PawSox Stadium opponents film music video outside McCoy


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2015-06-05 McCoy Sing-a-Long 012On Saturday morning over 75 people assembled outside McCoy Stadium in Pawtucket to sing a slightly altered version of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” for a video planned to protest moving the Pawtucket Red Sox to a proposed new stadium in Providence. Director Murray Scott lead the crowd in singing the song, from cue cards, four times as volunteers stopped traffic. Surprisingly, none of the drivers of any of the cars evidenced anything but support for the effort, despite the inconvenience of being stopped. instead drivers honked horns, waved, or gave thumb’s up to the efforts of the singers.

Despite what appears to be recent victories for stadium opponents in the form of RI Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello‘s admission that a deal with Brown University and the City of Providence seems unlikely, organizers Tim Empkie, Sharon Steele and David Norton all feel that the pressure needs to be kept on.

Murray Scott says that the video made today will be premiered in a couple of weeks on the Motif Magazine and GoLocal Prov news sites. In the meantime, below is a preview.

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Meet Cedric de Leon, author of new ‘Right To Work’ book


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RI Future presents….

origins adProgressive Providence College professor Cedric de Leon discusses his new book:

“Origins of Right To Work: Antilabor Democracy in Nineteenth Century Chicago”

At AS220, Saturday, September 12 from 5 to 7 pm

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cedricde Leon’s book contends Right To Work-style laws first came in to fashion after the Civil War when anti-labor forces said unionization was akin to employment slavery. He’ll be discussing his research as well as what Rhode Islanders can do to prevent RTW laws from coming here, and how we may not be able to stop them from becoming the law of the land through an impending Supreme Court case.

Check out this extended interview with de Leon about his book, right to work laws in general, what Rhode Islanders can do to keep RTW out of the Ocean State and how the Supreme Court may foist it upon us anyways.

Is this the end of Lucchino’s field of dreams?


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providence-stadium-rendering-april-2015By Friday evening, the opponents of the PawSox proposal to build a stadium in Providence were ecstatic. After a ruling by the federal government that the I-195 land must be sold at fair market value, a well-attended and media-friendly party on Monday at the proposed site, followed by reports that Brown refused to sell their property that PawSox owner Lucchino would have needed to build his stadium on and Speaker Matiello’s comments that the project now looked unlikely, it seemed to some like a victory.

Or is it?

The late African freedom fighter Amilcar Cabral once told his troops “tell no lies, claim no easy victories.” There are several reasons that would indicate this is not the end of the PawSox putsch, just a break before a real offensive. Even if the parcels designated as parkland remain as such, that does not mean Larry Lucchino is done, not by a long shot.

First, consider the fact that, following the Dueling Pianos forum on August 25, Lucchino was spotted the next day touring the site of the old Victory Plating factory, now called Victory Place. Throughout the I-195 land forum, members of the audience were almost unanimous in opposing building a stadium on that parcel in particular. But several members of the audience did in fact suggest Victory Place as an alternative they would be open to see developed into a stadium. The crowd at Dueling Pianos that evening was not unanimous in opposition to a state subsidy for a ballpark, they were just opposed to the parcel in question being used for that purpose. There is a big difference there.

Second, Gov. Raimondo told WPRO that the negotiations continue despite the revelations about Brown regarding the land. She said then:

As I’ve said all along, it’s a complex deal, you have to get it right for the taxpayers, we’re working through it but there are definite obstacles and we can’t rush through them.

Coming from someone who said her scheme to bail out Wall Street was ‘pension reform’, that does not sound like any conversations involving Mr. Lucchino have been terminated.

Mattiello was subjected to a lot of constituent pressure following a round of canvassing of his district by stadium opponents. He also is probably feeling a little stress around the recent revelations about 38 Studios, which show that his mentor William Murphy and his predecessor Gordon Fox were pulling strings long before former Gov. Carcieri laid eyes on Curt Schilling. He has said he is open to having all the facts come out regarding the ongoing litigation so that the public can know the truth. But if he were serious about it, why has he yet to grant Oversight Committee Chair Rep. Karen MacBeth the subpoena power she has been requesting since Mike Stanton profiled him for Rhode Island Monthly in September 2014? Back then, Mattiello was sticking to the original narrative about how the 38 Studios deal was concocted and had a rather problematic excuse regarding MacBeth:

As for 38 Studios, Mattiello says that it was “stone-cold conservatives” — Schilling and former Republican Governor Donald Carcieri — “who put this together.” Carcieri “was trying to throw a Hail Mary pass” to jump-start the economy.
Then [Gordon] Fox and friend Mike Corso, the shadowy 38 Studios agent and Providence tax-credit king, got involved and pushed it through a largely unsuspecting legislature… Representative Karen MacBeth, whom Mattiello had made chair of the powerful Oversight Committee in exchange for her support for speaker, is publicly challenging him on 38 Studios. MacBeth is upset that Mattiello won’t allow her to subpoena witnesses to investigate, which she says he promised during a meeting at a McDonald’s to secure her vote for speaker. Mattiello says he never explicitly promised subpoena power. While he favors a full airing of the facts, he says, he doesn’t want to interfere with the ongoing state police probe or civil suits. Furthermore, he questions going to the time and expense to subpoena witnesses who would likely take the Fifth, given the other investigations.

If he was so worried about the expense of a few subpoenaed testimonies before the Oversight Committee, what could possibly have changed his mind in regards to a construction project that economists agree is a way to loose money and proposed by a man who left Baltimore and San Diego rueing the day they met him?

Video games? What do I know about video games, my kids play them!
Video games? What do I know about video games, my kids play them!

More than likely, this is the reality of the situation: Lucchino has struck out once but will be up to bat again very soon. We are approaching an election year where Mattiello and the rest of the General Assembly are up for re-election but Gina Raimondo is not. She is also trying to get her tolls bill passed. The construction trade unions have not rescinded their endorsement of a stadium proposal. Lucchino has not come forward and said he will stay in Pawtucket. The Providence Journal, who are always to the right and almost always in the wrong, to paraphrase Gore Vidal, continue to print editorials in support of a ball park, which is a meter of how viable their sources think a deal is. More than likely, stadium subsidies will become a bargaining chit following the November election, Mattiello will push the toll bill through in exchange for support for a publicly-funded stadium. All the while, he will hem and haw about due process while quietly praying that the State Police don’t produce a damning report akin to the one regarding Allan Fung that shows he was not totally oblivious as the Number Three on Smith Hill regarding what Number One and Number Two were dreaming about video games until after the polls close on November 8, 2016.

Like Yogi Berra said, it ain’t over ’til it’s over.

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Groden Center employees picket, demand better wages


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Lafleur takes about the address the crowd.
Lafleur takes about the address the crowd.

More than 50 staff, union reps, and concerned families chanted and picketed Thursday afternoon at The Groden Center in Providence. The gathered participants were making their concerns public in their struggle for fair wages and safe staffing practices.

“At one time the Groden Center was considered an excellent school for autism,” said Cory Lafleur a staff member and key figure in negotiations with the Groden management, “and I want to help it get there.”

According to Lafleur the staff has been negotiating with Groden management since October with no changes and are now going public with their fight. Lafleur, who has worked at Groden for ten years, says he’s “seen things deteriorate,” and that the school is “loosely run,” with an emphasis on a “high turnover” rather than taking care of employees. Lafleur has accused Groden of walking away in the middle of negotiations and wasting the staff’s time while not budging on any point.

Picketers marching
Picketers marching

Among those in attendance were reps like Chas Walker from Service Employees International United (SEIU) Local 1199, who was running the event, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local 328, Teamsters Local 251, among a plethora of other local reps. All supporting the cause of Groden staff members including Rep. Patricia Serpa (D-West Warwick) and Rep. J. Aaron Regunberg (D-Providence).

Most of The Groden Center staff receive as little as $11.25 an hour, with very few making above $12.00 an hour. Allison Peterson, who has worked at The Groden Center in Coventry for three years, claims to have only received one raise in that time and only because of new hiring practices. Rep. Serpa called the treatment of the staff “morally repugnant” and “incomprehensible.”

According to Peterson during emergencies the staff are able to make “support calls” and have additional staff from nearby facilities intervene to ensure student safety. But even at times that’s not enough.

The chanting rang out in the Eastside neighborhood as Fil Eden lead the calls through a megaphone, various chants of “Can’t survive on eleven twenty-five!” and “What do we want? Safe Staffing. When do we want it? Now!”

Corey Lafluer wearing a sign before handing out fliers to passing traffic.
Corey Lafluer wearing a sign before handing out fliers to passing traffic.

Safe staffing means hiring more guides to take care of the children, with current student to staff ratios being nearly 1 to 2, or a 1 to 1. It would seem this number should mean each student is properly cared for but many students need near constant care as well as emergency cases where more 2, or even 3, staff members need to stop a student from hurting themselves or others. Leaving other students unattended.

“I’m passionate about it, I love the kids, I love what this institution is built on, but I don’t see them caring as much as I care. And that’s a problem,” said Lafleur.

Lafleur, Peterson, and many other staff spoke at length about the quality of care they provide and the love they have for the children under their care. As well as having the right kind of staff and people work at the school. The job coming with many difficulties, from the above mentioned emergencies to the slow progress of many of the students who are on somewhere on the autism scale.

“Not everybody is cut out for this job, so when you have people that are willing to work here, that enjoy working here, understand that they’re not gonna get rich working here, and don’t want to leave,” Lafleur said through a megaphone to the gathered crowd. “You need to recognize those people and pay them what they deserve.”