‘My story is Providence’s story’ Jorge Elorza’s reintroduction speech


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Photo courtesy of Dan McGowan/WPRI.com
Photo courtesy of Dan McGowan/WPRI.com

In an effort to define himself to undecided voters, Democratic mayoral hopeful Jorge Elorza reintroduced himself to Providence voters today.

“My story is Providence’s story,” said the son of Guatemalan immigrants, in front of the elementary school he attended as a boy, who went on to become a housing court judge and a Roger Williams law school professor before running for mayor.

Elorza said priorities will include improving education for everyone and using grants to get more police officers on the streets. “If you want a Mayor who will move Providence forward, I am your candidate,” he said.

You can read news coverage of Elorza’s event here from WPRI, RIPR and the Providence Journal.

And you can read the full text of Elorza’s speech here:

Good morning and thank you for coming. I especially want to thank Representative Grace Diaz for that warm introduction.

Many people in Providence are just starting to get to know me since I won the primary and became the Democratic nominee for Mayor. A lot of people are thinking, “I want Providence to move forward, not backward. What’s Jorge’s vision for Providence? What kind of Mayor will he be?”

My vision for Providence stems from my story, and my story is Providence’s story. I come from nothing. I was raised here in the West End, the son of Guatemalan immigrants. My parents both worked in factories – in fact, my mother is still working second shift in a factory today. While working in the factories, my mom managed to run her own daycare out of our home. I watched my parents work hard and count every dollar to create a better life for me.

I’m a product of the Providence Public School System. I went to elementary school right at Asa Messer then on to Bridgham Middle School and Classical High School. I was rejected from every college I applied to before I was fortunate enough to be accepted at URI, where I graduated first in my Accounting class. I went on to get my law degree from Harvard. I worked as an accountant for a big firm in New York before coming back to Providence and becoming a law professor and a judge on the Housing Court.

The bottom line is I grew up here, my family struggled, and I know what it’s like to grow up in a school system and in a city where it’s too easy for kids to fall behind and fall through the cracks.

I also know the challenges we face today, and I have a bold and clear vision to move Providence forward. My vision for moving forward is informed by what I saw growing up, and what I continue to see every day in the neighborhood where I live: working class families struggling to get by, minority communities struggling to find work, college students willing yet unable to remain here after graduation, small business owners held back by red tape.

For me it’s personal. I decided to leave my high-paying accounting job and move back to Providence when my father called me one night and told me that one of my best friends from childhood had been killed – murdered in our old neighborhood right around the corner from here. I decided then and there that I would come back to the city I grew up in – the city I love – to fight for a brighter future.

You’re going to hear a lot in this race about me and my opponents, and some of it may be a distraction from the fact that this incredibly important election is about the people of our city – the hardworking people who live here, work here and call Providence home.

This election is about building world-class schools we can be proud to send our children to. It’s about growing our tax base and creating good paying jobs that help our working families succeed. It’s about creating a government and business climate that’s transparent and friendly. It’s about keeping our streets safe and our neighborhoods vibrant so that our families can live safely and enjoy the quality of life they work so hard for.

Education must be our number one priority. Far too often I hear from families that say, “You know what Jorge, I love Providence, and I want to stay here and raise my family, but I don’t feel like I can send my children to our public schools.”

Well, that has to change. It’s time we make the appropriate investments in our schools so that we provide every child in Providence a world-class education. This to me is one of the most important ways we raise our families out of poverty, encourage more people to come live in Providence, and encourage business and homeowners alike to make investments in our communities.

We have to reduce the amount of violence in our city. And we need more officers on the street. We all know that funding for that isn’t going to materialize out of thin air, so we need to be aggressive in applying for grants and going to the federal government to find it, something I will work closely with our Congressional delegation to do.

A new class of police will be on the streets soon. And while that number still won’t be enough, I am committed to having those officers spend a significant portion of their first year on the job literally walking their beats, building those relationships in the community.

We also need more police officers who live in the city, officers who understand firsthand what our neighbors are experiencing. And we need a police department that truly reflects the community it serves.

We need an economy that works for everyone. That’s why I’ve proposed a plan to double our export economy, so that we can create jobs here in the city. That’s why I’ve proposed a plan to ensure equity for women and minority businesses, so that our most underserved communities get their fair share. That’s why I’ve proposed a plan for a citywide broadband network, so we can jumpstart the kind of knowledge-based economy that will retain our students.

And that’s why I’ve proposed a plan to instill an efficient, customer-service oriented approach in City Hall, so that our business people can spend less time filing paperwork, and more time creating jobs.

The bottom line is that we can no longer afford to balance our budget on the backs of the hard working families that live in our city. As mayor, it will be amongst my top priorities to recruit businesses to Providence that provide good paying jobs and expand our tax base.

If you want to know what I’m made of – my commitment to standing with and fighting for working families – look at what I did on the Housing Court.  I had seen firsthand the negative impact that foreclosed and abandoned properties have on our neighborhoods, and I wanted to do something about it. I pioneered a process to hold the banks responsible for these blighted properties. I called them into my court and I asked them, “What are you going to do with this property? And what’s your timeline to do it?”

They didn’t appear. They were too big to care, but I made them care. I began holding the biggest banks in the world in contempt of court, fining them hundreds of thousands of dollars. I even threatened to have the president of Bank of America arrested – that certainly got their attention. To their credit, the banks finally came before my court and took responsibility for these properties, resulting in many of these homes being repaired and returned to market. To the best of my knowledge, ours was the first Housing Court and I was the first judge in the country to do this.

That’s the fight I’ll bring to the Mayor’s office. I will be a Mayor who surrounds himself with the best and the brightest. I will be the kind of mayor who opens up City Hall and lets in fresh air, fresh blood, and the sunshine of new ideas.

This idea of One Providence is so powerful to me, because when I was growing up back in the 80s and the 90s, it didn’t always feel like there was just one Providence.

Sometimes it felt like there was more than one city within the city. If you knew the right people, ran in the right circles, supported the right politician, you lived in one city. Then, there were those who didn’t know the right people, who didn’t run in the right circles, who didn’t support the right politician, and certainly didn’t have any money to give anybody. They lived in another city entirely.

They lived in a city where schools crumbled and kids dropped out, where neighborhoods deteriorated and went ignored if they didn’t vote the right way, where business people could watch their life’s fortune evaporate if they didn’t have the right connection at City Hall. I grew up in that second city, and so when I talk about running an ethical, transparent City Hall, this not just a slogan to be slapped on a campaign poster.

If you want a Mayor who will move Providence forward, I am your candidate.

I look forward to releasing more detailed proposals over the coming weeks and bringing my message door to door, person to person to every neighborhood in Providence.

Thank you.

 

ACLU: Leaked docs show RI driver’s license pics used in terrorism database


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Leaked classified documents indicate the Rhode Island Department of Motor Vehicles is sharing residents’ driver’s photos with the National Counterterrorism Center, a little-known federal agency that has authority to broadly monitor US citizens, according to the RI ACLU.

“The ACLU of RI has deep concerns about our state’s collusion with the NCTC in this manner, because it means that the DMV is assisting the federal government in collecting personal information about innocent Rhode Islanders,” wrote RI ACLU Executive Director Steve Brown in a letter to the DMV on August 20.

The ACLU sent the letter to media outlets today. It describes how the document in question indicates Rhode Island, and only 14 other states, have allowed the NCTC to use driver license photos in a vast database of American citizens.

In response to media inquiries, Governor Lincoln Chafee said, “Since the receipt of the letter, my administration has done an investigation and has found no evidence of the proactive sharing of information with the NCTC. I look forward to working with the Rhode Island ACLU on this issue.”

The ACLU’s Brown said the document came to his attention while reading a post on The Intercept, a news website that publishes Edward Snowden documents.

This post, written by highly-regarded national security reporters Jeremy Scahill and Ryan Devaraux, is titled “Barack Obama’s Secret Terrorist-Tracking System, By The Numbers”. They report, “Of the 680,000 people caught up in the government’s Terrorist Screening Database—a watchlist of ‘known or suspected terrorists’ that is shared with local law enforcement agencies, private contractors, and foreign governments—more than 40 percent are described by the government as having ‘no recognized terrorist group affiliation.’ That category—280,000 people—dwarfs the number of watchlisted people suspected of ties to al Qaeda, Hamas, and Hezbollah combined.”

The story links to a document, with a National Counterterrorism Center seal, called : “Directorate of Terrorist Identities(DTI)Strategic Accomplishments 2013”. It says Rhode Island is one of 15 states to participate in a program that collects facial images from driver’s licenses.

On page 8, it reads:

To fulfill the biometric enhancement mission within DTI’s Identity Intelligence Group (IIG), the Biometric Analysis Branch (BAB) began an outreach/partnership effort with the larger law enforcement community to collect facial images associated with driver’s license data. With support from FBI partners and NCTC’s Domestic Representatives, this enhancement mission took on significant growth in FY13. BAB now coordinates directly with the following states; Arizona, Texas, New York, Maryland, Delaware, Washington DC, Florida, California, Virginia, Oregon, Massachusetts, Nevada, Gieorgia, Colorado, Washington, and Rhode Island. This effort has resulted in 2,400 Driver’s License facial images added to TIDE in FY13.

Why PVD Teachers Union is wrong to support Cianci


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CianciMaribeth Reynolds-Calabro, the president of the Providence Teachers Union, says her group is [sic]”progressive and solutions-driven and steadfastly committed to teacher’s rights.” You could have fooled me.

Based on its recent endorsement of Vincent A Cianci, Jr for mayor of Providence, the labor union’s executive board seems blind to the past, and ignores the present. Some connected teachers may well get better perks from Buddy (while many others grow jaded, leave the profession or fight like hell for their kids) but Providence has every reason to assume that Cianci will be bad for children, families, and dedicated teachers, as he was before.

Between 1989 and 1999, child poverty in Providence increased from 35% to 40%. During the same time, if you look at South Providence and the West End in particular, child poverty increased from 42% to 49%, and the city’s median household income declined by 7%.

Not enough numbers? Records from the RI Department of Education are hardly uplifting. In the 1997-1998 school year, the Providence high school graduation rate was 68.46%. In the 1998-1999 school year, the graduation rate was 71.4%.  In 1999- 2000, the graduation rate was 63.04%. In 2000-2001, the rate was  63.74%. In 2001-2002, the rate was 72%. At best, Cianci’s record is dramatically inconsistent, as graduation rates were marked by rapid fluctuations between the low 60s and low 70s.

According to RI Kids Count, “the high school graduation rate among Hispanic youth in the class of 2010 was 66%, lower than the overall Rhode Island high school graduation rate of 76%.” Children and families need this to move forward. What in Cianci’s record shows he has the skills to do so consistently?

For a dedicated teacher’s point of view of the Cianci era, check out Carole Marshall’s memoir- Stubborn Hope, about her time teaching English at Hope High School.

What about facilities? Can we trust Cianci to champion and oversee a true overhaul of city facilities? As Mike Stanton once wrote in the Providence Journal, “Since 1991, the Providence School Department had leased ..[a] former body shop at 400 West Fountain St. as a registration center for new students. The lease had generated controversy. The city’s impoverished school system paid more than $1 million for a building that was drafty and dreary, with concrete floors and inaccessible bathrooms. Critics pointed out that the city could have bought a better building for a fraction of the inflated rent it was paying. A reform-minded School Committee member tried to get out of the lease when it came up for renewal in 1994. But she was told not to buck City Hall.”

Do I need to mention the police testing scandal and repeated complaints of abuse?

For any group of professionals, with a straight face, to claim that Cianci “clearly understands the needs of our district” willfully ignores the real damage and hurts caused by his actions and inactions in neighborhoods where thousands of public school children live.

Remember, this “teacher” endorsement doesn’t come from a vote of union members, but a vote of the 13 person executive board. Not a single member of the executive board has a Latino or Asian American surname despite the fact that 68% of the current student body and families are Latino and Asian American. This PTU executive board is not reflective of, or reflecting on, the reality of Providence today.

Providence teachers deserve a union responsive to their needs and the needs of students and families. Providence residents need a responsive teachers’ union interested in actual solutions. Hitching on to the Cianci train is a ticket to nowhere good, and fast.