Chafee Helped Brown, Providence Behind Scenes


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It’s a huge day for Providence which, among other bits of good news, announced today that Brown University will pay the city $31 million over the next 11 years. While Mayor Angel Taveras and Brown President Ruth Simmons both deserve much credit for getting the deal done. So does another local leader who rarely wins praise for his efforts: Gov. Linc Chafee.

When talks broke down between Taveras and Simmons earlier in the year, it was Chafee, a Brown alum, who brought the two back to the negotiating table.

In a statement, Taveras praised Chafee for his “statesmanship” and David Ortiz, Taveras’ press secretary called the governor’s efforts “crucial” to the deal that was announced at the State House – not at City Hall or Brown – today.

“The governor brought us together and helped me understand a little bit better how important Brown is to the city and to the state,” Taveras said after the press conference. “One of the things the governor doesn’t get much credit for is he does a lot that people don’t necessarily see and I think this was another example of it.”

Simmons agreed, saying Chafee was “a  more neutral presence when the discussions were especially fraught.”

She added, “Because we were very divided we needed somebody to bring us into the room with a completely different perspective and he was able to do that to argue on behalf of the state, to argue what our joint agreement would mean to the state, and he had credibility in doing that. It was very helpful; we’re very grateful to him.”

Chafee, Brien Explain Need for Municipal Aid Bills


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Gov. Chafee and Rep. Jon Brien, chairman of the House Municipal Government Committee, kicked off the House Finance Committee meeting by addressing the need to pass the governor’s municipal aid package.

Brien, from Woonsocket, has a particular interest in the bills’ passage as they would greatly benefit his community.

In this video, they both explain why the bills are so important to the poorest communities in Rhode Island.

RI Progress Report: Gov Misses Photo Op, Gordon Misses Tax Deadline, NY Yankees Support Scott Brown


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The governor is in Afghanistan and it didn’t make the front page of the local daily newspaper. Instead, a first glance at the Providence Journal this morning informs readers that Dick Clark has passed away. Dick Clark, in case you don’t know, was the host of American Bandstand. Our country is at war with Afghanistan, as you probably do know, and the elected leader of Rhode Island is there. It could have been a much better news cycle for Chafee, if only his office would have procured a picture of his boots on the ground there. The governor made himself available to reporters by phone (including me), but given that he isn’t the best interview, the whole thing would have made a much better photo op.

Actual exclusive: Dan Gordon did not pay his income taxes. He told Dan McGowan that he hopes his protest sends a message to Rhode Islanders. Yep, it will.

Half of RI politicians told Ted Nesi they’d share their tax returns with him. Anthony Gemma actually said he would share his only if he wins a seat in Congress, but for the time being he has  “family and partners to protect at this point.” Which of course begs the question of who else will Gemma no longer feel obliged to protect if he were to get elected. Here’s one safe guess: Democrats.

Political sin in these here parts: Mass. Sen. Scott Brown took campaign money from New York Yankees President Randy Levine.

It goes without saying that most people disagree with the Vatican’s anti-abortion policies, but did you know only 14 percent of Catholics agree with the church when it comes to whether or not to support women’s rights.

Projo calls Paul Ryan’s budget proposal “dishonest.”

This page may be updated throughout the day. Click HERE for an archive of the RI Progress Report.

Governor Chafee Visits Troops in Afghanistan


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Gov. Chafee meets with Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta before his trip to Afghanistan. (Photo courtesy of Dept. of Defense)

Gov. Chafee is in Afghanistan, spending the week visiting with National Guard troops, and in a conference call with reporters said “Rhode Island troops are doing really well here.”

He added, “It’s just a tremendous sacrifice [for them]. It was very sobering having supper with them. I’ve been surprised at how thankful they are that governors came out. It really does make a difference.”

Chafee said many of the troops he spoke with knew Sgt. Dennis Weichel, the soldier from Providence who died in Afghanistan recently while trying to save a young boy. “They all know Dennis Weichel here in Afghanistan and were devastated by that, as all Rhode Islanders were.”

He also said he had some more lighthearted conversations with the troops as he visited Bagram Air Force base today.  “We were chit chatting about fishing season and striper season,” he said. “They are going to miss all that. It’s just not the same to skype pr email.”

Given the Taliban attack on Kabul on Sunday, Chafee said, “After hearing events of Sunday with the Taliban I was a bit apprehensive to be honest.” But, he added, “I trust the Department of Defense.”

Chafee has spoken out against the war, but said his own feelings on it were irrelevant during this trip. “Im really not hear to cast judgement on what we are doing. I’m just hear to check on national guard.”

Chafee arrived on Kuwait yesterday and will be in Afghanistan until Friday, he said. The trip was paid for by the Dept. of Defense and he is joined by the governors of Michigan and South Dakota.

Gov. Chafee Makes Case for Muni Relief; Unions Retort


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Mayor Grebien Gov Chafee
Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien pleads for the municipal aid package as Gov. Chafee listens.

Governor Chafee, testifying before the Senate Finance Committee, made his plea for his legislative package aimed at helping cities and towns stave off the impacts of the sustained recession and steep state cuts by his predecessor to local municipalities.

The legislation would allow the cities hit hardest by these untimely events and actions – Providence, Pawtucket, Woonsocket and West Warwick – to cut disability pensions, suspend automatic teacher raises and do away with state mandates such as school bus monitors.

According to Chafee, those four communities lost a combined $94.7 million in state aid between 2008 and 2011. Providence lost $54 million, and more than $25 million in 2009 alone. Pawtucket lost almost $20 million, Woonsocket more than $12 million and West Warwick lost $6 million.

Paul Valletta, a union representative for local fire fighters, said given the extreme loss in revenue recently it’s unfair to ask municipal employees to carry so much of the burden as communities attempt to adjust to the situation.

RI Progress Report: Romney in RI and Wildfire Warnings


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Mitt Romney will make his second campaign stop in the Ocean State today. The GOP presidential hopeful will be at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Warwick for what his campaign calls a Small Business Town Hall. The last time Romney was in Rhode Island he held a fundraiser at a Newport mansion, where the millionaire famous for being out of touch no doubt felt more at home than he will at a hotel in Warwick.

Meanwhile, yesterday at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, business owners disagreed with the congressional delegation on the reasons for RI’s high unemployment rate.

Not the AFL-CIO, though, which endorsed the three Democrats running for re-election to Congress this year.

I thought we only got springtime wildfire warnings in the West? Not only is it a particularly dry year here in Rhode Island, it’s also the warmest year on record.

Speaking of putting out fires … Ozzie Guillen, the new manager of the Miami Marlins, displays how NOT to ingratiate oneself to baseball fans in Florida by praising Fidel Castro.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation becomes the latest organization to sever ties with ALEC, the business (and, evidently, non-profit)-backed political powerhouse that authors right-wing model legislation for state legislatures.

Need a free bike? Head to South County on Saturday for the Bicycle Recycle, part of Bike Day in South Kingstown.

Gov. Chafee tells the Johnston City Council that the state didn’t do enough over the past three years to help struggling cities.

This page may be updated throughout the day. Click HERE for an archive of the RI Progress Report.

RI Progress Report: Same Sex Divorce, Newt and Neumont


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The Wall Street Journal has covered Rhode Island so much lately, it ought to devote a beat to us – if not a dedicated section. Yesterday, the Rupert Murdoch-owned paper reported that Chafee sent $70 million in early state aid payments for struggling cities and towns. Also, a WSJ op/ed yesterday lauded Rhode Island for its handling on Medicaid spending.

Talk about a glass-half-empty attitude … while same sex couple still can’t marry in Rhode Island, a bill being considered at the State House would let them get divorced.

It sounds like Newt Gingrich will be campaigning in Rhode Island this month … campaigning for exactly what, we’re not sure, seeing that he’s already been statistically eliminated from the GOP nomination.

With funding still uncertain, the Interagency Council on Homelessness approved a plan that would emphasize housing over shelters. A great step in the right direction.

So long, Neumont University, we hardly knew ya … and it turns out we won’t get to know you any better as the Utah-based for-profit college has decided against opening an Ocean State campus.

While the word was that Gov. Chafee and supporters of medical marijuana in the General Assembly came to an agreement on a bill that would allow cannabis compassion centers to open, no one really knows how much pot they’ll be able to have or grow.

It turns out Senators Ruggerio and Ciccone weren’t the only ones familiar with the State House at the now-infamous arrest in Barrington.

Don’t let anyone ever tell you activism is thankless work … at least it’s not for Frank Beazley, an advocate for the disabled for whom the General Assembly will rename the center for patients with paralysis and other disabilities.

Good news … Providence Business News says leading economic indicators continue to show improvements for the fourth month in a row.

RI Progress Report: Teachers v. Tuition, Ciccone, RIP Peter Lord


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Rightfully, Sen. Frank Ciccone is emerging as the biggest loser in the incident in which his senate colleague Dominick Ruggerio was arrested for allegedly driving drunk and refusing a breathalyzer. Ciccone is accused of attempting to coerce Barrington police officers to let Ruggerio off by threatening legislative retribution. We’re not sure exactly which is more dangerous to society: inebriated elected officials operating motor vehicles or inebriated elected officials using their positions to gain personal favor. Neither should be taken lightly.

Rest in peace, Peter Lord, the hugely-respected Projo environmental reporter who died yesterday of a brain tumor, and thank you so much for your years of explaining our natural world to us.

Thank you Gov. Chafee, for declining to give URI professors 3 percent raises at the same time that tuition is going up 9.5 percent. (I’m sure to hear from an ex-prof or two for this line, but oh well…)

As Providence is asking retirees to take a cut in benefits, the city failed to apply for $1.6 million in federal reimbursement from the Affordable Care Act to help offset these kinds of costs. Remarkably, the Capital City said it asked two health care providers to complete the application for it! I guess the old saying is true: if you want something done right, do it yourself. If you don’t, hire a health care provider.

More bad news for Barry Hinckley’s campaign for Senate. His spokesman John Loughlin has resigned after an erroneous attack on Sheldon Whitehouse’s Buffett Rule bill.  No word yet on whether Loughlin will be replaced by Hudson Hinckley, the previous campaign insider to give the candidate some bad press…

Congrats to Allan Tear, founder of Betaspring, who was asked by President Obama to join him at the White House today when he signs a bill into law that will help small businesses like his raise ore investment money.

Sen. Jack Reed will be at the soon-to-be-operational Wickford Junction train depot this morning, which is slated to start service later this month. The developers of the project have been waiting some 30 years for rail service in North Kingstown.

Turns out ALEC, the secretive business-backed group that quietly pushes for local legislation often bad for democracy and citizens, was behind the law that allowed Trayvon Martin’s killer to walk away without being charged.

Please, local media, give us less updates on lottery winners …. after all, lotteries are little more than a “cheap tax on the poor.”

Congrats to President Obama, who now seems guaranteed to get to run against Mitt Romney for re-election. “I’ve yet to meet a single person in the Republican establishment that thinks Mitt Romney is going to win the general election this year,” GOP cheerleader Joe Scarborough said yesterday.

 

Mistake on Mayor’s Name Was Projo, Not Chafee


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Gov. Chafee took some heat over the weekend for misidentifying Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine as Raymond Fontaine in an op/ed in the Providence Journal. But it turns out it wasn’t his mistake. It was the Projo’s.

According to Chafee’s office, the piece they sent read: “…particularly Mayors Fontaine, Grebien, and Taveras…” The version that ran in Sunday’s print read: “…particularly Woonsocket Mayor Raymond Fontaine, Pawtucket Mayor Donald Grebien, Providence Mayor Angel Taveras…”

While the Providence Journal mentioned the mistake on its editorial page this morning, it amended that correction on the web this afternoon after a call from this reporter.

The original correction said: “In Governor Chafee’s April 1 column, “Local leaders need more power in crisis,” the first name of Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine was printed incorrectly.”The amended correction read: “April 3’s correction of the erroneous first name of Woonsocket Mayor Leo (not Raymond) Fontaine in Governor Chafee’s April 1 column, “Local leaders need more power in crisis,” should have noted that The Journal, not the governor’s office, miswrote Mayor Fontaine’s first name. Mr. Chafee’s office did not give the mayor’s first name when it sent the column.”

Editorial Page Editor Robert Whitcomb said the amended correction will run in tomorrow’s print edition as well.

“It’s an unfortunate mistake,” Whitcomb said. “As soon as we became aware of it, we corrected it.”

The Chafee Endorsement Matters For Cicilline


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Governor Lincoln Chafee (Independent)

The big political news of the yesterday was Governor Lincoln Chafee’s endorsement of U.S. Representative David Cicilline for Congress in 2012. First, Chris Fierro of Mr. Cicilline’s office tweeted last night that Gov. Chafee attended a fundraiser for the incumbent representative.  Then the Governor’s office confirmed as much in this statement.

There’s a danger of reading too much into this, but it appears to be a good sign for both Mr. Cicilline and Gov. Chafee. It definitely hurts the campaign of Mr. Cicilline’s challenger Brendan Doherty, who could’ve bolstered his argument of being an acceptable Republican for Rhode Island by winning Gov. Chafee’s endorsement, Rhode Island’s last federal delegation Republican (it’s unlikely Mr. Doherty ever sought the Governor’s endorsement). But with no non-Democratic statewide officeholders left to endorse him, Mr. Doherty will have to rely on obscure RIGOP apparatchiks, conservative media, and the nationally-despised national Republican Party.

Mr. Cicilline won’t be overly-bolstered by this endorsement. As Mr. Nesi points out, the Governor and the Congressman are the two most disliked politicians in Rhode Island right now (of those politicians included on polls). If this was two years ago, such an endorsement might’ve shored up Mr. Cicilline’s progressive supporters, which it will somewhat help to do now. But Governor Chafee is not the same as Candidate Chafee, and his low poll numbers are likely due to a collapse in support from the labor-progressive coalition that propelled him into office in 2010. It does mean that potential Democratic primary opponent Anthony Gemma is increasingly isolated in Rhode Island’s political landscape.

I think Gov. Chafee actually benefits the most from this endorsement. There’s no doubt that the Governor has been pulling reliable duty as a Democratic Party workhorse; co-chairing President Barack Obama’s re-election committee, endorsing Senator Sheldon Whitehouse who ousted him from office, appearing with Providence mayor Angel Taveras, and now this. If the Governor makes the switch from Independent to Democrat, he might might be able to get more cooperation from the General Assembly in time for 2014, perhaps preside over a few legislative successes and stay in the limelight by virtue of party affiliation.

His fortunes are tied to those of the state’s of course, and Democrats might prefer that the Governor remains apart; setting up what could be an easy pick-up for current Treasurer Gina Raimondo without the risk of an unpopular candidate harming any down-ticket party members.

Education Funding vs. the Restaurant Industry


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Who needs the government’s help more: restaurants or public schools? Which do we value more as a society? The answer to these questions is likely to play out as Rhode Island debates Gov. Chafee’s proposed increase to the meals tax.

While Tea Party activists and restauranteurs rally against the 2 percentage point increase – which, just so we are clear about the kind of increase Chafee is suggesting, would amount to four dimes on a $20 lunch or less than $2 on an $80 dinner – they are effectively lobbying against a $40 million to boon to public schools.

That’s because Chafee proposed the slight increase as a way to better fund public schools in Rhode Island.

“This is a way that the governor could accelerate the education funding formula,” said Chafee spokesperson Chris Hunsinger.”You can talk to almost any mayor who was in the municipal strategy session up here and accelerating the funding formula was one of the ways that was talked about at length that the governor can help cities and towns.”

She mentioned Providence Mayor Angel Taveras and Cranston Mayor Allan Fung by name.

Public school funding is one of Rhode Island’s biggest problems, as evidenced by Woonsocket’s inability to pay for its schools and the state take-over in the 1990’s of the Central Falls school district. And a recent report, as reported by RINPR, shows that graduation rates in Rhode Island are falling.

The restaurant industry, on the other hand, is one of the state’s most successful sectors. Whenever almost anyone talks about what’s right with Rhode Island its world class cuisine is almost always mentioned. Chafee told me recently that as we’ve seen unemployment skyrocket and schools, cities and towns fall into further economic morass, the local restaurant industry has stayed level.

You’ll have a hard time convincing me that people are going to stop going out for an $80 dinner because it’s going to cost $82 instead. Similarly, I think most Rhode Islanders would be happy to pay an extra quarter for a pizza if it means more money for our struggling schools.

Conversely, if the state doesn’t find a better way to fund public education, more and more of our children will be looking for jobs in restaurants rather than looking to spend money in them.

Chafee’s Municipal Plan Helps Poorest Towns Most


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It’s hard to be happy about something that will hurt so many working class retirees across Rhode Island, as would Governor Chafee’s proposed bills to help cities and towns. But Chafee designed his suite of legislation to help the most cash-strapped communities the most, which is the right way to handle the state’s municipal fiscal crisis that is disproportionately plaguing the poor.

Rather than giving every community the ability to suspend annual pension increases, Chafee’s proposal would only allow those with pension funds less than 60 percent funded to exercise this tool, reports the Providence Journal. While no retiree deserves to have the deal they struck changed, at least this wasn’t a blanket exemption.

Chafee also made a number of cost-saving tools only available to the “most distressed” communities. As we reported earlier this week, those four communities are Providence, Pawtucket, Woonsocket and West Warwick. Ian Donnis has a good list of the relief measures offered to these cities and towns.

While Ted Nesi notes that former Governor Carcieri offered some of the same mandate exemptions that Chafee proposed yesterday, the big difference is Chafee’s bottom-up approach. Carcieri’s proposal was a blanket exemption to every municipality and Chafee’s is need-based. RI Future has held the former governor’s feet to the fire for cutting so much money from cities and towns that had so little. So did Chafee earlier this week.

Here’s hoping that Chafee’s proposal sparks a big debate in the General Assembly about the disparity between the haves and have-not communities in Rhode Island as this is arguably the biggest affliction affecting the entire state. After all, no one is talking about how rough it is for East Greenwich, Barrington and South Kingstown have it. Rather it’s the plight of Central Falls, Woonsocket, West Warwick, Pawtucket and Providence that is pulling our state down.

Woonsocket, and How Chafee’s Muni Bill Can Help


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Woonsocket High School (photo courtesy of Woonsocket School District)
Woonsocket High School (photo courtesy of Woonsocket School District)
Woonsocket High School (photo courtesy of Woonsocket School District)

The Woonsocket School Committee voted last night not to close schools early, which is good news all around. But guess what? Schools were never going to close early. If Woonsocket can’t come up with the money it needs to run them by April 5, which it probably cannot, the state will step in and keep the schools running. The state Constitution says it has to.

Furthermore, under the new state education funding formula, RIDE has all but admitted that it shortchanged the cash-strapped city under the previous funding formula to the tune of $4.6 million, an amount the state will pay to the school district over the next seven years. Woonsocket, along with Pawtucket, is suing the state saying it needs that money right away. Obviously, this isn’t a bluff.

Yes, Woonsocket could have managed its finances better. A lot better. But the state mismanaged how it funds education, too. Couple these blunders with the drastic cuts to cities and towns that occurred over the past several years and you have the recipe for disaster that was cooked for Woonsocket.

Governor Chafee’s municipal aid bill will help. It will not only allow cities and towns to save money by cutting annual pension increases for retirees, but Chafee said on Tuesday it will also allow Woonsocket (and Providence, Pawtucket and West Warwick) to ignore some of the state mandates that drive up expenses.

Providence Journal State House scribe Randal Edgar, who evidently obtained a copy of the legislation, has a little more on what those are: mayors and managers would be given the power to veto line items in school budgets; teacher pay increases will be suspended, bus monitors can be replaced with cameras and allow those communities to stop busing students to private schools.

But at some point, and hopefully sooner rather than later, this state has to come to terms with the fact that top-down policies adopted during the Carcieri era, and a seemingly utter disdain for its poorest communities, has created this problem to a far greater degree than have unfunded pension liabilities.


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