While workers struggle, hotel owners enjoy $1.4 million tax break


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In an effort to help transform the vacant and decrepit Masonic building into the posh, downtown hotel it is today, the 2003 Providence City Council granted a 19-year property tax “stabilization” to the project developers. Now years later, low-wage employees of the Renaissance Hotel are imploring the current City Council to implement a hotel-industry minimum wage, while Renaissance owners benefit from a $1.4 million tax break this year alone.

Renaissance room cleaner Santa Brito said Providence residents such as herself are picking up the tax slack for the Procaccianti Group, the Cranston-based multinational real estate holdings firm that bought the property in 2012.

“The City increased the tax rate on my house $427.28 this year,” she said. “I cannot understand why [the hotel] is getting a break on its taxes worth millions of dollars, when I have to pay more in my own taxes. There is something very wrong when the richest corporations are getting breaks and regular Providence residents are paying more, and they’re not even giving good jobs to our city in return.”

The Procaccianti Group, , will pay $284,219.18 in property taxes this year, said City Tax Assessor David Quinn. Without the stabilization, he said, it would owe $1,689,548.18 this year.

masonic tax stabilization

Tax stabilization plans, Quinn explained, are utilized to incentivize new development and to smooth tax fluctuations as city properties go through redevelopment.

According to the 2003 act passed by the Council, which you can read here, the Masonic Temple was a state-owned building that provided no tax revenue to the city. It says construction of the building was left unfinished in 1929 and in 2003 was “in a state of great disrepair.”

The act also says the state Economic Development Corporation (now dba as the Commerce Corporation) predicted the hotel would employ “140 people with an estimated payroll of $4 million, plus healthcare benefits.” Earlier this year, hotel workers and labor activists petitioned the Council to terminate the tax break based on the Procaccianti Group’s failure to provide living-wage jobs. The Council did not act on the matter.

Quinn said the Procaccianti Group will likely seek a second tax stabilization for an extended stay hotel it plans to build across the street from the Convention Center. Procaccianti also owns the downtown Hilton Hotel, and Quinn said the company is currently contesting its tax bill on that property.

“Hopefully they will compromise towards me,” Quinn said. “I’ve already compromised toward them. I have a simple philosophy: if people pay their fair share most people pay less.”

Cranston-based Procaccianti Group owns 3 hotels in Providence, 8 in Rhode Island and a total of 59 in 22 states, according to its website. Its local hotel employees have been fighting for better wages and working conditions for years. Recently they petitioned the City Council to approve a hotel-industry specific minimum wage of $15 an hour.

A Council subcommittee canceled a meeting to consider the proposal last week and has yet to reschedule it. If the Council doesn’t act on the matter, activists could get the issue on the November ballot by collecting 5,000 signatures. The issue has political implications for Mayor Angel Taveras, who is running for governor. He’ll need activist support to overcome Raimondo’s fundraising advantage, and if he wants activist support he’ll need to show progressive leadership.

When asked for comment, his staff said the Taveras wants to study the issue and would not like to comment on it further.

Fired Hilton Hotel workers ask City Council, Taveras for support


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DSC_9470Regular readers of RI Future will remember Adrienne Jones, profiled here after she was fired from the Providence Hilton Hotel, ending six years of employment, during her unionization activities. She joined the dozens of other working mothers who were abandoned by the City Council last Thursday night when the Ordinance Committee meeting, that was to discuss and vote on a proposed $15 minimum wage for hotel workers, was cancelled at the eleventh hour for reasons unknown.

DSC_8399Besides Adrienne Jones we have Ylleni Ferrares, another working mother with young children fired from the Hilton Hotel. Ferrares claims that when women speak out about the working conditions at the hotel, the are fired. One would think that a company receiving $4000 a day in tax breaks from the City of providence could repay that generosity by treating its workers well and paying them fairly.

The first video is translated into English, the second is in Spanish.

Chafee on Ed Achorn: ‘virulent,’ ‘unethical’ and purposefully misleading


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chafee sullivanIn a follow up interview about why he chose to release his full op/ed after a watered down version appeared in today’s Providence Journal, Governor Chafee called ProJo op/ed page editor Ed Achorn “virulent” and said the relatively new leader of the paper of record’s opinion page is “frankly unethical himself in his portrayal of different initiatives I’ve had here.”

Chafee agreed with me when I said he paper’s editorials can seem “purposefully incorrect” at times.

“Purposefully incorrect, I would agree with that,” he said.

Chafee said he complained to the publisher about the way he is portrayed in paper’s opinion page in 2011. “This irrational negatively is hurting Rhode Island,” he said he told the publisher a the time.

Chafee said his critique was  not meant for news reporters. But he did say “there’s a reflection down. I think the reporters pick up on a theme that comes from the upper floors.”

I also asked Chafee if RI Future was equally guilty of such yellow journalism (my word, not his)

You can listen to our full conversation here:

Who’s barrel has more ink: Linc Chafee or Ed Achorn?


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Ed Achorn is the editor of the Providence Journal op/ed page.
Ed Achorn is the editor of the Providence Journal op/ed page.

When Governor Chafee criticized Providence Journal editorial page editor Ed Achorn in an op/ed he submitted to the Providence Journal, the critique was edited out of the submission. As a result, Chafee released an “unedited” version of his piece this morning.

Removed from the piece that ran in the Providence Journal was the governor’s lede:

Back in June 2011, in the first months of my administration, Jack O’Rourke, who I don’t know and have never met, had a letter published in the Providence Journal. He wrote, “Some divide the world into two camps: The people of reason and logic versus the haters.  Instead of debating the people of reason and logic with reason and logic of their own, haters attack their opponents personally.” O’Rourke continued, “I find it clear that Edward Achorn is a hater. Instead of putting meat on the bones of the Journal’s vague suggestions for reforms, Achorn repeatedly attacks Governor Chafee personally.”

I have chuckled at the veracity and wisdom of Jack O’Rourke’s observations as his point has been reinforced in Mr. Achorn’s many editorials since.  I have been successful in politics for nearly 30 years and I take pride in ignoring the taunts of lilliputians. I do believe that Mr. O’Rourke’s “haters” will never admit they are wrong and thus are difficult to engage, and I haven’t.

Chafee’s submission is 646 words. Achorn typically asks for submissions to be under 700 words.

A lengthy “Editor’s note” accompanied the Journal’s edited version of the piece that reads, “The editorial argued that Mr. Licht’s qualifications were not the issue, but that the process of his appointment should wait until he has been out of office for a year, in the spirit of Rhode Island’s revolving-door law.”

The Journal ran the edited version on the web, as well.

Here’s an example of a paragraph that was slightly altered:

Chafee’s unedited version: “Let’s look at this latest editorial. The Providence Journal claims that it and unnamed “others” who care about protecting the public oppose my nomination of Mr. Licht because it violates the “spirit” of the state’s revolving-door law. Rather than citing any provision of that law, the Journal simply asserts that “people in positions of great power are supposed to wait a year” before being appointed to the bench. The Journal is wrong on the law, and it glosses over the role of two important public bodies – institutions whose actual job it is to protect the public interest – that vetted and approved his nomination long before it ever came to my desk.”

The ProJo edited version contains layout errors as well: “The Journal claims that it and unnamed “others” who care about protecting the public oppose my nomination of Mr. Licht because it violates the “spirit” of the state’s revolving-door law. Rather than citing any provision of that law, The Journal simply asserts that “people in positions of great power are supposed to wait a year” before being appointed to the bench. The Journal is wrong on the law, and it glosses over the role of two important public bodies

— institutions whose actual job it is to protect the public interest

— that vetted and approved this nomination long before it ever came to my desk.”

The last sentence of the piece was edited to remove Ed Achorn’s name.

Chafee’s unedited version: “Mr. Achorn supports those processes only when he likes the result.  Otherwise, as here, he defaults to personal attacks and invented legal theories.”

ProJo edited version: “The Journal’s Editorial Board supports those processes only when it likes the results. Otherwise, it defaults to personal attacks and invented legal theories.”

Here’s Chafee’s full, unedited submission:

Elevate the Dialogue
By Governor Lincoln D. Chafee

Back in June 2011, in the first months of my administration, Jack O’Rourke, who I don’t know and have never met, had a letter published in the Providence Journal. He wrote, “Some divide the world into two camps: The people of reason and logic versus the haters.  Instead of debating the people of reason and logic with reason and logic of their own, haters attack their opponents personally.” O’Rourke continued, “I find it clear that Edward Achorn is a hater. Instead of putting meat on the bones of the Journal’s vague suggestions for reforms, Achorn repeatedly attacks Governor Chafee personally. ”

I have chuckled at the veracity and wisdom of Jack O’Rourke’s observations as his point has been reinforced in Mr. Achorn’s many editorials since.  I have been successful in politics for nearly 30 years and I take pride in ignoring the taunts of lilliputians. I do believe that Mr. O’Rourke’s “haters” will never admit they are wrong and thus are difficult to engage, and I haven’t.

But the May 25th editorial’s attack on Richard Licht and my nomination of him to the Superior Court Bench deserves a rebuttal. Of all the challenges we face in this great state, it is mindboggling to imagine the wastefulness of spending capital on opposing a Rhode Islander of the stature of Richard Licht to be a judge. His education, legal career and long record of public service make our state proud.

Mr. Licht holds a bachelor’s and J.D. from Harvard, and an LLM in Taxation from Boston University. He has served his country in the military. He vigorously has worked for the people of Rhode Island as a former state Senator and Lt. Governor. His distinguished public service has garnered him several awards such as the Israel Peace Medal, David Ben-Gurion Award, Outstanding Man of the Year from the Jaycees, Honorary Public Service on behalf of the handicapped from the Meeting Street School, and Governmental Service Award from Ocean State Residences for the Retarded. He has fought for and achieved reforms for early childhood development and the passage of the nation’s first Family and Medical Leave acts, as well as consumer protection legislation. He has been Rhode Island’s best Director of the Rhode Island Department of Administration. Ted Nesi of Channel 12 recently called Richard Licht “indispensable.”

Let’s look at this latest editorial. The Providence Journal claims that it and unnamed “others” who care about protecting the public oppose my nomination of Mr. Licht because it violates the “spirit” of the state’s revolving-door law. Rather than citing any provision of that law, the Journal simply asserts that “people in positions of great power are supposed to wait a year” before being appointed to the bench. The Journal is wrong on the law, and it glosses over the role of two important public bodies – institutions whose actual job it is to protect the public interest – that vetted and approved his nomination long before it ever came to my desk.

First, the Rhode Island Ethics Commission reviewed the revolving-door statute. I assume they did this with the full understanding of the high visibility of their decision. They then determined that Richard Licht is not subject to its provisions. Second, the Judicial Nominating Commission conducted a meticulous evaluation of all judicial candidates, including lengthy written submissions, background checks and interviews. As a result of that process, the Commission sent me a list of five candidates each of whom the Commissions deemed “highly qualified.” Mr. Licht was one of two candidates receiving eight votes, a unanimous display of support.

I believe in the law and public processes established to determine conflicts and to select judges. I abide by the law and those processes, and I am entitled to rely upon them. Mr. Achorn supports those processes only when he likes the result.  Otherwise, as here, he defaults to personal attacks and invented legal theories.

Providence to Seattle: a roundup of municipal minimum wage proposals


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minimum wageAs the Providence City Council considers implementing a $15 minimum wage ordinance for local hotel workers, it’s important to remember the Capital City would be by no means the first municipality to legislate a low-wage threshold.

Seattle made national news Monday for passing a $15 city-wide minimum wage, giving the left-leaning Northwestern metropolis the highest minimum wage law in the country. “Seattle wants to stop the race to the bottom in wages,” Councilman Tom Rasmussen said.

“This progressive and expensive city struck a blow against rising income inequality Monday when the City Council voted unanimously to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour, the highest municipal minimum of any metropolis in the country and the rallying cry of fast-food workers and union organizers nationwide,” wrote Maria L. La Ganga of the Los Angeles Times.

And across the country, many other municipalities are considering city-wide minimum wage laws.

Chicago lawmakers put a $15 minimum wage ordinance up for discussion last week, Reuters reports. The San Diego City Council is considering putting a $13.09 minimum wage ordinance to voters. But New York City could also be the next big city to implement a local solution to low wages. Mayor Bill de Blasio this weekend helped Gov Andrew Cuomo agree in spirit to allowing NYC to implement a $13 minimum wage. Earlier this year, Portland, Maine considered a municipal minimum wage too.

There are only a handful of cities around the country with all-encompassing municipal minimum wage ordinances, and they seem to come in clumps. SeaTac, Washington, the city that grew up around the Seattle-Tacoma airport, implemented by voter referendum a $15 minimum wage last year. Sante Fe, New Mexico passed the first city-wide minimum wage law in 2004, and was then joined by Albuquerque and several New Mexico counties. San Francisco also passed a minimum wage bill in 2004, and neighboring Oakland, San Jose and Richmond now have similar laws. There is a minimum wage law in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and similar efforts afoot in Eau Claire and Lacrosse). New Orleans and Washington DC each have minimum wage laws.

According to 2011 data from the National Employment Law Center, there are more than 100 cities around the United States with living wage ordinances, many which apply specifically to businesses and industries that receive public assistance The Renaissance Hotel, from where the Providence effort emanated, received a $1.4 million property tax break from the city this year.

Los Angeles is considering a hotel-industry specific $15.85 minimum wage bill, much like the one in Providence. The proposal there exempts hotels will fewer than 100 rooms, and the Providence version exempts hotels with fewer than 25 rooms. In LA, hotel employees in the LAX neighborhood have had a minimum wage law protection since 2007.

Hasira S. Ashemu, the senior communications specialist for Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy … pointed out the increase is already present in certain areas of the city. Hotel workers in the immediate vicinity of Los Angeles International Airport are a paid a minimum of $15.37. The wage was established in 2007 after the city adopted a “living wage” ordinance, raising the rates of hotel workers and LAX employees.

Here in Providence, Mayor Angel Taveras, who is running for governor, told WPRI he would like to study the idea.

There’s been some research done already, as Seattle debated a minimum wage. According to the Seattle Times today:

What have the effects been on employment?

Almost none, according to economists at the University of California, Berkeley, who have studied San Francisco, eight other cities that raised their minimum wages in the past decade, and 21 states with higher base pay than the federal minimum.

Businesses absorbed the costs through lower turnover, small price increases at restaurants, which have a high concentration of low-wage workers, and higher worker productivity, the researchers found.

Hotel worker Auro Rodriguez: ‘Mayor Taveras, we are just like your mother’


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DSC_8319Renaissance Hotel room cleaner Auro Rodriguez says she once sat down across from Mayor Taveras and that he told her the story of his hard-working mother, who put him through school and college with her hard work in low paying jobs. He promised, says Rodriguez, that he would not forget these workers…

So the question, I suppose, is where was Mayor Angel Taveras on Thursday night, when dozens of working women showed up to a City Council Ordinance Committee meeting that was to discuss the $15 an hour hotel worker minimum wage ordinance?

Why is Auro Rodriguez talking to my camera outside the locked door of the Mayor’s office, instead of to the Mayor or to the City Council?

The first video is translated into English, the second is in the original Spanish.

Watch video of Santa Brito speaking to Mayor Taveras and the Providence City Council, via video here.

Red Bandana Fund remembers Richard Walton; honors PSU, Henry Shelton


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Red Bandana_web_small
The 2nd Annual Red Bandana Celebration is this Sunday at 4pm at Nick-A-Nee’s!

Every year he had a party. He would call it his “75th Birthday Part II” or his “80th Birthday Part 4.” You get the idea. And from all over Rhode Island, all over New England and even all over the country, friends and colleagues and relatives would meet, greet, drink, eat, sing and laugh the day away at Richard Walton’s hideaway, at the mouth of the Pawtuxet River, basking in the sunshine (or rain showers), reveling in each other’s company, renewing acquaintances, and hugging old friends.

By the end of the day, there was a cigar box full of checks and cash for Amos House and/or Providence Niquinohomo Sister City Project because social justice was in his blood and opportunities like this should never be wasted.

And he did this every year up until on his death December 27, 2012.

So for the first time in decades last year, there was no party at Richard Walton’s house in Warwick. Instead, a bunch of his friends got together, and produced a fund-raiser at Shea high School in Pawtucket to honor his memory and his work. And to continue that legacy, they formed The Red Bandana Fund.

But this year the party’s back! And we’re hoping to keep it going for a long, long time.

This Sunday, June 8th, between 4 and 7pm, at Nick-A-Nees 74 South Street in Providence, the Annual Red Bandana celebration will be held to honor the memory of long, time community activist Richard Walton. And just like Richard did, there will be food, drink, music and laughter. And because the issues never stop, The Red Bandana Fund will continue raising awareness by handing out 2 Activist awards and making a financial contribution to each.

After much deliberation and agonizing, the committee decided to give not just one but 2 awards this year; one to longtime community activist and hell-raiser, Henry Shelton, and the other to the passionate, unrelenting organizing workers called the Providence Student Union. Last year, the first Award went to Amos House, a cause Richard spent a good part his life working on.

They were many deserving nominees this year, all of which one could make an excellent argument for winning the award. The process eventually narrowed down to two: both Henry Shelton and the Providence Student Union. Finally, it became apparent that it made a lot of sense to give to both. So we did.

Richard would have loved the choices.

Since the mid 1960’s as a Catholic priest, Henry Shelton has fought for people’s rights and organized for social justice. After being dissatisfied with the approach of the diocese over the issues of poverty, Henry left the priesthood to continue organizing full time. He joined with George Wiley, a tireless advocate from Rhode Island, as part of the National Welfare Rights Organization. After Wiley died in a boating accident in August 1973, Henry continued his work forming numerous non-profit organizations including The Coalition for Consumer Justice (CCJ), The RI handicapped Action Committee (RIHAC), the Worker’s Association for Guarantee Employment (WAGE), the Fund for Community Progress (FCP) and the George Wiley Center (the latter with which he is still involved).

From utility rate increases to food stamp cuts to free school breakfast for children to winter shut off regulations to stopping the Charlestown Nuclear power plant to summer jobs to worker’s rights, it is not an understatement to say that Henry Shelton is the conscience of this state and has been so for a long, long time. There’s is even a law mandating a fair repayment programs on back utility bills called The Henry Shelton Act. And since Richard served on the Board of the George Wiley Center for decades; and that they marched together on many occasions, working so passionately for the causes Henry still fights for to this day, it’s only appropriate that Henry be one of the first recipients of the award.

Indeed, there is no way Henry Shelton could be ignored.

The Providence Student Union, on the other hand is relatively new to the picture. Consisting of mostly high school students, the organization was formed to fight cuts at Hope High school, which they eventually succeeded in doing. But they didn’t stop there. Qucikly, the students realized the influence they could be to institute reforms. They testified, organized and protested against unjust policies like the Common Core and High Stakes testing, much to the chagrin of those in charge. They have become a familiar presence before the board of education and have earned themselves a role in the decision making process; speaking truth to power and giving students a voice they have never had before.

This is a true grass-roots organization by any definition as their own words testify:

“The Providence Student Union’s vision of social change is based on the principle that justice can only be won in lasting ways when impacted communities themselves unite together to work for the changes they believe in. From this principle comes PSU’s model: organize low-income youth of color to make positive changes in the here and now by working to build student power within their schools, while strengthening the movement for social and economic justice in the long term by developing students to become leaders who will continue to bring their communities together to work for change long after they have graduated.”

It is their commitment to grass-roots organizing and social change, at such a young age, that has earned them the recognition and thanks of the Red Bandana Fund and for all those fighting for justice in today’s society.

Our mission is to honor those community members who uphold the values Richard Walton espoused. And with this year’s selections, we believe we have done just that.

So come this Sunday and join with us as we gather together to honor the past, and the future, in memory of Richard Walton. Buy yourself a an official, Richard Walton, Red Bandana and a beer, as we toast those who have worked for, and continue to work for, social justice in Rhode Island.

See you there.

To find out more about The Red Bandana Fund or to make a contribution, click here http://www.soup.org/page1/RedBandana.html.

(Core participants in organizing the event this year include: Bill Harley, Stephen Graham, Jane Falvey, Barbara & Rick Wahlberg. Other participants include: Jane Murphy, Jodi Glass, Cathy Barnard & Richard Walton,  Jr.)

Nick Mattiello cowers to corporate interests


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The article, House speaker outlines state’s economic priorities, in the Providence Journal started badly. Paul Grimaldi wrote,

“The newly elected speaker of the house told a roomful of business people Thursday that fixing the state’s fiscal problems is his priority.”

mattiello2I didn’t vote for Mattiello for speaker, nor did you. He was “elected” by a bunch of frightened representatives after just a few days of discussion. There was no political campaign, no public discussion. Yet he’s the “elected speaker”?

And he’s talking to a group of “business people” at a Chamber of Commerce breakfast in the Kirkbrae Country Club. He’s reassuring them. Why? Because he’s counting on their contributions to his campaign and any political action groups he might be setting up in the wake of Gordon Fox’s resignation.

In the article, Mattiello says that 38 Studios was one of the biggest debacles in the country’s history.” Really? Did he miss the Real Estate Bubble? The Dot.Com implosion? Stock Market Crash of 1929? Teapot Dome? 38 Studios has been and remains a huge sucking chest wound in Rhode Island’s economy, but it’s not the worst thing that’s ever happened in the US, not even in the state. Remember the Credit Union crisis?

But, having recently returned from a visit to the Bond Rating Folk in New York, Mattiello claims that we have no choice but to repay our “Moral Obligation.”

Let me reframe that little trip as a school yard scene…

Roger the Rocket wants a new video game! He doesn’t have enough money to buy the game, and Wally the Banker won’t lend him the money. But Little Rhody, who wants to be Roger’s friend, and thinks he’ll be able to play the game too, promises to pay Wally the Banker back if Wally will lend Roger the Rocket the money.

Wally loans Roger the money. Roger loses it on his way to the store. Roger can’t pay, but Wally says that Little Rhody has to pay.

Little Rhody doesn’t know what to do. Rhody didn’t have the money either! So Rhody goes to Wally the Banker’s friend, Bondy, who gives out grades of A, B and Junk, and ask them for advice. 

What do you think Bondy told Little Rhody to do?

Juvenile? Yes. Simplistic. Yes. Realistic? Startlingly so.

But the bad news is that the article keeps getting worse. Mattiello is telling these business people everything they want to hear. He’s going to lower corporate taxes. He’s going to raise the estate tax threshold.

One proposed bill, whose “nuances” he refused to discuss, would shift the way corporations taxes are assessed, from property, payroll and sales to just sales. In theory, this would increase revenue (presumably because they’d increase the taxes on corporate sales?), but in reality it looks like another big tax break for CVS. Think about it. What’s the biggest corporation in this state with the most employees and the most property?

Poor Little Rhody doesn’t know what to do. The rich kids all have so much money. Rhody wants to play in their playground. Maybe if Rhody will do whatever the rich kids say, then Rhody will be popular and have money too!

What do you think Rhody will do?

New EPA rule will be boon for RI renewable energy sector


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A coal-fired power plant in West Virginia. (Creative Commons)
A coal-fired power plant in West Virginia. (Creative Commons)

Rhode Island’s renewable energy industry is sure to benefit from the EPA’s new Clean Power Plan, said Abel Collins, program director of the Rhode Island chapter of the Sierra Club.

“The new EPA Carbon Rules are great news for Rhode Islanders, because the coal burning fire plants in the Midwest that have been poisoning our air for decades will either be closed down or cleaned up, preferably shuttered for good,” Collins said. “That will mean significant public health benefits, healthcare savings, and that’s even before we look at the climate impacts. Rhode Island’s economy is poised to capitalize on renewable energy development, and the planet will be better for it.”

Seeking a 30 percent cut in power plant emissions by 2030, the New York Times called President Obama’s executive order that the EPA tighten regulations on coal-based power plants “one of the strongest actions ever taken by the United States government to fight climate change.” It’s called the Clean Power Plan.

State Rep. Art Handy, primary sponsor of the Resilient RI bill that would develop a plan to address climate change said:

“While there has been much hand wringing about the new rule from the coal industry and their allies about these reasonable new rules, the truth is they will spur innovation in clean energy and efficiency, prevent thousands of deaths and millions of asthma attacks and will move our country in the right direction to reduce the impact of climate change on our economy and our society. Rhode Island with other northeastern states already started on this path with the successful RGGI program – the new rules will bring the rest of the country along with what we have been working towards for years.”

Channing Jones, campaign director of Environment Rhode Island said: “This announcement is exactly what we’ve been waiting for. EPA’s announcement is a huge win for the health of our families and our environment.”

He added, “The dirty energy companies that oppose this move may question the science and predict economic apocalypse if we act. They can make up whatever claims they want. But a cleaner, more energy-efficient economy and environment is not going to undermine our prosperity. In fact, our kids’ future depends on it.”

Jones’ comments echoed a post Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse wrote for Vice News, published Sunday night:

Sight unseen, the polluters have been characterizing the rules as part of a “war on coal” that will kill jobs and impose unfair costs on industry. Don’t believe them.

Their claims are exaggerated at best, and flat-out lies at worst — and they look at only one side of the ledger, ignoring the effects of carbon pollution on the rest of us.

The EPA proposal, according to Vox “will set different emissions targets for each state — which, when taken together, will aim to cut carbon-dioxide emissions from the nation’s power sector as much as 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.” After a one-year period to finalize and tweak the new rule, Rhode Island and other states will have until June 2016 to develop a plan to reduce emissions. “States will be given a variety of options for cutting their emissions — using more efficient technology at coal plants, boosting their use of solar or wind or nuclear power, or even joining regional cap-and-trade systems that require companies to pay to emit carbon-dioxide.”

Elorza, Smiley speak out on cancelled City Hall meeting


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Abandoned at City Hall

Thursday night’s last minute cancellation of the Providence City Council’s Ordinance Committee remains unexplained. Both the mayor’s office and members of the city council remain silent about the cancellation that left more than a hundred hotel workers and supporters, mostly women and working mothers, to arrive at an empty and unresponsive City Hall.

Two Democratic primary mayoral candidates did respond to my request for a comment on the cancellation, however. While not going so far as to support the $15 an hour minimum wage ordinance the hotel workers have brought before the City Council, the two candidates did champion the idea of open government and were critical of the decision to cancel the meeting without taking into account the sacrifices made by the workers to attend.

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Jorge Elorza

“This cancellation was an unnecessary and avoidable problem for those who planned on attending,” said Elorza, “As I made clear in my proposal on Revitalizing and Revamping City Hall, I believe that creating a friendly, customer service oriented atmosphere in City Hall is vital to maintaining the healthy functions of our government.”

Brett Smiley
Brett Smiley

Josh Block, Communications Director for the Smiley campaign, relayed the following statement to the hotel workers, “Brett shares your frustrations. He believes that, whatever decision is reached, it must be done in an open and transparent process. Brett is disappointed in the City Council leadership for playing politics and canceling the vote at the 11th hour without notifying the many hardworking men and women who made significant sacrifices and arrangements in order to show up and make sure their voices were heard.”

It is the right of every American that government be open and accessible. One might hope that the hotel workers be someday given an explanation and apology.

Santa Brito to Mayor Taveras: ‘Please support the working women of Providence’


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Santa Brito and child

After last Thursday night’s Providence City Council Ordinance Committee meeting in which the proposal to establish a $15 an hour living wage for hotel workers was to be discussed and voted on was cancelled, many of the women and men who made the effort to engage with their government were abandoned in City Hall with no way to speak to their government.

As Jenny Norris, MSW, said to me, “There are many, many, many, many, many barriers that prevent people from participating in government and policy discussions. What a shame it is when people actively overcome a lot those barriers only to be blindsided by a cancellation…”

Still, the women wanted to speak out, to directly address both the City Council and Mayor Angel Taveras. My camera caught them outside the Mayor’s locked office, and over the next few days I’ll be releasing their statements.

First up is Santa Brito. Santa has been a fierce advocate for hotel worker’s rights. She was fired from the hotel, possibly for her unionization efforts, shortly after giving birth to her child. The first video is translated into English, the second video is in the original Spanish.

 

Almonte: Good at grandstand, but not negotiating


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The third candidate for Treasurer, Ernest Almonte, never replied back to me after repeated attempts of reaching out to him. I therefore can’t say what his position is about standing up to the ratings agencies and their deceptive ratings practices.

matti-yellow2During his campaign, Almonte has been critical of exploring all options before making a decision on repaying the 38 Studios loans. Now, after House Speaker Mattiello put on a display of cowardice by pledging that taxpayers will be on the hook to Wall Street for the 38 Studios debacle, Almonte issued a press release urging elected officials to negotiate a settlement.

You can’t walk into a negotiation unless you have leverage. Promising Wall Street (who gamed the 38 Studios deal to begin with) that tax payers will be on the hook for the deal, gives up leverage. All along, Almonte has been giving up leverage by trumpeting the Wall Street talking points about repaying a bogus “moral obligation.” Almonte is doing nothing more than political grandstanding, which is a shame.

The elected leaders of Rhode Island have yet again been bamboozled by Wall Street. Wall Street sold a deal they knew was rotten and got our elected leaders to roll over and parrot the talking points of the 1%. It looks like any chance we had at negotiating a settlement is quickly going down the drain.

Attacked on Facebook by an alleged lobbyist


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gunnutEarly Sunday morning (about 1am), I received an unsolicited Facebook-Messenger attack. I can only imagine it was a response to my most recent opinion piece on the hearing befor Senate Finance on the 10% supplemental excise tax on guns and ammunition. Although, I cannot be certain. What I am certain of, however, is the remarkably angry tone and insensitive absence of logic, slung at me by a complete stranger was completely unprovoked.

In retrospect, I probably should have completely ignored it. In the future I will refrain from being baited into such pointless exercises. Maybe it was exhaustion or simply my own lack of self control, but I foolishly engaged in the dialogue and was so shocked by this person’s incapacity for civil discourse that I had to share it.

As a disclaimer, I am a progressive political operative. I make no attempt to hide the fact that I prioritize people over profits. However, I am far from radical. I tend to work within the system and, while my progressive values and personal integrity prevent me from keeping still and silent when I feel strongly about an issue, I make every attempt to accept opinions that differ from mine.

But, in the dead of night, when my smart phone chimed with unwarranted vitriol, spewed from a complete stranger who, like any well practiced bully, picks a fight by finding sensitive pressure points, I took the bait.

Here is the actual Facebook Messenger conversation. I added some personal commentary and removed the name of the individual to maintain privacy. I also blurred the photograph. However, everything else is copied, unedited, as it occurred.

The stranger’s voice appears under the blurred photo. My voice appears in bold face type. Commentary is in italics.

The Constitution has been clear for 227 years.  Maybe you should grab a  copy  of  “Constitution For Dummies” (cliff note version) …maybe Barnes and Noble could special order you one.

The Constitution has not been clear for 227 years. If it had been, we would not need a Supreme court to interpret and render decisions. Pick up a copy of a GED online, since you haven’t bothered to pay attention in civics. Don’t contact me again.

Every decision protects what it stands for

You can write all the garbage you’d like….

I know. See amendment # 1.

Yes unfortunately we have to tolerate nonsense

I addition to all the corruption in this state

No. I can block you. Bye, psycho.

Yeah I’ll see you at the state house

Asshole

Is that a threat? If so, I will contact the state police.

I’m a lobbyist for tax paying citizens

If this person is a lobbyist, he/she is not registered as such with the Secretary of State in Rhode Island.

Do you feel threatened?? Good

So am I. The police have been contacted. Please wait by your door.

So, I lied here. I did not contact the police. I was tired and trying to express that communication of threats is a crime.

Whatever

Excellent argument.

Can’t debate with an idiot liberal… They start whining

When you want to have a real debate id LOVe to

Can’t argue with crazy. I’m busy organizing.

The classic response

You know crazy you walk through it’s doors every day . Night

Okay, put the needle down and seek some rehab, sugar.

I got mean here. I shouldn’t have insinuated that the person was an intravenous drug user. I’ve known many who suffer from addiction and their condition should not be minimized by using it as an insult.

 

That’s for the illegals to take care of

You know you give them the ok….

I don’t even know what your talking about. Can you please stop typing and crawl back to the cave you came from. I don’t know you or care what you think. I’ve never heard of you. I don’t want to hear from you again. Please cease and desist your unsolicited harassment of me. Nobody cares about your ideas or opinions.

Can’t wait to share this

Nobody cares. Grow up.

Oh, they will.

At this point I made good on my threat to block the person.

I am trying not to form generalizations based on this encounter. My hope is that this incident does not represent the majority of right-wing, conservatives. I assume this person to be a right-wing conservative only because of the disparraging description of me as an “idiot liberal.”  He or she does not appear to be liberal, so I do not think he or she thinks of his or herself as a smart liberal and is simply pointing out my stupidity. I also hope that this person is not actually a lobbyist for taxpayers. I pay taxes. I don’t want to be represented by an unregistered bigot.

However, the ominous (or hilarious) church bell finale to the conversation left me wondering if this is the sort of red flag that should be noticed prior to an incidence of domestic terrorism. I’m going to choose to laugh this one off. But, one never knows.

ProJo declares working mothers a “Threat to Providence”


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A threat to Providence?

In what may be a new low for a newspaper that recently seems committed to charting new territory in its depth of uncaring, classist fear mongering, the Providence Journal has declared low wage working mothers to be a special interest group posing a “threat” to Providence. Disingenuously claiming that, “we all want workers to earn more money,” the unsigned editorial calls mandating a $15 an hour living wage for hotel workers “an election-year stunt divorced from economic reality.”

What is divorced from reality is the idea that a group of people peacefully petitioning their government for relief from exploitative treatment and a chance at decent wages should somehow be characterized as a “threat.” Is it a threat when workers ask for fair wages? Is it a threat when workers ask for fair treatment?

The ProJo, as usual, has it all backwards. The only threats are coming from the hotels, and the hotels have shown that they are capable of delivering on their threats. There are stories, more than one, of workers being threatened with losing their jobs if they persist in trying to unionize. Several workers, including many young mothers, have been fired. The hotels also threaten to close up shop or stop hiring if this proposal passes.

Imagine if the room rates at the Renaissance were to go up from $250 to $255 a night to cover the increase in workers pay. Does this really sound like the economic apocalypse foretold in prophecy?

The ProJo quotes Todd B. Finard, CEO of Finard Properties, which owns the Providence Biltmore hotel as saying, “We pay our people well and have labor peace. But if room rates go up, how can Providence compete?”

Guess what? The Biltmore already pays some of their workers nearly $15 an hour. Testimony was given at the City Council meeting from a woman who makes $14.85 cleaning rooms. She talked about how this wage allows her to provide for her children and even save money for college, something working women at the Renaissance for $8.50 can only dream of.

Who are these “threats” to Providence that the ProJo wants to terrify us with? One can’t help but wonder what it is about them that the ProJo finds so threatening…

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She has an opinion! Watch out!
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What is she about to do with that paper in her hand?
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Feel threatened yet?
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They look dangerous.

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Stop threatening me!

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She’s threatening us… somehow…

Pro 15 18

Pro 15 13
Dangerous.

Pro 15 15     Pro 15 10   Pro 15 07   Pro 15 04  Pro 15 02   Fight for 15 010   Fight for 15 006  Fight for 15 004


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