Goldman Sachs buys office, staff at CCRI


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goldman ccriThe “great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity” is ensconced at the Community College of Rhode Island.

Goldman Sachs, the too-big-too-fail Wall Street bank that crashed the American economy in 2008, has funded two state employees through its partnership with Governor Gina Raimondo on its 10,000 Small Businesses RI program. They share an office at CCRI’s Knight Campus in Warwick.

Goldman’s 10,000 Small Businesses program offers classes, coaching and loans to small businesses. The investment bank has offered the program in other parts of the country but this is the first time is has partnered with a state government.

The office is in the Center for Workforce and Community Engagement on the 4th floor, with the high school equivalency test, English as Second Language offices. Contrary to a GoLocalProv report, the Goldman program will not move into space on the first floor being vacated by a Providence Center daycare program, according to Alix Ogden, chief of staff to new CCRI President Meghan Hughes. But Ogden did say 10,000 Small Businesses will soon expand on the fourth floor.

The employees work for the state – they have “@ccri.edu” email addresses and receive state paychecks. But the money for their paychecks is funded from a grant from the Goldman Sachs Foundation, Ogden said.

Executive Director Karina Holyoak Wood declined to comment. She initially agreed to be interviewed on Monday but didn’t keep the appointment. She formally declined to comment on Thursday after stalling for several days. Holyoak Wood, who previously worked for Tobacco Free RI, was hired in March and is paid $85,000 a year. A second employee was hired in April for $45,000 annually. Three more employees are expected to be hired this year and will earn approximately $50,000 each, Ogden said.

The five employees are responsible for organizing and administering the program that will serve up to 40 small business owners. Ogden said participants are referred to as “scholars.” The first class – or “cohort” as t is called – starts in September. Ogden said 100 people have applied. There are additional classes slated for 2017. Rhode Island School of Design will be involved in some way, said Ogden, but the program is not sure exactly how yet.

“We’re talking to RISD about how they will be included,” Ogden said. “They will have a role.”

The 10,000 Small Businesses RI program is funded by a grant from the Goldman Sachs Foundation, Ogden said. It is a one year $1 million grant that can be renewed four times, Ogden said. She anticipates Goldman Sachs will fund the program for all five years. Ogden said she did not have a detailed breakdown of how the $1 million grant will be spent.

“I’m focused on that I think this will be such a good thing for Rhode Island,” she said.

Jason Knight challenges Jan Malik in District 67


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Jason Knight
Jason Knight

Jason Knight announced his candidacy for State Representative today in HD-67. The district encompasses parts of Barrington and Warren.

“We need new voices at the State House,” said Mr. Knight. “Our current government is not working fast enough to address our problems; especially in the areas of infrastructure and jobs.”  Mr. Knight went on to say, “We need creative and inventive solutions to our issues. Every year, our General Assembly gets together and can’t seem to get the job done. If recent events prove anything, it’s that it’s time for new blood.” Mr. Knight is challenging the current representative, Jan Malik, for the seat.

Knight also spoke out in favor of progressive values and responsible government. “This district deserves a representative with real Democratic values and is willing to stand up for change that matters. Jan Malik voted against gay marriage, votes in lockstep with the NRA, and didn’t even show up for the recent vote on truck tolls. We can do better.”

Knight concluded with, “Over the next few months, I will show the voters in Warren and Barrington that we can change the way things are done in Rhode Island. It starts by electing representatives who are ready, willing, and able to challenge the status quo and work to create new opportunities for economic prosperity.”

Mr. Knight, 46, is an attorney in private practice in Providence. He lives in Barrington with his wife, Nicole Jellinek, and their two children. He served in the U.S. Navy from 1988 to 1996 as an enlisted nuclear power technician. After his time in the service, Mr. Knight attended Emerson College and was the class valedictorian. Mr. Knight attended Suffolk Law School and graduated magna cum laude. Mr. Knight then served as a prosecutor in the Rhode Island Department of Attorney General under Attorney General Patrick Lynch and went on to start his own defense practice in Providence. In Barrington, Mr. Knight and Ms. Jellinek are active members at Temple Habonim, a Reform synagogue.

[From a press release]

Carson’s Sea Level Rise Commission issues final report and recommendations


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Rep Lauren Carson’s Special House Commission to Study Economic Risk Due to Flooding and Sea Level Rise issued its final report today, and has made several recommendations as to how Rhode Island can mitigate the effects of climate change.

These recommendations include:

  • Updates to local comprehensive plans, zoning ordinances, and building codes
  • Additional support for academic and scientific research on sea level rise
  • Increased communication concerning the financial impact of natural disasters and flooding; and
  • The development of a statewide property preparedness program for property owners.

Before an early morning kayak trip on Narragansett Bay.

Recommendation 1 calls for the “creation of a flood audit program for property owners and businesses to incentivize property fortification and adaptation.” Funding of this program could come from “through public or private investment.”

Recommendation 2 acknowledges the lack of awareness among government policy makers regarding climate change and sea level rise. “As such, several proposals should be developed to increase awareness: mandatory climate, flooding and sea level rise training for local planning commission, zoning boards, and realtors; a flood insurance incentive program for property owners in the floodplain; and, the dissemination of the Coastal Resources Center’s adaptation catalogue to property owners in the flood plain.”

Recommendation 3 came as a surprise to the commission, according to Rep Carson. The Fox Point Hurricane Barrier, completed in 1966, has only one small generator as back up in the event the grid goes offline during a hurricane or flooding disaster. “In light of the barrier’s age and scientific research projecting more hurricanes along the eastern seaboard, the Commission requests that municipal, state, and federal officials work with the Army Corps of Engineers and other federal agencies to review the Hurricane Barrier’s structural sufficiency.”

Recommendation 4 concerns getting businesses back on line as soon as possible after an emergency. This point was of particular concern to the commission, which states in their report that, “Assisting business continuity is critical to maintaining the economic fabric of the affected community.” The commission recommends that state policy makers “assess a potential business continuity toolkit that could include sales tax deferments during rehabilitation and reconstruction, trauma and mental health counseling for affected business owners and employees, unemployment benefits for displaced workers, bridge loan programs for businesses waiting for flood insurance payments and FEMA financial support, and concentrated marketing programs to highlight restored communities.”

Finally, having determined that “Rhode Island needs to more fully understand the economic implications of sea level rise,”  the commission recommends “a community by community analysis resulting in aggregate data that determines Rhode Island’s total economic exposure due to sea level rise.  State agencies should review all vulnerable assets and prioritize resiliency adaptation based upon the rate of return on their investment.”

You can access the full report here.

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Susan Donovan: Why I am running for State Representative


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susan donovan
Susan Donovan

My name is Susan Donovan, and I am running for State Representative. I’m writing this piece so you can learn a little more about me and hopefully understand why I’m running.

Right now at the State House there is an empty seat where a Representative should be sitting.  We deserve better.  I grew up in Bristol and raised my children here. There is no community I care more deeply for.  I’m running for State Representative because it is time we had someone who truly cares about our community representing us. I may be a new face in politics—but I am not new to the hard work that’s required to affect positive change.

Even though I’m retired, I will always consider myself an educator. I served in the Bristol Warren School System for 33 years. I truly believe and have always believed that a quality public education is the key to any successful community. Our school district has exceeded expectations and currently is one of the states recognized ‘high performing schools.’ But, because of the passage of the 2010 school funding formula, Bristol is suffering. The budget shortfalls we face are dire and need to be addressed. We need to seriously study and address the way we fund our public schools; urban, suburban, and regional, so that it is equitable and beneficial for all.

I am a lifelong advocate for children and families and am a founding member and the current Chair of the East Bay chapter of Habitat for Humanity (HFH). There is a shortage of good affordable housing available and we must do more to help. We recently finished our fifth HFH project right here in Bristol and now another deserving family has a safe and affordable place to call home. Projects like this are crucial to ensuring working families have a chance to get ahead and we need to be doing more not less.

I am a current board member of the environmental organization, Save Bristol Harbor. Our mission is to preserve the health, safety and integrity of the coastal waters and watersheds of Bristol. Recently, we led the fight to defeat the transport of Liquefied Natural Gas. We organized our neighboring communities in RI and South Coast Massachusetts to join us in pushing to fight this dangerous proposition. I attended dozens of meetings with local officials, state lawmakers, and the Attorney General’s office to make it clear our community did not want this. I am proud to say that we were successful! Today, along with a team of local volunteers, I test the quality of our waters bimonthly and work to educate local students on the importance of watersheds and the problems ocean and shoreline debris present to our environment.

When I decided to run, I thought about the children in our schools.  I thought about families struggling to get by.  The politicians are the ones who betray our trust, but we are the ones left voiceless.  It is our community that gets left without someone fighting for us at the State House.  Think about that.  When the budget comes around, there will be no one there to stand up and say what the people of our district believe.  When they talk about the school funding formula, there will be no one there to say what we need.  There will just be an empty chair.

We need real ethics reform, but we also need representatives who aren’t in it for themselves.  I promise you I’ll never betray your trust because I’m not running to make my life better.  I’m not running to further my own interests.  I’m running for the same reasons I became a teacher, for the same reason I helped build those homes and keep our bay clean:  To make lives better and our community stronger.

It’s time for Kevin Jackson to resign


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Kevin Jackson
Kevin Jackson

It’s time for Providence City Councillor Kevin Jackson to resign. Jackson represents Ward 3, on the East Side where I live. He has been plagued by scandal and bad choices for years, and barely won his last election against write-in candidate Marcus Mitchell.

I reluctantly voted for Jackson over Mitchell because of Mitchell’s past association with US Senator Rick Santorum in Pennsylvania. Mitchell claimed the mantle of progressive, but I couldn’t trust him, and there was little time to properly vet him. What little I knew about Mitchell didn’t thrill me. In 2005, Mitchell, then a registered Republican, was Senator Rick Santorum’s Director of Community & Economic Development in Pennsylvania. Santorum represents everything I find ugly in a politician.

Santorum once compared Obamacare to apartheid in a tribute speech to Nelson Mandela. Santorum is anti LGBTQ rights at best, a raving homophobe at worst. He’s not only anti-abortion, he’s against your right to use contraception. He supported the privatization of Social Security. He called climate change “junk science.”

Did I allow my completely reasonable disdain for Santorum to cloud my judgement regarding Mitchell? Perhaps. But given what I knew about Santorum and what little I knew about Mitchell, I made the best choice I could.

I voted for Jackson. I don’t regret making what I consider to be the best choice in a bad situation…

…but it’s time for Jackson to resign.

Jackson has done some good things as a city councilor in the last year, including fighting against fiscally irresponsible Tax Stabilization Agreements (TSAs).  Some of the most recent TSAs, supported by Mayor Elorza, would have functioned as little more than cash giveaways to connected realtors.

This is all for the good, but I think voters in Ward 3 could do a lot better than Jackson in an open election.

Buddy Cianci is dead, and the culture of casual corruption he represents should have died with him. Jackson backed Cianci when the former Mayor made his quixotic bid at a return to power. I found Jackson’s support of Cianci embarrassing.

Ward 3 could vote for a candidate that both looks after our interests and doesn’t play fast and loose with his campaign cash. We could vote for a candidate that has not been accused of embezzlement. We could vote for a candidate that does not embarrass us but instead represents us.

It’s time for Jackson to resign.

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