The Providence Journal this morning reprised Dave Fisher’s post from Friday about Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine going on Fox “News” and blaming the city’s economic woes on the fact that one in three residents needs SNAP benefits.
The ProJo picked up on the similar themes as did Fisher’s post*: Fontaine inaccurately claimed that Block’s report uncovered “massive fraud” (or, me and Fontaine have an entirely different idea of what the word massive means) and that even the Fox anchor was surprised that Fontaine was blaming the poor for the city’s problems.
Unfortunately Fontaine wasn’t the only conservative using Block’s investigation to bash our poor on national television.
Rep. Doreen Costa, the voice of the tea party in the General Assembly, was on a Fox segment that included not-too subliminal messages of “‘Rhode’ to Economic Disaster” and “Who is ruining our economy?”
Costa, whose major legislative accomplishment is a failed bill that would mandate drug tests for welfare recipients, is no stranger to this form poor-bashing-as-political-shell-game. Here’s how it works:
Fox: “Why is Rhode Island suffering so much?”
Costa: “Well, I think Rhode Island is suffering so much because we don’t have any jobs here and because no business friendly legislation has been put in up at the State House…”
Fox: “Do people at least recognize that this is a problem or are you the lone ranger in this?”
Costa: “I don’t think people up at the State House even think this is an issue, they just want to keep giving out and giving out and giving out…”
Fox: “If you are trying to help these people, do you think they are trying to help themselves?
Costa: “That’s a good question. We just had a major report…”
There’s a lot in here that is either blatantly wrong or half-true to the point of being misinformation.
To date, I think Fisher – WHO LIVES IN WOONSOCKET – has done the most interesting journalism on the Washington Post’s Woonsocket piece. He points out that while the city and the schools are going bankrupt and a third of the residents – and the local economy itself – is reliant on SNAP benefits, Woonsocket is also home of Rhode Island’s largest private sector employer, CVS, which gets more than $15 million in local and state tax breaks and pays its CEO $18 million a year.
There’s something to all that that I believe is the major reason Rhode Island finds itself in such bad economic shape.
I think conservatives, moderates, liberals and progressives all agree that the state’s struggles are pretty much concentrated in our urban areas. And I think everyone also agrees that the systemic poverty in Woonsocket, West Warwick, Central Falls, Pawtucket and Providence is terribly bad for Rhode Island (I think it’s the state’s biggest economic obstacle). Here’s where there is disagreement: do we want to continue with austerity measure and trickle down ec0nomics or do we want to try some bottom-up solutions.
I don’t think the couple dozen ACI inmates who may – or may not be – scamming the system will affect either our real-life economy or our made-up CNBC rankings one way or another.
]]>In a smart move that plays to the state’s natural advantages, Rhode Island is using the arts as an economic engine.
“Let’s be clear: State socialism created the suburbs. That migration – of educated, middle class workers away from the cities and mill villages – limited tax revenues and job opportunities in city centers across the state.” – Daniel Lawlor.
Why is Gina Raimondo trying to undercut Gov. Chafee’s efforts to help out struggling cities and towns? Here’s why.
If Anthony Gemma took his candidacy for Congress more seriously so would the media. But, then again, if he wasn’t such a joke, neither would be his campaign.
It’s Marathon Monday in Massachusetts today, when the Red Sox play their annual 11 am home game in conjunction with the Boston Marathon, but it’s also Patriot’s Day, marking the anniversary of the Battle of Lexington and Concord, the first actual military skirmish of the American Revolution, which Ralph Waldo Emerson dubbed “the shot heard ’round the world.”
It’s also the day the Senate is slated to take its first vote on the Buffett Rule … check out our coverage here.
This page may be updated throughout the day. Click HERE for an archive of the RI Progress Report.
]]>