ProJo typo: paper of record misstates marriage vote

“The eyes of the nation are upon us,” said Senator Donna Nesselbush about Rhode Island’s historic vote for marriage equality last night. Too bad for the Providence Journal, which made an awfully unfortunate typo in a headline on the historic vote today:

projo a1 vote

As you can see in two other instances on the front page – in the story and in the photo – the vote last night was actually 26 to 12, not 24 to 12 as the headline indicates. Full front page here.

If anything, this is an indication that a shrinking newsroom is degrading our once-great paper of record. But it’s also just a sign that human beings sometimes screw up…

ProJo Scapegoats Unions, Ignores Wall Street


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It’s fine if the Providence Journal editorial board wants to espouse a right wing philosophy, even if such ideas are largely out of touch with the people of Rhode Island. It’s not okay for the Providence Journal to blame organized labor for their policy positions when unions have nothing to do with it.

The latest example comes in a piece this morning that warns the state not to force Bryant University to make a payment in lieu of taxes to its host community Smithfield.

Sen. Steven Archambault and state Rep. Thom-as Winfield, both of Smithfield, and Rep. Gregory Costantino, of Lincoln, all Democrats, have filed wrongheaded legislation to alter Bryant’s tax-exempt status, evidently to funnel more money to the town and, ultimately, its public-employee unions.

This is factually incorrect and/or highly misleading. If Bryant were to step up its financial commitment to its host community, a fraction of that new money MIGHT benefit public sector employees – an even smaller fraction MIGHT benefit their labor unions. All of it WOULD be used to benefit Smithfield taxpayers and the community (but try making a boogieman out of those two constituencies!).

If you spend any time at the State House, you’d know that Rhode Island’s labor leaders probably spend more time and effort lobbying for legislation that benefits regular Rhode Islanders in general than they do for their members in particular.

In my last three years covering Smith Hill, it seems patently obvious that the most powerful special interest at the State House is big business and Wall Street. Whether coincidental or not, you won’t ever hear anything about this from any of the local media outlets funded by Corporate America.

Is it possible that the ProJo editorial board is making a scapegoat out of labor in order to hide who the real powerful special interest in state government?

The War On The Poor


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According WPRI’s Tim White and Dan McGowan, 100% of December 2012’s electronic benefit transfer funds are being used at completely legal locations. In any budget anywhere, that would be cause for celebration, it would be a gold standard by which to hold others accountable. However, that was not the lede that WPRI chose. They went with the more eye-catching “thousands of dollars in cash assistance were withdrawn from ATMs in liquor stores, bars, smoke shops and even Twin River casino…”

As Mssrs. White and McGowan show, approximately $10,000 out of the $3.1 million spent in Rhode Island EBT benefits are being taken out at ATMs in places where you can buy alcohol and tobacco; and $106 at a place where you can gamble. That amounts to 0.32% of all EBT funds. That’s a miniscule amount. And let’s be clear, these are completely legal ATMs that Rhode Islanders can use under Rhode Island and federal law. By 2014, those locations won’t be legal places and then we can say that 0.32% of EBT benefits are being withdrawn in illegal places. That hasn’t happened yet, and despite the area, there are still plenty of good reasons someone might take money out of an ATM at these places; such as convenience. Even the Twin River location could be explained as an employee using their card.

WPRI called these “questionable” places. Yes they are. But if we’re going to question this, we’ve got to hold up the mirror to ourselves. Has anyone ever charged their business for a “questionable” expense? To align with government assistance, what about that mortgage credit you received for buying a house? Have you bought any alcohol or tobacco since receiving it? Then you’ve used taxpayer dollars to pay for “questionable” expenses. That’s government money you got. What about that Social Security check your grandmother receives? She smoke or drink or gamble? Yes? All three, when she’s at Twin River? Turn her in to the Target 12 Investigators!

The difference between EBT and the mortgage credit and Social Security is that EBT goes to those who need it most. As Mssrs. White and McGowan point out, the maximum a family of four can earn is $1,438 a month and have less than $1000 in assets, not including a house or car. Left out of that is that the family of four is also living in Rhode Island. According the National Low Income Housing Coalition, to afford the “fair market rent” on a two bedroom apartment in Rhode Island and to spend no more than 30% of your income on it (thus making it “affordable”), you’d have to earn $3,081 a month.

There’s a word for stories headlined like the WPRI one. It’s “outrage porn” (the commenters on the story clearly were). And not even good outrage porn, since it found exactly zero cases of fraud. I understand the straits WPRI finds itself in. It needs to get those ratings up, and John DePetro seems to get a lot of mileage of SNAP… but come on, the “Heavy Hitter” getting disability from bankrupt Central Falls this is not.

If you want to be outraged, let’s talk about the butchery that was done to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children to turn it into TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) by the then-Republican Congress and then-President Bill Clinton. TANF doesn’t care about what the circumstances might be, you get a maximum of 60 months (5 years). So if you’ve say, been living in Rhode Island, attempting to make due since the recession started in Rhode Island (which was in 2006 for us, if you’ll remember) you ran out of TANF in 2008, because you didn’t find a job as the national economy worsened, and TANF requires that you find a job in 24 months (2 years) or your benefits are cut off (though states get the option to make the rules worse). Luckily though, TANF is only the callous part of the two programs that use EBT.

The other is SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program). SNAP beats every other program the government runs. Hands down, it is the best function of government we have. First, it feeds the hungry. Second, it never runs out because Sens. George McGovern and Bob Dole made damn sure America would not be a country that allowed its people to starve to death. That’s the fundamental vision there: no one should starve to death in the land of the free and the home of the brave. But there’s other reasons to love SNAP.

SNAP is also an economic bellwether. If you’d been paying attention to enrollment in SNAP over the last 10 years (funny story, you probably weren’t), you would’ve seen immediately when Rhode Island entered the recession. It was in 2006 when suddenly SNAP enrollment leapt up incredibly. At the time, administrators believed it was because of the robust outreach program they had. Even if that is true, it should have been a warning that economic circumstances were far more dire then we acknowledged or realized. The state should’ve gone into full recession-fighting mode. But hindsight is 20/20.

SNAP is also an amazing program because it automatically scales back as people don’t need it anymore. Like a good budget, it spends during lean years and then saves during the fat years. But since the American budgeting process it back asswards (spend wildly during fat years and cut back during lean ones), what you saw was Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan pointing to the massive increase in the cost of SNAP and saying “we need to cut this, it’s expensive.” Yes, feeding hungry people can be a bit pricey. But you know what’s even more expensive? Burying people and their children. It costs a hell of a lot more than the average of $1,611.48 per year that we were spending on each of the 47.7 million Americans enrolled in SNAP in September 2012. That’s 15.2% of all Americans in 2012 in case you were wondering.

Likewise, we will waste more more in court proceedings and imprisonment then we will save by attempting to go after the potential of $120,000 in savings. We will destroy families, causing instability and poverty. And Rhode Island will bear the costs, for policing a federal program with overly zealous laws. To save the Feds money, cash-strapped Rhode Island will take on the costs, costs that will undoubtedly exceed $120,000. That’s practically state-sponsored masochism.

We punish the poor so that the well-off can point to their government budget and say “look, we’re cutting back, we’re tightening our belts.” Then they’ll buy some expensive clothes, get drunk at an expensive restaurant, hire a family member or buddy for a $40,000+ yearly salary and blow $75 million on a video game company run by a retired baseball player. But you know what, instead of dealing with that, let’s keep passing laws to make life harder for the working impoverished, homeless, and destitute. After all, they’re just trying to survive in the greatest country on the face of the Earth.

Conservative Hate Radio Falls Out Of Fashion


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Will Rhode Island soon hear a kinder, gentler WPRO?

Probably not, but Lew Dickey, CEO of WPRO’s Atlanta-based parent company Cumulus, is hinting that we might start hearing less about Republican politics and more about the Red Sox baseball.

“We’re seeing a shift in spoken word radio from political-based talk over to sports,” Dickey told Bloomberg News recently. “The ratings are slightly down on talk and moving up on sports. Advertisers follow audiences and that is what we are seeing.”

You can watch him here. Dickey seems excited about the potential for country music as well as sports radio to keep making money for Cumulus. But he doesn’t seem too excited about the bombastic variety of conservative hate radio to which WPRO devotes most of its resources.

“I think people might be tired of all the partisan bickering,” Dickey told Bloomberg.

There is evidence that WHJJ sees this writing on the wall. This week the mild-mannered Andrew Gobeil is filling in for the always angry Helen Glover.

Not so much, though, at WPRO, where station manager Barbara Haynes seems to be bucking the trend and getting rid of the least conservative personalities, rather than the most: I was the first to be let go, then Andrew Gobeil then Ron St. Pierre. If this trend holds true, John DePetro might be the last employee at the Salty Shack!!

The American Prospect has a great piece on the rise and fall of conservative talk radio in America as seen through the experiences of Rush Limbaugh.

Since Limbaugh’s program began airing nationally 24 years ago, the goal of every episode has been to create an environment in which liberalism can’t but die. The show and its host came along at a time when the Willie Horton-ized politics favored bomb-throwing. The medium of political talk radio was just beginning its ascendance from regional media backwater to primary driver of national Republican politics.

But here we are today, newly embarked upon the second half of the Obama epoch. The conservative movement is fissured, and Barack Obama’s re-election brought a round of recriminations against the conservative media for poisoning Republican politics. For all of 2012, right-wing media gave its audience Obama-bashing and unfounded assurances of a Romney victory. As The Atlantic’s Conor Friedersdorf argued, this ended up putting conservatives at a disadvantage. “On the biggest political story of the year, the conservative media just got its ass handed to it by the mainstream media. And movement conservatives, who believe the MSM is more biased and less rigorous than their alternatives, have no way to explain how their trusted outlets got it wrong, while The New York Times got it right.”

Limbaugh is doing what he’s always done, because it’s worked for him in the past. But there’s a question now as to whether this model, an artifact from the Reagan years, can plausibly lead the broader conservative movement forward. It’s not 1988 anymore, and Republicans and conservatives still smarting from 2012 have to be wondering about the future of the party of Limbaugh.

Sanchez’s Wrongful Death Reminds Of Jennifer Rivera


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It appears that the State Police and the Attorney General have decided to NOT bring criminal charges against the 24-year-old man, Benjamin Servideo, who rear-ended and killed a 9-month pregnant woman Sullynette Sanchez and her infant who was born immediately after the accident, Noah.  Servideo claims that he became a distracted driver when his wallet fell and he looked for it.

Members of the community have expressed outrage on facebook and the radio at the decision to slap the wrist of Servideo instead of bringing criminal actions.  It sparks memories of another Attorney General who faced an outcry in the community after the death of a young, innocent girl named Jennifer Rivera.

Wouldn’t this section of the criminal code be relevant?

RIGL § 31-27-1  Driving so as to endanger, resulting in death. – (a) When the death of any person ensues as a proximate result of an injury received by the operation of any vehicle in reckless disregard of the safety of others, including violations of § 31-27-22, the person so operating the vehicle shall be guilty of “driving so as to endanger, resulting in death”.     (b) Any person charged with the commission of this offense shall upon conviction be imprisoned for not more than ten (10) years and have his or her license to operate a motor vehicle suspended for no more than five (5) years.

The interview with the fiance and dad of the deceased is heartbreaking.

For the first time since the crash, Steven Bustamante — Sanchez’s fiance and the baby’s father — spoke about his loss.

“My fiancee and my son are not here, and I’m never going to be able to get them back,” Bustamante said.

Bustamante was about to marry the love of his life, Sully Sanchez, who was pregnant with their son, when that dream was torn away, replaced by a nightmare he lives every day.

“Let them be alive and me not be here, and it was the most painful thing not to be able to help them,” Bustamante said.

Sanchez was driving on Route 4 in East Greenwich when another driver struck her from behind.

“Justice to me is consequences for his actions, not a ticket, taking his license away,” Bustamante said.

The family learned Monday that the driver, Benjamin Servideo, will not face criminal charges. Instead, he is facing a trial on civil violations in the Rhode Island Traffic Tribunal.

“He didn’t just kill one person, he killed two,” Bustamante said.

Bustamante is left with anger to compound his already overwhelming grief.

“Your son is supposed to bury you, not me bury my son or fiancee. It’s not right. It’s not right at all,” Bustamante said.

It is surprising that a Grand Jury was not even convened to ask the question of criminal liability.

Ed Achorn: Baseball Is His Second Favorite Hobby


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Ed Achorn is correct when he writes that in order to turn around the state’s dismal economy, “Rhode Island will have to improve its public schools.” But keep one thing in mind, he isn’t writing about education in this piece. And his favorite pastime isn’t baseball. The answer to both is: blaming labor for what ails the Ocean State.

“Very powerful special interests, who have not been above using thuggish tactics to advance their economic interests, still control public education in the state,” he writes.

It’s actually impressive how many half-truths, incorrect innuendos and outright falsehoods Achorn stuffed into this one sentence. There are nearly as many lies as words!

Much to my chagrin – and to the detriment of our economy and education system, I might add – teachers’ unions are not a very powerful special interest in Rhode Island anymore.

They can toss a couple bucks at a State House race or two, but so can Gina Raimondo. These days, so can pretty much any anonymous Enron hedge fund manager who might care to. And, not for nothing, but those exact two individuals pretty much took all of Achorn’s “very power special interests” to the legislative – and retirement – woodshed with pension reform still less than a year-and-a-half ago.

Though the new state education board is decidedly more pro-labor than either panel has been in recent history, Education Commissioner Deborah Gist is one of the nation’s more anti-labor ed. chiefs. I’d say the balance is at best split pretty evenly there.

Achorn’s game in this instance – and so-called education deformers in general – is to blame unions for what is obviously an issue of income inequality.

Public education is doing just fine in Rhode Island’s suburbs – in fact it is flourishing – but it’s crumbling in the poorer urban areas. Yet both groups of employees bargain collectively. So what gives, Ed?

Interestingly, RIPR’s Elizabeth Harrison had the answer.

As I was reading Achorn’s misinformation, education activist Aaron Regunberg was being interviewed on the radio about his efforts to advocate for education equality.

“I think there is a lot of demonizing public schools,” Regunberg said.

But, then again, Regunberg represents a special interest as well: students. In fact, using labor unions as a kind of model, Regunberg has organized students at three inner-city schools into groups that advocate for student interests.

 

Nesi Takes On Tax Policy!


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Chart courtesy of WhoPays.org

To my way of thinking, there are few things that would be better medicine for the debate on how to fix Rhode Island’s economy than for WPRI’s uber-influential blogger Ted Nesi to delve into the state’s tax policy in the same way he did for the pension debate.

And lately, he has!

Note the the last three headlines on Nesi’s Notes (as well as a number of posts on tax equity last week and the week before):

While all of Nesi’s posts haven’t furthered the liberal legislative agenda, that really isn’t what progressives want from the mainstream media; we want to have an intellectually honest and respectful debate about the issues that affect the community – be they tax policy, civil rights or social justice.

Nesi has a tough beat  because he has to cover politics AND the economy – and these two forces of nature often collide in odd ways. But if he devotes a fraction of the pixels to tax policy that he gave to pension reform (or even just Raimondomania!), progressives, and everyone else, will get a great deal of very valuable information by which to measure the success and/or failure of our tax policies, which I think people of all political stripes can agree is of tantamount importance to the state.

The zeitgeist here in the Ocean State is that Keynsian economics doesn’t exist. That’s what happens when there are very few progressive pundits and a great many conservative pundits posing as economists. Even self-described moderate Ken Block traffics in this talking point.

A little bit of sunlight from the mainstream media will go a long way to dispelling some of these myths.

ProJo Should Stop Using ‘Openly’ Gay


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Cheers to both the Providence Journal and Fall River Herald News editorial boards, both of whom reaffirmed their support for marriage equality in Rhode Island and called for swift passage of this long-overdue equal rights legislation before it becomes part of the political horse-trading on Smith Hill in the springtime.

This is an important point. Soon enough Rhode Island will learn whether Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed’s opposition to same sex marriage runs stronger than her desire for continued political power. I don’t imagine it does. Not when you factor in that she alone will bear the biggest political crosses, if you will, if Rhode Island rejects marriage equality.

While she is certainly seeking something in return for her support – it could be something giant like control of the powerful Joint Committee on Legislative Services or something smaller like support for binding arbitration – she also risks going down in the books as the Rhode Island’s 21st century version of George Wallace, the Alabama governor, known as “the most influential loser” who fought against civil rights in the early 60’s. Such a legacy would certainly affect her ability to become a judge in the future.

Openly? gay

There’s another point about these two editorials that’s worth noting – this one a difference in them.

The ProJo refers to House Speaker Gordon Fox as being “openly gay” while the Herald News more simply points out that Fox is gay. I think it’s prejudicial to refer to someone as being “openly” gay. There’s a great Wikipedia page on this for those who want to explore this more. For our purposes, I’ll keep it local:

Gordon Fox is no more (or less) openly gay than Ed Achorn is openly heterosexual. They are both – to my limited knowledge – in loving, long-time, committed relationships with two primary differences: one is gender and the other involves equal protection under the law.

When the media refers to gay people as being “openly” gay it implies there is still some cause to be closed about such sexual identity. There isn’t. Not here in mainstream Rhode Island there isn’t.

There are surely some hate groups, churches and other such outliers who still think it’s noteworthy that someone doesn’t hide their affection for people of the same gender. But by and large this ceased being a big deal to most people a long time ago.

We’re just waiting for the law to catch up with rest of society…

Roger Williams Would Be… Roger Williams


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Roger Williams and the Narragansetts
Roger Williams and the Narragansetts
Roger Williams and the Narragansetts, as published in 1856, 170+ years after Williams’ death. (Via Wikimedia Commons)

The political opinions collected at GoLocalProv have always been a bit of a mystery to me. A lot of it doesn’t seem to reflect the city that I know, which is a pretty nice cosmopolitan city with a number of issues.

Don Roach, a Brown University grad, fine. Travis Rowley always seems to inhabit a different Rhode Island than the one the rest of us are living in (his version of this state makes me afraid for his blood pressure), but at least he’s here in Rhode Island. But this takes the cake for about the worst thing that I’ve seen published in GoLocalProv’s political opinions.

It’s a ridiculous screed about the supposed ruin of Rhode Island by the Democratic Party entitled “Roger Williams Would Be a Republican in RI”, written by a Californian. Totally “local” right? There’s even a point where he vaguely compares the Democrats to witches. He does know Roger Williams wasn’t dissenting from witches, right?

Roger Williams (and Anne Hutchinson) features for all of eleven sentences before the screed just repeats the same b.s. about Democrats; they’re corrupt, they’re destroying Rhode Island, etc., etc. My favorite line:

Instead of casting hexes on the unsuspecting citizens, the Democratic Party cult has cursed the minds and the hearts of the Rhode Island citizenry, convincing them that Republicans have no power, no solutions, and no ideas beyond running against the Democratic machine.

Anyhow, the account is factually wrong on at least a couple of points:

1. Rhode Island is the most impoverished state in the nation. No, it’s not. Mississippi continues to retain that honor, with other southern states. Most impoverished in New England; but that’s a bit like being a short giant. Short, for a giant, but still very much a giant. That we’re tied with Nevada for highest unemployment, however, that remains true. We also rank around 17th for highest average income as of 2011.

2. Anne Hutchinson was going to be executed for witchcraft. Anne Hutchinson was advocating doctrines heretical to the Church in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, but witchcraft doesn’t seem to have been among her crimes. The major issue seems to have been her articulation of antinomianism, hence the name “Antinomian Controversy” for the events surround her trial and not “Hutchinson Witch Trial”. Since Anne Hutchinson was both imprisoned by the Massachusetts Bay Colony and then found guilty in both civil and religious trials if the colony intended to execute her they had the perfect moment: when they sentenced her. Hutchinson was excommunicated and banished. Her supporters suffered similar fates.

They’d already written to Roger Williams, who advised them to purchase land from the Narragansett. That eventually became Portsmouth.

That gets me to the major point; that Roger Williams would have been a Republican today. The answer is: who knows? Roger Williams was a classic English dissenter; he ultimately died without belonging to a church, looking for one that matched the purity of his ideals. He was a man apart. If Roger Williams were alive today his first response would probably be “whoa! How are your houses lit without candles? How are they heated without fire? Why is Providence built entirely from stone?!” Things have changed, Roger. Our entire political system is different from Roger Williams’ day. Who’s to say where he would stand once he figured it out.

Unless you actually are practicing witchcraft, specifically necromancy, you can’t possibly know what a dead person would think of today. People exist in specific historical places and times. Certainly, you can utilize their ideas and words; everyone does. It’s why the New Deal’s patron saint was James Madison even though the post-Constitutional Convention Madison opposed large-scale governmental policies in his own day. It’s why the Tea Party uses Tom Paine even though Paine specifically advocates for things like social welfare (and in the 18th Century as well).

We politicize history because it’s convenient to cast ourselves in the legacy of great people. To place ourselves in a historical context and seek justification for it from history. But Roger Williams can’t legitimize the Republican Party in Rhode Islanders’ eyes, anymore than he can do that for the Democratic Party. If Roger Williams were here today, he would be Roger Williams; a complex dissenter who helped found our state and gave us a body of thought that continues to be debated today. The man didn’t even leave behind an authentic image of himself. If he doesn’t have a face, how could he possibly have an affiliation with a political party that arose over 150 years after his death?

Population Decline and Progressive Witchcraft

Witches drinking tea.
A recent meeting of RIFuture contributors (Bob Plain last on right).

There’s an oft repeated falsehood told in Rhode Island that is repeated enough that those parroting it no longer feel the need to justify the logic of it. This factoid goes something like this, people are leaving the Rhode Island, which proves something is dreadfully wrong (and certainly the fault of Democrats, progressives, unions, fisher cats, whatever).

The latest iteration of this comes from the Arthur Christopher Schaper, “guest mindsetter” at GoLocal, who notes with grave concern that “more people are leaving the state than entering.”

The problem, according the Schaper, is that the Democratic Party like a coven of witches “casting hexes on the unsuspecting citizens” has “cursed the minds and the hearts of the Rhode Island citizenry, convincing them that Republicans have no power, no solutions, and no ideas beyond running against the Democratic machine.”

Yes, that’s right. It’s not Republicans lack of viable ideas. It’s only the appearance of that! Clearly someone has fooled you gullible voters. Lucky for you, smart folks like Mr. Schaper are still around to tell you about it. It’s funny, but it’s also what passes for serious political analysis on Rhode Island’s right.

But what of the idea that we should be concerned that “more people are leaving the state than entering?” This one is a bit more pernicious than the rest of the nonsense in Schaper’s anti-progressive rant because it seems a logical premise:  People gravitate towards “good” places and away from “bad” ones. But just how important an indicator is population growth for prosperity? Turns out, there’s no connection between the two.  Richard Florida of the Martin Prosperity Institute looked for just such an association. What he found was that:

Economists of all stripes agree that rising productivity – fueled by more efficient business practices, more highly skilled and flexible workers, new technology and higher rates of innovation – is the main driver of economic growth.

Productivity and prosperity always go together; prosperity and population not so much… there was no statistical association whatsoever between population growth and productivity growth.

This not only challenges, it definitively disproves, the conventional wisdom that a growing population equals a growing economy. Population growth, in fact, can create a false illusion of prosperity.

Florida explains, that while migration patterns may have mattered in the agricultural and industrial past, what’s import now are those things that matter in the new economy “like education, skills, innovation and creativity.” Unfortunately ideas to promote an environment supportive of those things that matter are among the very things Schaper dismisses out of hand as a focus on “inane and non-pressing matters,” for instance legislation promoting the progressives values of tolerance and equality, which have been positively linked to higher levels of economic growth. That’s not progressive voodoo. It’s simple economic fact.

Competitive Cities Care About Equality
Members of the creative class – the 40 million workers, a third of the American workforce – the scientists and engineers, innovator and entrepreneurs, researchers and academics, architects and designers, artists, entertainers and media types and professionals in business, management, healthcare and law who power economic growth – place a huge premium on diversity. In fact, they use it as a proxy to determine whether a city will provide a welcoming and stimulating environment for them.

Cities that demonstrate such attributes gain a competitive edge, as evidenced by their consistently higher levels of economic growth. As the journalist and demographer Bill Bishop put it, “Where gay households abound, geeks follow.”

I’m hopeful that analysis by economists like Florida will help to convince RI Republicans to abandon their flawed metrics of the past and to begin seriously considering ideas that will make Rhode Island competitive in the future. Hopeful, yes, but in the case of progressive witch hunters like Mr. Schaper, it may take some time.

This Just In: Media Can’t Steal From Social Networks


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Bill Rappleye, Stephanie Mandeville DaSilva and Bill Fischer are engrossed in the campaign via their smart phones. (Photo by Bob Plain)

In what Reuters calls “one of the first big tests of intellectual property law involving social media” a judge has ruled that news organizations can’t freely use photos posted to Twitter.

Reuters reports: “Agence France-Presse and The Washington Post infringed on the copyrights of photographer Daniel Morel in using pictures he took in the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake in January 2010, District Judge Alison Nathan in Manhattan ruled. While AFP had argued that once the pictures appeared on Twitter they were freely available, the judge said that Twitter’s terms of service did not give the news agency a license to publish the images without Morel’s permission.”

Coincidentally enough – two local media organizations used photos ostensibly taken from Facebook today: the Providence Journal and RI Future.

We used Jenny Norris’ picture of Linc Chafee, Gina Raimondo, Frank Ferri and Art Handy at the House Judiciary Committee hearing on marriage equality last night. I couldn’t be at the hearing, but I saw Norris’ picture on Facebook and asked her if she would mind if we used it. She agreed and I think it was a pretty good deal all around: we got great art and she got a little notoriety.

As an aside, I think crowd-sourced journalism works well for a progressive news/opinion outlet and I hope we do more of it. To that end, please send your pictures, videos, story ideas, rants and raves to me at editor<at>rifuture<dot>org.

The ProJo, it seems, took a picture from the Facebook profile of an alleged drug and gun dealer whom police arrested recently. In the picture, the man is armed and holding a large amount of cash. Ironically, police became aware of him because of such pictures on Facebook, according to the Journal piece, and first reached out to set him up there.

The story doesn’t explicitly say the picture was lifted from Facebook, but it implies as much: “Except for one. The handle of a revolver is exposed in Main’s waistband, as he shows off money in one hand and a bagged substance in another.”

I don’t point this out to pick on the ProJo. I just thought the timing of it all was coincidental.

ProJo Belittles, Misinforms Unemployed Letter Writer


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The Providence Journal is entitled to its opinions. But as the state’s paper of record, it should also respect the opinions of others.

Instead, the ProJo editorial page has a habit of tacitly belittling those it disagrees with – one of the most insidious forms of mainstream media bias – evidenced today by a demeaning editor’s note on a letter from a reader.

In the LTE, Dan D’Alessio, of North Providence, explains how he lost his unemployment benefits because of the brinksmanship during the fiscal cliff negotiations. Clearly frustrated, he writes, “I’m sure our Founding Fathers would disapprove of just how ineffective big government has become. Please let me know in a timely fashion as possible what I am supposed to do now, since I am at my wit’s end.”

At the end of his letter, the Journal offers him a response: “Editor’s note: There was no unemployment compensation at the time of the Founders.”

First off, the Journal is wrong about this. According to the Social Security Administration’s history on social services in America, “The first colonial poor laws were fashioned after those of the Poor Law of 1601. They featured local taxation to support the destitute.” It may have been administered much differently, and it may have come in a different form than a direct deposit (oftentimes, out of work colonists would get put to work on “poor farms”), but to say it didn’t exist isn’t accurate.

Secondly, it entirely misses the point. The writer, in case it needs clarifying, was arguing that politics now gets in the way of government, and the founding fathers wouldn’t like that. You can disagree with the sentiment, but whether or not a certain program existed then is really irrelevant.

Thirdly, and I think most importantly, it came across as a nasty pot shot – and was likely meant that way. Yet another indication of just how dismissive the Journal is to the plight of the less fortunate.

Does anyone think a similar editor’s note would have been attached to a letter questioning what the founding fathers would think of pension reform politics?

Here is D’Alessio’s letter, and the ProJo’s response:

My DLT experience

My unemployment compensation ran out in the last week of December.

Since that time Congress has passed a one-year extension and President Obama signed the bill. The late signing is 50 percent of the reason I was not able to   continue to collect my unemployment benefits. The other 50 percent is because I am unable to get through on the phone to a representative of the Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training.

I did leave an online message about my plight, and I’m sure that many other Rhode Islanders have as well. So far, I have not received any mail or phone call from any of the department’s representatives.

I’m sure our Founding Fathers would disapprove of just how ineffective big government has become. Please let me know in a timely fashion as possible what I am supposed to do now, since I am at my wit’s end.

Finally, when I first started collecting unemployment I was able to fill out all of the necessary forms online except to pick a personal identification number. I tried then to speak to representatives by telephone but my attempts were all in vain. So I decided to drive to DLT headquarters to speak with someone just to get a PIN (I think it would have been prudent to use the last four digits of a person’s Social Security number) but I was told that I could not speak to anyone.

All I wanted to do was speak to someone in authority to explain a problem the DLT created for itself but I had an antidote for. Perhaps the agency could   use an out-of-work thinker and problem solver like me.

Dan D’Alessio North Providence

Editor’s note: There was no unemployment compensation at the time of the Founders.

RIPR Should Hire Andrew Gobeil To Do Talk Radio


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Photo from Twitter.

Rhode Island Public Radio should hire Andrew Gobeil to host a moderate and fair call-in talk radio show. The Ocean State could really use this. I haven’t spoken to either party about about this idea, but it sure seems to be a no-brainer to me. RIPR is a great young radio station in need of a personality to engage its listeners and Gobeil is a talented talker and a proven journalist who was fired by WPRO last week.

I know RIPR has long-sought to create something like a local On Point – a topical, call-in show with guests that enlightens listeners through engaging conversation. The still-young start up radio station would be wise to do so. There are so many of us media consumers out here working away on laptops and in offices or who would tune in daily. And if you also made it a podcast, you would get that many more listeners. Think in terms of the “virtuous circle” that WPRI is investing in.

I’m pretty certain Gobeil is the perfect fit. He’s great at live radio, he’s a proven reporter, he’s well-known, he’s well-respected and he’s all over the local social networks.

If station manager Joe O’Connor and news director Catherine Welch want to check out what Gobeil is capable of on air, they should listen to last Wednesday’s John DePetro Show. After being on live from 5 to 9 a.m., Gobeil was asked to fill in for DePetro who didn’t show up for work. Not only did he put in three additional hours on the spot with no prep time, he nailed it. I even tweeted as much at the time – twice! Here and here.

It was nuanced and fair and intelligent talk radio. Not to put too fine a point on it, but such content simply isn’t what WPRO is interested in producing. And, quite frankly, management there might indeed be right that the market won’t support it. This economic reality is both why Gobeil was fired and why public radio exists.

GoLocal Hires Paul J. Spetrini from Standard Times


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RI Future would like to extend a big giant progressive welcome to Paul J. Spetrini, the new news editor at GoLocalProv.

The Providence native who grew up on Atwells Avenue, comes to the Capital City journalism scene after serving as the editor of the Standard Times, the North Kingstown weekly paper owned by Southern Rhode Island Newspapers.

“I’m really excited about it,” he told me. “I’ve never done the daily grind before. I think it’s going to be a challenge but it’s going to be a fun challenge.”

Spetrini replaces the well-respected Dan McGowan, who is off to become the second digital reporter at WPRI. McGowan launched his journalism career as a blogger for RI Future.

Spetrini was the editor of the Standard Times for two years. Prior to that, he covered sports for Southern Rhode Island newspapers for four years. He went to college at RIC, where he majored in criminal justice and says he stumbled into journalism by accident.

“I went to the wrong meeting,” he said. “I thought I was going to the RIC TV meeting.”

Instead, he was at the school newspaper meeting. So he started covering sports for The Anchor.

Spetrini started for GoLocal on Monday, he said. He is on Twitter at: @PaulSpetrini

Valicenti New WPRO Host, Gobeil Has Been Fired


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Gene Valicenti

The WPRO Morning News Show will have a new face in the near future. Gene Valicenti, a news anchor with NBC 10, is taking over as the host, sources confirmed, while Andrew Gobeil was fired earlier today and Tara Granahan was reassigned off the air. She will become the assistant program director who will work on special projects.

“I’m going to direct you to program manager Craig Schwalb for any comment on my future with the station,” said Valicenti, when contacted on Thursday night.

Valicenti has long hosted a Saturday afternoon radio show on WPRO, and he has been with NBC 10 since 1992. He declined to comment on whether he would be leaving the TV station, or working there at night and at WPRO in the morning. He will become the highest paid on air personality at WPRO, earning more than Buddy Cianci.

Gobeil, also reached Thursday evening, declined to comment. He has worked at WPRO for about a year-and-a-half. Prior to that, he worked for ABC6.

Rumors have circulated for months that WPRO wanted to replace Gobeil with Valicenti, but no one would fault Gobeil for not seeing the move coming after the work week he recently put in.

He was asked to work Christmas day and only one day before being fired was asked to fill in for John DePetro, who didn’t show up for work on Wednesday. DePetro thought he had the day off, though it wasn’t marked on management’s calendar. Schwalb asked Gobeil to fill in for DePetro Wednesday morning, and then fired him the next day.

Web Editor Dee DeQuattro Is Leaving WPRO for ABC6


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WPRO digital reporter Dee DeQuattro is leaving the station she is suing for a new job on December 21. On January 2, she starts as the assignment editor for ABC 6 and ABC6.com. She’ll also do a morning TV spot and keep her own political blog in her new position.

“I’m excited to pursue a new endeavor and transition to tv after working in radio for the past five years,” DeQuattro told me this morning.

She would not comment on her lawsuit alleging that DePetro sexually harassed her. When I asked if she was sad to be leaving WPRO, she said:

“Not sad. I’m excited and enthusiastic to move on in my career and I expect to maintain professional relationships and personal friendships with some of the people I met working here.”

She confirmed that she is leaving the Salty Shack after I got an email forwarded written by station manager Craig Schwalb to WPRO employees wishing her good luck in her next opportunity.

The email from Schwalb, according to the employee who shared it with me, said, “Want to say thanks and good luck to WPRO-AMs web producer/reporter Dee DeQuattro who will be moving to ABC 6 for a new job there. We wish her nothing but the best in her new role and thank her very much for helping make 630wpro.com what it is today.

“We will be working with Dee next week to transition into our interim plan until a replacement can be named in the coming weeks.”

Full disclosure: I was DeQuattro’s manager at WPRO and am referenced in her lawsuit for statements DePetro made to me about DeQuattro and her allegations after they became public.

NY Times Confirms It Doesn’t Use ‘Right to Work’


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Earlier today I noted that the New York Times doesn’t use the biased and misleading moniker of “right to work” when it does journalism on the kind of anti-organized labor laws that Michigan passed yesterday. I thought this was interesting, so I gave them a call to see if, in fact, the Old Gray Lady does avoid it on purpose.

Turns out they do. Here’s the response I got from Phil Corbett, the associate editor for standards:

Our stylebook has long cautioned reporters against using the “right to work” phrasing, on the grounds that it is a loaded term favored by one side in the debate. It also, frankly, just isn’t very informative to readers who don’t know what the fight is about.

This is a case where it’s best just to explain, tersely, exactly what the law would do. That’s what our reporters tried to do in today’s story.

For us, it’s not a question of taking sides, but of trying to use language that’s as neutral as possible. For similar reasons, we avoid using both “pro-choice” and “pro-life” to describe the sides in the abortion debate.

Here’s the story from today’s Times, and here’s how the reporter described the new Michigan law (emphasis mine):

…advocates of the legislation, which outlaws requirements that workers pay fees to unions as a condition of employment, lauded…

The Providence Journal ran an Associated Press story today that used the phrase. My 2002 AP Stylebook lists “right-to-work” as appropriate terminology. If the Associated Press and others are still using this term, they should revisit this decision as it’s both misleading and biased.

RI Future hosted a really interesting debate about it in the comments of my first post on this. It’s well worth giving them a read.

Is Ted Nesi Biased on Pension Reform?


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Ted Nesi is easily the most knowledgeable and well-respected local reporter on the pension beat. As such, it’s not easy to call him out for what I think is some bias in his pension reporting as of late.

Today on Twitter I asked him why he didn’t include either Angel Taveras or Ernie Almonte’s perspective when he reported that Gina Raimondo, Gordon Fox and EngageRI all disagree with the governor’s tack.

Yes, Raimondo, Fox and EngageRI are important players in this debate. But so are Almonte and Taveras, both of who had publicly weighed in defending Chafee by the time Nesi posted on the issue. WPRO had Almonte on Wednesday morning and RI Public Radio had a post on Monday saying Taveras thought, “the state should seek a settlement to a challenge by a series of unions to last year’s pension overhaul,” wrote Ian Donnis for RIPR.

Here’s the exchange we had on Twitter:


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