ACLU to honor RI Coalition for the Homeless, Megan Smith at annual celebration


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Annual meeting image for emailThe ACLU of Rhode Island works tirelessly to defend fundamental rights here in the Ocean State. Now, it’s time to celebrate that work. Join us on Thursday, October 22at the Providence Biltmore to take part in our Annual Meeting Celebration and raise a glass to another year of protecting civil liberties. This year, the ACLU of Rhode Island is honoring the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless and homeless rights advocate Megan Smith as the 2015 “Raymond J. Pettine Civil Libertarian of the Year” award recipients.

The ACLU of RI is honoring the Coalition and Ms. Smith  for their unyielding advocacy for the civil rights and liberties of individuals experience homelessness, and for the invaluable support and resources they provide. The RI Coalition for the Homeless works to promote and preserve the dignity and quality of life for men, women, and children by pursuing comprehensive and cooperative solutions to the problems of housing and homelessness. Ms. Smith is an outreach worker and case manager with PATH, a program of the House of Hope CDC that works primarily with individuals experiencing street homelessness. Both are also tireless advocates for policies and reforms that affirm the rights of the homeless and protect individuals experiencing homelessness from discrimination.

ACLU supporters will mix, mingle, and enjoy hors d’oeuvres and cocktails while they celebrate the civil liberties successes of the past year and recognize the hard work of these two honorees dedicated to protecting the rights of the homeless.

ACLU of RI volunteer attorneys Sonja Deyoe, Carly Iafrate, and Neal McNamara will also provide updates on their ongoing and important court cases.

Celebrate your rights and freedoms, honor the RI Coalition for the Homeless and Ms. Smith, and support the ACLU of Rhode Island by purchasing your ticket today!

Tickets for the evening are $65 and are available for purchase online or by calling the ACLU office (401-831-7171). RSVP by October 14.

COCKTAILS & CONVERSATION

ACLU of Rhode Island’s Annual Meeting Celebration

 

Thursday, October 22 at 6 P.M.

(Registration begins at 5:30 P.M.)

 

Providence Biltmore

11 Dorrance St., Providence, RI 02903

Complimentary valet parking provided to all guests.

Mayor Elorza calls Black Lives Matter coffee cup ‘very important issue’


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jorge elorza nbcProvidence Mayor Jorge Elorza said the uproar among Providence police officers who took issue with a teenager Dunkin Donuts employee who wrote “#blacklivesmatter” on a cop’s coffee cup is a “very important issue” and pointed out that the community and the officers that serve and protect it are closer than this issue would make it seem.

“I’m really proud we haven’t had the outbursts and the violence that we’ve seen in other communities,” Elorza told RI Future after an appearance on NBC10 News Conference Friday morning. “And it’s not a coincidence. We’ve spent a lot of time building relationships between the police department and the community and it always can be better but I also think we have a lot to be proud of.”

He made certain to draw a distinction between the police union and the police department and said, “If we continue to focus on what brings us together as a community we can make sure that here in Providence we avoid some of the issues we’ve seen in other cities.”

Negotiations sour between Verizon, IBEW union


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2015-10-01 Verizon 012Verizon worker negotiations with the company have come to a major impasse and a strike now seems imminent, says a source close to the situation who asked not to be identified.

In an email to members, the IBEW said:

“The Business Managers informed us that the company has started the process toward a unilateral imposition of their contract terms,” said the IBEW T6 Mobilization Committee, in an email to all Verizon union employees in New England. “Those terms include the elimination of job security.  The company has begun making “last and final” proposals and the situation is urgent.”

As I have written in a previous series of articles, this is a tremendously important struggle that will impact the labor union movement in the private sector as severely as the coming Friedrichs Supreme Court case will affect the public sector. If Verizon is able to impose their will and defeat the union, this would have a ripple effect on the entire job market, threatening the basic coordinates of unionized middle class jobs.

This is going to be a hard and long battle, but the stakes are too high to sit this one out. Simultaneously, the UAW has just recently averted a strike with Fiat Chrysler. United Steel Workers are currently facing a lock-out with Allegheny Technologies Incorporated in New Bedford and other plants across the country. Mayor Elorza continues play a cruel game with the firefighters union while rolling out his corporate charter school agenda to bust the teachers union. United Nurses and Allied Professionals have been engaged in continuing negotiations over a contract with Lifespan Hospital Network.

These are not isolated incidents or random occurrences. Both the Democratic and Republican Party are collaborators in the neoliberal ideological apparatus that intends to destroy the union movement, the middle class, and ultimately the hard-earned gains for the social safety net made during the New Deal and Baby Boom periods. It is impossible to deny that there are still some strong pro-worker figures in the political landscape that reject this ideology, but they are few and far between. With a career-minded politician like Gina Raimondo in power and hungry still for ascension to higher prospects in Washington DC, it is clear that a pillar of American democracy is under attack.

Visit the Stand Up To Verizon website by clicking here.

The CWA can be reached at 401-275-0760.

The IBEW can be reached at 401-946-9900.

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RI Antiwar Coalition protests Kunduz hospital bombing


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2015-10-09 Hospital 003About a dozen members of RIAC (Rhode Island Antiwar Coalition) protested outside Rhode Island Hospital in Providence Friday evening against the Kunduz hospital bombing that claimed the lives of patients and medical staff, including members of Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders).

RIAC notes that President Barack Obama has the singular honor of being the first Nobel Peace laureate to bomb another Nobel Peace laureate. The protest is being held on the same day as the announcement of the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize, and is aligned with other protests on the hospital bombing nationwide organized by Voices for Creative Nonviolence.

According to their press release, “RIAC calls for an end to bombing in Afghanistan and notes that the bombing of the hospital is probably a war crime.  Obama, who was elected president in 2008 as the beneficiary of calls to stop these needless war deaths, bears command responsibility as commander-in-chief for the procedures in place that allowed this to happen even though he wasn’t personally the one who called for the airstrike.

2015-10-09 Hospital 007“This protest is not directed against Rhode Island Hospital. The point is that bombing a functioning hospital, destroying it and killing patients and doctors, is obviously the wrong thing to do.  Military strikes in countries like Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Somalia should be ended immediately.”

RIAC further notes that, “After the hospital bombing, Rhode Island’s Senator Jack Reed tentatively suggested changing the war plans so that more troops would continue fighting in Afghanistan.”

Passersby were generally favorable to RIACs message, honking horns in solidarity or making comments from their cars.

[Parts of this report is from a RIAC press release.]

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Peter Nightingale’s call to action at URI


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Peter Nightingale

At the University of Rhode Island’s 19th annual Diversity Week, Peter Nightingale, professor of physics at URI, and climate activist, challenged students’ perspectives on climate change and offered a call to action in order to address environmental racism. The event, “Race and the Environmental Justice Movement,” was held at the Multicultural Student Services Center.

Nightingale began the event with a stark warning: in order to avoid catastrophic climate change, we must reduce greenhouse emissions globally by 7 percent. The U.S. is home to a fraction of the world’s population, it emits 25 percent of global greenhouse gasses. Even though the U.S. is greatly responsible for climate change, it will be the poor of the world, nations with less developed infrastructure, that will bear the consequences.

Nightingale referenced Robert Bullard’s work, “Dumping in Dixie”, in the presentation:

The environmental movement in the United States emerged with agendas that focused on such areas as wilderness and wildlife preservation, resource conservation, pollution abatement, and population control. It was supported primarily by middle- and upper-middle-class whites. Although concern about the environment cuts across racial and class lines, environmental activism has been most pronounced among individuals who have above-average education, greater access to economic resources, and a greater sense of personal efficacy.”

“I’m one of those people who are in a position of privilege,” said Nightingale. It was Nightingale’s privilege that allowed him to be treated politely by police when resisting fracked gas expansion. “Suppose I were half my age, and my color is a little bit darker – would they be equally polite, and nice? No – absolutely not.”

In the fight for the environment, there are the following stakeholders: the environmentalists, the social justice advocates, and the neo-liberal boosters, who, “have as their chief concerns maximizing profits, industrial expansion, economic stability, laissez-faire operation, and deregulation,” said Nightingale, quoting Bullard.

“If you follow the economic discussion in Rhode Island,” continued Nightingale, “all you hear people say is ‘all we need is more jobs, more jobs’ – but when you scrape away the rhetoric, a lot of people of color and poor minorities are being divided among themselves… the elites never mention that it’s all about their profits, about busting unions, about exploiting people – and this is one of the problems we have to deal with.”

For instance, Governor Gina Raimondo stated, “I am committed to moving ahead with cost-effective, regional energy infrastructure projects—including expansion of natural gas capacity—that will improve our business climate and create new opportunities for Ocean State workers.”

Nightingale also referred to the President’s Climate Action Plan as the “President’s Business Climate Action Plan” – stating that it is based on the interests of Wall Street, not in science. We are moving away from fossil fuels, and going towards natural gas, essentially replacing carbon dioxide with methane, a gas that is much more potent than carbon dioxide. “Let that sink in – that’s what [Senator] Sheldon Whitehouse is saying we should do and it’s a bad plan”

Not only are we “Dumping in Dixie,” but we are dumping in Providence, we are dumping in Burrillville, and we are dumping globally. From National Grid’s proposed LNG liquefaction facility to the proposed gas-fired power plant in Burrillville, the environment and the people are under assault says Nightingale.

“Who are the people that live next to I-95 in Providence… the people are about to thrown out of their houses… their skin tone is a couple of shades darker than mine.” Nightingale directed attendees to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Environmental Justice website, which shows several environmental and demographic indicators regarding pollution. In the presentation, Nightingale showcased the current indicators for the proposed LNG liquefaction facility at Fields Point location in Providence, and compared the indicators to those of East Greenwich.

Nightingale continued by critiquing Cap and Trade. “We are taking a serious problem [and] financializing it. We’re putting it on the stock market, and we’re allowing people to speculate.” By allowing environmental destruction to continue in impoverished communities, while Wall Street profiteers from the destruction, we thus institutionalize environmental injustice. “We can live yet another day, because we are taking the livelihood from someone else in the Southern Hemisphere.” A prime example of this is the continued deforestation of the Amazon rain forest. Nightingale drew a parallel to Pope Francis’ comments on climate change and tax credits:

The strategy of buying and selling ‘carbon credits’ can lead to a new form of speculation which would not help reduce the emission of polluting gases worldwide. This system seems to provide a quick and easy solution under the guise of a certain commitment to the environment, but in no way does it allow for the radical change which present circumstances require. Rather, it may simply become a ploy which permits maintaining the excessive consumption of some countries and sectors.”

Nightingale concluded by offering a powerful statement from Pope Francis, “The Earth, our home, is beginning to look more and more like an immense pile of filth.”

FERC listens as no one speaks in favor of National Grids’ LNG facility


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2015-10-08 LNG 018No one spoke in favor of the project, but more than 100 people packed the room and 33 people spoke against National Grid‘s plan to build a $100 million methane gas liquefaction facility in Fields Point in South Providence before representatives of FERC (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission), the agency tasked with the job of approving or disapproving the project.

One after another speakers from the affected community, environmental activists, concerned Rhode Islanders and elected members of the General Assembly spoke passionately about negative environmental impacts and the explicit environmental racism implicit of National Grid’s plan.

The liquefaction facility is to be located adjacent to one of Rhode Island’s poorest communities, which already suffers from higher rates of asthma and other respiratory ailments. This community has become a sacrifice zone, a place where dangerous chemicals are stored. A representative from FERC admitted that some additional methane leaks are to be expected as a result of this plan, and methane is one of the most dangerous gases contributing to global warming and global catastrophe.

Peter Nightingale, a member of Fossil Free Rhode Island, has been involved in several FANG (Fighting Against Natural Gas) actions and who was arrested for his peaceful protest at Senator Sheldon Whitehouse‘s Providence office, pulled no punches when he told FERC, “To you who are here silently doing your jobs for this project I have but one thing to say: You are complicit in crimes against humanity and against Mother Earth.”

Monae McNeil, from the Environmental Justice League of Rhode Island (EJLRI), a group central to the community’s resistance to this project, said, that this project “puts low-income communities at risk, if something were to happen.” The site of the project is not protected by the hurricane barrier. There was an earthquake near this location in August. A disaster at this facility would affect as many as 140 thousand Rhode Islanders.

Jan Luby pointed out that no storage facilities like this are being proposed for Barrington, Lincoln or East Greenwich. Instead, these projects are proposed for low-income communities where resistance is expected to be minimal.

Greg Gerritt spoke on behalf of the Green Party of RI and Prosperity For RI. FERC, he said, “has never turned down one of these projects” demonstrating that the agency is not serious about climate change.

Kate Schati doesn’t live on the South Side, but she cares what happens there, because “it affects the people who live in Providence with me… I don’t want them to be at risk of a breach or a leak or an explosion or even the normal operation of a plant…”

Ben Boyd: “…we need to be investing in clean, renewable, sustainable energy sources…”

One of the most impassioned testimonies of the evenings came from Stephen Dahl, of Kingston, RI. “Weep, weep, weep, weep,” he began, quoting William Blake on the Industrial Revolution. This was more performance piece as testimony, and was powerful.

Marti Rosenberg lives within the affected community. “This project shows us that the impact of fracking is much closer than we think.” Methane is used by communities near the South Side, but the South Side itself not so much. Instead, this community bears the brunt of the negative impacts of methane gas, and none of the benefits.

Peter Sugrue questioned National Grid’s motives for project. “We will clearly see a rate increase for this $100 million project,” yet all National Grid is promising is a smoothing of price volatility. How does this benefit Rhode Islanders, is that even to be honestly expected and is it worth the cost?

Paul Klinkman

Liberty Goodwin

Karen Palmer

Nick Katkevich of FANG, which has lead several actions against fracked gas infrastructure in Burrillville and Providence, promised resistance to this project in the event that FERC approves it.

Gina Rodriguez-Drix is a resident of Washington Park, a mother of two and a birth worker, is “deeply concerned about the disproportionate effects” this project will have on women and children of color in  her neighborhood and other affected communities.

Julian Rodriguez-Drix is tired. “I’ve got a family with two kids, a full time job, and now it’s up to us to us, spending our free time poring through pages and pages of bureaucratic nonsense that is trying to find ways to justify a facility that you’ve heard everyone here speak out against.”

Representative Aaron Regunberg

Claudia Gorman

Servio

Lisa Petrie

Yudiglen Sena-Abrau

Jesus Holguin

Ana Quezada

Dania Flores is a board member of EJLRI. She spoke to the community (not to FERC) about how National Grid’s plan impacts the Latino community, about how we have our own solutions, and how we need to deport National Grid.

Paul

Beth Milham

Senator Josh Miller

Senator Juan Pichardo

August Juang

Vanessa Flores-Maldonado

Helen MacDonald

Steve Roberts

Susan Walker

Michelle Lacey

Will Lambek

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Tempest on a coffee cup: either a teachable moment or erosion of trust


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blacklivesmatter coffeeThe recent dust up between the Providence police union and a teenage Dunkin Donuts employee who wrote #blacklivesmatter on a cop’s coffee cup is perhaps the best way the always highly-charged nexus between racial equality and police conduct could have been raised.

Too many communities only debate this very critical issue after a white cop kills a black civilian. To that end, and maybe to that end only, it is to Rhode Island’s credit that we are having this debate prior to violence.

But Rhode Island needs our leaders to step up and moderate this moment. Mayor Jorge Elorza, Public Safety Commissioner Steve Pare, Governor Gina Raimondo – as well as Jim Vincent of the NAACP and Taft Manzotti of the Fraternal Order of Police – must seize this opportunity. This is either a teachable moment or it will breed more animosity between young, urban people of color and the police officers who are supposed to serve and protect them.

In the meantime, the cops plan a protest at the coffee shop on Saturday morning with signs that will say “Police Lives Do Matter” and progressive activists plan to patronize the Dunkin Donuts on Indigenous Peoples Day (aka Columbus Day, Monday).

While the whole thing seems silly on its face (some within the police department say it was mostly driven by an upcoming union election, though current union president Manzotti, who isn’t running for reelection, dismissed that theory) this incident has brought much valuable information to light. Providence police officers, it seems, resent the Black Lives Matter movement. We can reasonably assume the Black Lives Matter movement similarly resents the Providence police, and that it probably resents them at least a little bit more now, we need to bring these two communities together. This all matters.

None of this resentment is in anyone’s interest. It needs to be addressed before it festers into something worse. Rhode Island can’t have members of the police community calling for people to be fired. Law enforcement should never be politicized in this way. And to have white police officers publicly indicating they would fire a teenager of color for writing #blacklivesmatter is to sow the seeds of racial strife.

Time to change RI’s Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights law


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Because of incidents like this, police officers should be subject to more, not less, public scrutiny of their actions.
Because of incidents like this, police officers should be subject to more, not less, public scrutiny of their actions.

A Providence police officer was arrested this week for texting death threats to a doctor. Last week, the same officer was arrested for threatening his police department bosses. In August, he was charged with possessing a gun with a scratched off serial number. In April, he was disciplined when a picture of him sleeping in a police cruiser while on duty was posted to Twitter.

He’s being held without bail at the ACI. But he’s still a Providence police officer.

That’s because Rhode Island police officers are protected by what’s known as the Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights, a state law that dictates a special process for disciplining cops. Anything more severe than a two day suspension requires a hearing by a three-board panel – one of whom the accused gets to select.

While a felony conviction would trump this law, there are untold examples of officer misconduct that go unpunished because of, according to Providence Public Safety Commission Steve Pare who says it’s time to make a change.

“It’s antiquated and doesn’t serve the purpose it was intended to,” he told RI Future. “It goes against the ethical standards and values of police departments.”

Rhode Island is one of just of 14 states to have a LEOBoR law, The others are: California, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin, according to a report by the Marshall Project., which says Rhode Island’s law is the most “officer-friendly version” in the nation.

Pare concurred. “No other state in the country has these kinds of protections,” said. “They may have varying protections but no where else in the country is both protection and process spelled out in state law.”

LEOBoR laws became a flash point earlier this year when the law shielded Baltimore police officers who killed Frieddie Gray from discipline, as well as other officers involved in high profile instances of violent police misconduct.

“The Law Enforcement Officers Bill of Rights has the same relationship to a real bill of rights that the Patriot Act has to a real patriot,” wrote Georgetown law professor Paul Butler in the New York Times this June. “The real Bill of Rights — the one enshrined in the United States Constitution — actually limits the power of government, including the police.”

And Radley Belko, a criminal justice/mass incarceration blogger for the Washington Post, wrote that LEOBoR “can essentially become a how-to guide for cops to get their colleagues out of trouble.”

Rhode Island’s LEOBoR law cost “$1.5 million in legal fees and officer pay while suspended” during the previous 5 years, reported WPRI’s Tim White in 2014.

The Ocean State has long been the poster child of right wing criticism LEOBoR laws. An oft-cited 2012 Reason article starts with several Ocean State anecdotes. “All of these Rhode Island cops, and many more like them across the county, were able to keep their jobs and benefits—sometimes only temporarily, but always longer than they should have—thanks to model legislation written and lobbied for by well-funded police unions,” writes Mike Riggs. “That piece of legislation is called the ‘law enforcement bill of rights,’ and its sole purpose is to shield cops from the laws they’re paid to enforce.”

Pare said the Rhode Island Police Chiefs Association tried to have the law amended in recent years, to no avail. “The unions were adamantly opposed to any changes,” he said, noting that 25 city and town councils endorsed amending the LEOBoR law.

With a renewed emphasis on police officer conduct across the nation and in Rhode Island, Pare said the time may finally be right to move the issue forward.

“Let’s come up with some recommendations that the General Assembly can consider,” he said.

Protest then partnership: how bikes can beat cars


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Steve Miller
Steve Miller, Livable Streets Alliance

Re-imagining transportation and street design in Rhode Island is about more than trying to reduce congestion, says Steven Miller, co-founder of Boston’s Livable Streets Alliance, it’s about, “liberating ourselves, our bodies and our social lives, from the trap we find ourselves in.”

The trap Miller is talking about is the automobile. Though as individuals we all drive less on average, there are more of us due to population increase, and we all head to work at the same time. “Until we radically redistribute our populations,” says Miller “congestion is going to get worse.”

The Livable Streets Alliance “envisions a world where our streets are vibrant public spaces that encourage personal interaction, physical activity, community and fun. We believe streets should be designed to accommodate all people and provide mobility options that enhance access to goods, services, jobs, health care, friends and family.” Miller, who has been working for decades as an advocate in Boston, is speaking at AS220 to a small but very interested audience. The event is sponsored by the RI Bike Coalition.

“There are no solutions within the car world for the problem of the car,” says Miller. “Until we radically redistribute our populations, congestion is going to get worse.” And Miller doesn’t think that’s going to happen in our lifetimes. The solution then is to telecommute, move to a city and reverse commute, or provide alternatives.

In order to provide alternatives, especially those that promote health and reduce pollution, we need to organize, said Miller. What Miller then did was to outline the process of effective protest and advocacy in broad strokes.

Miller knows the world of organizing well, and it starts with protest.

“If you want to stop the machine at some point you need to shout and stick something in the machine,” said Miller. But protesting is “the power of veto.” To be truly effective, a group needs to advocate and be able to clearly state what they want. This requires using the media and “being a little outrageous and a little political at the same time.”

Lastly, organizers need to move past protest and into partnership, which means working with government to effect change. Of course, once you start working with the government you lose your outsider status and some will perceive you as part of the problem. “This is why groups split,” said Miller.

Let’s say you want to build more bike lanes. When you have the government’s ear, it’s important to “generate political will.” This means understanding what it is that politicians want. Not just money and votes, but what kind of ideas fit their agendas, their goals.

Next you have to help develop the government’s capacity. Not everyone who designs a city’s streets knows how to design a bike lane. Presenting the information authorities need to do it right can help facilitate successful projects. When a government agency gets it right, publicly thank them, but also support them against the inevitable backlash. “Once you’ve done something, at least some percent of the population is going to hate it,” said Miller, so giving officials cover and supporting them is smart politics.

The final step is to “get the pilot made permanent.” Most new ideas are first rolled out as pilot programs. No matter how successful a project is, if the ideas are not “integrated into the core policies, procedures and operations of the agency” then the pilot program will die when the people you’ve been working with inevitably move on. New people means new pet projects, and your ideas risk being left behind.

When we first started designing roads in this country, said Miller, engineers had no idea what they were doing. Then we started building Interstates, the highways, and we quickly learned how to build them very well. When we turned our attention to city streets, we brought all that knowledge to bear, and it was all wrong.

Highways are the opposite of city streets. City streets require narrow lanes, slow speeds, and many distractions. On a highway we have wide lanes, with a lot of tolerance built in. We have rumble strips for inattentive drivers, for instance. City streets require our full attention. After all, we’re sharing those streets with bikes and pedestrians. This is the essence of “context sensitive road design” says Miller, we want “city roads, not mini highways in the city.”

Seems obvious, but we are only just starting to understand and implement this insight.

Ultimately, says Miller, when we advocate for better transportation options, we are ultimately advocating for larger values: the environment, physical and mental health, education, energy… just about anything that makes living better for humans.

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Groups call on Gov. Raimondo to open public records


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acluCiting a recent “pattern of disturbingly inadequate” responses to open records requests “on truly critical matters of public import,” five open government organizations have called on Governor Gina Raimondo to issue an executive order that calls on state agencies to “adopt a strong presumption in favor of disclosure in addressing requests for public information.”

In a letter sent Tuesday to Gov. Raimondo, the five organizations — ACCESS/RI, American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island, Rhode Island Press Association, New England First Amendment Coalition, and League of Women Voters of Rhode Island — cite three recent incidents in which state agencies addressed Access to Public Records (APRA) requests. The groups called the handling of each of these requests “questionable” and indicative of a “disinterest in promoting the public’s right to know.”

In the first incident, according to the Providence Journal, the state Department of Transportation provided an incomplete response to a reporter’s request for records related to the administration’s hotly debated truck toll proposal, failed to properly request an extension of time to respond, and then denied records without specifying what was withheld or whether there was any information in the withheld documents that could be released, as required by law.

In another instance, the administration denied the release of any records related to the hiring of former state Representative Donald Lally, citing “attorney-client privilege” and an APRA exemption for “working papers.” While the groups said it was reasonable that some documents might not be disclosable, they called the blanket denial of all records “untenable on its face.”

The third incident involves the Executive Office of Health and Human Services’ refusal to release an application filed with the federal government for additional funding for the state’s Unified Health Infrastructure Project. The department claimed the application and related documents were “still in development” despite the fact that the application had already been submitted for approval.

“From our perspective, none of [these responses] occupies a ‘shade of gray’ in interpreting APRA. Rather, precisely because they are so clear-cut, they warrant decisive action on your part in order to address the lackadaisical interest in a strong APRA that the responses embody,” the groups argued in the letter.

Representatives from the organizations said today that by issuing an executive order emphasizing the Administration’s commitment to open government, Gov. Raimondo would better ensure transparency and accountability from state executive agencies.

Linda Lotridge Levin, president of ACCESS/RI, said: “It is incumbent on public officials to make access to public records a priority if they expect to maintain the public’s trust.  The instances cited in the letter to the governor show that some public officials choose to remain oblivious to the state’s Access to Public Records Act that mandates that the workings of government remain transparent, accessible and accountable to its citizens. We in ACCESS/RI urge Governor Raimondo to ensure that members of her administration adhere to the law and to respond in a timely manner to all public records requests.”

Steven Brown, ACLU of RI executive director, said: “Governor Raimondo’s first executive order upon taking office addressed compliance with state ethics laws. In passing, it also urged state officers and employees to ‘be mindful of their responsibilities’ under the open records law. Because they have not been mindful, we believe an executive order specifically establishing a presumption of openness in responding to APRA requests will better promote that key responsibility.”

Justin Silverman, executive director of the New England First Amendment Coalition added: “This is an opportunity for Gov. Raimondo to remind those working under her leadership that government transparency is a top priority and that the public’s right to know must be protected. These recent APRA responses are concerning and the governor should make clear that the statute needs to be taken more seriously. Timely responses need to be made and records should be disclosed whenever possible. An executive order to this effect would help build trust between the people of Rhode Island and their elected leaders.”

Jane W. Koster, president of the League of Women Voters of RI, stated: “It is of the utmost importance that the citizens of Rhode Island’s ‘right to know’ be protected and broad citizen participation in government be encouraged. The League of Women Voters of the United States and LWVRI believe that democratic government depends upon informed and active participation at all levels of government. It further believes that governmental bodies protect this ‘right to know’ by giving adequate notice of proposed actions, holding open meetings and making public records accessible. The LWVRI believes that Governor Raimondo will act accordingly and alert all in her administration to comply with APRA going forward.”

A copy of the letter is attached and can be found here.

[This report comes from a press release.]

World ends today. See you tomorrow!


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2015-10-07 World Ends 002During the recent visit of Pope Francis to the United States, in every city he visited, (Washington DC, New York City and Philadelphia,) there were people at the fringes of the largest crowds wearing bright yellow shirts, often carrying large yellow signs, handing out literature proclaiming the end of the world for today, October 7, 2015.

The eBible Fellowship had previously predicted the world would end in May, but this time, Chris McCann, the founder of the fellowship, assures us all that the world will be “Annihilated” and that today is the day.

I spoke to a woman distributing these eschatological flyers outside the Philadelphia train station. I asked her if she truly believed the world would end on October 7 or if this was a paid temp position. Sheepishly, she admitted she was getting paid, and doesn’t think the world is really going to end.

Maybe this will be something you can tell your grandchildren about, I said.

She smiled at that.

Most religious claims are unverifiable. We can’t measure souls or disprove life after death. These claims persist because no definitive proof of their falsehood will ever be presented. The best a nonbeliever can do is say, “I see no evidence to believe in Gods or souls or miracles.”

But those predicting the End of the World, a one time event with no historical precedent, are easily disproved time and time again. All you have to do is wake up the day after.

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Do black lives really matter to PVD cops or Dunkin’ Donuts?


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In reviewing the basic facts of the case at hand, the behavior of a Providence Police officer and his union in reaction to a Dunkin’ Donuts worker writing #BlackLivesMatter on his coffee cup, it seems useless to level mature critiques against a group behaving so immaturely. The statements of the two, as well as Dunkin’ Donuts, can only be called childish, hammy, paranoid, reactionary and blatantly racist. This is not the first or last time that the Providence Police and their Latino mayor have carried on in such a fashion and the fact they continue to do so unchecked by the people who pay their salaries indicates that it will continue.

tumblr_nfnkasBrWK1s6bbrro2_250The first place to begin the discussion is with a mature analysis of the #BlackLivesMatter movement in Rhode Island. It is clear from the reaction and statements of the police that they see the movement as a threat to their self-designated right to antagonize people of color. One must only say the name of Cornell Young, Jr., the black police officer who was accidentally gunned down by white colleagues during a late-night robbery, to remind folks that even a badge does not protect black people in Providence. Consider the statements of the police union regarding the agitation of Kobi Dennis, who reported the racial profiling and harassment of his son by the so-called ‘jump out boys’ to police leadership:

The consequences of the combined actions of the police administration, City Hall leadership and these activists has been to decrease the safety of the citizens in the city of Providence due to the disruption of police activities, to increase the dangers posed to our police officers and to lower morale among the ranks.

The idea that a man who works out of the South Providence Salvation Army building on Broad Street poses a public safety threat and might be some kind of Ocean State Che Guevara is indicative of a mentality that hates when black and brown people dare speak aloud against their victimization. It is no accident that the international community cited America for 25 different types of human rights abuses through a UN Human Rights Committee report in April 2014, including several instances that involved the police. In March of this year, Cuba called America to account for racism in the prison and death penalty sentence applications.

This all provides fertile ground for the #BlackLivesMatter folks to plants roots in.

It is no mistake that Michelle Alexander’s book about the police-prison industry was called THE NEW JIM CROW. Police forces say they exist so to protect and serve, but they also produce a genuine product, incarcerated black and brown men who become cheap labor for work-release programs. They create a new class of low-cost laborers who operate in workplaces that should be staffed with honest, unionized American workers. The fact the Providence police union is involved in this just shows how anti-worker and anti-American they are.

Providence was founded on two things, religious freedom and slavery. One of the first acts of Roger Williams was to sell Pequots into slavery in the Caribbean. Years later, the Brown family, the same one who endowed the University that bears their name, made their fortune selling Africans in slavery, as well as the ships, chains, and clothing that were used to transport Africans from the continent. When a slave escaped from his captors, a notice such as this one would be distributed to the newspapers and authorities.

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In reacting as they have and treating those who dare say that #BlackLivesMatter in such a fashion, the Providence Police have shown their true colors as not those who are interested in protecting poor people of color. They are rather the direct descendants of the Fugitive Slave Patrols who used to prowl the land looking for black and brown people who dare say their lives mattered and were worthy of emancipation. Their foolish response that ‘All Lives Matter’ is petty.

Are police officers the overwhelming majority of the prison population? Were their forebears brought to America in chains and raped, whipped, and worked for no pay upon arrival? Is there a cataclysmic level of poverty, disenfranchisement, and gun death fatalities among police in Providence that I missed? Are police being gentrified out of their historic neighborhoods in Providence to make way for recent college grads who serve as the shock troops of so-called ‘urban renewal’? Are the children of police officers forced to see a majority of their fathers behind bars? Are their wives and partners routinely called ‘welfare queens’ and members of the ‘moocher class’ by austerity-minded politicians? Were the majority of the failed mortgages that crashed the economy in 2008 originally executed by predatory lenders who targeted Providence gumshoes? Is there an overwhelming level of fatalities related to asthma, diabetes, and under-treated cancers in the ranks that we at RIFuture are not reporting?

It is hard to judge which is more galling, the narcissism or the intellectual hollowness of these counter-slogans. For such a bunch of tough civil servants (who are also noticeably well-armed and equipped with military-grade body armor), they seem like a bunch of toddlers in dire need of a nap. We might be at risk for a flood in Providence due to their crying over nothing.

Someone wrote a slogan that affirms the value of human lives on a beverage container. When the anti-choice crowd, who do have a history of bombing health centers and shooting doctors, carry on as they do, we never see the boys in blue on the look-out for potential terrorism. Yet when black and brown people say they matter, it warrants a cacophony of self-important nonsense. None of the #BlackLivesMatter folks in RI have been involved in domestic terrorism, yet they are treated like it while the odious Bishop Tobin, the bin Laden of anti-choice hysteria, gets kid gloves. The hypocrisy is blatant.

That Dunkin’ Donuts apologized because someone said #BlackLivesMatter shows that they do not actually care about black lives. One could speak volumes before this instance of how awful their corn syrup-based confections and watery coffee was, but now they have gone one step further and hung a shingle in the window that says ‘WHITES ONLY’.

The #BlackLivesMatter folks have some steps to take in their efforts to mature as a movement and not get caught in the ‘anti-politics’ ennui that collapsed the Occupy Wall Street movement. When I spoke with Glen Ford recently, he emphasized the two most pertinent demands were ending mass-incarceration and gentrification. It may take a little while for the #BlackLivesMatter folks to articulate those demands properly, but in the meantime, a Martin Luther King, Jr.-style boycott of Dunkin’ Donuts might suffice, demanding that black and brown people be made managers of stores in black and brown neighborhoods and that every one of them feature windows that say #BlackLivesMatter.

As for the black and brown police officers in Providence, I am sorry that they must work in such racist conditions. Providence has 37 out of 425 sworn officers on the force, which makes plain how serious they are about minority hiring. When I spoke with Kobi Dennis this summer, he said that he felt their minority hiring effort so far has been problematic.

The message is clear, Providence police, its union, and their mayor have allowed Taft Mazotti, head of the Fraternal Order of Police, to tar them all as people who do not think black lives matter. It is time for them to stop pretending otherwise.

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Tempest on a coffee cup: NAACP, PVD police differ on Black Lives Matter meaning


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blacklivesmatter coffeeTaft Mazotti, president of the Providence police union, and Jim Vincent, executive director of the Providence chapter of the NAACP, have very different opinions on the actions of a 17-year-old black employee of an Atwells Avenue Dunkin Donuts who wrote “#Blacklivesmatter” on a cop’s coffee cup.

The police union issued a press release chiding the teenage girl and the Black Lives Matter movement, while Vincent defended the young woman and the catch phrase that has unified people who feel that black people continue to be marginalized in America.

“The negativity by the #Blacklivesmatter organization towards Police across this nation is creating a hostile environment that is not resolving any problems or issues, but making it worse for our communities,” according to the press release. “They are doing this by increasing tensions amongst police and the people they serve.”

But Vincent thought it was the police who are increasing community tensions with its handling of the incident.

“I just think it makes the union look bad,” he told RI Future. “It gives people the impression that black lives don’t matter to them.”

Manzotti told RI Future this morning that the issue raised concern for the union because they believe that someone who would write black lives matter on a coffee cup may also try to poison a police officers’ coffee. “There’s been a concern that police officers have to be weary about where we can get something to eat or drink,” Manzotti said.

Vincent scoffed at the assumption that asserting that black lives matter indicates a direct threat to a police officer, noting that the movement is not even against police officers. “You cannot imply that because someone says black lives matter that they are against the police,” he said. “I think she probably just wanted to communicate that black lives matter and the officer took it the wrong way.”

I asked both Manzotti and Vincent if the officer missed an opportunity to dialogue with the woman about what the Black Lives Matter movement means to her.

“I think they missed an awesome opportunity to do some real community policing,” Vincent said. “Instead of bringing the community together they further fractured it. They may not have meant to do this but that’s what happened.”

Manzotti said the officer did not notice the message on his coffee cup until he arrived at work. “We’re a very busy department,” he said. “For an officer to take time to sit down with someone…”

Manzotti stopped mid sentence to tack away from officer time management to put the onus on the employee. “Let’s turn this around,” he said. “Could the employee have reached out and started a conversation?” When reminded he was tasking an urban teenager of color, rather than a law enforcement officer, with taking the lead in starting this conversation, he said, “Every single person knows right from wrong.”

Manzotti said he thought the young woman should be fired, but was careful to explain that the union did not ask the owner to fire her when they spoke earlier this week.

“We asked that he do whatever he feels is necessary to rectify the situation,” Manzotti told RI Future. “I can’t tell him what to do but I know if I had an employee working at my small business who did that, that person would not be working for me.”

Vincent acknowledged the teenager “maybe used poor judgment” but agreed with a reporter who said the employer would likely lose a wrongful termination lawsuit, as well as risk national backlash. “If there was no clear policy in place,” Vincent said, “…it’s hard to fire someone for something like this.”

Perhaps their biggest difference concerned the phrase black lives matter.

“I’d like to hear the union say black lives matter,” Vincent said. “Why can’t they say that? What is it that’s so difficult for them about acknowledging that black lives matter? It suggests to the community that black lives don’t matter to them.”

Manzotti was careful to avoid acknowledging that black lives matter and, like in the initial press release that kicked off this tempest in a teapot, explained, “because, to us, all lives matter.” He said he has not seen evidence in his life or career that black lives matter less than white lives.

Vincent said supplanting ‘all lives matter’ for ‘black lives matter’ is “almost like a code word for saying you don’t believe black lives matter.” He added, “Either intentionally or unintentionally, it marginalizes and minimizes the value of black lives.”

RI trails every state east of Ohio, WV, NC in economic opportunity


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Vermont, Massachusetts and Connecticut topped this year’s Opportunity Index, an annual ranking of the states that have the best and worst “social mobility and economic security.” New Mexico, Nevada and Mississippi rounded out the bottom of the list.

Rhode Island fell squarely in the middle of the nation at 25.

But the Ocean State trailed far behind its New England neighbors – all of whom were in the top ten except for Maine which was 15th. And while Rhode Island scored better in most metrics this year compared to last, it was the lowest ranking state east of Ohio, West Virginia and North Carolina.

“At the core of America is a shared belief that no matter how humble your origins, with hard work and perseverance, you can improve your prospects in life and give your children a shot at a secure and productive future,” according to the Opportunity Index’s website. “For generations, Americans lived this dream. Millions were able to lift themselves out of poverty and climb the ladder of social mobility and economic security. But today, our American Dream is at risk. Too often it’s your zip code that predetermines your destiny.”

The Providence Journal also reported in the survey.

Below are screen shots of the metrics used to determine each state’s score, and how Rhode Island compares to the other 49 states and the District of Columbia.

ri opportunity econri opportunity edri opportunity community

Your cell phone may run on conflict minerals from Venezuela


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A bloody corpse lay on the sidewalk in front of the gated hotel I was staying at in Caracas, Venezuela. A police car drove by but didn’t stop. This is one of the safest neighborhoods in a city that has more than 7,000 murders reported a year. Police won’t even patrol more than half of Caracas because some neighborhoods are so rife with danger and desperation.

But increasingly Caracas isn’t the most dangerous place in the Americas. That dubious distinction may now belong to the pristine tropical jungle of Amazonas, Venezuela. Into this lawless wilderness otherwise populated only by precious commodities and indigenous inhabitants have migrated FARC rebels from Colombia who are facilitating the illegal mining of gold, diamonds, uranium, and coltan.  Backed by hundreds of millions of dollars of support from the US over the last seven years, the Colombian Army has waged a fierce campaign to push the FARC out of the areas they have occupied within Colombia. The vast majority of FARC soldiers fleeing the Colombian Army assault have taken refuge in the Venezuelan state of Amazonas.

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Along the Brazo Casiquiare, a gateway into Venezuela from Colombia

Amazonas, the southernmost state in Venezuela, is about twice the size of Florida. Most of it is dense jungle, 98 percent is unexplored, and it has less than 180,000 inhabitants, mostly living along the snaking Orinoco River. There are 20 indigenous groups living in Amazonas, making up 54 percent of the total population.  I am a Venezuelan born American citizen and in 2007 traveled more than 600 miles along the Rio Negro, Brazo Casiquiare, and Rio Orinoco in Venezuela, nearly the entire length of the state of Amazonas. I was the only American to visit the interior that year.

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Flying over the Orinoco River, Venezuela

FARC soldiers are heavily armed with machine guns and tactical weapons such as land mines, and there are believed to be more than 4,000 of them in Amazonas, according to Governor Liborio Guarulla. In terms of sheer numbers, the military may be outgunned by the rebels. And what began as exile in Amazonas has transformed into a multi-million dollar criminal enterprise for the FARC rebels.

In November of 2014, the Colombian Army captured a FARC commander, Juan Jose Rivera Suarez, along with a shipment of coltan and uranium from Venezuela. A Venezuelan National Guard Intelligence Information Summary, dated January 2015, documented several columns of FARC soldiers “engaged in illegal mineral extraction.” Last year, 83 tons of smuggled Venezuelan coltan was seized during a Colombian Army raid on a cocaine smuggler’s operation in Colombia – more than $10 million worth. In the Colombian countryside, the FARC has traditionally extorted money from coca growers and coca paste laboratories, and assisted in the smuggling. Kidnappings have also brought in significant revenue, but illegal mining has now surpassed kidnappings as a source of income for the FARC.

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Image taken from a FARC recruiting poster in Caracas, Venezuela

Coltan mined in the African Congo has been outlawed as a “conflict commodity” by the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. Conflict commodities are those “extracted in conflict zones and sold to perpetuate the fighting.” International efforts have been made to identify and curtail the marketing of coltan from the Congo. Nonetheless, coltan is being openly poached in Amazonas. The coltan from Venezuela can be easily shipped to Colombia where it is legal. From there, much of it goes to China and some ends up in smart phones in the USA. Tantalum is extracted from coltan, and tantalum capacitors are the lightest, coolest, and most capable of high capacitance. Tantalum capacitors are used in microprocessors. They can be found in everything from aerospace electronics to household appliances including smart phones.

Raul Castro has announced positive headway with current FARC peace negotiations. A six month timetable has been set for the conclusion of peace negotiations. When the accord is signed, the rebels will lay down their arms. But will they also give up the lucrative practice of mining and smuggling coltan out of Venezuela?

The fanfare about progress with peace negotiations is appropriate for Colombia but peace, when it comes, may not bring an end to troubles in Southern Venezuela. Colombia will benefit greatly from peace with the FARC after 51 years of armed insurgency, and Venezuela may well be left with insurgents who outlive their insurgency. The lucrative trade in coltan is very tempting, and the immense expanse of jungle too easy to hide away in.

It will take an international effort to curtail the illegal mining of “conflict minerals” in Venezuela, with the same enforcement that is being given to illegal African mining. In the meantime short of such an agreement, it will be business as usual, and Venezuelan coltan will find its way into smart phones around the globe.

The jungle of Amazonas is an asset that can benefit all of mankind with hundreds of thousands of plant and millions of animal species. Twenty indigenous groups of people live there and have lived in the region for thousands of years. Will they be driven off their land by the criminal mining of “conflict minerals” in Venezuela? If so, the rest of us will also lose countless biological resources to the extensive pollution and soil upheaval of the illegal mines.

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Pristine tropical rain forest in the heart of Amazonas, Venezuela

Hannah Purcell Martin, Armstrong Diaz show work, break ground at AS220


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AS220 is known for hosting groundbreaking art on a regular basis. Thursday saw the opening of an exhibition of two artists who certainly fit that profile perfectly.

VISIT AS220 FOR MORE INFO!

Hannah Purcell Martin’s work is traditional, but nonetheless has a vibrant quality.

2015-10-01 18.58.22 With traditional paint and surface mediums, she has created a series of images of haunting beauty in NATURE AT A BLUR.

2015-10-01 18.59.55 A Providence-based New York native, she graduated from University at Buffalo with a BFA in Studio Arts-Print Media.

2015-10-01 19.00.04In ALL JOKES GUARUNTEED STOLEN, Armstrong Diaz combines ironic comic strip-styled art with a variety of surfaces.

2015-10-01 18.58.47From scrap metal to black leather to a three-dimensional cube, he is challenging both the expectations of style and confines of what is ‘allowed’ to constitute art.

2015-10-01 18.59.00Comics were, until the rise of the graphic novel in the late 1970’s and 1980’s, considered children’s fair, and bad at that, excepting instances of kitsch in the work of artists in the vein of Any Warhol.

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Barbara Meek has died at age 81


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BarbaraMeek1Stage and television actress Barbara Meek, most recently seen in the Trinity Rep production of JULIUS CAESAR, has passed away.

Born in 1934 in Detroit, Meek worked at Trinity beginning in 1968. Her starring role in THE VISIT was a historic first for a woman of color. It was one of the first instances of color-blind casting in American theater history and broke barriers for all. Over the span of her career, she would also appear in television shows such as ARCHIE BUNKER’S PLACE, a spin-off of ALL IN THE FAMILY, and television films such as Robert Penn Warren’s BROTHER TO DRAGONS, Edith Wharton’s THE HOUSE OF MIRTH, Harriet Beecher Stowe’s LIFE AMONG THE LOWLY, MELBA, BIG BROTHER JAKE, SEE HOW SHE RUNS, and JIMMY B. AND ANDRE.

She earned the Elliot Norton Award for Sustained Excellence, the R.I. Pell Award, an Honorary Doctor of Arts from URI, the Foundation for Repertory Theatre Award, the Wayne State University Arts Achievement Award in Theatre, the Norton Prize for Sustained Excellence, and the Edward Bannister and Christiana Bannister History Makers Award from the Rhode Island Black Heritage Society over the span of her long career. She also performed at at Vienna’s English Theatre, the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, the Hilberry Repertory Theatre, the Dallas Theater Center, the Cleveland Play House, The Repertory Theater of St. Louis, the Hampton Playhouse, The Eugene O’Neill Theater Center and the Brandeis University Theatre. A fan of jazz and opera, she leaves one child. She said that her favorite production was LESLIE MOLSON.

As news broke of her passing, figures from around the state expressed their feelings of loss.

I have known Barbara Meek for 35 years. We are both former Detroiters and grew up in a wonderful city that collapsed. 35 years ago Barbara and I went to the Biltmore Hotel for a get to know each other drink. She had one or two drinks and I drink four diet cokes trying to keep up. She could not understand why an ex-Detroiter did not need a good strong drink. We talked from 3 to 6pm and off she went to Trinity Rep to perform in a play. I went to that play later in the week and had been a Trinity Rep and big Barbara Meek fan every sense. Once or twice a year we would talk. I mean ready talk about Detroit or Trinity or Ed Hall or life. Ten days ago she and I had a drink over the phone. She had a good strong drink that a former Detroiter would have and I had ice tea. We talked 30 minutes about her start at Trinity Rep and how wonderful her career had been in Providence. She said it was a great opportunity to work all of the time with the most interesting people on a regional playhouse stage. We were preparing for a roundtable that she was to be a part of at Brown University later this month. She will be missed. On Tuesday I called her to make final plans for her involvement in the Stages of Freedom Roundtable. Her voice was strong and she told me to have Robb [Dimmick, a collaborator on the project] put everything in writing because it had been a rough day. But she expected to return to her role at Trinity Rep the next day. So I thought that this was just one of my many conversations not the last one. Great actresses don’t die they just live in our memory. May God bless Barbara.Ray Rickman, Executive director of the Stages of Freedom: Black Performing Arts in Rhode Island, a cultural nonprofit, and president of the Rickman Group.

 

I knew Ms. Meek only through her outstanding reputation. The NAACP Providence Branch is deeply saddened by her passing and wish to express our condolences to her family and friends.Jim Vincent, NAACP Providence President

 

It is with deep sadness that we announce that long-time company member Barbara Meek has passed away. Barbara joined the company in 1968 with her husband, Martin Molson (1928-1980) and in that time, performed in over 100 productions on our stages.

She had a long and varied performing career, from her well-known role as Ellen Canby on Archie Bunker’s Place, to world premieres at Vienna’s English Theater and Alabama Shakespeare Festival, to the Broadway production of Wilson in the Promised Land. Fiercely intelligent, intensely funny and a brilliant and dedicated actress, Barbara will be deeply missed. Tonight, we raise a glass of her favorite spirit, Akvavit, in her honor. A complete obituary and information about services will be forthcoming.

Posted by Trinity Repertory Company on Saturday, October 3, 2015

 

This beautiful, funny, brilliantly talented woman, Ms Barbara Meek, has left us, and left us the poorer. My heart aches that I will not see her again. She left a legacy of wonderful work, but an even greater one of outrageous comments and observations that endeared her to all of us. Age could not wither her, nor custom stale her infinite variety.Bob Colona, Rhode Island College Theater Department

RIP, Barbara Meek, a great actress and wonderful human being. I did some work for the ACLU with her and thought the world of the woman.

Posted by Bruce McCrae on Saturday, October 3, 2015

Such sad news to hear of the passing of the incomparable Barbara Meek. My condolences to her family and many, many…

Posted by Marilyn Busch on Saturday, October 3, 2015

Rest in Power Ms. Barbara Meek.

Posted by Mike Araujo on Saturday, October 3, 2015

A legend has left our midst. Mixed Magic Theatre offers a final farewell and ovation to the incomparable Barbara Meek. An inspiration to so many, hers is a light that will be sorely missed.

Posted by Mixed Magic Theatre on Saturday, October 3, 2015

I grew up on Barbara Meek. Was in awe of her as a kid in the Trinity Rep audience, completely scared of her as an…

Posted by Carrie Azano on Saturday, October 3, 2015

Shocked to learn of Barbara Meek’s passing moments ago. Her presence at Trinity Rep was foundational and the manner with…

Posted by Algernon D’Ammassa on Saturday, October 3, 2015

Counter-Productions Theatre Company would like to send our deepest condolences to everyone at Trinity Repertory. Dr. Barbara Meek was an inspiration to us all.”Flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.”

Posted by Counter-Productions Theatre Company on Saturday, October 3, 2015

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Brown students, Fuerza Laboral protest Wendy’s over treatment of farmworkers


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2015-10-03 Wendy's 019A Wendy’s restaurant in Providence was the site of a protest Saturday evening as members of Brown Student Labor Alliance and Fuerza Laboral protested the chain’s refusal to sign onto the Coalition of Immokalee WorkersFair Food Program (FFP). After holding signs and marching outside the location, the thirteen Brown University students entered the restaurant until the manager on duty ordered them to leave.

Most of the restaurant patrons seemed okay with the surprise protest, some even joining in with the chants, but one family became extremely agitated. A man told me that if I turned the camera towards his kids he would assault me. The same man approached the protesters, took a sign from one of them and ripped it in half before tossing it on the floor. He was very angry.

2015-10-03 Wendy's 005The protest was part of the Student/Farmworker Alliance‘s protest, “Schooling Wendy’s National Week of Action” intended to pressure Wendy’s into joining the FFP, described as a “ground-breaking model for worker-led social responsibility based on a unique collaboration among farmworkers, Florida tomato growers and 14 participating buyers.” It is “the first comprehensive, verifiable and sustainable approach to ensuring better wages and working conditions in America’s agricultural fields,” say organizers.

According to their website, of “the five largest fast food corporations in the country — McDonald’s, Subway, Burger King, Taco Bell, and Wendy’s — Wendy’s is the only one to not yet sign onto the Fair Food Program.”

The program works by having companies pay one extra penny per pound of produce purchased. That extra penny goes into a fund that allows for six benefits to farmworkers, according to FFP’s Code of Conduct:

1. A pay increase supported by a “penny per pound” premium paid by Participating Buyers;
2. Zero tolerance for forced labor, sexual assault, and other abusive conduct;
3. Worker-to-worker education sessions carried out by the CIW on the farms and on company time to ensure workers are aware of their new rights and responsibilities;
4. A worker-triggered complaint resolution mechanism comprising of a timely investigation, corrective action plans, and if necessary, suspension of a farm’s Participating Grower status, and thereby its ability to sell to Participating Buyers;
5. Health and Safety Committees on every farm to give workers a structured voice in the shape of their work environment; and
6. Ongoing auditing of farms to insure compliance with each element of the FFP.

Organizers are asking people to boycott Wendy’s until the corporation signs on to the FFP.

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Bloodstained Men confront circumcision in Providence


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2015-10-02 Circumcision 004The Bloodstained Men & Their Friends, a traveling anti-circumcision protest group, set up outside Providence Place Mall yesterday in concert with Intact Rhode Island. Both groups have held protests in the past, but this year report that their message was greeted with more thoughtful consideration and less incoherent invective than in the past.

Circumcision is an issue that confronts Americans mores on sex, childcare, health and religion. It’s a hot button issue. The Bloodstained Men, wearing coveralls with a large red stain on their crotches, confront these issues in not so subtle ways. Their signs, such as, “STOP CUTTING BABY PENIS” and “STOP TORTURING BOYS” are jarring and unexpected sights. I’ve covered the arguments both groups make against circumcision here. I’ve covered previous “intactivist” protests here and here.

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Mike Ferrara, proudly uncircumcised

Mike Ferrara, a Rhode Island native and contractor working at Gtech came out to briefly join the protest, saying that he was uncircumcised and proud. He offered to “whip it out” and show me, but I declined the offer. “If you’re circumcised you’ve lost a half inch,” said Ferrara.

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Verizon workers rally for a fair contract


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Dave Fontaine, IBEW 2323

Nearly three hundred workers representing over a dozen different unions, as well as family members, gathered outside the Verizon offices on Washington Street in Providence to rally in support of 900 IBEW 2323 members who are entering their second month of working without a contract. When the contract with Verizon expired on August 1st at midnight, 39,000 IBEW & CWA, from Massachusetts to Virginia, were affected.

2015-10-01 Verizon 002Even as Verizon demands cuts in job security, health care and retirement security, and even seeks to eliminate benefits for workers injured on the job or caring for a sick family member, the company “made over $18 billion in profits over the last 18 months–$1 billion per month–and paid its top executives $249 million over the last five years,” according to a press release.

Meanwhile, here in Rhode Island, “many of our neighborhoods are suffering from neglected phone and internet services… Verizon has even refused to build their new high-speed internet lines, FiOS, in low income communities, communities of color, and rural areas, again claiming poverty as the reason they can’t put people to work doing much needed repairs.” Workers see these areas as growth opportunities for Verizon, and are eager to “string the lines.”

After IBEW workers David Fontaine and Bill Dunn opened the event with “The Star Spangled Banner,’ a steady stream of union officials and one state representative took the stage, promising to support workers in their bid to negotiate a fair contract. Over all their message was simple: Stay strong, organized labor has your back, and we can win this fight.

Below is the video of the speakers.

Dan Musard, IBEW 2323

Jim Riley, Secretary-Treasurer of Local 328

RI State Representative Ken Marshall

Chris Buffery, Asst Business Agent, IBEW 2323

Maureen Martin, AFL-CIO

Michael Sabitoni, Rhode Island Building and Construction Trades Council

Matt Taibi, Secretary-Treasurer of Teamsters Local 251

Frank Flynn, Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and Health Professionals

Paul MacDonald, Providence Central Labor Council

Michael Daley, IBEW 99

Mike Araujo, RI Jobs With Justice

Steve Murphy, Business Manager, IBEW 2323

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Patreon


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