CLF moves to finish off pipeline tariff


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

National Grid LogoIn response to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s decision against National Grid’s plan to charge consumers to underwrite and guarantee profits for its proposed ANE pipeline, the Conservation Law Foundation (CLF) has moved to close the Docket on a similar proposal here in Rhode Island.

Closing the docket would essentially end National Grid’s plan. According to the motion, National Grid provided testimony in the Massachusetts case claiming that “the fate of the ANE Project is dependent on approvals of full cost-recovery in other New England states—especially Massachusetts, which National Grid assumed would provide a substantial portion of the financing for the proposed project.”

As National Grid further states, “If there is any possibility of less than full cost recovery over the entire term of the contracts, the Proposed Agreement has a negative expected value for the Company’s investors…” National Grid wants to place the risks of this investment on ratepayers, not its investors.

The motion to dismiss, filed by CLF attorneys Jerry Elmer, Megan Herzog and Max Greene, supplies several reasons supporting the contention that Docket 4627 needs to be closed in light of the Massachusetts decision.

The first reason is that the project cannot proceed without Massachusetts. “Massachusetts was to receive the lion’s share—more than 43 percent—of the Access Northeast project’s gas capacity,” says the motion to dismiss, “In effect, Massachusetts’ non-participation cripples the project.”

Even if National Grid decides to proceed with the motion, by deciding to actually assume the financial risks, says the CLF, that isn’t the plan as proposed in Docket 4627. The scheme, says the CLF, “is so substantially altered by [the Massachusetts opinion] that the Petition, as filed, fails to represent fairly the costs and benefits of the ANE Project.”

Without the State of Massachusetts buying in, “The resulting proposition is an entirely new, and raw, deal for Rhode Island. In effect, National Grid is now asking Rhode Island ratepayers to subsidize a project that it alleges will benefit all of New England; yet a substantial share of New England ratepayers—including millions of ratepayers in Massachusetts—will be insulated from bearing a proportional share of the risks of this experimental and uncertain scheme.”

Also, even though the Massachusetts decision was based on Massachusetts state law and has no direct legal bearing on Rhode Island, “the reasoning underlying the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s decision… applies with equal force here.”

Rhode Island has laws similar to those in Massachusetts regarding “the core principles of electricity market restructuring,” says the CLF, and approving National Grid’s plan “would undermine the main objectives of the [restructuring] act and re-expose ratepayers to the types of financial risks from which the Legislature sought to protect them.”

Patreon

Museum preserves Somali culture in a world of fear and hate


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

SONY DSCThe Somali immigrant community in Minnesota came under fire from Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump earlier in August. Immigration policy, said Trump, is, “creating an enclave of immigrants with high unemployment that is both stressing the state’s … safety net, and creating a rich pool of potential recruiting targets for Islamic terror groups.”

Trump’s comments did not come out of a vacuum. They were in reference to the the high profile trial of 10 Somali-Americans who were tried for attempting to join ISIS. But note that Trump isn’t going after terrorists or criminals in his statements, he’s going after a community. The Somali community in Minnesota is the largest in the United States. Of the over 85,000 Somalis in the country, 25,000 live in Minnesota, and they want what we all want: peace and love and family and friends.

Trump’s words emboldened his followers to attack the Somali community. Laura Yuen of Minnesota Public Radio News, reports:

In an audio recording the Somali Museum of Minnesota said it received last week on its office voicemail, an anonymous caller, who identifies himself as a Minnesotan, saying “when Donald Trump is elected president, you’re going to have to close down your museum.”

The anonymous caller continues: “November’s coming around; he’s gonna get elected, and we’re gonna get put a ban on all Muslims, especially Somalis. Go listen to Donald Trump speak at speeches: He’s talking about Somalis in Minnesota. What do you think is gonna happen? They’re all gonna get deported. What’s gonna happen then to your museum?”

20160820_160946-1This is not an attack on terrorists, this is an attack on a culture, the threat of genocide is implied by such threats against its cultural institutions. The Somali Museum in Minneapolis is the only one of its kind in the world. Another museum, in Mogadishu, fell victim to the civil war, its artifacts and exhibits scattered to the wind.

I visited the Somali Museum on Saturday. I was given a tour by Abdirahman Hassan, a 24 year old University of Minnesota student. Hassan taught me about Somalia’s history of colonization, about the ways in which the country was divided by the English, Italians and the French. How a failed government led to civil war and the expansion of the Somali Diaspora. Today more than one million Somalis now live around the world in communities like Minneapolis.

Abdirahman is very much an American youth. We bonded over our mutual appreciation for Star Trek, yet his eyes were most alive when we talked about nomadic Somali culture. As part of the diaspora he could not read or write the Somali language until he began to learn it at university.

The Somali Museum concentrates on the nomadic Somali culture. Weaving is an essential skill. Some pots, like the one pictured above, are woven so tightly and expertly they can contain milk without leaking. The camel, in Somali nomadic culture, provides transportation, meat, leather and milk.

Abdirahman told me of Arawelo, the ancient and legendary queen of Somalia, who advanced the cause of feminism even as she castrated and limited the power of men.

I learned of Mohammed Abdullah Hassan, called the Mad Mullah by the British. He fought for the freedom of what was then known as Somaliland against British, Italian and Ethiopian forces. His was the first army to face aerial bombardment as biplanes dropped bombs on his forces. He did not die in battle or in prison, but of the flu at age 64.

There is a culture, a language, a history, a people and a community under threat from the mad rhetoric of Donald Trump and his followers. On June 29, near the University of Minnesota, “an assailant allegedly made disparaging remarks about Muslims before opening fire on five young men clad in Muslim prayer robes called qamis. Two of the men, ages 22 and 19, were wounded when bullets struck them in the leg.”

And of course there is 13-year old Yusuf Dayur, who has been bullied in school for being Muslim. “Why do your people attack us for no reason?” Yusuf was asked in school by an older student.

“I just walked away. I didn’t know what to do,” said Yusuf.

The mission of the Somali Museum says that, “By promoting the highest forms of Somali creativity, the Somali Museum believes that it can also help to diminish harmful prejudice and misunderstanding.”

Mission accomplished.

Patreon

Joe Paolino talks poverty, panhandling in Providence


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

paolinoJoe Paolino, who is spearheading an effort to address panhandling in Providence, told RI Future he is committed to addressing systemic poverty rather than moving poor people away from his real estate empire.

“I think I and other business people should pony up some dollars to try to help toward that,” he said. “It’s not our job but it’s our social commitment that we should make as members of this community.”

He spoke of the need for new shelters, new laws and more experts on the streets to address the issue, but he didn’t estimate a cost. “I don’t know because you have a state-wide problem, you have a city problem, different communities have their problems and you have a downtown problem.”

But he did offer reassurances that he isn’t interested in simply relocating the issue away from downtown. “I don’t want to see the problem moved to another area,” he said. “I want to see the problem fixed. If we can fix it here, then it becomes an example of what other communities can do.”

He said austerity and government cost cutting have exacerbated the issues of poverty and panhandling. “By cutting those dollars you’re creating the problem,” he said.

The good news, Paolino said, is that all the interested parties are finally communicating with each other.

“With every crisis comes an opportunity,” he said. “The social service agencies finally have business people listening to them. This is an opportunity for the progressive leaders in the General Assembly to seize upon this. I don’t think they have to fight us.”

We had a fascinating 30-minute conversation that you can listen to below. While we agreed on a lot, we often passionately disagreed, too. For example, we exchanged some heated words about whether a City Hall employee was mugged or harassed.

Green Party calls on Mayor Elorza to support Community Safety Act


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

2016-07-21 Pass the CSA 038The Green Party of Rhode Island is demanding that Providence pass the Community Safety Act.

“Further delays are inexcusable and potentially dangerous,” said Green Party spokesman Andrew Stewart in a press release sent on Sunday. “Providence should learn from other cities, and move quickly to prevent another tragedy.”

The Community Safety Act is a citizen-backed bill that would implement new safeguards against racial profiling when police detain and/or search a suspect. Proponents say it would “ban racial profiling and other forms of discriminatory policing.”

A subcommittee of the Providence City Council is supposed to consider the legislation in September. DARE, or Direct Action for Rights and Equality, has long championed the Community Safety Act. Recently members of the Providence Youth Student Movement and the White Noise Collective have formed an umbrella organization called the Step It Up Coalition to organize around the CSA. In July, activists held a mock city council meeting at Providence City Hall. Actors playing elected officials pretended to pass the legislation.

The Green Party’s support could add a new dimension of political pressure to efforts to pass the CSA. “Unless the ordinance is approved soon, the Green Party says further protests may be necessary,” according to the press release. “The Greens have written to Councillors Jo Ann Ryan, Brian Principe, Seth Yurdin, and John Igliozzi, urging them to move the ordinance to approval. Mayor Jorge Elorza has also heard from the Greens, who asked him to remind the Police Department that the CSA is an opportunity to build stronger community ties while making officers’ jobs more safe and secure.”

Here’s a copy of the email the Green Party sent to Mayor Elorza and other members of the city council.

Dear Mayor Elorza:

On behalf of the State Committee of the Green Party of Rhode Island, I am writing to urge you to support the Community Safety Act (CSA), which could make Providence a national leader in police/community relations.

As you know, the CSA would create stronger checks-and-balances for law enforcement, to ensure safer encounters between officers and residents. For example, it would prohibit racial and ethnic profiling, implement a “standardized encounter form” to document police-citizen interaction, and set limits on police use of non-essential traffic stops, warrantless surveillance, and the so-called ‘gang list’.

Your support now could make a difference. Please remind the Police Department that the CSA is in everyone’s best interest—the CSA would build stronger and safer communities—while making officers’ jobs more safe and secure.

We look forward to learning that your Administration has decided to support the CSA.

Andrew Stewart
For the State Committee
Green Party of Rhode Island
CC: Green Party State Committee