Progress Report: 38 Studios Scoop; Localvore Recipes; Banksters vs. Liz Warren; Thanks, ALEC and Earned Media


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Greenwich Cove (Photo by Bob Plain)

It’s amazing some of the things we’re willing to believe … Jesus was born to a virgin, Thomas Jefferson thought all men were created equal, Reaganomics works and, the perhaps the biggest doozie of them all, that Rhode Island did its due diligence in assessing the 38 Studios deal.

For anyone still hanging onto that most recent bit of malarchy, Tim White and Ted Nesi have some news for you.

One of the most interesting aspects of their scoop is Linc Chafee’s letter to Keith Stokes about the impending deal, and Stokes’ reply – which was essentially that smarter business minds than Chafee’s had already vetted the deal … which goes to show, I think, that being successful in the free market doesn’t always – or even all that often – translate into having a flair for what works with regard to public policy.

Progressive Charlestown has been blogging about localvore recipes this week … a great idea, you guys!!

The banksters don’t want Elizabeth Warren on the Senate committee that oversees their industry. No surprise there … I wonder what the people want? And which constituency will get its way?

Dee DeQuattro lists her 12 biggest turkeys for 2012. Noticeably missing from her list is the guy she’s suing.

How small is Rhode Island? We would fit into Alaska more than 547 times! I once lived in a county in Oregon that was about four times the size of our state. And before that in an unincorporated hamlet in Northern California that only had about 200 full-time residents, but was at least twice the size of the Ocean State.

Bob Kerr reminds us of some of the Rhode Islanders we should be thankful for. And Elizabeth McNamara of EG Patch has a great piece on all the things a community journalist should be thankful for … including fast-talking editors!

Thanks to John Marion, executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island, local public officials will have to disclose more of the travel expenses comped to them because of their public positions. The new rule, Marion said, is a result of some shoe leather reporting by the local media.

Here’s how the ProJo reports it:

Marion said the rule request was prompted by Providence Journal reports concerning two legislators’ controversial trips.    One trip was taken by Senate Majority Leader Dominic J. Ruggerio, to a Buenos Aires, Argentina, luxury hotel last year, paid for by a New Jersey organization, the Senate President’s Forum. The other, Marion said, “was by soon-to-be former Senator Jon Brien’s travel to these conferences held by the American Legislative Exchange Council, otherwise known as ALEC.” Marion said, “In both instances, that travel wouldn’t have come to public light except for the reporting that had occurred about them.

One clarification: that was my shoe leather on the ALEC story. In an email to me this morning, Marion confirmed, “It was the Projo reporting on Ruggerio that first led us to this idea,  and RI Future’s reporting on ALEC that pushed us to make a request of the Commission.”

Fundraising vs. Good Govt: Which Matters More?


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Harvard professor Lawrence Lessig told the Common Cause annual dinner said it’s not enough to reverse Citizens United, but it’s the place to start.

Note the irony that while one prospective 2014 Democratic candidate for governor was making headlines for raising an almost unfair amount of money from corporate interests from outside of Rhode Island, the other prospective candidate was busy not making headlines for being honored by good government group Common Cause RI with its 2012 Excellence in Public Service Award.

Providence Mayor Angel Taveras was honored with the award for “for his work on redistricting, voting rights, and ethics as a community activist, and now as Mayor,” said a Common Cause release about their annual meeting. “The award is given to those who demonstrate integrity, courage and leadership in pursuit of open and accountable government.”

Adding to the irony is that Harvard professor Lawrence Lessig was also at the Common Cause event to talk on the dangers of such unfettered money in our electoral process. If you’re a fan of good government or even just politics, you’ll really appreciate his presentation, which you can watch here:

ALEC Funds Brien’s Travel Costs to Annual Meeting


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Conservative Rep. Jon Brien, of Woonsocket, will be attending his first ALEC meeting as a member of the far right wing group’s board of directors when he travels to Charlotte, NC on Thursday for its annual Spring Task Force meeting where, he said, one of the orders of business will be “coming up with a strategy to win the war against the left wing media.”

ALEC task forces pair state legislators with corporate sponsors to formulate policy and write model legislation to be used in state legislatures across the country. At this year’s spring meeting, ALEC members will discuss, according to an agenda: 21st century commerce and taxation; insurance; education; energy, environment and agriculture; health and human services; and tax and fiscal policy, among other topics.

Brien said the American Legislative Exchange Council will reimburse him for the cost of his plane ticket, which cost under $400 and two nights in a hotel. Because ALEC is not a registered lobbyist with the state and has no bills before the General Assembly there are no requirements that Brien disclose the money ALEC is paying for him to attend to conference.

Interestingly, but unrelated to Brien’s trip, Common Cause Rhode Island sent a letter to the state Ethics Commission yesterday “requesting greater disclosure of gifts and travel of elected officials.”

In an email sent out yesterday, Common Cause wrote:

“In light of recent events in Rhode Island, with expensive travel by elected officials not being reported, Common Cause requests the Ethics Commission enact a regulation requiring disclosure of any gift over $25 received by an elected official by virtue of their being an elected official. Rhode Islanders have a right to know who is trying to influence their public officials. Without a complete picture of the flow of influence, citizens cannot fully determine who is behind the laws that govern them.”

John Marion, the executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island, agreed with Brien that under the current rules, he does not need to disclose the trip to the ALEC conference. “Because ALEC doesn’t have any bills before the legislature – its members do – there’s no requirement to disclose,” he said. “ALEC essentially acts as the pass through.”

But, he added, it’s important that citizens know “who is influencing our legislators,” he said. “These entities are out there paying for things for legislators and the only way we know about it is when a reporter happens to stumble onto it.”

Brien Joins ALEC Board as Group Comes Under Fire


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Conservative House Democrat Jon Brien of Woonsocket is not only a card carrying member of ALEC, the right wing group backed by some of America’s most powerful corporations that writes model legislation for use in statehouses around the country, but he’s also the lone Democrat on the group’s 17 member board of directors.

“I don’t feel it’s largely Republican but I think it’s a conservative group,” he said, noting that ALEC stands up for low taxes and free market policies which are also core values of his. “I’m a conservative, I make no bones about that.”

He added, “It’s a collaboration between business and legislators. It’s no different than a U.S. senator getting a donation from a corporation.”

Brien said he was just named to the group’s “governing body” in the past month. He said he was introduced to ALEC by former Woonsocket lawmaker and majority leader Jerry Martineau, a past state chair of ALEC who served jail time for political corruption for using his position in the General Assembly to curry business favors with CVS and Blue Cross.

“Jerry and I have always been friends,” Brien said. “I wanted to pick up that mantle.”

Brien will be attending ALEC’s spring task force meeting in Charlotte this May where, he said, “we’ll probably be talking about everything that is going on in the court of public opinion.”

ALEC, which has for years flown below the mainstream media’s radar, has been in the news of late for authoring the Stand Your Ground law in Florida that came under fire when it almost allowed George Zimmerman to go un-prosecuted for the killing of Trayvon Martin. Brien said last week ALEC decided to no longer work on non-economic policy after several large corporations dropped their membership

More recently, Common Cause has accused ALEC of tax evasion because the group is registered as an educational non-profit when it engages in lobbying efforts.

“It’s a corporate front group that is cheating the tax payers,” said John Marion, the executive director of Common Cause RI. Marion and Brien exchanged tweets on the issue yesterday afternoon. “They should own up to the fact that they are lobbyists and register as every other group has to do.”

Brien denied the allegations, saying ALEC has done nothing wrong with its taxes. He said Common Cause has targeted ALEC not because the group is flouting its tax obligation but because ALEC, like Brien, support Voter ID laws, which Common Cause works against.

“They can’t beat us legislatively, so they are coming after us in another way,” Brien said.”Do you think Common Cause is mad about taxes or because we are beating them on Voter ID?”

While he referred to himself as the “godfather of Voter ID in Rhode Island,” he said he did not use the ALEC  model bill for Voter ID. He said he has never proposed an ALEC model bill in the House but he often proposes legislative issues that are also near and dear to ALEC such as anti-tax bills, education reform efforts and others.

Brien said since becoming the state co-chair of ALEC he has signed up some 10 new members from the legislature. He named Reps. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, Dan Reilly, Doreen Costa, Lisa Tomasso, and Samuel Azzinaro. He said he hopes many of them join him at the annual meeting this August in Salt Lake City.

At that meeting, he will appoint Rhode Island legislators to ALEC task forces. The task forces, he said, pairs legislative members with corporate sponsors to hammer out new model legislation.

Brien, Common Cause Spar over ALEC on Twitter


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Rep. Jon Brien is the local co-chair of ALEC, the pro-business political group that drafts model legislation that supporters, often elected members of state legislatures like Brien, propose at the local level. ALEC has come under fire as of late for authoring the Stand your Ground law in Florida that initially protected George Zimmerman from prosecution.

Common Cause filed a complaint with the IRS today saying the ALEC is violating its status as a non-profit by engaging in lobbying efforts.

Here’s the exchange on Twitter today between Brien and John Marion, the executive director of the local chapter of Common Cause:

Legislature Considers Better Public Records Act


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Mike Field, of the Attorney General's office, testifies at a hearing on a proposal to update Rhode Island's Access to Public Records Act.

Rhode Island’s public records law may get some much-needed revisions if a bill heard by the House Judiciary Committee last night becomes law.

The proposal, introduced by Rep. Michael Marcello, D-Scituate, would be the first amendment to the Access to Public Records Act in 15 years. It would: decrease the amount of time a public agency has to make public records available from ten to 7 days; require municipalities and government agencies to designate and train a public records officer; require police departments to make initial arrest reports available within 24 hours; and would make correspondences between elected officials regarding policy public documents.

Officials with the Attorney General’s office, which submitted a separate bill that doesn’t reach as far, the Department of Administration and local and state police took issue with the legislation, advocates for civil liberties and open government applauded the effort.

“This may impose some additional burdens on government employees but it should be accepted as an important part of their work,” said Steve Brown, the executive director of the RI ACLU.

Brown said people and organizations that seek public records in Rhode Island often run into problems obtaining them. He said the changes would improve citizen’s access to public records.

While police are against compelling arrest reports to be made available within 24 hours, saying this could be onerous for officers, John Marion, the executive director of  Common Cause RI, said making arrest reports available as quickly as possible is an important function of a free society.

“Arresting someone is the strongest action the state can take against an individual,” he said. “When the state takes away someone’s liberty – that’s what an arrest represents – the state should provide information about that in as timely as manner as possible.”

There is also a Senate bill, sponsored by James Sheehan, D- North Kingstown, that would update the Access to Public Records Act that open records advocates say doesn’t go as far as this one in ensuring that citizens have easy access to public records.

 

RI’s DISCLOSE bill introduced!

Before leadership of RI’s legislative and executive branches jumped on board, there were the hardworking activists of Democracy Matters and Common Cause of Rhode Island working all fall to put together this legislation, designed to pull best practices from other states who have introduced similar reforms.  Congratulations on putting everything in place for an exciting announcement tomorrow!

(The photo is the old guard of Democracy Matters, a group of us at the State House in early 2006 introducing that year’s Clean Elections bill)


MEDIA ADVISORY:
Governor Chafee, General Assembly Members and Leadership,
Common Cause RI to Announce Campaign Finance Disclosure Legislation
 
Providence, R.I. – Rhode Island Governor Lincoln D. Chafee will join with House Speaker Gordon Fox, Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed, Senate President Pro Tempore Juan Pichardo, Representative Chris Blazejewski, and Common Cause Rhode Island Executive Director John Marion tomorrow to announce significant campaign finance disclosure legislation that will be introduced in the current General Assembly session.
 
Who:                     Governor Chafee
                             Speaker Fox
                             Senate President Paiva Weed
                             Senate President Pro Tempore Juan Pichardo
                             Representative Chris Blazejewski
                             John Marion, Executive Director, Common Cause
 
Where:                  State Room, State House, Providence, RI
 
When:                   Thursday, February 16, 2012 at 2:15 p.m.

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