditions—the raw materials of air, water vapor, land masses and, of course, that big old sun. Weather is what happens when these conditions interact on a day-to-day basis.

Evaporating oceans that become water vapor, ride in air over a land mass and then fall in the form of rain or snow is what makes life on this planet possible. If this were to stop, we would all die. Fast. But it needs to happen within a certain range and within a certain seasonal pattern for the ecosystem to work is such a way that our lives are possible.

Global warming has deposited exceptional amounts of heat in the oceans, making them more evaporative. This increased amount of available water vapor has changed the climate in ways that we are still trying to understand. What we know for sure is that the exceptional weather results we see these days are unlike anything in our recorded history, and in some cases they are unlike anything at any time that science has been able to study through fossils or ice core samples.

North America’s January Started in Siberia…in October

aer-image

Dr. Judah Cohen is no hippie. He works for one of the world’s leading private weather prediction services. He gets paid quite handsomely to help companies anticipate weather months in advance and put risk mitigation strategies in place.

As I’ve written here repeatedly, major insurers are the leading climate alarmists. Exceptional weather events destroy property, and they’re the ones who have to pay.

Over the past 15 or so years, the northeast US has seen a substantial increase in major winter snow events—costly to cities and states—that did not correlate with an exceptional Labrador counter-current, a coastal down flow of Arctic waters generally associated with a snowy northeast winter. And the storms would sometimes track far south of the traditional path.

Dr. Cohen searched the climate data from around the globe and found something that correlated well: October snow in Siberia. Like the new winter weather in the northeast, these Siberian snows were also new. Typically, these areas of western Siberia remained barren rock through the autumn and into the winter. Suddenly, these remote areas began receiving significant amounts of snow in the month of October.

This change in Siberia in October affects our weather in January and February. Or so Dr. Cohen’s team—and all the companies that pay them so much money—believe.

When this area in Siberia gets covered in a smooth sheet of white snow, it radiates substantially more solar heat than the darker, rumbled rock formations did. This mass of rising warmer air becomes so powerful that it pushes the giant dome of frigid air that covers the polar region in the winter down over North America.

Interlude: Polar Ice

220px-Arctic_Sea_Ice_Minimum_Comparison

Before addressing the madness that is the polar vortex, we should ask the question, “Why is it now snowing in Siberia in October?”

The answer is simple: because it can.

Rain or snow requires the right combination of temperature gradient (hot and cold temperatures near each other) and available moisture (water vapor). The North Pole is cold pretty much all the time; Siberia gets warm in the summer. So the temperature gradient has always been there.

What’s new is the available moisture, in the form of increasingly greater summer melt of the northern polar ice cap. The illustration (click for bigger view and attribution) compares the peak melt in mid-September of 1984 and 2012. Clearly, substantial amounts of new, open water can feed the prevailing westerly winds (moving roughly top to lower left) with moisture that then falls as snow in Siberia (left and lower left). That’s basic meteorology: more or warmer water means more precipitation.

Polar Vortex, Go Home. You’re Cold

The Siberian snowpack creates rising air that reaches the polar air mass and pushes it off its natural polar resting place so it more-or-less spills itself over North America.

The polar vortex is a weak, low pressure system that rotates counterclockwise. This 72-hour forecast loop shows the effect clearly. [NOTE: Link will open in a separate tab. Also, this link is time dependent, so if you’re not looking at this on or about January 25, 2014, it may not show what’s described.] As it spins, it polar air plunges down the western flank well into the South. For the first time ever, people in Louisiana are seeing their pipes burst because the construction of their houses does not account for this kind of weather.

Perversely, when the polar vortex descends over North America, it can sometimes be colder at the bottom of Hudson Bay than it is on the North Pole. Note how warmer air presses up over the northeast side of the system in the forecast loop.

nam_winchl_39h

One thing the polar vortex can’t do is be stronger than the ocean. So it gets stuck in the triangle created by Siberia that is pushing it away and the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic. The illustration at right shows the 39 hour wind chill forecast: 15Z SUN 26 JAN 14 (about 10am local time on Sunday, January 26).

Looks like about -10 F in Little Rhody. So, yeah, polar vortex. Cold, horrible and anomalous. Also, not going anywhere.

Have a great Sunday!

Wingmen: Justin Katz just doesn’t trust The Man


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wingmenRight after Neil Steinberg finished filming with Bill Rappleye he noted that throughout the Make It Happen process led by the Rhode Island Foundation that no business owner cited taxes as being a difficulty to doing business in Rhode Island. So maybe, just maybe, that’s a bit of a canard being bandied about by anti-government activists like my frenemy/weekly NBC 10 Wingmen colleague Justin Katz.

Watch us discuss that, the Senate’s Rhode to Work plan, the Economic Intersections report and Justin’s seemingly deep distrust of chambers of commerce acting in cahoots with government. And we get into his sales tax/government elimination proposal.

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

ACLU’s Steve Brown on the NECAP graduation requirement waiver


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RI ACLU Executive Director Steven Brown has been a huge critic of the state’s high stake test high school graduation requirement and the exemptions to the policy prove it hasn’t been properly implemented. Brown said several school districts from around the state still don’t have policies in place, and others left important areas blank. Listen to our conversation here:

Economic Intersections report, meet coastal resilience necessity


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gear-grabOn first reading, I give Economic Intersections, the Make it Happen Rhode Island report from the RI Foundation and Commerce RI a B.

It’s mostly things we’ve heard before like tech transfer, support for manufacturing and regulatory reform. It has some very good, new areas of focus, and it has an interesting idea that doesn’t quite make the grade. But I’m writing this short piece because there is one, glaring, horrifying and totally irresponsible part that defies any kind of logic whatsoever, at least as it is presented in this executive summary.

Good

The best part of this is the new focus on food production. There is a clear understanding that this burgeoning sector represents an important part of our next economy, and the report recognizes many important factors in building out the industry. Farms and farmland now have much better visibility within the state’s economic apparatus.

Even better, there is a section focused on the “food-health nexus.” Simply having those two words together in a state-level economics report represents a giant step forward. Medical technologies, neuroscience and bioscience all still hold their places at the top of the economy the report envisions, but actual health and what makes it possible—good, fresh food—is in the mix. Yay!

Not So Good

The report devotes a section to making Rhode Island “stronger and more resilient.” In this area, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of expertise at the table, as evidenced by the goal of creating “scalable approaches to economic development through resiliency.”

Resilience doesn’t scale. Lack-of-scale is the essence of resilience. As I’ve written here many times, resilience is based on redundancy, which is inherently inefficient and therefore not scalable. Many small things within redundant networks so that when some of them experience catastrophic failures—as will certainly happen with greater frequency—the system continues to function through alternate paths. The only thing that scales is the network.

The intention is to spawn companies that develop approaches and technologies around community resilience, as if resiliency were a product. I think what they really mean is “protection from catastrophe,” which is different from resilience. And, certainly, there’s a market to be made in protection from catastrophe, because there will be no shortage of global warming-driven catastrophes.

Some might hold out hope that once the economic apparatus starts to examine resilience and systems-oriented approaches to the impacts of climate change, they may actually/accidentally start to pursue genuine resilience.

But don’t hold your breath. Here’s why.

Blind, Stupid, Irresponsible

I like the top-line idea here: promote access to water and marine-based businesses. When you’re the Ocean State, it’s kind of a no-brainer. But this section of the report has a glaring blind spot, a miss so incredibly stupid that it might be more irresponsible than the 38 Studios deal.

Nowhere in this section—even in this section of the full report—does one find the terms “climate change,” “global warming” or “rising sea levels.” It’s true that they throw a bone to the Coastal Resource Management Council’s current role in this area, but CRMC is conspicuously absent from the list of public entities in the plan moving forward.

The plan is heavy on access to the water and marketing. Which means, of course, building right at the water’s edge. Think “marina access to a mini-resort”.

This represents an irresponsibly short-sighted approach. Coastal properties already have almost no choice but the federal insurance pool, and these costs will certainly only go higher. It is only a matter of time before any coastal infrastructure gets destroyed.

To add insult to injury, the full report refers to New York City’s 2011 Comprehensive Waterfront Plan, and the last of its eight goals is “Increase Climate Resilience.” I mean…right?

This is the kind of pull-your-hair-out stupid that still permeates our econo-think. It’s possible that they never put two and two together to make four. Or it’s possible that “certain powers” deliberately excluded the TOTALLY FRICKIN’ OBVIOUS, SIMPLE LIKE FALLING DOWN CONNECTION HERE!

(As background, Gov. Carcieri’s administration actively worked to suppress any mention of solar power in the RIEDC’s 2009/2010 Green Economy Roadmap authored by yours truly. So this kind of move is nothing new.)

CONNECT. THE. DOTS!

I know this is complicated, so I’ll go step by step.

1. The report is called Economic Intersections, so it’s about connecting things that might be complementary.

2. One idea in the report is to develop marine-based businesses, following New York’s waterfront plan.

3. New York’s waterfront plan includes increasing the waterfront’s resilience.

4. Another idea in the report is to develop resilience.

It seems so elementary, so obvious that I’m embarrassed to have to spell it out like this, but…here goes:

Focus your resiliency efforts on the coastal impacts of global warming-driven sea level rise and catastrophic weather events so that your marine-based businesses can be, oh, I don’t know…resilient.

Republicans are wrong about minimum wage and economists know it


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DSC_8263In response to Democratic gubernatorial candidate Angel Taveras supporting a minimum wage increase in Rhode Island from its current $8 to a kingly $10.10, both Republican candidates, according to the ProJo, have opposed the idea. Ken Block is quoted as saying, “We have seen repeatedly… that Democrat-driven mandates, like increasing the minimum wage, raise the cost of doing business and ultimately lead to fewer jobs,” while Cranston Mayor Allan Fung declared, “Raising the minimum wage isn’t a solution. It’s a symptom of a larger problem.”

Are Block and Fung right when they say raising the minimum wage will have an adverse effect on Rhode Island’s already struggling economy? The short answer is no, and the truth is that economists have known this since at least 1994 when David Card and Alan Krueger published Minimum Wages and Employment: A Case Study of the Fast-Food Industry in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Card and Krueger did an analysis in 1992 when New Jersey raised its minimum wage from $4.25 to $5.05. Contrary to what Ken Block seems to believe, the study found “no indication that the rise in the minimum wage reduced employment.”

As to Fung’s position that raising the minimum wage isn’t a solution, one needs to ask, “A solution to what?” If we are looking for a solution to the problem of how to keep workers poor and minimum wage employers rich, then Fung is right. However, if we are looking for a way to potentially lift hundreds of thousands of low paid workers out of poverty, then raising the minimum wage is a solution worth pursuing. A report from ROCUnited shows how this is possible.

Both Block and Fung, it seems, are content with the status quo, in which large corporations and other other businesses underpay their employees. This puts the burden of public assistance for these underpaid workers squarely on the taxpayers. Raising the minimum wage, however, does not put any additional burdens on the taxpayer, and in fact, by getting people off public assistance, tax burdens will be lowered.

To those who think that raising the minimum wage will just benefit a bunch of teenage kids working for date money or people too lazy to find real jobs, this chart, from the AFL-CIO and put together with info from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, should dispel that idea.

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Dr. Christine Brousseau on Reproductive Freedom


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sweeneyAt the legislative launch for the Rhode Island Coalition for Reproductive Freedom, Dr. Christine Brousseau, of the Rhode Island American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) tells an emotional story about the importance of a woman’s right to make her own decisions regarding her pregnancy, without the interference of the government.

You can see Dr. Brousseau’s full talk here.

RIF Radio: ACLU’s Steve Brown on NECAP waivers, Tiverton’s Rep Canario on GMO labeling


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Friday Jan 24, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State Futurists. 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_24_14Later on in the show, we’ll be checking in with we’ll be checking in with Steve Brown of the ACLU on Waivergate, the latest fiasco with the NECAP graduation requirement. We’ll also here from Rep. Dennis Canario, a legislator who represents Sakonnet and parts of Portsmouth, on why he is pushing a bill this session to label genetically modified foods.

Our show today is brought to you by Largess Forestry. Preservationists and licensed arborists, no one will care for your trees better than Matt Largess and his crew. If you’ve got a tree or a woodlot in need of some sprucing up, call Matt today for a free consultation at 849-9191 … or friend them on Facebook.

It is Thursday, January 24 and the unemployment rate is up, but so is our population. And, if you ask me, so is our collective psyche. I can just kinda feel it everywhere I go that Rhode Islanders are feeling better about the biggest little state in the union … And I give major credit to Linc Chafee, the Rhode Island Foundation and all the other folks who work tirelessly to focus on what’s great about Rhode Island and pick us up by our bootstraps. Seriously, if we can break the inferiority complex that the Ocean State has long suffered from, we’ll have done something a lot more important than simply created some wealth and maybe a couple jobs…

There were 400 more unemployed people in Rhode Island in December than the previous month bringing the total number to an almost eerily even 49,900, reports the Providence Journal this morning.  This has become our monthly box score and reporters, politicians and pundits comb through these monthly numbers the way I poured over NBA agit in the ProJo when I was a kid…

Providence last in ‘Bible-mindedness’


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americas-most-bible-minded-cities-infographic-2014-american-bible-society“We want people to know that whether you live in the least or most Bible-minded cities, the Bible can speak to your needs, challenges and concerns and help you make sense of your life,” says the American Bible Society (ABS) in a report that listed Providence RI and New Bedford MA as the “Least Bible-Minded” cities of 2013.

Taking the opposite spot of most “Bible-minded” is Chatanooga, Tennessee.

Drawing on research conducted by the Barna Group “a leading research organization focused on the intersection of faith and culture” the ABS claims to have discovered an inverse relationship between “population size and Bible-friendliness.” In short, those cities with more Bible-mindedness have smaller populations, on average.

Time Magazine reports that Bible-mindedness, according to the ABS and Barna, is determined by the number of “respondents who report reading the bible within the past seven days and who agree strongly in the accuracy of the Bible.” By “Bible” the ABS and Barna apparently also include the Torah, (but not the Quran?) as the exact question asked was, “How many times do you read the bible outside of church or a synagogue?”

That this report is a load of bunkum should be obvious to all. The very concept of “Bible-mindedness” is questionable, to say the least. Though a familiarity with the Bible, like a familiarity with the works of Shakespeare, should be a part of any decent Western education, the ABS advocates a morbid relationship with the Bible that encourages daily readings and rote memorization.

Need to memorize the Bible? The ABS has an app for that.

This report, to the extent it is the least bit reliable (and that’s giving it way too much credit in my opinion) should at least give pause to any state legislators who seek to appease the loud yet tiny minority of Rhode Island voters who push for legislation that favors their religious views over others.

Rhode Island, by measure after measure, is a proudly secular and religiously diverse state, and our laws should seek to protect that balance.

Waiver chaos sparks ACLU to ask Guida to suspend NECAP policy


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board of education executive sessionSteve Brown, executive director of the RI ACLU, sent word to Patrick Guida, a member of the Board of Education and chairman of the ad hoc committee studying high stakes testing, that confusion over the waiver process proves it’s high time to reconsider the controversial NECAP graduation requirement policy.

[READ THE LETTER HERE]

“It is important for the Committee to realize that, as things currently exist, the waiver process is, in many instances, a completely arbitrary hodgepodge of inconsistent, incomplete, and poorly advertised policies that can only leave students and  parents understandably anxious and perplexed,” Brown wrote in his letter.

In a subsequent phone interview, Guida said, “I have great respect for Steve Brown and am taking the letter very seriously” but added that he wanted to discuss the issue with committee members and Chairwoman Eva Mancuso before commenting on the letter. “As a board member I vote in favor of the assessment and still believe we need some form of assessment, but I am also very sensitive to the issues going around.”

The latest issue with the NECAP graduation requirement is the waiver process he state asked cities and town to develop for students who don’t pass the test.

Brown said in his letter: “Approximately two and a half months ago, the ACLU filed an open records request with all school districts to obtain a copy of their waiver policy as well as any documents related to its implementation, including any notice or instructions provided to parents or students about it and any forms that must be completed for a student to apply for a waiver. Such information is, obviously, essential for any meaningful waiver process, and required by RIDE’s guidance and regulations. The results of our request, however, were less than encouraging.”

You can read Brown’s entire letter here .

 

 

 

RIF Radio: Neil Steinberg talks about economic intersections and making it happen


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Monday Jan 23, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State Futurists. 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.

Today is Thursday, January 23 and our show today is brought to you by Largess Forestry. Woodland preservationists and licensed arborists, no one will care for your trees better than Matt Largess and his crew. If you’ve got a tree or a woodlot in need of some sprucing up, call Matt today for a free consultation at 849-9191. That’s 849-9191 … or friend them on Facebook

neil steinbergA little later on, we’ll be talking to Neil Steinberg, executive director of the Rhode Island Foundation about the next step fort the Make It Happen RI movement … today the group will release a report on how to resurrect Rhode Island’s economy called Economic Intersections of Rhode Island: a private sector generated action agenda.

But first, the news…

Providence Journal columnist Ed Fitzpatrick helps Common Cause bring the gubernatorial candidates to the table to sign a meaningful People’s Pledge that would limit undisclosed, out-of-state money in the campaign. RI Future blogger Sam Howard has been all over this issue too, and he posted his third piece on it yesterday.

Also on RI Future this week, Steve Ahlquist has been running a series on reproductive justice … you should check out the videos he’s been posting as they show this is a broad-based issue that is more about freedom and economic prosperity for women than anything else.

And the AP’s David Klepper reports states all over the country – including Rhode Island – are considering legislation to label GMO foods. We’ve written a lot on this one Futurists, so let’s keep the pressure on … so far, only Maine and Connecticut have passed laws to label genetically modified ingredients.

Rep. Dennis Canario, from Portsmouth, Tiverton, Little Compton, is sponsoring the bill in the House. In a press release he said, “Knowledge is power and people need to know what they are putting into their bodies.” And added, ““I am not interested in launching a fight for an outright ban on genetically engineered products, but I am interested in educated consumers.

 

Department of Revenue website links to corporate lobby group


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Screen Shot 2014-01-21 at 9.04.56 PMHere’s a revealing nugget about how conservatives win the policy debates in our state:  If you spend a lot of time trying to understand the Dickensian world of city and town budgets, like I do, you’re going to wind up spending a lot of time on the Department of Revenue’s municipal finance website.  They provide quite a few useful resources, but as a helpful hint, they also provide links to other resources.  One of them is the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council–our state’s most powerful corporate lobby.*

Commonly abbreviated as RIPEC, it’s a coalition of some of the largest and most important businesses in the state, and they take a rather extreme right-wing position in their State House lobbying.  And the conservatives who run Smith Hill take their word as holy writ.  Last year, when they proposed abolishing the Department of Environmental Management and moving its functions to the new Department of Commerce, Gordon Fox and House leadership actually tried to do it.  (Fortunately, they didn’t succeed.)

There are two explanations for why the Department of Revenue decided to provide free advertising for RIPEC.  One is that they’re hardcore RIPEC partisans.  But I don’t think that’s what happened.  Instead, I suspect that the culture of reverence for RIPEC is so strong on Smith Hill that no one thought it would be wrong to link to their website.

Sometimes we talk about the state government as if it’s entirely composed of right-wingers who are basically Republicans.  Although there certainly are many hardcore conservatives, many legislators and bureaucrats would better be described as centrists who vote with the conservatives on economic issues because the center of discourse in this state is so far right.  Although really a fairly fringe group, RIPEC has become so mainstream no one sees a problem with the government openly promoting them.

After all, when Senate leadership needed a white paper to make a show of doing something about jobs, they contracted it out to RIPEC.  Naturally, what we got was a report harping on business tax climate indices, which are basically bogus statistics conservatives invented to help push for tax cuts for the rich.

*I suppose it isn’t quite fair to call RIPEC a corporate lobby.  Many of their initiatives seriously damage Rhode Island businesses.  Their signature initiative, cutting taxes for the rich and paying for it by gutting aid to cities and towns, was pretty tough on businesses, since cities had to raise commercial property taxes to make up for the lost state aid.  It would probably be more accurate to say they lobby for the interests of the executives of the state’s largest businesses. Here’s how RIPEC describes itself.

Women’s Fund’s Marcia Coné on Reproductive Justice


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coneAt the legislative launch for the Rhode Island Coalition for Reproductive Freedom, Marcia Coné, executive director of the Women’s Fund of Rhode Island, talks about the need for a bold legislative agenda to ensure the economic security of women.

“The Rhode Island Reproductive Justice Coalition is committed to addressing  inequality for four lenses: conscious and faith based principles, medical, legal and economic security,” she said.

You can see Marcia Coné’s full talk here.

And learn more on reproductive justice, from:

Honoring the Water video, Stopping the TTP


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Check out this moving video about last nights vigil in Charlestown W. Va. They braved the snow after working 24/7 for 2 weeks on the relief effort with this UNITY Event.

They were supported by people all over the world, many of the pictures are posted here including several from Fossil Free RI/Sierra Club members.Check them out. They are very cool. Whose water? OurWater.

http://ourwaterwv.org/photos-from-vigils-around-the-country/

W VA Water 1505411_212228618967851_611967377_nEven though the ban has been officially lifted, people are still showing up at hospitals with chemical burns. Their Governor Tomplin has not inspired confidence with answers like “you can drink the water if you want to” and “I am not a scientist.” Appalachian Water Watch is tracking where people are still smelling MCHM. “If you can still smell the chemical in your home, record your findings at http://appalachianwaterwatch.org/ or call at 1-855-7WATERS to have them help you upload your information to the website.” so if you have friends or family there let them know. W VA hub sarcastically adds “With the addition of PPH to MCHM and the five other acronyms in the spill, West Virginia water is now cleared for use in alphabet soup.”

The problem there isn’t “a few bad apples” (thought Freedom Industries owners are rotten to the core) as Charleston Mayor Jones (R) said, or that there were a few holes in the classification of chemicals that anti-EPA governor Tomplin (R) claims or that everyone is picking on the coal industry as Sen. Joe “the coal mannequin” Manchin (D) (pronounced mansion) claims. The problem is the rotten stink of corporate controlled government with the fossil fuel industry as a prime mover.

This comes at an important time when President Obama is trying to ram through the Trans-Pacific Partnership will legalize it for corporations to put profits before the public health.

So “what happens in W Va doesn’t stay in W VA”; either we start cutting off the heads of these toxic dragons or we will all pay.

Our Senator Whitehouse’s committee is only working on the Boxer/Vitter Toxic substances law to patch the hole not inciting the coal industry and corruption that led to the EPA weakening in “Chemical Valley.” I hope that this changes or is in the works.

On a state level, we can’t even get storm water treatment passed- this is another one of the right wing governor from W. Virginia’s “concessions.” Imagine what one chemical spill on Rte 95 could do to the bay. If we can’t get this passed how many other ways is the public health being put at risk?

Let’s hope that a water disaster where 300,000 people water is “toxified” in one “accident” is enough to wake up our government, currently embalmed with  corporate money, to wake up an start correcting the problem at the root.


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