Rep. Paddy O’Neill on the priorities for the session, his relationship with leadership


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

paddy oneillRep. Paddy O’Neill became one of the most high profile Rhode Island legislators last session when he stuck up for the Ethics Commission instead of House leadership and was subsequently stripped of his committee membership for his actions. He told me yesterday, that he and Gordon Fox met recently and “at least as of [Monday]” are getting along better this year.

He also said bridge tolls need to be addressed more than 38 Studios (we talk a bit about the Newport Bridge toll too); that he hasn’t heard from his constituents on voter ID repeal and therefore it won’t be a priority for him and – in a sort of rebuke to those who would mock the calamari bill – that Rhode Island needs to embrace its role as a tourism-centric economy.

“We are a tourism, restaurant, beautiful shoreline … that’s us, we have to own that,” he said.

You can listen to our entire conversation here:

‘Inequality For All’ at State House today, Fox and Paiva Weed to attend


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Legislative leaders Gordon Fox and Teresa Paiva Weed will be attending a screening of “Inequality for All” at the State House this afternoon, according to spokesman Larry Berman. But whether or not the Robert Reich film’s thesis – that the historically high gap between the haves and the have-nots is tearing apart America’s economy and social fabric – will make their way from the screen to the General Assembly’s agenda is a question only the future knows.

But at least we know they will be listening!

inequality

The op/ed documentary is being screened at Statehouses across the country to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Lyndon Johnson announcing the war against poverty (which many say America lost but others say has been a “mixed bag”). Here in Rhode Island, it’s being sponsored by the Economic Progress Institute and General Assembly leadership. It will be shown in the House lounge (popcorn permitted) after the session commences for the day (approximately 4:30 or 5)

Before the session there will be an “Interfaith Vigil” to call attention to the plight of the homeless in America – talk about income inequality – some people slept outside last night in Rhode Island! (please think about that for at least one minute today) The vigil begins at the Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, located at 15 Hayes Street (across from the Providence Place Mall) at 2:30 and participants will make their way to the State House by 3pm, where they will be joined by Fox, Paiva Weed and Governor Chafee.

 

Heard in the Senate: ‘Let us remember we are in God’s holy presence…’


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

kenney

“Let us remember we are in God’s holy presence…”

With those words did the Reverend Monsignor Albert Kenney, Vicar General of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, begin his convocation at the opening of the 2014 legislative session in the Rhode Island State Senate. As Senate President M. Teresa Paiva-Weed stood by his side, hands clasped and head bowed in reverence, Kenney continued:

We pray to you, O God of might, wisdom and justice, source of all legitimate authority. Assist us with your gifts of counsel and fortitude to the members of the Rhode Island State Senate that their legislative efforts may be conducted in righteousness and truth by encouraging due respect for virtue: the practice of religion by a faithful execution of laws and justice and mercy.

On November 6th of last year the United States’ Supreme Court heard arguments in Town of Greece v. Galloway, about the legality of and permissible scope of legislative prayers of this nature. The Town of Greece, in New York has allowed various clergy (almost all Christian) to open their legislative sessions for the last eight years. Susan Galloway, who is Jewish and Linda Stephens, an atheist, filed suit in 2007 because Christian prayers opening a secular, legislative session of government gives the impression that Jews and atheists are, at best, second class citizens.

The Supreme Court has not been exactly consistent about invocations, convocations and “ceremonial” prayer. In Marsh v. Chambers (1983) the court allowed the Nebraskan legislature to begin its deliberations with prayers from a resident chaplain on the claim that such prayers were ceremonial and not impositions of Christian hegemony. However, in 1992’s Lee v. Weisman a case from right here in Rhode Island, ceremonial prayer was held to be unconstitutionally coercive if done at a high school graduation ceremony.

In Town of Greece v. Galloway, the Supreme Court could rule any number of ways, but it is doubtful that so conservative a court will make the practice of legislative prayer illegal. On the other hand, non-sectarian prayers seem equally problematic. Take this court exchange, as reported by the New York Times:

“How could you do it?” Justice Alito asked. “Give me an example of a prayer that would be acceptable to Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus … Wiccans, Baha’i.”

“And atheists,” Justice Antonin Scalia added. “Throw in atheists, too.”

Mr. Laycock [the attorney representing Galloway and Stephens] reminded the justices that atheists were already out of luck based on the court’s prior decisions. Then, riffling through his documents, he suggested, “The prayers to the Almighty, prayers to the Creator.”

“To ‘the Almighty,’” Justice Alito said skeptically. “So if — if a particular religion believes in more than one god, that’s acceptable to them?”

Justice Scalia, often impatient in religion cases, couldn’t resist. “What about devil worshipers?”

Over the laughter of the courtroom, Mr. Laycock said meekly, “Well, if devil worshipers believe the devil is the almighty, they might be okay. But they’re probably out.”

Back in the Rhode Island State Senate last night, Reverend Kenney was making exactly no effort to be nonsectarian. His prayer was explicitly Christian if not expressly Roman Catholic. As the Vicar General of the Providence Roman Catholic Diocese, a diocese that makes a point of embroiling itself in political issues based on its particular theological aims, Kenney’s presence was no mere formality. This was not an innocuous or ceremonial convocation.

Kenney’s words were a way of framing the work of the Rhode Island General Assembly as a religious undertaking. This was an attempt to bring church and state together, to align the goals of the state with the goals of the church, the specific state being Rhode Island, and the specific church being Roman Catholicism.

Kenney continued,

Let the delight of your divine wisdom direct the deliberations of elected officials and allow that light to shine forth in all proceedings so that they may tend to the preservation of lasting peace and the promotion of true happiness. We also pray for the executive officials of the State of Rhode Island, for all members of the Assembly, for all judges, magistrates and other officers that they may be enabled by your powerful protection to discharge the duties of their respective stations with honesty and integrity.

The ideas that Kenney is endorsing should be anathema to religious and nonreligious Americans alike because these words do not seek to unite us as individuals with different beliefs but divide us. The pecking order is clear: Those who believe in the right God are first, those who believe in the wrong god are second, and those who believe in no god(s) or have beliefs that are difficult to classify, well, as Mr. Laycock suggests, “…they’re probably out.”

Kenney concluded his Rhode Island State Senate convocation with,

And finally we recommend likewise to your infinite providence all our fellow citizens throughout the State of Rhode Island that we may be blessed in the knowledge and sanctified in the observance of your most holy law that we may persevere in our call to promote unity through the gift of holy charity and after enjoying the many blessings of this life we pray we may be admitted to those which are eternal. Grant this O Lord in your mercy and justice which find perfect fulfillment, Amen.

Vicar General Kenney might want to see all Rhode Islanders “blessed in the knowledge” of his God’s “most holy law” but the Senate chamber of the Rhode Island State House is not the place and the opening of the 2014 legislative session is not the time for the cleric to make this point. Kenney might believe that his God is the “source of all legitimate authority” but the last time I checked, legitimate authority rests with “We the People.”

No Gods need apply.

Regardless of how the Supreme Court decides Town of Greece v. Galloway, Rhode Island legislators should seriously consider doing away with legislative prayers. Rhode Island, as I often point out, is the birthplace of separation of church and state and the very first secular government established anywhere on the planet. Our state guarantees rights based on the primacy of conscience and on a strict policy of not imposing our beliefs on one another.

Rhode Island once showed the world how to be a better place.

We can do that again.

Time for all to come together


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

elorzaRhode Island’s recent decision to relocate the probation and parole office to downtown Providence — since set aside — has sparked controversy. Good. We in the city need to be publicly debating administrative choices like these to maintain a well-functioning democracy.

But I am greatly concerned that different sides of the debate are missing a critical point: We are all in this together. We are all one Providence, and that means that each of our residents — whether he or she owns a major business or is re-entering society from the criminal-justice system — is an equal stakeholder and each of his or her needs and interests must be reflected in government decisions.

Critics of this decision have done us a valuable service by pointing out several legitimate problems with the current relocation plan. In fact, I agree that the proposed downtown space may not be the best location for the probation and parole office. If the state is going to administer a public program, it should do so in the best interest of all of its constituents, including ex-offenders.

I believe the office should be located in a space that can most effectively connect parolees and probationers to the multiple services and supports they need, such as education, workforce development, health and housing services. I also agree that increased rental costs are a valid concern.

While the location’s proximity to Kennedy Plaza would convenience many parolees and probationers who commute by bus, I have spoken to several who have expressed concerns about the challenges of downtown parking. For these reasons, I am unconvinced that the state’s initial decision was the best possible answer.

Despite those concerns, I have been upset to hear strains of another argument made against the state’s plan. It is an argument claiming that the mere presence of “those people” will damage our economy and threaten the safety of “legitimate” downtown-goers, despite assurances by the Providence, Pawtucket and Woonsocket police departments that they have never experienced increased problems around parole and probation offices.

Let me make this very clear: Parolees and probationers, who have committed themselves to rehabilitation and re-entry into society, have just as much right to be in downtown Providence as, say, the head of a bank. Segregation and inequality are the greatest challenges our society faces, and these problems are compounded every time we choose to exclude the most vulnerable among us — the very people we should be working to help and support.

As a lawyer at Rhode Island Legal Services, I represented many of “those people” in their efforts to avoid homelessness and obtain better living conditions. I know first-hand that many stereotypes we have of them are unfounded and that many people simply need a supportive hand to help them turn their lives around.

I believe that this controversy has offered us a great opportunity. Let us use this moment to come together, with opponents and supporters, to improve the way ex-offenders are reintegrated into society; to provide pathways to education and employment for those who seek them; and to treat the most vulnerable with the benevolence that only a great society can extend.

I have made the theme of my mayoral campaign “One Providence” because I believe with every fiber of my body that we can only be a great city with a thriving economy when every resident has an opportunity to participate and to have a voice in our shared community.

We need to listen to our business leaders and our successful entrepreneurs, who are doing so much to innovate and revitalize Rhode Island. But we need to listen just as carefully to our low-wage workers, our working families, our youth and students, our seniors, our small business owners, our homeowners and our renters and, yes, to our ex-offenders.

This is an opportunity to come together. We do not need further division. We are one community, One Providence, and the only way we can rise and succeed is if we rise and succeed together.

Jorge Elorza is a Democratic candidate for mayor of Providence.

This is an op-ed that originally ran in the Providence Journal.

Chafee, Ferri, Miller: Three lawmakers talk marijuana legalization


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

rhodeislandmarijuanaMarijuana policy experts from afar have suggested Rhode Island could become the third state in the nation, after Colorado and Washington, to tax and regulate cannabis. But local political policy experts have suggested it won’t happen this year because it’s an election year.

I spoke with three State House lawmakers yesterday about the prospect for Rhode Island to legalize marijuana this year: Governor Linc Chafee, Senator Josh Miller and Rep. Frank Ferri

Chafee said he doesn’t think it will happen this year, saying he would like to see what happens in Colorado and Washington and what revenue estimates look like before moving ahead.

Senator Josh Miller, a progressive Democrat from Cranston, didn’t sound overly optimistic. “I’m not sure there’s enough people who understand or take it seriously enough to totally embrace it but I think it will be a serious discussion.” But he did say the revenue projections “will be hard to ignore.”

And for those who think the politics of the election cycle will trump policy (there are very few legislators who actively oppose legalization) Rep. Frank Ferri likened its chances to marriage equality. (Ferri is gay and worked for many years to pass same sex marriage; it passed last year)

Here’s my takeaway: legalizing marijuana will create jobs, raise tax revenue and every lawmaker I spoke with yesterday said that should be the major priority of the General Assembly this year. If there is a non-reefer madness reason not to tax and regulate marijuana – beyond the reefer madness offered by the Providence Journal and the electoral concerns of those in power – I’d like to hear it.

For more on this debate, see this article from Reason (August, 2013): Marijuana’s Bright Future. And this one from the American Prospect (December 2013): Pot’s Uncertain Future.

Also please listen to this RI Future podcast featuring an informed conversation between pro-legalization advocates Jared Moffat and Rebecca McGoldrick with East Greenwich drug counselor Bob Houghtaling, who said he could support legalization if done right.

Helio Melo says RI income tax policy has hit the rich, helped the state


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
From 2012 House Finance Committee budget consideration.
From 2012 House Finance Committee budget consideration.

House Finance Committee Chairman Helio Melo said the oft-debated restructuring of Rhode Island’s income tax code under Governor Don Carcieri has resulted in more annual revenue, and that the wealthy are paying more than they did prior to the changes.

“I don’t think we cut income tax on the wealthy,” he told me last night, before sitting down for the first evening of the legislative session. “I think they actually pay more than they have in the past. We took away a lot of exemptions when we did that.”

He also said the changes top-down changes have resulted in more revenue, too.

“I think we are seeing more money coming in with personal income tax so if we just look at it that way I would say yes. Does it mean we are getting more jobs? I’m not too sure about that…”

You can listen to our conversation here, including voter ID (Melo: “I don’t have a problem with it.”) and later today I’ll be post my conversation with Rep. Maria Cimini about tax equity and her contrasting thoughts on it:

RIF Radio: The first day of the rest of the session


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Tuesday Jan 7, 2014
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.

It’s Tuesday, January 7th … And, no, that’s not the opening bell for the first day of work for the General Assembly, that’s Pink Floyd with the world’s greatest ode to education deform. But today is, in fact, the first day of the 2014 legislative session and tonight lawmakers will begin the long slow process of waiting until the very end of the session to decide on how to address the biggest issues facing the state: our struggling economy and our thriving inequality and injustice.

Here’s what ProJo columnist Ed Fitzpatrick writes on Opening Day for the General Assembly: “The White House and the Vatican have placed renewed emphasis on inequality and poverty.”

Will Rhode Island lawmakers join with the president and the pope to place a renewed emphasis on inequality and poverty? Or will we spend another year whistling into the trickle down winds?

Scott MacKay wrote an excellent legislative session preview that shows how as the Ocean State tacked right, our economy got weaker, and while Connecticut and Massachusetts invested in education and and employees, theirs grew stronger. So, you do the math…

McKay said believing tax cuts for the wealthy will spur growth is to believe in baseless mythology, and last week Fitzpatrick, in a separate column, actually mentioned rolling back the Carcieri-era income tax cuts as a viable policy proposal … so maybe this is the year for a more progressive tax code.

Podcast fan Dan McGowan of WPRI reports the Providence City Council is looking into more than 100 personalized tax breaks to local businesses. I guess the Providence Place Mall threatened to move to North Carolina if we didn’t give it a sweetheart deal? Or because Olneyville nightclubs are such a positive force in our community?

James Kennedy of the Transport Providence blog writes a really cool in-depth post about how building more roads to make commuting easier is a bit too much like relying on unlimited growth to drive our economy. I’m a big fan of anything that can tie together  Rhode Island, Keynesian economics and Jack Kerouac.

And Sam Howard pens a typically awesome look at how Rhode Island keeps trying to attract more businesses without doing much to create potential customers for said enterprises.

waterfall 1_7_14

A bit more on Rhode Island’s ostriches


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

In my last post, I suggested that instead of dealing with actual problems, Rhode Island “leadership” prefers to either focus on distractions or bury their heads in the sand. One of the examples of issues I used was the long-term unemployment rate; which is usually defined as being out of work six-months or more. WPRI’s Ted Nesi yesterday pointed out the chart below, released by the U.S. Senate’s Joint Economic Committee (JEC) Democratic staff in support of Senate Dems’ push to extend unemployment insurance:

Long-term unemployment by state
(via Joint Economic Committee Democratic Staff)

As Nesi points out, RI proportionally has more long-term unemployed than any other state. If you drill down into the JEC Democratic staff’s numbers, what they show is that of our 9% unemployment rate (which is called the “U-3 unemployment rate” – that’ll be important later), 44% of those workers are long-term unemployed.

Why is that a problem? Well, there’s pretty clear evidence that employers don’t like to hire the long-term unemployed; at least according to a Boston Fed study released in October 2012. Not even a “can’t get an interview” situation, it’s a “won’t look at the application” situation. Unlike previous recessions, where when job vacancies rose both short-term and long-term unemployment fell the Great Recession has been different. An increase in job vacancies isn’t causing a decrease in long-term unemployment. So even when employers have openings, they aren’t filling them, despite the existence of candidates who are currently long-term unemployed.

Now, this might be the point where people start saying “well, there’s a skills gap, and we need more workforce development.” But March 2013 research from the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee demonstrates that, consistent with 40 years of jobs and training research, “workforce development” has little to no impact on workers and the “skills gap” is a mythological creature on par with Pegasus and the Questing Beast. The study quotes Anthony Carnevale of Georgetown University Center on Education and Workforce Development:

Training doesn’t create jobs. Jobs create training. And people get that backwards all the time. In the real world, down at the ground level, if there’s no demand for magic, there’s no demand for magicians.

As Matthew O’Brien of The Atlantic points out in the article linked above, the discrimination against the long-term unemployed is a vicious cycle which has the ability to permanently impoverish the country. Eventually, those 4.1% are going to burn their way through every family member, friend, and place of goodwill available. And they’ll end up homeless. Combine that with the structural deficit in the state budget, a likely loss in revenue from gambling once Massachusetts casinos start up, and a likely future economic crash due to failure on the part of the national government to reform our economy to prevent the abuses that caused the Great Recession… well, that means we’ll have a state even less capable of dealing with the crisis at hand.

Before I move on to our state’s “response” to this slow-motion crisis, I want to make a final point about the unemployment rate. If we really want to imagine what a healthy RI economy looks like, we have to look past the U-3 or “official” unemployment rate. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Rhode Island’s U-6 unemployment rate for Q4 2012 through Q3 2013, which includes the total unemployed plus marginally attached worker (people who have given up looking for work in the past four weeks) plus people employed part time for economic reasons Rhode Island has a 15.8% unemployment/underemployment rate. While this means we are no longer the worst in the nation (5 states are equal to or above ours), it’s nowhere near the 8.3% we had just before the Great Recession hit.

So given that this is perhaps the greatest threat to our state’s economic well-being, what was the major economic package to come out of General Assembly and be signed by Governor Chafee? “Moving the Needle” which states the problem it intends to address in its first sentence: “In its annual ‘Top States for Business’ rankings, published on July 10, 2012, CNBC ranked Rhode Island 50th of 50 states on how appealing the state is to start or grow a business.”

Distractions. State leadership is more concerned with the subjective rankings given to it by a television station (which has as part of its goal, to entertain and make a profit) than the reality in front of it. That’s the reality where 4.1% of our labor force has been searching for work for six months or more. Where 9% of it is unemployed. Where 15.8% is either looking for work, discouraged or gave up looking for work, or taking a part time job until economic conditions improve. Let’s jump back to that Prof. Carnevale quote: “if there’s no demand for magic, there’s no demand for magicians.

That’s the problem in a nutshell. There is a demand problem in the state. If you’re unemployed or on a really tight budget, you can’t buy what business is selling. So it doesn’t matter too much what businesses Rhode Island can’t attract, because even if it can attract them (“competitiveness” between states is usually nothing more generous cash giveaways), there’s a weak customer base that can’t support them. Moving the Needle is just about getting us more magicians… or illusionists, I think is the synonym.

It’s that mindset that produced 38 Studios, a pie-in-the-sky dream of beaucoup bucks while kick-starting a tech industrial boom and hiring a bunch of Rhode Islanders. It’s utterly backwards. We need a Rhode Islanders First jobs program, that puts our actually existing (and struggling) citizens ahead of all the fantasies of start-ups and imaginary migrating businesses. We know we can’t rely on the federal government to provide one, so we’ll have to do this ourselves. If that’s a Rhode Island-style WPA/CCC type effort, so be it. If it means we pay people to fix our infrastructure, assist our nonprofits and even work in support of our businesses, that’s fine with me.

You can say that’s government picking winners and losers. I will too. I say it’s definitely government picking a winner. Rhode Island.

Teny Oded Gross talks about locating a parole office in downtown Providence


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Photo courtesy of Ryan T. Conaty.
Photo courtesy of Ryan T. Conaty.

Teny Oded Gross, the executive director of the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, works with people who are trying to turn their lives around after being in trouble with the law. And as such, he had some choice words for Angus Davis, Ed Achorn and others who don’t want the state to locate a parole office in downtown Providence. But his choice words were, to my mind, surprisingly balanced.

He said Davis, the Swipley CEO who ignited the debate, made some good points that may have been overshadowed by his use of the term “criminal convention centers.” He said it was “unfortunate” that the Providence Journal editorial chose to re-purpose that phrase rather than the more reasoned points in Davis’ letter. He also took issue with the ProJo headline: “Protect the downtown.”

He also said parolees may prefer to drive to their parole visits, and downtown isn’t the best place for that. And that the NetworkRI location on Reservoir Avenue may be a better locale considering all transportation options.

My favorite thing he said: “The business people are not leeches on our city and the poor who are being serviced by the government are not leeches either. We cannot step on each other.”

Listen to the entire podcast here:

 

Labor Board sets trial date for Renaissance Hotel dispute


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Regional Director Jonathan B. Kreisberg of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) out of Boston “issued a Government complaint and notice of hearing against the Renaissance Providence Downtown Hotel and TPG Hospitality, Inc., The Procaccianti Group’s hotel management affiliate. The NLRB Complaint charges the Hotel with multiple unfair labor practices deterring workers from organizing to improve their low wage, low benefit jobs,” according to a press release on the Joey Quits blog late Friday.

The press release continues:

Representatives of the hotel workers’ union asked the Hotel to resolve the case by being neutral. The Hotel has refused. A trial before a federal labor judge is scheduled for March 31, 2014 in the NLRB’s Boston office.

The Government complaint names thirteen different managers, including Elizabeth Procaccianti and Hotel General Manager Angelo DePeri.  The NLRB Complaint alleges multiple acts of interfering with, restraining and coercing employee organizing rights, including interrogation and illegal promises of benefits to induce workers to abandon union organizing. The NLRB Complaint cites The Procaccianti Group’s TPG Hospitality affiliate for maintaining illegal work rules nationwide, including rules restricting communications and prohibiting employees from speaking to the media and the public about their jobs.

This NLRB Complaint comes after OSHA cited the Hotel in October 2013.  The Hotel ultimately settled with OSHA by agreeing to correct the workplace hazards and paying $8,000 in fines.

Julian Bello, a houseman at the Renaissance, said: “This is now the second time the Federal government is citing the Hotel for violating our rights.  Why does it think it is above the law?”

Citing the Hotel’s coercive anti-union campaign, sweatshop workloads and sub-living wages, the workers called for a boycott of the Hotel on December 4, 2013.  While the law gives Hotel managers the right to force workers into mandatory anti-union meetings, the law does not force the public to patronize their Hotel.

The Unitarian Universalist Association (UUA) has already canceled over 800 rooms they had reserved for their General Assembly convention, to be held in Providence in June 2014. Jan Sneegas, the UUA’s director of General Assembly and Conference Services, said, “The Unitarian Universalist Association is strongly committed to the fair treatment and equity of all employees in the workplace. When a labor dispute arises, it is our policy to review our contract with that company.  In this instance, the UUA decided to terminate the contract.”

Renaissance workers currently make significantly lower wages and benefits than their counterparts in union hotels like the Omni Providence Hotel. The Procaccianti Group, has owned, developed or managed over 100 hotels nationwide and claims real estate assets exceeding $5 billion nationwide.

RIF Radio: Jack Reed on unemployment insurance; legislative session predictions and ‘High Hopes’


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Monday Jan 6, 2014
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.
shadylea falls 1_7_14
Click on image for more pics like this.

As Bruce Springsteen suggests it’s Monday, the first day of the first full week of 2014 … and talk about climate change! It’s already 50 degrees warmer than it was last week. A 50 degree swing! Last week pipes were freezing all over Rhode Island. Today, we might have a thunder storm.

The big news out of Washington DC this week centers around Rhode Island’s senior Senator Jack Reed, who is working with Republican Dean Heller of Nevada to extend federal unemployment benefits. Listen to my interview with Sen. Reed from Friday here.

Policy aside, it’s really cool that 2014 inside the beltway politics starts with a bit of bipartisanship that includes a Rhode Islander. Will this be a trend in the new year … will this be the year America re-learns how to work together? Here’s more evidence that perhaps we will: Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, a jew and a socialist, said he’s on the same side as the pope!

To learn more about the Ocean State version of Pope Frank, make sure to check out Ed Fitzpatrick’s column on Sister Ann Keefe … Remember earlier when I wondered what Rhode Island would be like if Anchor Rising or RI Future were in charge? Well imagine if superstar Ann Keefe ran the state? I’d take that.

The : “the $14,947-a-year legislators will be off and running, with public hearings, private horse-trades and almost nightly legislative fundraisers…”

The AP’s David Klepper had a fascinating look at one of the ways Rhode Island has been systematically ignoring our most vulnerable residents.

A Florida judge ruled drug testing welfare recipient is unconstitutional.

For yet another example of how Rhode Island seems to revile the poor and disaffected, see the recent ire from the business community about a potential parole office in downtown Providence. Please make sure to check out Sam Howard’s take on this issue. Needless to say, the ProJo op/ed page thinks reformed offenders don’t belong in downtown Providence.

Tom Sgouros thinks you need to read this press release. If you know why, you passed the spelling test.

Jonathan Jacobs, who works for Brett Smiley’s campaign for Providence mayor, had this to say about Eli Broad’s op/ed about how maybe we are giving the rich a hard time.

And James Kennedy wants you to sign this petition to add more bike lanes to the West End of Providence.

A knew hat in the wring


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Received the following press release in my email.  It is reproduced verbatim here as a public service to East Side voters:

Press Release:

From College Republicans of Johnson & Wales University

A Young College Republican Upset that his District is paying more of there fare share into the city and the State of Rhode Island.

Johnson & Wales University College Republican President Russell Taub considers running for either city council in Providence or for the State House in 2014 at Edith Ajello.

H. Russell Taub 25 years old student at Johnson & Wales University studying hospitality and entrepreneurship is a member of many campus organization starts to gather information on issues that his district  faces and what changes need to start happening.

H. Russell Taub who participated in this year Hanukkah lighting says he feels that that Jewish Community has been ignored when the state house did not even have the Hanukkah lighting on the calender for people to look up or attend. Even Governor Chafee staff had no idea when or if it was still happening, creating a feeling of not caring about the Jewish Community. And that Christmas is more important than any other holiday.

He  went to Fairleigh Dickinson University to study politics and foreign relations, which he did for three years before he  given an opportunity to be part of the Social Humanitarian Committee on Indigenous Affairs as an NGO Rep. at the United Nations for one year. After that he transferred to Johnson & Wales University. Currently H. Russell Taub represents many organizations including a social group designed to promote the State of the Rhode Island and its job to promote businesses and the state with foreign governments, the group is called the United Nations Association of Rhode Island. He also works for the Blackstone Valley Tourism Council as the Relationship Manager and part of the RIGOP Finance Committee as an educational resource for him to learn from. He recently was part of the polar express in Woonsocket where the Tourism Council was solely responsible for bringing roughly 11,500 people to the city of Woonsocket. Last year he was appointed by the International Human Rights Commission to Ambassador to the USA at the age 24.

H. Russell Taub maybe a republican but he is very much bi partisan politician who believes in working together is the only way that we can start to solve Rhode Island problems. He does not stand for party politics at all he stands for the community and what his constituents wants.

 He believes in property tax reform, bipartisan women in leadership and entrepreneurship, accountability of taxes, and making sure those who are paying more of there fare share do not have to any more.

More news will come in the next weeks to weather or not he will run and if so what he will run for.

From College Republican
H. Russell Taub
russ taub

 

 

Providence Journal: Poor Richard Riordan and Eli Broad


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

job creatorIn Saturday’s edition of the Providence Journal, Richard Riordan and Eli Broad contributed an opinion piece typical of the declining editorial quality of a decaying news source. Called “It Isn’t A Sin To Be Rich,” the pair penned the argument against the rhetorical criminalization of affluence.

While everyone is entitled to an opinion, not all opinions are equal. Opinions that are condescending, uninformed, and pedantic tend to hold less water than those that contain actual evidence, substance, and argue a point that actually exists outside of the consciences of the interlocutors.  What people want is tax equity. Equality and equity are distinctly different. Equality would be like a circle of people all removing their shoes and tossing them in the center. Equality is then handing out the shoes randomly until everyone has two, regardless of size, type or match. Equity is giving everyone a matching pair that fits his or her needs.

What these authors fail to provide is any evidence to back up their opinions. They quote Janet Yellen and the President, but other than that their only evidence is anecdotal. The only historical precedent given is not even from this country. Income tax rates on the upper percentages of income earners in America were, for the biggest portion of America’s rise to world economic benchmark, between 70%-92%. Then they dropped considerably in the 80s – 28% – and briefly rose again to 39% during the Clinton years. Bush 2, however, dropped them back to 35%.  It is also the 80s that marked the tipping point in the systematic elimination of America’s middle class. The demonization of labor unions and deifying of Wall Street traders was a paradigm shift in the American zeitgeist.

The authors refer to the wealthy as the job creators but discuss the uncontrollable factors of globalization of manufacturing and automation as the real culprits. If the wealthy are the job creators, where are the jobs? The argument against “socialism” in favor of “voluntary charity” is as deplorable as the reference to tax equity as “punitive.” Certainly charity is appreciated. However, charity would be less of a necessary component of the American economy if the so called job creators actually created jobs. And not just subsistence level or below, part-time or less, or mis-classified contract work. Worker productivity has increased by 80% since the 1970s but wages have stagnated in spite of cost of living increases.

The question is, if the workers are not seeing profits of the maximization of productivity, who is? Are the job creators responsible in that circumstance? Furthermore, charity increasing “in spite of the halting economic recovery” falls short of mentioning the record-setting stock market. The authors’ Janet Yellen reference, previously mentioned, pointed to the fact that more and better earnings-potential was directly linked to post-secondary education.

Many Americans who “decide” not to go to college do so because they are unwilling to make a loan investment of thousands of dollars when there are so few jobs after graduation. Furthermore, with cuts in federal aid, increasing tuitions, and higher competition for grants and scholarships, college is less likely to be attractive for the children of today’s economy.  Overall, this editorial reads like a bad advertisement and those of us who are not educated enough or have not worked hard enough or were not born lucky enough to reach the lofty heights of the authors’ fiscal standards, cannot afford to buy the bridge they are trying to sell. Rather, the opinion should be directed to fellow victims of the supposed demonization of the wealthy. They are better comforted by the flowery rhetoric and carefully lain blame. Being rich is not a sin. Yet one does well to remember the Beatitudes when thinking of what is and is not a sin. Especially those as described by Luke:

Woe to you who are rich, for you have already received your comfort.

Woe to you who are well fed now, for you will go hungry.

Woe to you who laugh now, for you will mourn and weep.

Woe to you when everyone speaks well of you, for that is how their ancestors treated the false prophets.

Furor over Probation and Parole Offices Proves Need for Genuine Prison Reform


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
angus davis
Angus Davis, CEO of Swipley, has asked the state not to locate a parole office in downtown Providence.

The response to a plan to move parole and probation offices to Downtown Providence has been a disappointing chapter in recent events. Angus Davis, four contenders for Democratic nominee, the Providence Chamber, and everyone else who took up the call against placing these offices in Downtown should be ashamed of themselves.

Davis’ intellectual dishonesty is especially disgusting in his use of the phrase “government-mandated criminal convention center” as though B&ECon14 and Larceny Conference 2015 will be renting space out at 40 Fountain St. with the intent of spreading best practices and instilling values. It’s representative of Davis’ clear disdain for our criminal justice system. Ostensibly, probation and parole offices are to check in on how criminal offenders are doing rehabilitating back into society. Davis views these offices as doing the opposite.

This view isn’t limited to Davis. It’s in everyone who thinks that as they walk along Fountain Street or walk by Kennedy Plaza (these are not the kind to wait for a bus in Kennedy Plaza) that they can spot a parolee or a person on probation. It’s in everyone who refuses to get out of their car in Providence because of its “high crime” (despite massive reduction in crime rates since the heyday of the “super criminal”). And its in every employer who views a criminal conviction as a scarlet letter to be carried around for the rest of one’s life.

Recently, the State of Rhode Island passed “Ban the Box” legislation that prevents employers from asking about criminal convictions on job applications (in interviews, employers are allowed to fire away). This was a positive first step aimed at dealing with the effects of our twisted prison system.

And make no mistake about it, our prison system is twisted. What was supposed to be a genuine reform from hangings, beatings, and mutilations to a reflective period has turned into a for-profit enterprise, complete with school-to-prison pipelines, mandatory minimum sentencing, three-strike laws, and a plethora of policies that add up to give the United States the highest rate of incarceration in the world; possibly our only rival for this position in North Korea. Even the most policed country in the world, Russia, still manages to come in many places below.

What’s on display in the reaction to this simple relocation is a classic example of Rhode Islanders hiding their heads in the sand when it comes to genuine problems in the state. If Davis was at all concerned about reducing the number of parolees and people on probation around his offices he would be calling for serious prison reform in the state of Rhode Island. Perhaps along a Scandinavian model. Instead Davis and his partners in opposition are perfectly fine with moving the location to Cranston (a proposition which I doubt Cranston residents and businesses are particularly in love with).

The implied threat, as always, is “I will take my ball and go play with it elsewhere” the classic employer flight threat that’s used to pressure government on everything from taxes, not enough parking, the education system, etc. And lawmakers listen.

I expect, given his propensity to kowtow to parochial interests, Governor Chafee will listen to Davis rather than his own agencies which oversee this population and have said that such offices are not the sites of dangerous criminal activity. Such a give-in will be another loss in a state which refuses to take serious action against the ills which plague our state; whether it’s lack of affordable housing, high unemployment (especially long-term unemployment), our incarceration and recidivism rates, etc. Focusing on all of these would save the State money and reinvigorate our economy. Instead we focus on ill-advised band-aids, half-measures and one-off deals: creating higher-risk casinos, giving away our limited land to the expensive and tax-free “meds and eds” which can only support a weak service economy, or paying $75 million for an unproven video game company.

I’d argue that there are those in state and local government who are willing to tackle the big issues, but given the cowardice in the vast majority of the Providence mayoral candidates in their handling of this issue, I don’t have much… hope.

Senator Reed: looking forward to vote on extending unemployment benefits


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Screenshot-ReedSince the economic crash in 2008, Congress has offered extended unemployment benefits after state benefits run out. Last year, during the fiscal cliff negotiations, Republicans successfully cut off these extended benefits effective last week. But Senator Jack Reed has teamed up with Senator Dean Heller, a Republican from Nevada, to extend the program for another three months.

With a vote looming next week, Senator Jack Reed called into the RI Future newsroom today to speak to the politics behind the issue, as well as the economic and moral imperative to protecting the people out of work “through no fault of their own” from further financial harm.

You can listen to our full conversation here:

Sign Our Petition for Protected Bike Lanes on the West Side


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
petitionThe next mayor must re-envision our city streets by supporting protected bike lanes. Westminster on the West Side is the first place Providence should start the transformation.

Providence does not have cavernous streets like Los Angeles, but many of its streets are much wider than streets in other East Coast cities, but without bike infrastructure. While Philadelphia has buffered bike lanes that are eight feet wide on streets that are around twenty-four feet wide, there are no such lanes on the W. Side’s Westminster Street, which is about forty feet wide.

Sign the petition here

We would like the city to implement bike lanes on Westminster because:

*Bikers already use Westminster, but at their peril. Although a 25 mph street, cars routinely go over 40 mph on the street. Parked cars mean that people on bikes have to “take the lane” on a street that is too fast for them to ridesafely and comfortably in mixed Now that's a narrow street!traffic.

*Westminster is home to several schools, including three high schools. Protected bike lanes will help students to get to school more independently and safely.

*Protected bike lanes will be a great improvement over less advanced infrastructure that already exists on Broadway. Studies show that elderly riders, small children, disabled persons, and people who are less athletic are much more likely to use protected infrastructure than narrower lanes that are next to parked cars. Protected bike lanes also prevent dooring.

*Studies also indicate that bike lanes are good for business. Cyclists spend more money on average than non-bikers, because of the money saved on transportation. While biking infrastructure will improve the business climate of Westminster Street, it will also provide an affordable way for low income people to continue to enjoy the neighborhood. We want transportation solutions that improve our neighborhoods, but don’t price people out.

*We have proposed that businesses be able to test out these bike lanes as temporary infrastructure. We feel confident that the neighborhood will like the change if they get a chance to see it. Important projects like the closure of Times Square in NYC to cars happened first as temporary projects. They soon proved so popular that they are permanent, and are inspiring change in cities around the world.

We will be in Fertile Underground for the snow tomorrow, collecting signatures. Come in, enjoy some coffee, and show your support for a more sustainable city!

~~~~

John DePetro indirectly compares his cause to MLK’s


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Talk about starting off the new year right.

In what can only be called a grossly insensitive appropriation of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy, John DePetro has included a picture of and a quote from the great civil rights leader on his blog, implying that King would be appalled by the injustice DePetro is suffering. This is an act of incalculable hubris on DePetro’s part, and surely an insult almost on par with his misogynist comments about the protesting union women.

When will WPRO wake up?

Screen Shot 2014-01-02 at 4.14.58 PM

Where Should Parole and Probation Offices Be Located?


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Downtown ProvidenceSo I understand that a number of people are upset about the plan to move some of the probation and parole offices to downtown.  This really came to my attention when on Facebook, Angus Davis posted the following:

Governor Lincoln Chafee plans to relocate a parole office serving over 1,500 convicted criminals to the heart of Providence, which my company and others are trying to revitalize. This is an inside deal, a no-bid crony contract that would triple costs to taxpayers and was rushed through the state property commission with no debate just before Christmas. My letter: http://ang.us/KhkkK8 Please share + call Governor, (401) 222-2080 to oppose turning Kennedy Plaza into a Criminal Convention Center. Many of us are working to move Providence forward – this sets us back.

While I appreciate the concern, I also want to raise a few questions to help people fully reflect on this matter.

  1. Where, ideally, should parole and probation offices be located?  It would seem to me they should be located near the central bus line, where people can most easily access them if they rely on public transportation.  While the offices in the Dix Building of the Pastore complex are fine and will continue to serve many ex-offenders, they are not very centrally located and are not as easily accessed by bus as the Providence downtown area is.
  2. Do Angus Davis and others who have businesses downtown realize that ex-offenders are already downtown?  Do they realize that many of them take the bus from Cranston and other outlying shelters to Providence and spend time there anyway?  Do they also realize that current offenders do landscaping and garbage collection, among other jobs, and are also frequently downtown?
  3. What would it be like if, instead of categorically rejecting ex-offenders in the community, employers like Angus Davis considered setting up employment opportunities for ex-offenders in their businesses?  They might find that some ex-offenders are quite employable and have a valuable contribution to make to society.

I welcome your feedback on this important matter.

Knights of Columbus: Crusaders for Discrimination

2012-10-08_10-41-18_350
Knights of Columbus Parade Float

The Roman Catholic Church is structured like a medieval empire with the Pope serving as King, Cardinals as princes and arch-dukes, bishops as dukes, and priests as entitled nobility. Add to this mix laymen (and they are all men) acting as knights, as in the Knights of Columbus, and you have what essentially amounts to a theocratic (if questionably benevolent) monarchy in a modern world that is contradictorily coming to embrace the benefits of democracy and freedom of conscience.

The Knights of Columbus (KoC) is a volunteer organization open to “practical Catholic men in union with the Holy See, who shall not be less than 18 years of age on their last birthday,” according to the KoC-RI website, explaining that, “A practical Catholic is one who lives up to the Commandments of God and the precepts of the Church.” The KoC is the largest Catholic lay organization in the world and is traditionally thought of as an organization engaged in fundraising for people in need and other charitable works.

The Knights still do charitable works, and provide real services for those in need, but they are also true knights within the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church, front line combatants in the culture wars over such issues as women’s rights, LGBTQ rights, marriage equality and reproductive justice. Over the years that I have been an advocate for a properly secular Rhode Island that prioritizes the separation of church and state and freedom of conscience, I have seen many members of the Knights of Columbus opposing my positions.

KnightsofColumbus250A new and well researched publication from Catholics For Choice entitled “Opposition Notes: The Knights of Columbus: Crusaders for Discrimination” has put the KoC under the microscope and found some disturbing trends with real implications for Rhode Island politics. What follows is a mix of my own observations informed by insights gleaned from the Opposition Notes.

The KoC in Rhode Island has been actively involved with the protests outside clinics that provide abortion and outside Planned Parenthood for years. In Cranston, there is a nearly weekly effort to engage in “sidewalk counseling” and “prayer vigils” that essentially amounts to displaying misleading and grotesque graphics and intimidating women who might want to access reproductive services. There is almost always a KoC presence at these protests as a small part of a national effort to restrict or eliminate reproductive health care for women. A KoC chapter in Madison, Wisconsin even runs a “Pro-Life Activist Training Camp” that teaches people how to more effectively protest outside clinics.

The KoC in Rhode Island was also extremely active in campaigning against marriage equality, even going so far as to publicly team up with notorious hate groups like MassResistance. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, this was a previously unheard of alliance, as the Roman Catholic Church is usually more careful in its choice of allies. The KoC is also tied very closely to the National Organization for Marriage (NOM), and in Rhode Island we suffered NOM-RI, supported it seems, almost entirely by a very few undisclosed donors.

It was NOM-RI’s Christopher Plante who was Politifacted as a “Pants on Fire” liar for his completely untrue claim that “religious groups [such as the KoC] have been forced to allow same-sex marriage ceremonies in their facilities.” Plante made this outrageous and false claim at the 11th hour in a desperate attempt to stop the General Assembly from voting marriage equality into law. The close working relationship between the NOM and the KoC makes it hard to believe that Plante issued his statement without the Knights knowledge.

hqdefault
Michael Krzywonos

Michael Krzywonos, the “Pro-Life Chairman of Rhode Island Knights” twice spoke at the State House in opposition to marriage equality in 2013, which is totally within his rights. He also worked very hard behind the scenes to pass the “Choose-Life” license plate that was strong-armed through the General Assembly by an almost desperate Senate President M. Teresa Paiva-Weed, who seemed to care nothing for diligent discussion of the bill or for proper legislative procedure. Though the bill originally cited the Knights of Columbus as the recipients of the money generated by these special “Choose Life” license plates, at the very last minute the text of the bill was changed so that all references to the KoC was replaced with references to CareNet Pregnancy Center of Rhode Island.

According to Opposition Notes, CareNet Pregnancy Centers across the United States are often funded by the Knights of Columbus, so the last minute language substitution in the bill is now revealed to be a completely meaningless cosmetic change, meant to trick the Rhode Island public into thinking that the bill was not a strong violation of the First Amendment’s separation clause. Be thankful that Governor Chafee vetoed this odious bill. One hopes that the next Governor will be as wise.

One thing the KoC does for CareNet and other “crisis” pregnancy centers is purchase ultrasound machines as part of their “Ultrasound Initiative.” This program matches funds from the KoC Supreme Council with money from state and local chapters to purchase these machines. So far the the program has purchased 290 machines at a cost of about $8.5 million. The Knights believe that seeing an ultrasound of a fetus can convince up to 90% of women to not terminate their pregnancy. That the 90% number is completely made up does not seem to deter the beliefs of KoC members. Think about that the next time Representative Macbeth tries to push her ultrasound bill through the General Assembly.

How far reaching is the KoC’s influence on Rhode Island politics? It is difficult to say. On the General Assembly’s website no less than three Senators and six Representatives (all men, of course) claim membership in the KoC in their biographies. The highest ranking and perhaps most powerful KoC legislator is Senator Michael McCaffrey, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Judiciary, Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Rules and a member of the Senate Committee on Labor who “has previously served as a Grand Knight for the Warwick Knights of Columbus.”

Senator Pro Tempore William Walaska and James Sheehan, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Government Oversight are also members.

On the House side, Rep. Peter Palumbo (who infamously called my niece, Jessica Ahlquist, an “evil little thing” on John DePetro’s radio show (a preview of the DePetro Show’s reprehensible misogyny, in retrospect) “is a second degree member of the Knights of Columbus.” Also listing membership are Representatives Melo, McLaughlin, Hull, DeSimone and Canario. The last two listed were at one time “Grand Knights” in the organization.

Of course, membership in a fraternal organization does not mean that the legislator votes the way the organization instructs them to. Senator Sheehan voted yes on marriage equality and so did Representatives Canario, DeSimone and Melo, so the vote was split. On the “Choose Life” license plate bill, however, which was a special project of the Knights here in Rhode Island, every legislator who claims membership in the KoC either voted for the bill, or declined to vote against it by not voting. (Not exactly a Profile in Courage, but this is local politics and different rules apply.)

The “Choose Life” bill passed overwhelmingly, it seems, because the Knights of Columbus willed it so.

The Knights of Columbus are an international organization with very specific political goals and the resources to seriously impact legislation and elections. In Rhode Island the Knights claim to represent the wishes of the Roman Catholic Church, and to the extent that they get there marching orders from the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), that might be the case. But the conservative politics of the USCCB and the KoC are completely out of step with the majority of Rhode Islanders and even out of step with the majority of Rhode Island Catholics, who for the most part fully support LGBTQ rights, reproductive health care including abortion, women’s rights and the proper definition of separation of church and state that includes freedom of conscience, not the freedom to impose your conscience on others.

Money given to the Knights may well be used to feed or shelter a hungry family, but it might just as easily be used to fund an effort to strip LGBTQ citizens or women in general of their human rights on thinly veiled theological grounds.

One might want to think twice before lending them your support.

CRMC: Taylor Swift Is Building a Completely Legal Wall


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Photo courtesy of WJAR/NBC 10. Click on image for original.
Photo courtesy of WJAR/NBC 10. Click on image for original.

About an hour after my post on Taylor Swift’s wall rehabilitation I saw this column by Tom Mooney in The Providence Journal where the Coastal Resources Management Council’s* Laura Dwyer gives a pretty definitive answer about any criticism of Swift for building a wall on her property.

Dwyer said the CRMC expected the permit applications from such an international celebrity would draw attention.

“Our executive director [Grover Fugate] had a feeling this was going to happen, so doing more than his usual due diligence, he went to the site a number of times, just so he had a good understanding of the present conditions, what they wanted to do, and in order to feel comfortable that this was all under ‘maintenance’ of the seawall.”

Swift’s hard-working publicist points us to another story by The Day‘s David Collins, the writer who kicked off the whole hullabaloo. Here’s the key bit:

Turns out, though, Swift and her engineers suggest in their application to the CRMC, the old cement wall is well above the mean high water mark, the effective property line for oceanfront land.

In fact, the plans indicate Swift’s property extends in some places up to 40 feet beyond the concrete wall.

And if you were to extrapolate from that line, along the beach, it would mean much of the big wide sandy beachfront the public enjoys every summer in Watch Hill is above mean high water and owned by the adjacent homeowners.

This seems counterintuitive because it’s not what people usually think of as the high tide line, the part of the beach where a “wet line” is left as the tide goes in and out.

I learned some of this from a CRMC geologist Monday who explained that the legal definition of mean high water in Rhode Island comes from a very specific court case and involves complex calculations unrelated to the vagaries of ocean tides on a beach or the classic “wet line” left behind.

Unless I’ve got my facts wrong, the case in question was in the Rhode Island Supreme Court, State v. Ibbison (1982); where a property owner had fishermen arrested for trespassing. The fishermen had figured that the high water mark (usually marked by seaweed) was public property. The property owner asserted that the mean high tide mark was. The property owner was ruled correct, but the arrest was ruled to be unfounded, because up until Ibbison, there was no standard definition for what the “shore” was. And thus for the last 30 years the mean high tide mark is our standard (which has left large portions of public property underwater). (Information on Ibbison from page 116 of The Rhode Island State Constitution by Patrick Conley and Robert Flanders, Jr.)

So what does all this mean for Swift? Well, it means she’s in the right and clear, that David Collins can’t necessarily eyeball “mean high tide,” that the CRMC does their due diligence, and that I’ve once again poked my finger in someone’s eye who’s much bigger then me without genuine cause (the sad thing is that I know about Ibbison since my 11 Awesome Things about RI post, Collins didn’t have that benefit).

However, it also points to the problem with using undefined and vague words when trying to protect rights in our Constitution. I mean theoretically, if you have the constitutional right to gather seaweed from the “shore” that same “shore” should extend to the highest extent of seaweed. If you have to swim out to gather your seaweed, I’m not sure that should be counted as “shore.” Anyhow, defining “shore” as equivalent to “high water mark” not “mean high water mark” is a constitutional change (or a judicial one, but it’s hard to roll back 30 years of judicial interpretation), and that’s really up to the voters.

So yeah, if you were hoping to use this little episode to nurse your weirdly deep and inexhaustible hatred of Taylor Swift, then you’ll have to find some other reason.

 

*Edit: An earlier version of this post referred to the final “C” in CRMC as “Commission” rather than “Council”


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387