We are not deserving, we are lucky


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51RGjjDctHL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_We all, every one of us, make up stories to justify our good fortune.

If we are lucky enough to have good health, a decent home and full bellies, we are quick to ascribe it all to our own efforts and slow to credit the largess of others or to the situational nature of our placement in the world. We love stories of hard work and sacrifice yielding great rewards and pretend to disdain inherited wealth and titles. We imagine, without evidence, that the world operates as a gigantic meritocracy, dolling out the proper amount of wealth and security to each according to their ability to earn it.

Our view of those who lead less wonderful lives is almost always tainted by a childish criticism of the person’s character. I say childish because I remember being child and learning about slavery in the United States. My first thought was, “I would never let anyone enslave me.”

As a child I was white and male and comfortably middle class. It was easy as a kid reading Marvel Comics and watching Star Trek reruns to believe that corrupt systems can be overthrown and bad people defeated. As a child, the world is black and white, and a child’s imagination, as wonderful and creative as it might be, lacks the ability to understand the soul crushing effects of psychological, emotional, sexual and physical torture that perpetuates an engine like slavery.

(I am reading an excellent book on this subject, The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism by Edward E Baptist that brings to light the cruelty of slavery through the lens of “unfettered” capitalism.)

One of Providence's Tent Cities (Via the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless)
One of Providence’s Tent Cities (Via the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless)

These are the thoughts I had when thinking about my first night volunteering for Registry Week, the first step in the Zero:16 campaign to end veteran and chronic homelessness in Rhode Island by 2016. Last night I sat across a table at Crossroads, a homeless shelter in Providence, and interviewed around a half dozen people who are currently homeless.

The questions I asked were extremely personal at times, delving into physical and mental health, interactions with law enforcement and financial issues. Everyone had the right, even after consenting to the interview, to not answer any of the questions, but everyone answered every question. Some of the stories I heard were heartbreaking. The people I interviewed are not bad or possessed of some life defining moral failing. They are simply the winners of a lottery none of us wants to enter.

Certainly some of the people I talked to have issues with alcohol or the law, and some of the people I talked to don’t manage their finances properly or plan for the future, but these are not crimes. We all have friends and family with addiction issues and not all of us are smart with our money, but only some of us are homeless.

Homelessness is the end result of a number of unfortunate life circumstances. Most of us deal with these issues one at a time, some of us deal with two or three at a time. Most of us have family and fiends we can count on when things go wrong. It’s not our wonderful natures that immunize us from the terrors of the world, it’s the luck of the draw.

But the childish among us want to pretend that rewards and punishments are doled out fairly. Some of us made the right choices, went to the right schools, angled for the right job, avoided all the pitfalls and scored big. But deep down, we all know differently. That’s why some cities and towns (including, apparently, downtown Providence in Kennedy Plaza) outlaw feeding the homeless. Some people don’t want to see the victims of the game they are winning. It’s out of sight, out of mind, a willing dismissal of the object permanence we learned at nine months old or a cultivated cognitive dissonance.

Those of us who are not homeless might work hard and do all the right things, but when it comes time to account for our fortune the number one determinant is luck.

We are lucky.

That’s it.

Providence students, in their own words


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panel studentFor those who wonder what is really going on in those big old high schools in Providence, Brown University is hosting a discussion about them Thursday, featuring as speakers the very students who experience or have experienced them on a daily basis.

It begins at 6:30 p.m. in the Salomon Center for Teaching, Room 001, the College Green. Twelve current and former high school students from Central, Classical, Hope, Alvarez, E-Cubed Academy, The Met and Paul Cuffee, will contribute their perspectives on a number of issues confronting their schools, such as their schools’ reputations, graduation and college admission rates, what students are offered for lunch, and what they believe makes a great teacher.

There will be a half hour of facilitator-generated Q&A  and then 45 minutes of interactive audience Q&A. The discussion is sponsored by Generation Citizen, BRYTE, Providence Student Union, and the Rhode Island Urban Debate League.

A few words of advice for Raimondo, Elorza


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elorza_raimondoThe votes have been cast and counted, the public has spoken and our officials have been elected. Before our new slate of state and local office holders start to govern, R.I. Future asked some of Rhode Island political experts for their advice and words of wisdom for Governor-elect Gina Raimondo and Mayor-elect Jorge Elorza.

Keep the healthy balance of family and professional roles you showed throughout the campaign. And always listen to your mother! – Lt. Governor Elizabeth Roberts (to Raimondo, specifically)

 

Surround yourself with good people and encourage them to disagree with you and each other. Communicate your vision to your team and let them execute it. Have measurements for progress and evaluate honestly. – Providence Mayor Angel Taveras

 

Never forget how much people are relying on you and the difference your work will make in their lives. Remembering this every day is the best way to remain positive, energized, and focused through the difficult decisions you will be required to make.

Don’t forget the small things, they add up. From taking time to call on a family member’s birthday, to speaking directly with constituents constantly, to writing personal thank you notes, or acknowledging the excellent work of a staff member; these gestures help remind you of the important things and help keep you grounded.

Be sure to hire smart, talented and reliable people who are willing to disagree with you. Surrounding yourself with dedicated staffers who will ensure your work is on the right track is essential to success. – – Congressman David Cicilline

 

Keep your promises, surround yourself with smart, hardworking people and never forget why you wanted this job in the first place. It’s about the people of Rhode Island, and when you hit a roadblock, turn to them for support and guidance. – Congressman Jim Langevin

 

What advice would you offer our newly elected officials? Please comment below and let us know.

10 things Gina Raimondo should do as governor


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Governor-elect Gina Raimondo will undoubtedly accomplish much as Rhode Island’s chief executive. Exactly what she accomplishes is up to us. Here’s a list of 10 policy ideas where I think she should spend her time and effort.

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1. Raise the minimum wage. As a candidate, she pledged to lift the lowest legal hourly wage from $9 to $10.10 an hour and then adjust it for inflation going forward. The Economic Progress Institute says a single adult needs to earn $11.93 an hour to afford the most basic living expenses.

2. Outlaw payday loans. She’s been a vocal opponent of high-interest, predatory payday loans and Rhode Island is a regional outlier in allowing them – payday loans actually have a special carve out in state usury law. I suspect this will be the issue she will clash with House Speaker Nick Mattiello over, with former House Speaker Bill Murphy being a paid lobbyist for payday loans and a close friend of Mattiello’s.

3. Grab the I-195 project by the horns and turn it into the most exciting thing in the state. Providence is in the hugely unique situation of almost completely redesigning its downtown in one single generation – and long after people stop talking about 38 Studios and pension reform they will remember how the city changed after the highway was moved.

4. No more small ball when it comes to public education. Charter schools and high stakes tests are neither the cause of or solution to the systemic issues in public education – which is that inner city schools aren’t doing well. Rhode Island needs to have a big picture conversation about public education. Here’s hoping Clay Pell and Bob Healey are as much a part of that conversation as is the first gentleman.

5. Two-for-one: make the Ocean State the most resilient vacation destination. In the next four years, Rhode Island can expect sea level rise, devastating hurricanes, floods and even sustained droughts. Perhaps the best thing we can do to for the tourist economy is ensure it can survive any of that.

6. Rebuild Rhode Island. It’s not a super sexy issue, but it’s a necessary one. Fixing our failing infrastructure will not only help us get around, it’ll also put people back to work. And fixing our infrastructure isn’t just repairing roads and bridges – it’s also updating infrastructure for the 21st century, and this means more and better public transportation. A Narragansett Bay ferry could stimulate growth on many fronts.

7. Fill the Superman Building. See number 3. Get Roger Williams Law School to relocate here, and see number 8.

8. Double team the nonprofits. As goes Providence so goes Rhode Island, so it makes sense for the governor to work with Mayor Elorza in getting the property tax-exempt nonprofits to pay a fairer share for city services.

9. Sunlight. It’s no wonder Rhode Islanders don’t trust our government – they get to see so little of it.  Use your bully pulpit to end late night legislating, make elected officials more accountable to public records request and push hard for transparency wherever you see darkness.

10. What about jobs? I know this is supposed to be the first thing on everyone’s agenda, but if Gina Raimondo can take care of these nine issues, the jobs will fall into place and before we know it Rhode Island will be known for having the strongest economy in the country.