PolitiFactRI Asks Developers to Fact Check Developers


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The Superman Building from Smith Hill. (Photo by Bob Plain)
The Superman Building from Smith Hill. (Photo by Bob Plain)

PolitiFactRI has a history of sloppy reporting and conservative bias that has generated national attention.  But a piece on whether developers deserve huge cash handouts broke new ground.

It centers around David Sweetser, the principal owner of the Superman Building.  Controversially, Sweetser has refused to renovate the building or bring in tenants until the city and state agree to pay him tens of millions of dollars in taxpayer money—considerably more than the purchase price.

When Ed Fitzpatrick at the Providence Journal reported on the Superman Building, Sweetser gave him a classic defense.  As Fitzpatrick wrote: “Sweetser, who lives in Wellesley, Massachusetts, said the reality is that Boston is just 60 minutes away and it’s offering subsidies to developers who can charge higher rent than you can get in Providence, while construction costs are more or less equal.”  PolitiFactRI rated Sweetser’s defense true.  This is an important claim to unpack because it’s one of the most common arguments big Rhode Island developers use in their quest for taxpayer cash.  It’s also extremely misleading.

To begin with, what makes Boston real estate so expensive is not the cost of construction.  It’s the cost of land.  The whole point of this developer talking point is to imply that overall costs are no higher in Boston–something that is definitely not true.

PolitiFactRI does not address this point.  Instead, they zero in on whether construction costs are higher.  So how does PolitiFactRI seek to answer this question?  Do they consult some unbiased labor cost index?  No, they just ask the Gilbane Corporation—one of the biggest developers in Rhode Island.

Interestingly, Gilbane does not say construction costs are identical.  They say there is, in fact, a “slight overall difference.”  But they also say, “When it comes to larger more complex projects costs are roughly the same.”  If Gilbane shared any hard numbers, PolitiFactRI neglected to print them.

Now, Massachusetts is a considerably wealthier state, with stronger unions and a slightly higher minimum wage. It would be odd if labor costs were not slightly higher in Boston.  But just how big that difference is is an interesting question.  Unfortunately, PolitiFactRI does not give us a number.

Finally, there is the question of subsidies in Boston.  PolitiFactRI asks Nicholas Martin, the spokesman for the Boston Redevelopment Agency.  He says, “I would not hesitate to say that the majority of construction that’s going on in the city of Boston is not subsidized,” although he does clarify that some big projects do get subsidies.

Boston certainly does offer some absurd subsidies, but the situation today is nothing like Providence, where pretty much every big project gets a special tax break.  Boston does lots of developments without subsidies, and they even make Fenway stadium pay taxes.

Under liberal Governor Michael Dukakis, the Massachusetts economy went through a huge boom called the , and the state now has quite a strong economy.  That’s why the state has a strong housing market.  Like Rhode Island today, Massachusetts used to struggle with conservative Democrats who opposed good policy.  Ronald Reagan called Governor Edward King, Dukakis’s rival, his “favorite Democrat,” and King formally became a Republican after Dukakis beat him in the 1982 primary.  Today, the Massachusetts legislature is filled with solid real Democrats like Senate President Stan Rosenberg.  And the state is thriving, especially when compared to Rhode Island.

If Rhode Island wants to learn a lesson from Massachusetts, we should try breaking the machine and electing real Democrats.

Ed Fitzpatrick, Center for Freedom & Prosperity, RI Future agree on library funding


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RI Future, the Center for Freedom and Prosperity and now the Providence Journal’s Ed Fitzpatrick all agree on this one: Rhode Island’s library funding formula is way too regressive. This odd trio represents a fairly decent cross-section of the local punditry, and another great reason why the General Assembly should pass Rep. Shelby Maldonado’s and Sen. Betty Crowley’s bill that would help reduce the library funding disparity.

Rhode Island is very generous to libraries in affluent suburban communities and relatively stingy to the libraries in poor urban cities. In fact, the state library funding formula funnels the most state aid per resident to, in order most to least: Barrington, Jamestown, North Kingstown, East Greenwich and Cumberland. The least state aid goes to, in order least to most: Central Falls, Pawtucket, Woonsocket, West Warwick and Providence.

RI Future analyzed state library aid in March of last year and found per resident the state offers the most financial aid to some of the most affluent communities in Rhode Island while the poorest communities receive the least state aid. Click on the image to read the post from March, 2014.
RI Future analyzed state library aid in March of last year and found per resident the state offers the most financial aid to some of the most affluent communities in Rhode Island while the poorest communities receive the least state aid. Click on the image to read the post from March, 2014.

RI Future first reported this in March, 2014. The state funding formula for libraries is so regressive that even the Koch brother-aligned Center for Freedom and Prosperity recognized it needs to be altered in its Spotlight on Spending report last year. The attention inspired Rep. Maldonado and Sen. Crowley, both of Central Falls, to author legislation that would increase state library funding to the poorest cities in the state.

Fitzpatrick joined the chorus in his Sunday column, with an endorsement of Maldonado’s and Crowley’s bill. It is “absolutely a good idea because libraries are especially crucial sources of information and education in poorer communities, where fewer people have the money for laptops or books from Amazon,” he wrote.

It’s worth noting that Central Falls’ library was shuttered when the city went through bankruptcy and at the time the state gave more matching funds to Barrington than it would have cost to keep Central Falls’ library open.

Op/ed writers pick up ‘political football’ fumble


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wallstmainstForget the football analogies, maybe Ed Achorn was writing this morning’s misleading Providence Journal editorial while his beloved Boston Red Sox were getting goose-egged by Detroit (his most reviled municipality) last night?

Like Gina Raimondo did in 2011, the Sox crushed the ball against Tampa Bay. But last night the hirsute home team looked more like the Gina Raimondo of 2013, swinging and missing against more major league pitching. Raimondo’s only hit since being at-bat against the likes of Ted Seidle and Matt Taibbi has been to label the recent influx of high-and-tight, hard-hitting, anti-Wall Street journalism as “political football.”

I posted about political football Wednesday morning and both ProJo op/Eds (Fitzpatrick and Achorn) followed suit this weekend. It was an obvious great line right from the get-go. Interestingly, the Providence Journal news coverage led with the quote in print and the online version ended with it.

Ed Fitzpatrick looked at how the national narrative about Raimondo has gone from protagonist to “Wall Street Raimondo.” (we like to call Raimondo a Wall Street Democrat). I wrote that I thought it hypocritical that Raimondo used pensions as a political football when it was to her advantage and dismissed them when it did not.

Conversely, Ed Achorn wrote that people in unions are against good. And those who support their interests are childish. And failing to cut pensions would have been akin to “murdering” the private sector. (I am not making this up, you can read it for yourself here!!) It begins:

Frank Caprio, the last Democratic nominee for Rhode Island governor, made his mark by pledging to stand up to the special interests and fight for the common good. Public-employee unions did not like that very much, and turned on him with a vengeance in 2010, tearing down Mr. Caprio while dragging Lincoln Chafee into the governor’s office.

But wait, it gets even more ridiculous. Those who don’t agree are just being childish:

It would be nice to make politically powerful groups happier with more generous retirement benefits, but grownups realize the state has only so much to spend on government. There are other areas that cry out for funding; notably education, roads and bridges, and programs to help the neediest among us.

I would agree that education, infrastructure and ending poverty are more important that pensions, and so would every single retiree. Where we disagree is whether these are either/or propositions. Well, Rhode Island’s paper of record’s official editorial voice actually wants you to believe that cutting pensions was necessary to save capitalism!

Murdering the goose that lays the golden eggs — the private sector — would have hurt public employees vastly more than making some reasonable changes in the system. Reform was a question of math, not politics.

Well Rhode Island, if you thought the Ed Achorn era as op/ed editor was bad, wait till we get a healthy dose of the Ed Achorn era minus Froma Harrop. The ProJo really needs to send Achorn to the showers and bring in someone from the bullpen who isn’t scuffing the ball.

Progress Report: Election Day! Dixville Notch Results In; Baited Breath in CD1; Obama Enjoys 92% Chance of Victory


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The votes are already coming in … up in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, traditionally the first town in America to report its results, Obama and Romney have battled to a draw among the 10 voters there.

Let’s hope the David Cicilline fares better in the 1st District than Obama did in Dixville, though it could be as close. It’s really the only statewide campaign that is still in doubt. Dan McGowan says , which is a good point.

Let’s also hope it isn’t too close to call … the Ocean State might not be able to handle that.

Speaking of hope … remember four years ago when us progressives were filled with hope? It’s not quite the same feeling this year, is it?

But there is good news … forget what the pundits and the national polls are telling you – and the Dixville results, for that matter – the presidential race isn’t nearly as close as it may appear to the lay observer. Numbers guru Nate Silver says Mitt Romney has only an 8 percent chance of winning today … roughly the same odds as drawing an inside straight in poker.

Now, remember, people do pull inside straights in poker, so it’s not over yet. And even if Obama is very likely to win, it doesn’t mean he’ll win by a lot and it also doesn’t mean we’ll know particularly early. Consider the country, and yours truly, lucky if we know who our next president is by the time we all go to bed tonight. Assuming of course Romney doesn’t pull an inside straight of electoral politics.

ProJo columnist Ed Fitzpatrick looks into the controversy surrounding Silver’s projections ginned up by GOP talking heads who are understandably trying to stave off a self-fulfilling prophecy. Still, it’s worth pointing out that Republicans have resorted to ignoring the laws of science, economics and now math to push their agenda … how can this be good for America??

In case you are very much unlike me and are going to miss the 2012 campaign season, you can review the 10 best moments of it here.

I can’t add enough links to this post to capture all the great stuff Rhode Island Public Radio bloggers Ian Donnis and Scott MacKay have cranked out over the past couple days … if you, by chance, aren’t a regular reader of their stuff, it’s all right here.

The ProJo helps you figure out “how and where to cast your vote.”

Ted Nesi breaks down how many people vote in Rhode Island, and who they are … and how the number of people who show up today could swing the Cicilline/Doherty campaign.

I know many of you moderate Rhode Island Democrats have forgotten why the labor movement is your ally, so here’s a practical reason to stop crapping on unions: if and when Obama wins his second term, it will be organized labor most responsible for the win in Ohio.

I disagree with today’s ProJo editorial arguing that all the negative ads and smear campaigns we’ve had to endure are actually a sign of a healthy democracy … while they are a part of our Democracy, that doesn’t mean they are a good part of it. Fixes for this problem aren’t easy to come by, but that also doesn’t make it a good thing.

On this day in 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected president.

What Can’t Brown Do for You?


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Was with Occupy Providence to the City Council meeting on Thursday night and the City Council distributed the following flier about how the wealthy Brown University refuses to pay their fair share in Providence — even after teachers, firefighters, police officers and city workers did their fair share, the taxpayers did theirs and even after lots of public schools were closed.

The Facts on Brown University and their “commitment” to Providence

Facts about Brown University and their real estate holding companies:

  • Brown owns 203 properties in Providence.
  • Assessed value of properties is $1,042,111,400 or $1 Billion.
  • Taxes that should have been paid is $38,186,481 or $38.2 Million.
  • Payment Brown made pursuant to 2003 MoU: $1.2 Million.
  • Taxes Brown actually paid: $2,283,987 or $2.3 Million.
  • Brown’s Budget is $834 Million.
  • Brown’s Endowment is $2.5 Billion.

If fully taxed, Brown would pay $38.2 Million.

Brown currently pays $3.5 Million.

  • 25% of Brown taxes due (Carnevale bill) would be $9.5 Million
  • 22% of Brown taxes due (Revenue commission report) would be $8.4 Million
  • Deal reached with Mayor would have total Brown payments as follows: $3.5 Million + $4 Million = 7.5 Million.
  • Deal offered by Brown after they reneged on deal with Mayor: $3.5 Million + $2 Million = $5.5 Million.

Facts about Yale University:

  • Yale University is New Haven’s largest contributor to the City budget beside the state.  Each year, Yale pays the City more than $15 million in taxes, voluntary payments, and fees – money that helps fund schools, safety, and other citizen services. Yale pays for its own police force, pays the City for fire services, and pays full property taxes on all its commercial properties. The City receives further millions in state PILOT payments because of Yale’s academic property.
  • Over 920 Yale employees – most of them first-time homeowners and half African-American and Latino – have taken advantage of the Yale Homebuyer Program, which provides a $30,000 incentive for staff and faculty who purchase homes in New Haven neighborhoods. Through this program, Yale has invested more than $22 million to leverage nearly $150 million in home sales.
  • Yale’s leadership commitment to establish the New Haven Promise program with $4 Million will offer a powerful incentive to academic success for New Haven Public School students living in the city.  Promise scholars will receive up to full tuition for in-state public colleges and up to $2,500 per year for tuition at in-state independent, non-profit colleges.

Facts on Tax Exempts in Providence:

  • Over 50% of the city’s land is tax exempt.
  • 41% of the assessed property in Providence is tax exempt.
  • Major Tax Exempts own ¼ of city’s non-public land.
  • Costs of Direct City Services to Tax Exempts (Revenue Commission Report): $36,234,000 Million.

Councilman John Igliozzi is right.  So is Journal columnist Ed Fitzpatrick (cant’ find his column online).  And so is Ted Nesi.  Theyre all right.  Brown needs to step up and pay their fair share.