Candlelight vigil outside RI Hospital for fair labor negotiations


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DSC_9238Members of the United Nurses and Allied Professionals (UNAP), Local 5098, at Rhode Island Hospital, with labor and community allies, held a candlelight vigil and march Thursday evening to call attention to to unsafe staffing levels and other problems that continue to remain an issue in negotiations. UNAP members have been working without a contract since June 30th.

In a press release, UNAP said, “UNAP represents nearly 2,300 nurses, technologists, therapists and allied health professionals at Rhode Island Hospital. Members have authorized the negotiating committee to issue a 10-day strike notice, if an equitable agreement cannot be reached. On FridayLifespan officials acquiesced to UNAP’s request for federal mediation. A representative from the Federal Mediation and Reconciliation Service has been assigned to work with both parties in seeking resolution.”

“We are aware that this is a challenging economic time for Lifespan, that all health workers need to be part of a ‘shared sacrifice’ to aid the hospital. But that’s a tough pill for our members to swallow when Lifespan continues to pay a small handful of top executives nearly $13 million a year,” said UNAP Local 5098 President Helene Macedo, RN, “The question must be asked: Who’s really making the sacrifice?”

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RI Treasurer Seth Magaziner attended the vigil

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Bus riders protest proposed RIPTA rate hikes on seniors and disabled


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DSC_9077RIPTA Riders Alliance, an advocacy group for bus riders, held a press conference in Kennedy Plaza across from Providence City Hall on Thursday afternoon to protest “a sharp bus fare increase” of $1 per ride for low-income disabled people and seniors. Right now the increase is only a proposal and the current fare for senior and disabled riders is $0.

According to the RIPTA Riders Alliance, “RIPTA officials say that they haven’t decided yet on bus fare increases, [but] some information about the planned increases is already publicly known.  According to comments made by RIPTA officials at RIPTA’s July 20 board meeting, their planned budget includes plans to raise fares.”

20150827_171229RIPTA Riders Alliance release a list of cities and states with bus systems of comparable size to RIPTA. The average fare in these systems in $1.60 for regular riders, 40 cents lower than RIPTA. The average rate for seniors and disabled riders is 68 cents. RIPTA Riders Alliance wants RIPTA to find savings via internal efficiencies, not with additional costs to riders.

Don Rhodes, president of RIPTA Riders Alliance, said in a statement, “RIPTA Riders Alliance is opposed to balancing the deficit on the backs of the passengers.  The Alliance is against the imposition of an off-peak fare for disabled and elderly people living on a limited income. And during peak hours, charging them $1 per ride is far too much of a financial burden, greatly limiting their mobility. We are also opposed to any increase in the $2.00 base fare, which is already higher than average base fares in similar bus systems.”

Several speakers spoke of the economic hardships they would face under a new rate system.

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Homeless advocates confront PVD police over homeless harassment


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DSC_8802More than 50 homeless and community advocates protested and confronted the police on Thursday afternoon in front of CVS near Kennedy Plaza within sight of Providence City Hall. At least 14 police officers were on hand, though no arrests were made. The protesters carried signs demanding an end to “a noticeable increase of harassment of homeless folks around the city.”

According to the Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless (RICH), “On Thursday, August 13th, Shannah Kurland, a community lawyer and activist, was arrested in front of the CVS located at 70 Kennedy Plaza. Witnesses state that Kurland was simply standing on the sidewalk near the CVS and clearly not blocking the entrance.”

DSC_8749The police officers told Kurland that she was in violation of “failure to move,” a non-existent offense with “no legal basis in city ordinance or state statute,” that is often used to threaten and harass homeless people, according to RICH. When Kurland explained that there was no such law, she was arrested

Protesters carried signs and defiantly committed the same “crime” as Kurland, standing in front of CVS, and refusing to move. “Advocates contend that with increasing frequency, people experiencing homelessness are being subjected to judicial and extrajudicial arrest, harassment, and discrimination,” said RICH in a press release, “Individuals who are homeless have been treated as criminals for engaging in activities necessary to survival, foremost among them resting and sleeping.”

One sign simply read, “Legalize Sleep.”

“We are sick of the harassment,” exclaimed Barbara Kalil, Co-Director of the RI Homeless Advocacy Project (RIHAP). “People are being targeted simply because of their housing status. Not only is that unacceptable, it is illegal!”

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Outside Elorza’s office

Kalil lead a delegation into City Hall to present a letter to Mayor Jorge Elorza demanding a meeting to discuss the issues by September 4th and that the Providence Police be immediately instructed “to stop their practice of criminalizing homelessness and harassing homeless individuals” both downtown and in other city neighborhoods.

In addition, RICH and RIHAP demanded a “commitment on behalf of the city to provide resources for a permanent, accessible day center” and a “promise from the city to advocate for more permanent housing vouchers and identified units.”

Earlier in the day, a homeless constituent encountered two police officers “who told him that they know about the rally this afternoon and there will be many police officers there ready to arrest anybody who obstructs the sidewalk,” said Karen Jeffries of RICH in an email. According to the constituent, the police officers said, “We have Paddy wagons and many handcuffs ready to go.”

DSC_9031The police were in fact ready with plastic handcuffs hanging from their belts and two “paddy wagons” parked on the opposite side of Kennedy Plaza. During the protest the police made a large show of force that included at least one officer videotaping the crowd, for reasons that are unclear. The Providence Police are often videotaping crowds at such events, but do not seem to have any policies in place regarding the use of such video.

Shannah Kurland is the lawyer for Manny Pombo, a street musician suing the city of Providence for harassment, and John Prince, who was attacked by police in his own home for videotaping them from his yard. Kurland is also involved in her own lawsuit against the city of Providence for violating her free speech rights last year at a fundraiser in Roger Williams Park for then-Gubernatorial candidate, and now Governor, Gina Raimondo. Kurland is also legal counsel to five local Ferguson activists charged with trespassing for shutting down Interstate 95.

DSC_9027RICH drew attention to a report from the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, which “details the ways in which criminalizing ordinances are damaging both to individuals experiencing homelessness and to the cities that enact them. It also found that, despite a lack of affordable housing and shelter space, cities across the country are essentially making it illegal to be homeless with laws that outlaw life-sustaining acts, such as eating and sleeping, in public spaces.”

Key findings/conclusions from the report are:

-Homeless people are criminally punished for being in public even when they have no other alternatives;
-The criminalization of homelessness is increasing across the country;
-Criminalization laws violate the civil and human rights of homeless people;
-Criminalization laws are costly to taxpayers;
-Criminalization laws are ineffective;
-Criminalization laws should be replaced with constructive solutions to ending homelessness.

DSC_8944RI famously passed a “Homeless Bill of Rights” in 2012 with the intent of preventing, according to Sam Howard, in a piece written for RI Future at the time, “harassment or discrimination towards homeless people. This means kicking people off of park benches or out of libraries when they’re not doing anything wrong. It means that when someone applies for a job, the fact that their mailing address is listed as a shelter can’t be used as a reason to reject them. It means that a homeless person can’t have their stuff seized or searched if they’re not causing trouble. Basically, if the Governor signs this, it’s now a little bit easier for the homeless to enjoy all the little niceties of public life.”

The Homeless Bill of Rights set an important foundation for Opening Doors Rhode Island, the state’s plan to end homelessness, which states as a core value that “there are no ‘homeless people,’ but rather people who have lost their homes who deserve to be treated with dignity and respect.”

According to RICH, “Opening Doors Rhode Island outlines a plan that significantly transforms the provision of services to Rhode Islanders experiencing homelessness. Consistent with the new federal plan to end homelessness, the plan seeks to sharply decrease the numbers of people experiencing homelessness and the length of time people spend homeless.”

“The path to ending homelessness starts with treating those experiencing homelessness with basic dignity and respect, plain and simple,” added Kalil.

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Blockaders of Spectra Energy construction site sentenced


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Peter Nightingale and Curt Nordgaard

Associate Judge William C. Clifton of Rhode Island’s District Court handed down his verdict against Curt Nordgaard, and Peter Nightingale, who were arrested after locking themselves to the front gate at the site of Spectra Energy‘s compressor station in Burrillville, Rhode Island in a direct action organized by Fighting Against Natural Gas (FANG).

Charges of disorderly conduct were dismissed; charges of willful trespass resulted in a one-year “filing,” which means that these cases will be dismissed if the defendants come into no further conflict with the law.

DSC_7653Nordgaard,  a resident pediatrician at Boston Medical Center, stated after his arrest that “if we had legal means to stop this project, we would use them. Instead we are forced to protect families and communities through nonviolent civil disobedience, in proportion to the severity of this threat.” Nightingale,  a professor of physics at University of Rhode Island and a member of Fossil Free Rhode Island and who was arrested last December during a sit-in in U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse‘s office in Providence, has kept the promise he made at the time: “This pipeline is immoral and unjust, and we will keep taking action until this dangerous project is stopped.”

Peter NightingaleNightingale stated: “Under the Public Trust Doctrine, government has a duty to preserve Earth’s gifts for present and future generations. The fact that we cannot use this argument to justify our actions in Burrillville [in Rhode Island’s courts] is but one symptom of the environmental injustice that pervades our system of government.”

“Natural” gas has been touted as a bridge fuel by both the industry and the Obama Administration, but evidence has been mounting since 2011 that, independent of the use to which it is put, it is more dangerous for the climate than coal or oil.  This development, along with a growing awareness of local impacts such as air and water pollution, threats to public health, earthquakes, etc. are continuing to draw unexpected activists into increasingly defiant acts of civil disobedience against fracking and gas-related infrastructure.

[This report compiled from a FANG press release]

Post Office dedicated to Sister Ann Keefe


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DSC_6687Sister Ann Keefe “was not a saint, she was better than that. She was human,” said her sister Kathy Keefe to an impressive crowd of 200 people at the newly christened Sister Ann Keefe Post Office at 820 Elmwood in Providence. Sister Ann, a community activist who started or helped to start nearly two dozen organizations in the service of social justice, including the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, ¡City Arts! for Youth and AIDS Care Ocean State died earlier this year from brain cancer. She was 62. The post office, located in South Providence, a community that Sister Ann served so passionately during her lifetime, was named in her honor.

US Representative David Cicilline introduced the legislation that began the process of renaming the building in Sister Ann’s honor in February. In the present political climate, said Cicilline, even getting a bill like this passed presented difficulties. Representative James Langevin cosponsored the bill, and Senators Sheldon Whitehouse and Jack Reed pursued the legislation in the Senate. Ultimately, President Barrack Obama signed H.R. 651 into law in May. Thus, the Sister Ann Keefe Post Office became the first US Post Office named for a nun.

Senators Whitehouse and Reed were not at the dedication ceremony, having been called back to Washington to vote on a transportation/infrastructure bill, but Cicilline and Langevin, along with other many elected officials, were eager to put in an appearance at the event, a tribute to Sister Ann’s influence.

The best parts of the dedication ceremony were the tributes from Sister Ann’s family and the community she served. Her biological sister, Mary Blanchet, read a letter to Sister Ann, recalling memories from their lives. Another sister, Kathy Keefe, read a poem from A.A. Milne.

Elijah Matthews read an award winning poem written by his sister, Victoria Matthews about Sister Ann. Elijah was introduced by his mother, Pamela Matthews. Victoria Matthews was at a sorority event out of town. Elijah’s reading of the poem earned a well deserved standing ovation.

The ¡City Arts! Bucket Drummers and the Saint Michael’s Community Choir provided the music.

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¡City Arts! Bucket Drummers

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Elijah & Pamela Matthews
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Mary Blanchet and Kathy Keefe
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Remembering Sally Gabb


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sally gabbRhode Island is a little smaller.

A good friend, Sally Gabb, passed away, after a struggle with cancer. I spoke with her a few weeks ago. She and her wife, Beth, had been together for over 20 years. They only could legally be married for the last 3 or 4 in Rhode Island.

I know Sally and Beth from Bell Street Chapel, our West End Unitarian Universalist congregation. They were known to indulge a love of diners (Seaplane for breakfast!), pot lucks, gardening, justice work, and were gratuitous with their wonder and compassion.

Sally was a proud Civil Rights-era veteran and 70s veteran activist. She was from Virginia, went to Duke, renounced her background, became involved in the sit-ins, became a journalist, did radical organizing work and LGBT advocacy in Atlanta. She moved to Rhode Island in the 1980s, and has been dedicated in adult education in Providence (at the Genesis Center) and Fall River (at Bristol Community College). Hundreds of first generation students gained new skills through her work.

She fell in love with Beth when she saw Beth on her motorcycle. In the years ahead, they helped raise a son, supported neighbors, ran an ice cream parlor, bought a home, created a garden, lived life. Food– and more important — sharing it with others -was so vital to Sally and Beth’s love as a couple.

Sally loved to read, constantly, voraciously, and to plan, think and act about injustice, faith, community change and growth. She taught me to find allies, that a person doesn’t have to do things alone in change work- in fact, they can’t.

Sally was involved in the civil rights movement, women’s movement, medical marijuana regulation, marriage equality – and constantly wanted to listen, laugh, and be positive. She was a great cartoonist, and liked crafty things- whether drawing cartoon sketches of the church at pond clean-ups to cutting out little construction paper feet for a “A Step Up” campaign.

She would show up at rallies and I remember her smiling that the big Providence Occupy march was like a reunion. She was a truly wonderful friend and mentor.

As she became more sick, especially this last year, she and Beth went to Europe on a trip with her niece, and on a hot air balloon ride in Sedona, Arizona (She loved it). She wanted to connect me with a friend who was a public defender in Oakland.

I’ll miss her. I thought you would like to know about her.

SCOTUS marriage equality decision celebrated in RI


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C Kelly Smith’s last Marriage Equality sign

Rhode Island’s celebration of the Supreme Court‘s historic decision allowing same-sex couples to marry across the United States was also a history lesson about the long battle for full LGBTQ acceptance in our state. Organizer Kate Monteiro spoke eloquently and introduced a steady stream of speakers, but more importantly she paused to remember those who didn’t live long enough to see this day, those who are only spoken of “in the echoes of the wind.”

We live in a better world because of their work and sacrifice.

The celebration was held at the Roger Williams National Memorial, because, explained Monteiro, this is where “religious freedom in the United States was born” and where Belle Pelegrino and the ’76ers first met to demand the right to march in Providence with a sign saying ‘I am gay.'”

“We stand at the top of a very, very high hill,” said Monteiro, “we have carried that pack and we have wanted for water and struggled and slipped and we stand at the top of a hill. And the view is beautiful. It is absolutely splendid. And just a little bit further is the next big hill. Because we are not at the top of the mountain, never mind the other side of the mountain.”

“Tomorrow, in 29 states, someone can be fired for being gay or lesbian, let alone transgender. (That, thank you, is 32 states)… That’s wrong, we need to change it, that is the mountain.”

“Can you imagine if we could go in time and bring Roger Williams here today?” asked Rodney Davis to laughs, “but when you boil it down and get to its purest sense, Freedom, Liberty and Justice was the reason why he came here…”

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Mary Beth Meehan’s large scale photography exhibition in downtown Providence


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At the RISD Museum Thursday evening, I was pleased to hear Martha Rosler’s essay, “In, around, and afterthoughts (on documentary photography)” referenced during Mary Beth Meehan’s “Public Conversation.” Meehan explained the genesis of her current photography project: Eight large scale photographs attached to buildings throughout downtown Providence. The photographs have been selected from her Tumblr, Seen/Unseen.

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These remarkable photographs of ordinary Providence residents demonstrate the beauty and diversity of the city’s residents. Created in conjunction with the 2015 Providence International Arts Festival, there is also a larger exhibition of her portraits at the Providence City Hall.

The banner concept was first explored by Meehan in Brockton, Massachusetts where 12 large scale banners were displayed in that city in 2012. According to Meehan, after the Brockton display was unveiled, AS220’s Bert Crenca asked Meehan why she wasn’t doing something like that in Providence. So here we are.

Meehan talked about confronting Rosler’s ideas during her brief talk at RISD. Rosler famously talked about the way documentary photography was exploitative of its subjects and of how it was not actually accomplishing its goal as an agent of social change because of its commodification as a consumer product. Rosler’s critique has long informed my own work, such as it is, and I attempt to answer Rosler by not commodifying my work through strict copyright enforcement (I use the Creative Commons copyright to “free up” my work for use by others), and by working to eliminate myself from my photographs as much as possible, in order to empower and amplify the voices of my subjects. It’s an ongoing process, and I realize that it is a difficult, if not impossible, goal.

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Meehan solves Rossler’s dilemma by collaborating closely with her subjects. Three influential photographers were cited during her presentation, Fazal Sheikh, Dawoud Bey and Wendy Ewald. All were known to spend time getting to know their subjects before taking their pictures, or to collaborate with their subjects in different ways. Through her style of collaboration, Meehan hopes to honor her subjects, rather than exploit them as subjects in a gallery. (For the opposite of this approach, check out the latest exhibition from the reprehensible Richard Price.)

Here’s Rossler, writing circa 1981. Her insights are still pertinent today:

…the higher the price that photography can command as a commodity in dealerships, the higher the status accorded to it in museums and galleries, the  greater will be the gap between that kind of documentary and another kind, a documentary incorporated into an explicit analysis of society and at least the beginning of a program for changing it. The liberal documentary, in which members of the ascendant classes are implored to have pity on and to rescue members of the oppressed, now belongs to the past. The documentary of the present, a shiver-provoking appreciation of alien vitality or a fragmented vision of psychological alienation in city and town, coexists with the germ of another documentary (a financially unloved but growing body of documentary works committed to the exposure of specific abuses caused by people’s jobs, by the financier’s growing hegemony over the cities, by racism, sexism and class oppression, works about militancy, about self-organization, or works meant to support them. Perhaps a radical documentary can be brought into existence. But the common acceptance of the idea that documentary precedes, supplants, transcends, or cures full, substantive social activism is an indicator that we do not yet have a real documentary.”

As you think on this, get out and go downtown this weekend to fully appreciate Mary Beth Meehan’s work, both outside on the streets of Providence and inside at the Providence City Hall. You won’t be disappointed.

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101 things I’ve done (and do) at 2.89 an hour…


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1. Carried cases of beer for myself,three high, through a crowd.

2. Cleaned for an entire shift: snow storm.

3. I claim all my tips. No one will give you an apartment or credit if you don’t show income.

4. Forced to “close the bar” and to pay the sitter for overnight hours. I finish the day up about 30 dollars. This was my “money shift”.

5. Served the manager drinks while I do his job.

6. Moved full kegs. Many, many full kegs and Co2 canisters (they’re as tall as I am).

7. I listen to people when they’re sad, which happens a lot when people rely on alcohol to manage their stress and emotions. Listening and empathizing is often part of the job.

8. Inventoried and processed liquor orders.

9. Restocked an entire bar. Every shift.

10. “Cashed out” an entire waitstaff. Most shifts. Not in my job description.

11. Accepted Crumpled up money thrown over the bar onto the floor as a tip.

12. Customer says he’s a “producer”. Asks me to turn around and see my “rear” in not so polite terms before he orders. I neither do nor say anything.

13. Manager brags about running a “brothel / escort service” in college. I do nothing.

14. Busy day at the bar. Customer grabs drinks over the fruit tray, smashing it. I get gashes across my knuckles and bleed everywhere. No one asks if I am okay. I tape them and keep working.

15. I cut off a customer who has arrived drunk from another venue. He pees on the “service area” of the bar.

16. Man grabs my arm, I twist away and scowl, but otherwise do nothing.

17. Owner grabs me forcefully by the back of the neck to show me where a switch is. I don’t tell him that’s not my part of my job. I do nothing.

18. Owner splits up my tips. Strangely, I leave with less than when I counted it two hours before. When I make a fuss, they cut my shifts.

19. Manager tells me I’ll get a great recommendation if I quit. I do not sign the paper he hands me, knowing I might need unemployment. My son is about 2 years old.

20. I close the bar by myself, at 3 AM. I put the cash in the safe, and set the alarm. Every shift. No extra pay.

21. There are many rubber floor mats here. They are all very heavy and about 6’ by 3’. I carry all of them, covered in filth, to the kitchen, where I clean them myself. Every shift.

22. I tear my rotator cuff setting up the bar. An accident. I do nothing. I don’t have health insurance. It still hurts occasionally, years later.

23. You can still smoke in bars. I clean stacks of ashtrays, some with gum. There are maybe thirty of them.

24. I roll silverware. Enough to fill about a dozen shoeboxes.

25. I pay a sitter ten dollars an hour, so when I get to work, I’m already at least sixty dollars in the hole.

26. On my feet all night. I close the bar at 3 am and get up to feed my son at 6 a.m.

27. When people say “You’re too smart for this job. Why don’t you go back to school?”, I think, “What makes you think I haven’t?” but say nothing.

28. I memorize customers drink orders on the fly. I’m pretty good. I can remember groups of about 8-10 at a time, depending on how busy it is.

29. Manager tells me I had a really great sales day. Like, the best of the past few weeks. Feeling good, but don’t get a raise or bonus.

30. The “Service Bar” tape is going crazy. I make pitchers of margaritas hand over fist for hours. The servers only tip us out maybe 10-15 dollars a piece. They make 2.89 an hour too. We have to tip out barbacks 15-20% to keep them happy. We tip out the bussers and expediters as well. Tips are stretched thin.

31. I run Keno slips. No one tips me on those unless they win, which is not frequent. It makes a lot of money for the bar, as I understand. It’s time consuming and makes me no money and takes away from my service.

Tipped Minimum Wage Press Conference

32. I wash dishes. A lot of dishes. I scrub lipstick from glasses.

33. I wear a uniform that is sexually degrading. It’s a “referee” outfit that says “#69” on it. I make good money here, so I do it anyway, even though it embarrasses me. I can’t bend over without exposing my underwear. This is a new “uniform” and wasn’t what I signed up for.

34. Senior bartender tells me I’m shit, and I cry. I don’t know what to do. People are yelling at me. I’m only 19. Women (and servers in general) are forced to be competitive in this environment.

35. I get burned expediting food. It’s my own fault, I think. Even though the manager practically threw the plate at me.

36. Underage waitress comes into the restaurant and is physically and verbally abusive to me, because she is drunk. I complain. She’s friendly with management. They make her a bartender. I have to find another job; this is ridiculous.

37. I book the shows, and live bands for the nights I work. It brings in a little crowd on an otherwise dead night. I get no extra pay for this.

38. I listen to my boss, the owner, talk about how upset they are about their personal life even though it’s really inappropriate.

39. I make “bar food”. We have a mini-fryer and a pizza oven. I’m a bartender-cook now, I guess. Maybe we’ll make more tips. I hope. We get no extra pay.

40. Every week, I do a “deep clean” on my slow shift. I pull out the keg coolers and mop and sweep behind them, I take out every single beer from every cooler behind the bar. Clean every shelf. Anything that can be touched by human hands, I spray cleaner on. It helps pass the time. No one comes here when it rains, except for a few friends. I will break even today.

41. I slice bags upon bags of lemons and limes for the bartender following me. It takes a long time. We help each other out.

42. I come into work, even though I’m really sick. My manager says it’s my job to cover my shifts.

43. I pick up an extra shift, Yay! The manager just phoned me. Someone just called out. I guess in some special cases the manager will find shift covers.

44. We’re open every day, rain or shine. Everything is closed in the “blizzard”, I’ll walk the two miles, I like hiking and snow. Maybe it’ll be fun, even though I won’t make any money.

45. I have an abusive relationship with a co-worker. I get fired a few months after asserting that I feel threatened. He does not.

46. There is a refrigerator for condiments that needs restocking. I refill ramekins of mayonnaise, and other sides. It takes me about 20 minutes. One of my many chores. Part of the job is helping out. The servers need these things ready for the next shift.

47. I refuse to wear a t-shirt that says “Check Out My Rack”. That’s not a funny joke to me. I’m getting tired of this.

48. I’m not receptive to a customer’s vulgar come-on. He calls me a “dyke”, and I walk away, otherwise doing nothing.

49. Customer says, “How much for a smile?” I squeeze out a grin even though it’s the tenth time I’ve heard that this week, and it’s not funny anymore. It makes me feel dirty. I’m not smiling because I had to push my way through a crowd to get to you. I am 20.

50. I get a really big tip. I’m psyched, because we were overstaffed this week, and rent is almost due.

51. Customer repeatedly orders a “Smirnoff and Vodka”. I try and clarify because that’s not an actual drink order and customer calls me a “(expletive) idiot”. I brush it off.

52. Not a lot of tips because I’m working a “techno night” where everyone is high on “party drugs” and drinks 5 dollar bottled water all night. I restock the cases of water.

53. I get fired for refusing to work a show in conflict with my personal beliefs against racism and homophobia. The owner says it’s a “no-show” even though I told him far in advance.

54. Not trying to insult me, a customer says, “You must love this job. It’s so easy.” People who have never done it don’t really know what it’s like, or how little they have to pay us. I wish it was just chatting and being friendly; that would be great.

55. I keep a few babysitters, and family members on “standby” for childcare. I don’t know what my schedule is going to be, and I can’t say no to a shift, or I get a warning or suspension. Say no multiple times, and you get fired. I can’t afford that.

56. I buy my own uniforms.

57. I hide my superior’s drug use.

58. I memorize the daily specials, and push for extra sales. We have meetings about “up-selling”, and I’m generally pretty good at it.

59. I make just enough money to still qualify for SNAP, or food stamps, because the cost of living is so high in the city of Providence. My rent consumes about 70% -90% of my income, sometimes more, in the years I live here. I borrow money. I get roommates. My family helps me. What do other people do to get by?

60. I can’t afford a car. I walk to work. Providence is a great walking city.

61. My co-workers and I hang out after work. We vent and swap stories. Camaraderie really seems to get us through tougher shifts.

62. I set up sound equipment for the music tonight. I do not get extra pay.

63. I work well into my pregnancy. The comments about my body (some from superiors) really upset me and I say nothing.

64. I have morning sickness, and run to the bathroom frequently during my shift. Not sure if I’ll make any money tonight. Not sure what I’m supposed to do.

65. I think about one of my favorite elementary school teachers. She waited tables on the weekend, and was a lovely, intelligent woman. I think about her especially when people say things like “Stupid people are stuck waiting tables”, or when people insult my intelligence for being a server.

66. I carry 16 gallons of orange juice down two flights of stairs.

67. Stood on a ladder and dusted cobwebs. I am in my ninth month of pregnancy.

68. A dishwasher quit mid shift so I washed all the dishes in the restaurant.
No extra pay.

69. I worked for 55 hours in one week and was only paid for 39.5 hours because my boss didn’t want to pay time and a half (it would have still only been $4.36 an hour before taxes).

70. A coworker sexually harassed me in front of a crowd of people.

71. I was called a “retard”.

72. I was called a “cunt”.

73. I was told to “(expletive) off”.

74. Served a patron who had his penis out of his pants during moments of his
meal.

75. I worked holidays, my child’s birthday, my birthday, and every
mother’s day.

76. I was sexually harassed and propositioned by friends of my superiors.

77. I was told if I didn’t like it to “get a real job” when I asked for more
than 2.89 an hour.

77. Since becoming an advocate, I’ve been told by strangers that poor people like
me should just die.

78. The air conditioning breaks at work. It’s over 90 degrees in here.

79. No lunch break, ever.

80. I pulled a muscle while lifting a heavy bus bucket. Kept working.

81. Slipped on butter and smashed my face into the tile floor. Finished my shift with a bloody nose.

82. Came into work to cover someone else while having contractions from pregnancy.

83. Turned down unsolicited dates, while smiling, and still doing my job.

84. Wouldn’t let patrons in after close. Got called a “bitch” for doing my job.

85. Been a full-time student and made the Dean’s List. People still assume I’m lazy and uneducated.

86. Cleaned a rotting mouse out of a sticky trap behind my bar. Got told, “Clean it yourself.”

87. Got left drugs as a tip. I don’t do drugs.

88. I was forced to pay for tabs that were walked out on, even though I was told not to take credit cards as collateral on lunch shifts.

89. Had a drink thrown at me by a customer who had had enough to drink and was cut off.

90. Broke up a fight. Held a towel over the bleeding man’s forehead.

91. Used my personal time to promote for the business that employed me.

92. Too busy to take a break, and we’re not allowed to eat behind the bar, so I eat my food cold at close to last call. I got here at 11 AM, so I’m desperately hungry.

93. Spent my own money at the business that employs me. I’m a customer, too.

94. During the lunch shift, a customer (a doctor) says, “See, a girl like her is good girlfriend material.. busy and grateful. Wouldn’t get in the way of the wife.” Like I wasn’t even in the room. I did nothing.

95. Re-organized the walk-in and made sure nothing was past code or spoiled.

96. Didn’t fake sick to get out of work, but couldn’t get time off for being sick even if I was. I try to never miss work.

97. I don’t like karaoke. But when I worked a karaoke night, I did it anyway to give the customers a good laugh.

98. Danced with one of my customers on his birthday. We have become good friends, and we both like jazz.

99. Struggled to pay my bills. Though I’m thankful for my customers, I wish they knew how their tip really pays my hourly wage for my boss.

100. A family member died this week. I go to work and tell no one how upset I am. We’re supposed to “keep that shit at home”.

101. I met a lot of wonderful people, hard-workers, and friends at work. I think we deserve to make at least minimum wage. But we don’t. Our labor is paid $2.89 an hour.

RI Pride flag unfurled on steps of City Hall


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DSC_9209Mayor Jorge Elorza helped to unfurl the rainbow Pride flag on the steps of the Providence City Hall as a crowd of about 75 members and supporters of the Providence area LGBTQ community applauded.

Kurt Bagley, president of Rhode Island Pride, introduced the mayor who spoke of Providence as a city that is accepting and supportive of people regardless of their sexual orientation. Elorza was especially proud of his recent move to include transition-related healthcare coverage for all city employees, current and retired, who identify as transgender or gender non-conforming.

The mayor noted that RI PrideFest and the Illuminated Night Time Pride Parade was coming up in two weeks, (June 20) but called special attention to his signature 2015 Providence International Arts Festival, which will will take up the length of Washington St and much of Kennedy Plaza next week.

Elorza took special note of his Deputy Chief of Staff, Marisa O’Gara, recently named Providence’s LGBTQ Liaison.

Anthony Maselli, an AIDs activist, LGBTQ activist and former Mr. Gay Rhode Island, presented a moving address to the crowd, recalling his youth in Connecticut growing up in a conservative religious family and a community that did not accept him. “I feel overwhelmed and personally grateful that a lonely and isolated gay boy from a violent, fundamentalist household in Newington, Connecticut, could move to a city only 80 miles east, and find a home here with people who love and support me,” said Maselli, “For most of my life, I had no sense of connection to the terms ‘community’ or ‘family’. It was a long and intense struggle, but finally, I have been able to find those things here.”

Joining the speakers on the stage were Miss Trans Rhode Island, Alejandra Blaze and Miss Bisexual Rhode island Amber Guzman. They are they first to hold their respective titles, which were created this year in an attempt at greater inclusion in the LGBTQ community.

Alejandra Blaze, Mayor Elorza & Amber Guzman
Alejandra Blaze, Mayor Elorza & Amber Guzman

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Patreon

Voices from PVD Black Lives Matter march in solidarity with Baltimore


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2015-05-02 BlackLivesMatter 057Over 500 people march through the streets of Providence as part of Saturday’s Black Lives Matter march in solidarity with Baltimore. Judging from the enthusiastic and mostly positive response of the people watching or encountering the march, the messaging of the movement is starting to penetrate the general population.

What is that message?

I will let those who organized and participated in the march explain for themselves.

“When we chant Black Lives Matter, we are bringing forward voices that are normally ignored. Historically ignored. Presently ignored. To push back and tell us All Lives Matter is to also be complicit with this hetero-patriarchal, white supremacist society…”

“My son Joshua was… what I am going to say is that…” began Suzette, torn with emotion, “my son had the shit beat out of him for whatever apparent reason… on a basic routine traffic stop… and uh… the end result is that the pain which I’m feeling right now… to say to your son that there is going to be no justice…”

“In my life I’ve had many experiences with the police in this city, in every neighborhood in it, and it’s never been pleasant. It’s been funny sometimes, but, it’s always been very intimidating and scary because I didn’t know what was going to happen. A lot of times, it was very humiliating. A lot of times it was kind of vicious and painful…”

“We know that the police [in Baltimore] have been charged with something, and what they’ve been charged with is one thing, but the main goal is that when they go to court, we want to make sure that when they go to court that they’re prosecuted for what they’ve been charged for…”

“Don’t be afraid to say ‘Black Lives Matter.’ We know, it’s been proven to us time and time again that white people matter. We know that. It’s in our face every effen day…”

“You see gentrification of the West Side, well now its the West Side,” said Chanravy, “It used to be called the West End, right? But because this development is coming in, now it’s the West Side. That’s when you know the white folks are moving in, right?”

Note the police car now filming the speakers through the fence.

Three speakers from PrYSM spoke in favor of the Community Safety Act (CSA). “It is a city ordinance that will create measures within the Providence Police department that will make it easier for us, the people, to fight back. The CSA will prevent them from profiling based on race, gender and immigration status. The CSA will create a community board that will make sure that they stay in line. The CSA will make it harder for them to conduct searches on us. The CSA will make sure they don’t work with ICE to throw us into the deportation machine. The CSA will restore due process rights for many young people accused of being in a gang…”

Radames Cruz performed his spoken word piece, “Can I Live?”

“When we stand up this time, we must not sit back down. That’s what they’re waiting on. They’re trying to wait us out, right? they tried to wait Ferguson out. They’re trying to wait Baltimore out. They’re saying ‘We’re just going to wait them out.’ That’s the human tendency…”

“I had a pretty bad experience with the Providence police. At 19 years of age I was going through a depressive time in life and I walked up on a bridge and thought that I wanted to end it all. But I felt like, maybe the police could help me. So I called the police and they came over, 3 or 4 of them, and while I’m on this bridge, over the highway, I hear a police officer yell in the background, ‘If you’re going to jump, then jump.'”

“A few years back I was in a very toxic relationship and my boyfriend of the time, he beat me up pretty badly. I didn’t have access to a phone, but he took advantage of him calling the police. The police came, I thought I was going to be okay because I had the bruises. I was bleeding. I had the scratches and all the marks. So I thought I was okay. Long story short I had an officer tell me that there is no such thing as self defense because my ex-boyfriend had a bite mark on his arm. So I was arrested. I was booked. I sat in a jail cell for hours until they posted bail…”

 “The brother said, ‘by any means necessary’ but my question to you is, How far are you willing to go? Because our history says, anything that has been built, it must be destroyed. And the only way you’re going to destroy that is through bloody force…”

A song from Putu, (Putugah Takpaw Phenom) was next. “Have you ever heard the revolutionaries cry, ‘How come you let our revolutionaries die?’

The event was closed out with a final song.

Patreon

Photos from the RISD art studio technician strike


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RISD Strike
RISD Strike

Over twenty members of NEARI local 806 carried picket signs on North Main St early this morning before separating to cover the various studios that are spread over the RISD campus. The art studio technicians are officially on strike until “the administration returns to the negotiating table.”

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Patreon

Working for tips in Rhode Island


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NYC-Diner-ToGo-Cheeseburger-DeluxeAt the State House hearing for the wage theft bill and for the bill to raise the minimum wage we heard a lot from members and leaders of the Rhode Island Hospitality Association. At the wage theft bill hearing the room was packed with restaurant owners pleading poverty and assuring legislators that their waitstaff are well cared for, and even loved.

Most of the restaurant owners were from the kind of high end, casual fine dining establishments where stories of well paid waitstaff might actually be something akin to the truth. But as Mike Araujo, of ROC United RI pointed out, “The average tipped worker does not make $20 an hour.”

“We are not all high end restaurants,” he said. “We are mostly Denny’s, we are mostly diner service. So to say that ‘my people do well’ or ‘I love my people’ might be true, but we have to love all the people who work in the industry.”

In Rhode Island, servers are supposed to make $2.89 an hour, plus tips. By law, if a server doesn’t make enough in tips to reach $9 an hour, the restaurant is supposed to make up the difference.

In general there are two kinds of restaurants; corporate chains like Denny’s or Chili’s, and owner operated diners and restaurants. The chain restaurants are governed in large part by strict rules and regulations that come from the top. These restaurants are national or multinational in nature and don’t often run afoul of local laws. They operate in California, where there is no tipped minimum wage, as well as in New England, where Rhode Island has the lowest tipped minimum wage. The tipped minimum wage is $7.25 in Connecticut and $3 in Massachusetts. New York just raised theirs to $7.50.

Non-chain restaurants have more leeway in paying their employees, because they can often pay under the table. There is no corporate chain of command tracking every cent that comes in and goes out of the store. This isn’t to say that all owner operators violate the law, but the practice is common enough that some servers I’ve spoken to have told me that they have never worked in a restaurant that didn’t pay some or all of its employees at least partly under the table.

I recently spoke to two servers at two different restaurants about the tipped minimum wage and their experiences working as servers in Rhode Island. One server works at a chain restaurant here in Providence, the other works at an owner operated restaurant in Warwick. Both spoke to me under the condition of anonymity, so as to not suffer any blowback at work. Some details of their stories have been obscured as well, to avoid identifying them accidentally.

Debbie is a single mom working at an owner operated restaurant. She has three kids. She’s worked for tips all her life. “This is how we survive,” she said. “We do all right. I’m pretty good at what I do most of the time.”

Chris is in her mid-fifties and has been working for tips as a server for over 30 years. She works for a well known corporate chain restaurant. “When I first started waitressing [the tipped minimum wage] was $1.50 or $1.59, so it’s gone up, but not for 20 years. It’s crazy.”

John's Diner by John Baeder
John’s Diner by John Baeder

The experiences of the women are similar, and they make about the same amount of money, but there are big differences between working at an owner operated restaurant and working for a corporate chain.

“We make all our money on tips,” says Debbie, “At the end of the week I get a paycheck, and it’s usually nothing, or a dollar, because of taxes. We get taxed on our tips and we get taxed on the $2.89.”

Chris has the same experience in her corporate store. “Some of my co-workers have a pile of $2 and $3 checks. Why bother cashing them? Or if they do, they cash them once a year for $80.”

Both work hard. “I work my ass off in here six days a week,” says Debbie, “I work like 45, 50 hours a week.” Chris works Monday through Friday. They both work the day shift.

I ask them about overtime.

“I probably shouldn’t say this,” says Debbie, “but the owner pays me for 40 hours and then I get the rest in cash. Time and a half has never happened. Every restaurant I’ve ever worked at that’s how it always was. You get paid for 40 hours and then everything else is overtime, not on a paycheck. Time and a half on $2.89 is meaningless anyway, because we’re talking about less than $4.50. It’s not like my tips are going to be time and a half.”

Chris sees this as a problem. “Corporate restaurants have to do the right thing,” she says, “But these [owner operated] restaurants, they can get away with not paying $2.89 or overtime.”

She said she knows someone who was injured and couldn’t collect disability because “so much of her work was off the books she didn’t qualify. I have friends that are working at some of these little places that aren’t making out. One girl got laid off and was told, ‘You can’t collect. You were working under the table.’ How are you suppose to deal with that?”

Working at an owner operated restaurant can bring other problems as well. “We don’t get time and half for holidays, we don’t get paid vacations,” says Debbie, “If I take a vacation I lose out. I pay for the vacation and I don’t get paid to work. My kids are like, ‘You don’t even get time off,’ and I’m like no, I don’t.

“You don’t get sick pay, you don’t get- I can’t even call in sick! There’s no one else to work. I open the store. Who’s going to answer the phone at 5 o’clock in the morning? If I’m sick, you’re not going to answer your phone, you know? You’re going to be sleeping.”

The recent snow has interfered with their pay as well. “It’s difficult sometimes, on a slow snow day, sure,” says Chris, “We didn’t get any customer tips until almost one in the afternoon and we’re thinking, ‘We’re not going to get anybody today.’”

So when it’s slow like that, does the restaurant make up the money as the law requires?

“They’re supposed to punch you in [with more money] when you make less than minimum,” says Chris, “but they average the week.”

Debbie agrees, telling me, “We don’t ever not make minimum wage, so the restaurant never has to make it up. On any given day we might not make any money, but the restaurant is allowed to average it out over the week.”

Debbie is worried about raising the tipped minimum wage. She worries that, “if they raise the minimum wage to $9 an hour people aren’t going to tip us, and if we made only $9 an hour we wouldn’t make what we would just living off tips. We make more than that in tips.”

Chris isn’t convinced. “People don’t know what we make. In the restaurant people are telling me, ‘I didn’t know you made this! I saw on the news they’re trying to raise your rates. I didn’t know you made only $2.89.’ If they already thought you were making more and they’re tipping you whatever they do, why would they lower it when you actually make that amount?”

Debbie has an ‘aha’ moment. “Yeah, you’re right. If you don’t know what I make, and you’re assuming that I’m making minimum wage when you tip me, then why would you not tip me?”

I point out that the minimum wage in Connecticut for tipped workers is $7.25, and nobody seems to be tipping less there.

“Really?” says Debbie, surprised, “I didn’t know they made more in Connecticut. Damn. It’s like right there.”

Chris isn’t surprised. She knows people who went to Connecticut to make more money. “A couple of girls who live on the line transferred to Connecticut, but I live too far,” she says. Transferring wasn’t hard, because the corporate restaurant chain has units in every state.

Both servers mentioned that working at a higher end restaurant in Providence might bring in more money. “I would have loved to have gone to Federal Hill,” says Chris, “but I don’t see myself, at my age, going there, working at some fancy restaurant.”

But both women also had heard stories that worried them.

“I had a friend who worked at a nice, upscale restaurant in Providence,” said Debbie, “and she worked Friday and Saturday night and made a lot of money, but for every good shift you got there you had to take a crappy shift on a Tuesday afternoon or something. On a Monday-Tuesday lunch, she might make $3. But she still had to pay to park, and she had to pay for her gas because she doesn’t live in Providence. So she’d drive to Providence, pay to park, drive home and leave negative basically.”

“One girl I know applied at a very nice place on Federal Hill as a cocktail waitress,” says Chris, “She didn’t take the job because they told her you don’t make a pay, you just work for tips and all of you pool your tips at the end of the night.”

So they don’t pay the cocktail waitresses anything?

Chris nodded. “She never took the job. I told her that’s not right. She was asked, ‘You want taxes taken out? You want to go through all of that?’

“I have friends who worked on Federal Hill. A lot of them get paid under the table. The [owners] should have to do the right thing, but that’s what they don’t want to do. Corporate restaurants have to pay you the right wages. They have so many restaurants, and they pay different amounts everywhere they’re set up, but you’d think the corporate restaurants would want these other restaurants to pay employees on the books so that they could compete better.”

So, I ask, are you two living the high life?

“I see people working to get $15 an hour at McDonald’s but we don’t make that,” Debbie says, shaking her head. “Every so often we may make that, but not all the time.”

“I don’t live the high life, God no,” says Chris.

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Civil Rights-era activist Adele Bourne speaks against Raptakis highway protest bill


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Adele Bourne
Adele Bourne

In my opinion Adele Bourne, speaking in front of the Senate Judiciary committee on behalf of the American Friends Service Committee in opposition to Senator Leo Raptakisbill to make blocking the highway during a political protest a felony, has put the last nail in the coffin of this ill considered legislative overreach.

“I would have a rap sheet a mile long if this were taking place in Webster Groves, Missouri in 1953,” said Bourne, who was a senior in high school at the time, “There were good reasons. I’m not a wild eyed pacifist or liberal but in 1953 in Webster Groves, Missouri, our religious leaders and our wonderful school teacher… black and white, they got us all together, the kids, and we got rid of a corrupt mayor. We opened up a new pool and recreation area, paid for by everybody, used only by whites: we changed that. So when school desegregation came three years later there was no problem whatsoever.”

Bourne spoke directly to the danger of passing laws that run contrary to civil rights, saying, “At the time there were real problems and my ministers and my teachers and I would have been put in jail because we had to cross a highway at one point or another.”

Webster Groves is only 14 miles from Ferguson.

Bourne brought up the case of Father Michael Doyle, a New Jersey priest arrested in 1971 as part of the Camden 28 for breaking into a draft office as part of a protest against the Vietnam War.  “I’m old enough that I have been able to know some of the leading people for political change and social change in this country. That’s one advantage of being so ancient. Father Michael Doyle of Camden, New Jersey would be behind bars under mandatory sentencing.”

Instead, Father Michael Doyle has spent that last four decades, “feeding, housing, and educating the poor.”

It’s important to remember that the people blocking the highways today are the Adele Bournes and Michael Doyles of the future. We cannot let ourselves become so fearful of change that we criminalize our best and brightest.

You can view the rest of last night’s testimony on the Raptakis’ highway bill here.

Patreon

BoA’s Brian Moynihan no expert on ‘corporate social responsibility’


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Redesigning Capital Markets: Moynihan
Brian Moynihan at Davos (2010)

Brian Moynihan’s turn as this year’s guest of the Darrell West Lecture Series was interesting for all the wrong reasons.

Moynihan is the CEO of Bank of America, an institution suffering from an abundance of controversies. The lecture series “was founded to provide an open forum on the intersection between religion and politics” and in the past has hosted Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Elaine Pagels. Moynihan was invited to talk about his philanthropic work in the context of being the CEO of one of the most powerful financial institutions in the world. The event was billed as a discussion about “the role of philanthropy and corporate social responsibility” in today’s society.

Outside the Central Congregational Church where the event was held, police shooed away peaceful protesters handing out informational flyers critical of Moynihan and Bank of America. The Brown Student Labor Alliance’s Stoni Tomson sent a letter acknowledging the churches “best intentions” in inviting Moynihan while decrying “Bank of America’s track record of predatory lending schemes that targeted people of color which directly contributed to the financial crisis of 2008, the financing of ecocidal practices like mountaintop removal mining, and the exploitative treatment of its call-center workers.”

Tomson said, “We believe that Moynihan’s lecture on Corporate Social Responsibility will inevitably be fraught with hypocrisy that effectively makes congregation members pawns in a Bank of America Public Relations Stunt.”

The interview conducted by Darrell West avoided negativity and focused on Moynihan’s philanthropic efforts in Haiti, and the questions too often allowed Moynihan to deliver corporate spiels that sounded more like advertisements for Bank of America than serious considerations of the issues involved. For instance, in answer to a question regarding the controversial nature of large financial institutions like Bank of America in the light of the financial meltdown, Moynihan talked about the excellent ratings the bank receives from satisfied customers, saying “We do lots of customer research. Our customer satisfaction is as high today as it was in 2007.”

Flyer
Flyer

When asked about the role of faith in his life, Moynihan invoked the Golden Rule in a way I never thought possible when he claimed that the principle of being customer focused in business “is not all that different from treating others as you want to be treated yourself.”

During the question and answer period things got edgier as Central Congregational Church member Paul Armstrong said, “Let me quote a few lines from a press release issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission last August as they settled a $245 million case which was part of a larger $16.5 billion settlement which Bank of America reached with the Department of Justice to resolve various investigations involving violations of laws relating to the sale of toxic mortgage backed securities. The regional director of the SEC’s office said, ‘Bank of America failed to make accurate and complete disclosure to investors and its illegal conduct kept investors in the dark. Requiring an admission of wrongdoing as part of Bank of America’s agreement to resolve the SEC charges filed today provides an additional level of accountability for its violation of the federal securities laws.’

“My question to you is this,” continued Armstrong, “What is the relationship between the illegal conduct the organization you lead has engaged in and your personal philanthropy? Is philanthropy morally tainted if it’s funded by illegal acts? Can philanthropy redeem wrongdoing behind the fortunes you make possible?”

Tough questions, which Moynihan awkwardly sidestepped as he maintained that it would take days to walk the audience through the complexities of the mortgage crisis. He then claimed that Bank of America “ended up trying to help people keep their homes,” before adding “We do lot’s of good work… it’s all consistent with what we do [as a company.]”

The kind of good work Bank of America is known for can be seen in this Huffington Post piece, where “former employees said they were told to falsify electronic records and string homeowners along in foreclosure as long as possible.” I suppose that’s one way to keep people in their homes.

Moynihan also backed away from accepting a “level of accountability” for Bank of America’s illegal actions, saying that his company only settled with the government because it was the cheaper course of action. “We settled,” said Moynihan, “because it was in the best interest of or customers to do so.”

Armstrong’s question deserves better answers from proponents of corporate philanthropy. Serious questions have been raised about the “charitable industrial complex” with even multi-millionaires such as Peter Buffett, Warren Buffett’s son, asking, “Is progress really Wi-Fi on every street corner? No. It’s when no 13-year-old girl on the planet gets sold for sex. But as long as most folks are patting themselves on the back for charitable acts, we’ve got a perpetual poverty machine. “

If there is a perpetual poverty machine, then Bank of America is a huge part of it, because while Moynihan’s efforts in providing education for exceptional Haitian youth are indeed laudable, the CEO, making well over $13 million a year, runs a company in which one-third of its bank tellers rely on public assistance and “has had more complaints filed with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau than any other American financial institution.”

Working conditions at the Bank of America call center are so bad there’s an online petition demanding “adequate job training that keeps jobs and customers safe” that everyone reading this should consider signing.

I’d like to believe that Moynihan was invited so as to expose the hypocrisy and self-serving nature of so-called corporate philanthropy, but unfortunately, I think the invitation was sincere, and therefore misguided.

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Open letter to our newly elected friends


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Elorza 002Congratulations on your well-deserved inaugurations and new positions! I am deeply proud of the opportunity afforded me to parade with your stickers and flyers and write so freely in papers and on social media about your visions for our beloved Providence and Rhode Island.

We all know that our state faces many challenges. In most cases, good and honest leadership and visions have been unthinkable, especially in these challenging times. Like many others, I am aware of those critical issues and challenges, and I am deeply concerned about what lies ahead for our creative capital and state. However, I stood by and with you through the fight in the past elections, and I still believe and stand with you as you take office.

I have no doubt in mind that you’re ready to transform our city and state by changing it from within.

As you take your respective seats in offices and roll your sleeves, keep in mind that I and thousands of other concerned Rhode Islanders are watching you– particularly those of us who walked tirelessly under scorching summer sun and bitter cold winter. We burnt our fuel and carelessly increased our cars odometers by traveling to every corner of the city and state. We knocked on strangers’ doors despite the dangers and untold and unexpected humiliations that came with it. Above all, we put our own lives on hold, believing it’s worthy. We were ready to tell your stories and share your visions with the rest of the city and state. We believed in you and still do.

Like many others, I am watching you. I am watching you because I care about you and our state. I am watching you because I still believe in One Providence and One Rhode Island, where a mother on the Southside of Providence sends her teenage boy to the nearby corner store without any fear that he might not return home safely. If you do not do what you made us believe and get swallowed by the chronic illness of “cultural and insider politics,” don’t be surprised to read my articles in the papers. Don’t be surprised to see me hitting every medium, criticizing the person you might become. Don’t be surprised to see a movement against your failures. Don’t be surprised when an ardent supporter and a friend becomes a fierce critic.

As your good friend, I am watching you with eagle eyes. Beware and be yourself! Lead with open heart, open mind and integrity!

Your caring friend,

Komlan A. Soe

“Addiction is a Disease. Recovery is Possible.” campaign launches today


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DSC_9493The Departments of Health (HEALTH), Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH) and the Anchor Recovery Community Center held a press conference today to announce the launch of a new media campaign, “Addiction is a Disease. Recovery is Possible.

The ads cover television, radio, billboards and the sides of buses. There is a website. The powerful ads feature eight local men and women who tell their stories of addiction and recovery. Though many share their personal stories of addiction, one woman, Elise, speaks from the point of view of a mother who lost two sons to overdose.

Holly Cekula
Holly Cekala

Holly Cekala, executive director of RICAREs (the group that staged a “Die-In” outside the State House earlier this week) pointed out the wide range of ages, races and economic level of those in recovery and told me that the community she serves, and is a part of, is the most diverse community there is. Addiction, it seems, does not discriminate.

Anchoring the event and introducing the speakers was Jim Gillen, Director of Recovery Services at the Providence Center / Anchor Community Center. Gillen has been in long term recovery since 1998 and “As a result, my life is banging, let me tell you,” he said to the audience, “It’s the reason that I’m employable, it’s the reason that I pay taxes, that I drive with a license and insurance… and I vote.”

Dr. Michael Fine, director of HEALTH, said that the point of this campaign is to let “every single Rhode islander know that addiction is a disease.” This is a “campaign to bring Rhode Islanders together.”

There were 232 overdose deaths in Rhode Island last year. People have already died this year. “With each death,” says Dr. Fine, “a piece of Rhode Island dies.”

Dr. Fine revealed that another aspect of this campaign is designed to raise awareness among doctors and others with the power to prescribe opiates about their responsibility in curbing this epidemic, as well as bringing more accountability to the pharmacies that fill the prescriptions. “We need to change our prescribing behavior,” said Dr. Fine.

Linda Mahoney of BHDDH sees this campaign as a means of combating the stigma that addiction carries. She commended the eight people appearing in the ads for having the courage to face this stigma head on in an effort to change the hearts and minds of the wider community. It takes courage, said Mahoney, “to come out professionally and publicly and say, ‘I know I was sick. I got better and there is still work to do.’”

“The idea is to overcome stigma, to treat addiction as a disease like any other disease,” said Mahoney.

Jonathan, one of the eight featured in the ads, started with a joke, “When I was told that this campaign would mean having my face plastered on the side of a bus, I said that this wouldn’t be the first time I was plastered on a bus.” But he soon turned serious. His was a story of addiction that lead to crime and estrangement from friends and family.

It ultimately led to his death, but he was saved by an injection of Narcan. Waking up in the hospital, Jonathan’s first thought was to score more drugs, but he learned that there were people out there who “loved me more than I loved myself.”

Jonathan has been in recovery for 19 months. He is repairing his relationship with his family, has a job and is paying the debts he accrued during his addiction. Still, addiction haunts him. On Wednesday he attended a funeral for a 22-year old friend, one of the first overdose deaths in 2015.

Elise spoke next. She is a nurse who has worked in recovery since 1998. Her son Paul died at the age of 22 in 2004, and her son Teddy died at age 30 in 2010. “Who would have thought it would happen to me?” Elise asked, “You can’t have your blinders on.”

‘We can’t arrest ourselves out of this problem,” said Dr. Fine during the question and answer session, observing that addiction is a medical, not law enforcement problem. Jim Gillen, wrapping up the event, seemed to concur. “We may have lost the war on drugs,” he said, “but we will win the war on addiction.”

Below are all eight videos produced for the campaign.

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Speaker Mattiello upfront about his economic vision


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It’s not often you hear a high ranking Democrat from a solidly blue state say, “the focus has to be on eradicating the safety net and not bolstering the safety net.” It’s not often a conservative Republican goes that far. But that’s exactly what Rhode Island’s Speaker of the House, Rep. Nicholas Mattiello, said to an Interfaith Coalition focused on poverty this week.

Mattiello preceded his comment with his usual rhetoric of building a strong economy with good jobs as being the best route out of poverty, and that the safety net should be funded at “appropriate” levels. House spokesperson Larry Berman offered this clarification: Speaker Mattiello, “means that if we alleviate poverty, there will be not need for a safety net. He wants to improve the economy and get people working to eradicate poverty.”

However, other public comments by Mattiello leave little doubt that the Speaker’s call for the eradication of the safety net should worry progressives enormously.

The RI Interfaith Coalition to Reduce Poverty has held this event on the second day of the General Assembly being in session for the last seven years and traditionally the Governor, Senate President and Speaker of the House are invited to speak. Usually the assembled politicians say a few nice words about keeping the plight of the poorest Rhode Islanders in mind as they maneuver bills through the system, whatever their actual intentions towards the poor might be. But Mattiello, beginning his first full term as speaker, seems eager to chart a new course: He’s being upfront about his intentions slash social service programs to “appropriate” levels.

A staunch conservative, Mattiello has the solid backing of both the NRA and Right to Life. He has the strong backing of conservative Republicans. House GOP leader Brian Newberry says, “Philosophically, he’s just closer to us than his predecessor.” Meanwhile, Mattiello has targeted progressives within his own party. He endorsed progressive legislator Maria Cimini’s Democratic primary challenger “because she didn’t back him for speaker, didn’t apologize for that and because she doesn’t agree with him on policy.” Cimini lost her primary.

When the Providence Journal asked Mattiello where the cuts would be made this session, the Speaker answered, “Eligibility for human-service benefits and so forth. Let’s see where we are versus our neighbors …. Prioritize which ones are more important and look to cut expenses out of them.”

In his first term as speaker, Mattiello cut the corporate tax rate from 9 to 7%, now the lowest in New England, and raised the exemption on the estate tax to the first $1.5 million of wealth. He’s eager to cut funding for Healthsource RI, one of the most successful state run Obamacare programs and has even suggested closing the system down and “giving it back to the federal government.”

RI Monthly quotes Mattiello as wanting to steer the state away from being, “on the leading edge of the social agenda” but can economic policy be so readily separated from issues of social justice? Rhode Island has the highest poverty rate in New England, yet when workers organize to help themselves out of poverty, Mattiello has led the charge to slap them down.

Mattiello likes to talk about jobs and the economy, but people are more than their jobs. People have value beyond the economy. Like it or not, the government has a role in securing that there is a system, a social safety net, to prevent the most vulnerable from facing the worst life has to offer. And maybe, along the way, we can even help lift people up.

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50 hours of community service for highway protester


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Molly Kitiyakara, bottom right

Saying that she didn’t agree with the state prosecutor’s request for a sentence of six months probation for a first time offense, on Tuesday Judge Christine Jabour issued Molly Kitiyakara, arrested for disorderly conduct during a #blacklivesmatter protests that blocked the highway on November 25th of last year, a filing and sentenced her to 50 hours of community service. Judge Jabour approved the filing and Kitiyakara’s nolo plea over the state’s objection after a lengthy and sometimes tense discussion between the prosecutor and defense lawyer Shannah Kurland at the bench.

The remaining four defendants, Tess Brown-Lavoie, Steven Roberts, Larry Miller and CBattle are due back in court on January 20 as prosecutors and defense counsel continue to negotiate.

You can read about their previous court date here.

Also appearing today, in another courtroom, was Servio Gomez, who is being tried separately from the other defendants, as he is being charged by the Providence Police, not the State Police. Gomez told me that his lawyer is still negotiating with prosecutors, and that he is due back in court on January 22.

Kitiyakara is the second of the PVD7, those arrested the night of the November 25 protest, to settle with the state. Charges against Tololupe Lawal were dismissed on December 17.

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Speaker Mattiello seeks to eradicate the social safety net


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mattiello2Update, Jan 8: In response to our request House spokesperson Larry Berman sent the following reply:

Speaker Mattiello, “means that if we alleviate poverty, there will be not need for a safety net. He wants to improve the economy and get people working to eradicate poverty.”


Speaker Nicholas Mattiello established himself as a cartoon super villain at the 7th annual Rhode Island Interfaith Coalition to Reduce Poverty Vigil when he told an assembled crowd of faith leaders and poverty advocates that when it comes to ending poverty, job creation and appropriate funding of the social safety net are important, but, “the focus has to be on eradicating the safety net and not bolstering the safety net.”

It’s obvious that the Speaker is no longer pretending to be a Democrat. You can hear the entirety of Mattiello’s short speech below.

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