Shout down at Brown: what would John Lewis do?


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john-lewisSpeaking of civil disobedience, Congressman John Lewis will be in Providence on Friday and I can hardly wait to ask the this living legend of the struggle for civil rights what he thinks of the instantly infamous Shout Down at Brown.

Lewis, like those who prevented Ray Kelly from lecturing on his controversial and currently unconstitutional “stop and frisk” policing style, broke the rules of civil society in an effort to force our nation to have a conversation about racism. He was arrested 40 times during the 60’s, and here’s what I heard him say at the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington:

“…we used what we had to bring about a nonviolent revolution (applause) And I say to all of the young people that you have to push and to pull to make America what America should be for all of us.”

It’s really worth listening to what this icon said just a few weeks ago about civil disobedience:

There are both obvious similarities and differences in how Lewis pushed and pulled for change during the Civil Rights era compared to the direct action successfully coordinated by a surprisingly organized coalition of Brown students and local community organizers. For one, Lewis broke rules he felt were unjust. And when he did interrupt civil society he did so merely with his presence, or his blackness, as the case was.

It’s worth noting that Gandhi’s world-changing Salt March was in tactic more akin to refusing to pay a bridge toll than shouting down an invited guest. But it’s also worth noting that Nelson Mandella was best known for leading a known-terrorist organization, Spear of the Nation, before doing 27 years hard time for other reasons.

There’s no doubt in my mind that nonviolent resistance is a more effective change agent than its morally inferior cousin civil disobedience. But there is also little doubt in my mind that if local activists want Rhode Island to have a discussion about civil rights, playing by the rules will not work. The left has lost serious ground on important issues that smack of latent racism in recent years, such as voter ID and high stakes testing. Both initiatives, like “stop and frisk,” target minority populations and these angles don’t get a fair share of attention in our marketplace of ideas.

Perhaps it’s telling that the Providence Journal’s day 2 story on this Shout Down at Brown does not offer insight from DARE, the Olneyville Neighborhood Association or Fuerza Laboral but it does have perspectives from both the Heritage Foundation and the CATO Institute – two groups that advocate for low taxes and small government, not civil rights or free speech.

In a way, there is a connection between austerity and what Ray Kelly calls “proactive policing.” It places a higher value on efficiency than individual liberty. When that starts happening, and information gatekeepers like the media and academia, don’t want to talk about it, it’s worth forcing the conversation a little bit.

Ravitch responds to ProJo


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diane ravitchThe Providence Journal published a highly misleading op/ed by Deborah Gist, that was discredited here, here, here and here (among some examples). So naturally, ProJo’s Politifact team responded by fact checking Gist’s biggest and most well-known critic, Diane Ravitch.

Politifact wrote: “Education critic Diane Ravitch said, ‘Test scores had gone up steadily for 40 years until No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top.’ There are a few problems with her statement. First, the time spans for the scores she cites are 32 and 38 years, not 40. Second, while the scores increased overall, there were a few dips. And for 17-year-olds, the overall increases were insignificant. Finally, despite her implication that the increases stopped after No Child Left Behind, scores actually rose for all age groups in 2008 and for nearly all in 2012, the next two testing periods.”

Ravitch, a blogger, wrote a lengthy response today saying that Politifact “misinterpreted what I said or misunderstood what I wrote.”

I contend in the book that test scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress are at a historic high point for white students, black students, Hispanic students, and Asian students. Nothing in his article disputes those facts. It seems that his goal is to defend the high-stakes testing and accountability regime created by George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind law, passed in 2001 and signed into law in 2002.

You can read the whole thing here.

 

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.

Coach makes 26 times what childcare providers earn


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robinhoodwaswrongThe income gap between those who entertain the affluent and those who provide childcare services for poor and middle class parents and their children is massive, according to the Providence Journal. By way of comparison, URI basketball coach Danny Hurley’s state subsidy is more than 26 times larger than what the average community-sponsored childcare provider earns.

Hurley earns $600,000, Politifact RI confirmed, making him the highest paid state employee. Earlier in the week, a page 1 story compared the starting salaries of teachers to the childcare providers who will most certainly earn a little bit more if and when they sign their union cards.

If you read really, really far down into that story, you’d have learned that the average pay these providers earn is $20,028.86.

According to the Providence Journal:

The state paid the licensed childcare providers $23,028.86, on average, last year, in amounts that varied from the $224 paid to a woman on Hunts Avenue in Pawtucket, to the $76,991 paid the top-earner.

It would appear that many of the people paid by the state to take care of other people’s children are, themselves, poor enough to qualify for financial assistance from the state and federal government.

The ProJo has dedicated a lot of time and energy to these childcare providers, many of whom it reports are poor. Why? The editorial page won’t run anything from advocates of the organizing efforts and the news coverage reads as if it was reported by Fox News (I would absolutely positively welcome any disinterested parties to weigh in on this).

The Providence Journal isn’t the only well-heeled local organization to take an intense interest in this unionization effort. So has the Freedom for the Prosperous, a public-sector despising local think tank that purports to care for Rhode Islanders economic well-being. By way of comparison, I would love to know how much both of these two groups have invested in their campaigns to call attention to 600 people who earn on average $20,000 getting a raise.

Whether it’s how much we pay a basketball coach, how much childcare providers earn, or why the ProJo and the Freedom for the Prosperous spend their time and money on certain topics, it’s all evidence that modern American capitalism seems to reward making more money rather than adding value to the community.

Ed note: For clarity, I think Danny Hurley is both an awesome basketball coach and well-worth $600,000 a year to Rhode Island taxpayers.  I passionately believe the childcare workers who take care of poor and middle income children have among the most crucial roles in our community – they are helping out with the kids who have a high likelihood of falling through the cracks and every additional penny we invest in this function will reap huge though often invisible dividends for taxpayers AND the citizenry.

Evaluating Eva’s op/ed


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mancusoEva-Marie Mancuso’s recent (9/18/13) op-ed piece in the Providence Journal “Testing helps R.I. students achieve” offers a disingenuous rational for not discussing the current NECAP testing requirement. Her piece attempts to build a case for the Board’s exit-test policy by stringing together a series of misleading and vacuous statements that do not hold up to critical review. Here are some of the most blatant:

“We want to prepare all of our students for success, and we want to make Rhode Island’s public schools and higher-education institutions among the best in the country.”

No one engaged in the current debate about the exit-testing requirement disagrees with this goal. The disagreement is around the policies that determine how Rhode Island will use its scare resources and regulatory authority to achieve this goal. And, it should be noted that Mancuso does not have a Board united behind the current policies. On September 9 that Board voted 6-5 not to accept a petition that would have opened up the testing policy to discussion and public examination.

“The vote [by the Board not to discuss the graduation requirements] was not about the merits of any of our battery of state assessments; it was about starting the debate again about whether or not to have state assessments.”

In fact, the debate has all along been, in part, about the merits of the eleventh grade math test. This test fails a far higher proportion of students than the 11 of reading and math assessments, whether it be the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) or the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) shows such a huge disparity between the performance standards for reading and math. So the debate has included fundamental questions about the performance standards the Board has endorsed for graduation.

“the New England Common Assessment Program (NECAP), is not the be-all, end-all — but it is one valid measure”.

I don’t know what evidence she uses to assert the NECAP is a valid measure because the NECAP technical report does not provide any credible validity study. Consequently, we do not know whether the NECAP predicts college or career readiness any better than family income, mother’s education, or number of books in the household. And, if it doesn’t, which is very likely, it is a huge waste of very scarce resources.

“[the NECAP] shows us that too many students…have not attained the knowledge and skills they will need upon graduation.”

Yet, RIDE already knows this—they know, for example that many students taking the NECAP math test have not had a geometry course and, since geometry is required on the NECAP, how could these students pass the NECAP? Making sure all schools provide the curriculum necessary to pass the NECAP is a prerequisite to implementing an exit-test requirement and one of the things Massachusetts did in their ten-year preparation phase. By rushing to implement “high standards”, the Board is already harming students unfairly.

“We don’t have to look far for support for a state assessment. Massachusetts implemented an even more stringent standard more than a decade ago, and, though assessments alone do not account for the improvements in Massachusetts, today Massachusetts ranks first among states in student achievement.”

I agree that assessments alone do not account for the improvements we see in Massachusetts. It is far more likely that they reflect a decade-long preparation, adequately financed by a state funding formula that built capacity in the poorest districts. Adequate funding means a district can conduct intense professional development, build its infrastructure, and provide supportive programming for its vulnerable students. It also means the district can maintain courses in art, music, and vocational training. Lacking a funded formula, these are things Rhode Island’s poorest districts cannot provide.

“every high school in Rhode Island offered students additional instruction and support during the school year and over the summer, in a commitment to improve mathematics achievement”.

Not true. Most high schools only passed along the state sponsored ‘math module’ which was an online test prep course with a ‘virtual’ teacher. Most students did not receive any additional instruction from the schools last year or over the summer – unless they were enrolled in those test prep courses. Already, one of the concerns of those of us who question the wisdom of this policy has become reality–districts have been forced to dedicate extremely scarce resources to providing test-prep courses that have almost no lasting impact on students’ learning.

“I have been moved and troubled by the concerns many students, educators and family members have raised regarding our diploma system.”

Perhaps, but Mancuso has remained steadfastly unresponsive to the concerns raised by parents and advocates for students with Individual Education Plans (IEPs). The NECAP failure rate of these students in math is astoundingly high—over 80% failed. Furthermore, ten years of exit testing in Massachusetts has resulted in more students with IEPs failing to get diplomas, not fewer. This long-term failure of a testing policy to close achievement gaps in Massachusetts is reflected in their being ranked as having among the worst NAEP achievement gaps. Since Rhode Island is having no success in reducing achievement gaps, the exit-exam policy seems like a bad choice.

Finally, Mancuso concludes with a plea for support, “Let’s take all of the energy that has gone into opposing statewide testing and focus it where it belongs — on improving opportunities and outcomes for our students.”

Yet the policies Mancuso asks us to support have not been defended in transparent public discussion that addresses the relevant evidence. It will do our students no good for us to blindly support a policy based primarily in ideology.

Two Rhode Island business stories


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Photo courtesy of EcoRI.org. Click on picture for more.
Photo courtesy of EcoRI.org. Click on picture for more.

A story in today’s Providence Journal would seem to confirm that Rhode Island is indeed an unfriendly place to do business. But wait. A story on EcoRI.org today would seem to confirm that, contrary to the popular narrative, Rhode Island is indeed a friendly place to do business.

One story is about a pharmecutical company and the other story about making energy from food waste. Is it possible both narratives are true, and that this is a good thing?

According to the Providence Journal story, it took the drug company 7 months and $100,000 to apply for a license to have an employee administer pain medicine into an internal pump surgically located in the body of a patient with multiple sclerosis. This might not be a terrible thing to regulate, especially given that the company in question gets bought and sold by private equity firms more often than it invents new products. I’m concerned with how each new owner increases the profitability of this product.

I’m also concerned that a medical procedure for an active patient took more than 7 months to approve. Why? (the story doesn’t say). I do hope Rep. McNamara, who seems most concerned with how the business was treated by the state, also asks for a decision to be expedited for the patient’s sake (ie the consumer).

I’m also interested in why it cost so much money. According to the ProJo story, Pentec, spend $1,000 a month on rent when it seems like it only needed a PO Box. Perhaps Pentec had overspent in other areas as well? Or maybe it is factoring in lobbying fees?

In any case, the EcoRI story painted a very different picture of state regulation. In this case, regulation helped bring a New Hampshire company to the Ocean State to make energy and fertilizer from food scraps.

At a Sept. 10 meeting with members of the House Committee on the Environment and Natural Resources and the North Kingstown Town Council, Callendrello credited the state’s fixed-price energy program, known as distributed generation, for making the project doable. In 2012, anaerobic digesters were added to the list of qualifying energy sources for the DG program.

Callendrello also noted that Rhode Island has a better regulatory environment than Florida and Texas, two states where NEO has biomass facilities. “I think, on balance, it’s probably a better permitting atmosphere,” Callendrello said.

On balance, these might both be instances of the system working.

* It’s well worth noting that the ProJo covered the biomass story on September 10.

The ProJo opinion: Stop saying things we don’t want to hear


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ProjoI get that the Providence Journal editorial board (read: Ed Achorn) really doesn’t like union workers, and feels very strongly that public sector retirees should bare the brunt of elected officials’ overly-optimistic and/or irresponsible plan for dealing with future employee expenses, but I think that calling for a judge to chide the governor for speaking to the media is more than a little bit of an extreme reaction from Rhode Island’s paper of record.

“On Latino Public Radio Saturday, Governor Chafee brazenly ignored a judge’s gag order, imposed for the benefit of all parties,” read this morning’s editorial.

As journalists first, Achorn, et al should be more weary of siding with secrecy, even when it suits their special interest. But that’s their prerogative as chief ProJo philosophers. It’s a journalism high crime, however, for their editorials to so pervasively misrepresent reality for what read like cheap political pot shots. For example, does anyone believe the Journal when it writes that Chafee leaked this “brazenly?” I suspect “accidentally” or “clumsily” might be more accurate adverbs.

More importantly, today’s editorial misstated the situation it was ostensibly explaining. The governor “publicly pitched his hopes to ‘make the unions happy’ with concessions that he asserts will not cost taxpayers too much money,” according to the piece.

Well, not exactly. Or, more precisely, not at all. What Chafee actually said, according to the Providence Journal, was, “There might be some room for something that won’t cost the taxpayers a whole lot of money but will make the unions happy.”

One has to wonder if the Projo takes issue with the statement or the sentiment. I so highly doubt there would have been a similar opinion offered from the Providence Journal if Gina Raimondo said there was a potential solution that was going to make George Nee and Bob Walsh really sad.

The editorial then asks the judge to give the governor a little talking to for the breach, and cautions Chafee about his legacy. I’d be concerned if I were Governor Chafee, too. After all, the so-called paper of record is saying things about him that aren’t true.

ProJo changes it’s mind on child care benefits


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child careRhode Island gets a good glimpse of how the Providence Journal editorial page may change now that Ed Achorn has assumed the helm.

This morning’s piece about a bill that would let child care workers bargain collectively with existing public sector unions carried the headline: “Another R.I. fiasco.”  This is a stark contrast to the paper of record’s May 6 editorial on the similar subject that was headlined “Early childhood potential.”

The headline isn’t the only difference in the two pieces. The more recent piece is just anti-organized labor hyperbole while the one from May 6 was a measured endorsement of the concept.

Today’s op/ed suggests, in the first sentence, that people who support this legislation don’t love the Ocean State.  The May 6 editorial had a very different opening: “For several years, Rhode Island Kids Count has provided invaluable data on the state’s children.”

Hyperbole is one thing. Misinformation is something else entirely. “It can only make government more costly and intrusive, fueling the flight of the state’s educated people in their prime earning years,” according to the Providence Journal as of today.

But actual economic analysis shows there is likely to be much economic benefit. This 2003 study funded by the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce states: “for every public and private dollar spent on regulated child care, $1.75 is returned to the Rhode Island economy – a net positive return that almost doubles investments.”

It’s well worth noting that the SEIU crafted a more intellectually honest argument for the bill than today’s Projo op/ed did to oppose it. Watch this video:

But if the ProJo editorial board needed any evidence whatsoever that this bill can do more than simply spend money it didn’t have to look any farther than its own archives. Ostensibly, it was even written – or at the very least read – by the very same group of thinker/writers, minus the recently retired Bob Whitcomb.

The video pretty much communicates what the paper of record believed last month when it wrote, “…Rhode Island’s child-care workers could use an upgrade. Most earn fairly low pay, making it difficult to further their education.”

The Journal can both believe and publish what it wishes, and a center right editorial page may even benefit a center left constituency. But progressive viewpoints are not only largely absent from the paper of record’s editorial voice, they are often misrepresented. That may benefit my business model, but it isn’t very good for Rhode Island news consumers.

This post has been updated to fix an error. The post originally said the first editorial endorsed the bill. It did not.

ProJo Scapegoats Unions, Ignores Wall Street


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It’s fine if the Providence Journal editorial board wants to espouse a right wing philosophy, even if such ideas are largely out of touch with the people of Rhode Island. It’s not okay for the Providence Journal to blame organized labor for their policy positions when unions have nothing to do with it.

The latest example comes in a piece this morning that warns the state not to force Bryant University to make a payment in lieu of taxes to its host community Smithfield.

Sen. Steven Archambault and state Rep. Thom-as Winfield, both of Smithfield, and Rep. Gregory Costantino, of Lincoln, all Democrats, have filed wrongheaded legislation to alter Bryant’s tax-exempt status, evidently to funnel more money to the town and, ultimately, its public-employee unions.

This is factually incorrect and/or highly misleading. If Bryant were to step up its financial commitment to its host community, a fraction of that new money MIGHT benefit public sector employees – an even smaller fraction MIGHT benefit their labor unions. All of it WOULD be used to benefit Smithfield taxpayers and the community (but try making a boogieman out of those two constituencies!).

If you spend any time at the State House, you’d know that Rhode Island’s labor leaders probably spend more time and effort lobbying for legislation that benefits regular Rhode Islanders in general than they do for their members in particular.

In my last three years covering Smith Hill, it seems patently obvious that the most powerful special interest at the State House is big business and Wall Street. Whether coincidental or not, you won’t ever hear anything about this from any of the local media outlets funded by Corporate America.

Is it possible that the ProJo editorial board is making a scapegoat out of labor in order to hide who the real powerful special interest in state government?

Rhode Island’s Economy: A Moral Failure


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The most important news story Rhode Islanders can read this week is the front page of today’s Providence Journal. “The Face of Food Stamps Nearly 1 out of 5 in R.I. Depends on the Program,” reads the headline. It’s a sort of follow-up to the Washington Post’s recent stunning Sunday front-page examination of Woonsocket, where one in three people depend on the SNAP program.

What these stories depict – in human terms – is that there is a huge chunk of our state that isn’t making it on their own. Whether you believe this is because our government and our economy favor the rich over the poor or the poor over the rich is really inconsequential. I think we can all agree this is really bad. And not just for our economy.

Yesterday afternoon I went to a press event at the State House calling attention to the rising rate of homelessness in Rhode Island, another critical issue for Rhode Island’s economic and social well being and George Nee made a point that I don’t think gets nearly enough attention here in Rhode Island.

Class Warfare Disquised As ‘Healthy Gridlock’


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Senator Dawson Hodges

Kyle Scott’s op-ed in today’s ProJo, “Gridlock comes out of healthy conflict” maintains that “as frustrating as the gridlock in Washington may be to most Americans we must keep in mind that this is the way it is supposed to work and that the gridlock is actually a good thing.”

Scott’s piece draws on the writings of Madison, Hamilton and Jay in The Federalist Papers as well as Roman historians such as Sallust and Livy to make his argument that the only real alternative to inefficiency in congressional decision making is the efficiency of totalitarian autocracies. This is a false dichotomy should be obvious since there is an entire range of ways in which to organize a political system that fall between Scott’s extremes.

There is, however, some truth in Scott’s piece, in that the way the United States government is set up provides a series of checks and balances on power, and that the two-chamber system we use for our Congress pushes the legislative branch towards compromise on difficult issues. But gridlock, despite what Scott might have us believe, is not compromise, gridlock is a failure of government to compromise.

Scott says, “…when you find yourself getting frustrated with Washington gridlock keep in mind this is how things are supposed to work and that it is better than the existing alternatives.” He is wrong. Gridlock is not the way government works. It’s the way government doesn’t work. In fact, rather than arising out of “healthy conflict” gridlock in Congress arises from income and wealth inequality.

Rather than depend on the historical perspective of long dead political writers, Nolan McCarthy, Keith T. Poole and Howard Rosenthal focused on the relationship between voter partisanship and income from 1956 to 1996. Their paper, Political Polarization and Income Inequality shows an “uncanny” proximity between political polarization (what Scott would call “healthy gridlock”) and economic inequality.

The obvious reason for this relationship is that big money in politics buys big influence. Republicans are more inclined to support policies that favor the 1% and to believe that government is ineffective. Gridlock, which brings government to a crawl and impedes its effectiveness, thereby becomes not just a tactic of the right, but the goal. Big money supports those politicians who will best stymie government.

Scott’s piece attempts to recast our government’s inability to do something as simple, perfunctory and necessary as raising the debt ceiling as being part of the Founding Father’s original intent.

Republican state Senator Dawson Hodgson  apparently buys into this conservative fantasy, tweeting, “Thoughtful piece from today’s ProJo about the protective and inclusive nature of political conflict.”

When I countered that “Legislative gridlock is related to greater economic inequality. Reducing the effectiveness of government is not good” Hodgson trotted out his usual, tired arguments rather than confront the point I was making, suggesting that I “Contrast Washington gridlock and RI inaction: evenly matched sides at stalemate vs ultra-majority rule producing no progress.”

Hodgson’s reply is nonsense. Due to the prevalence of DINOs in the General Assembly, Smith Hill very often suffers from the same gridlock as Washington, and the causes are they same: wealth and income inequality allowing monied interests to warp politics and grind government to a halt.

ProJo Should Stop Using ‘Openly’ Gay


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Cheers to both the Providence Journal and Fall River Herald News editorial boards, both of whom reaffirmed their support for marriage equality in Rhode Island and called for swift passage of this long-overdue equal rights legislation before it becomes part of the political horse-trading on Smith Hill in the springtime.

This is an important point. Soon enough Rhode Island will learn whether Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed’s opposition to same sex marriage runs stronger than her desire for continued political power. I don’t imagine it does. Not when you factor in that she alone will bear the biggest political crosses, if you will, if Rhode Island rejects marriage equality.

While she is certainly seeking something in return for her support – it could be something giant like control of the powerful Joint Committee on Legislative Services or something smaller like support for binding arbitration – she also risks going down in the books as the Rhode Island’s 21st century version of George Wallace, the Alabama governor, known as “the most influential loser” who fought against civil rights in the early 60’s. Such a legacy would certainly affect her ability to become a judge in the future.

Openly? gay

There’s another point about these two editorials that’s worth noting – this one a difference in them.

The ProJo refers to House Speaker Gordon Fox as being “openly gay” while the Herald News more simply points out that Fox is gay. I think it’s prejudicial to refer to someone as being “openly” gay. There’s a great Wikipedia page on this for those who want to explore this more. For our purposes, I’ll keep it local:

Gordon Fox is no more (or less) openly gay than Ed Achorn is openly heterosexual. They are both – to my limited knowledge – in loving, long-time, committed relationships with two primary differences: one is gender and the other involves equal protection under the law.

When the media refers to gay people as being “openly” gay it implies there is still some cause to be closed about such sexual identity. There isn’t. Not here in mainstream Rhode Island there isn’t.

There are surely some hate groups, churches and other such outliers who still think it’s noteworthy that someone doesn’t hide their affection for people of the same gender. But by and large this ceased being a big deal to most people a long time ago.

We’re just waiting for the law to catch up with rest of society…

This Just In: Media Can’t Steal From Social Networks


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Bill Rappleye, Stephanie Mandeville DaSilva and Bill Fischer are engrossed in the campaign via their smart phones. (Photo by Bob Plain)

In what Reuters calls “one of the first big tests of intellectual property law involving social media” a judge has ruled that news organizations can’t freely use photos posted to Twitter.

Reuters reports: “Agence France-Presse and The Washington Post infringed on the copyrights of photographer Daniel Morel in using pictures he took in the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake in January 2010, District Judge Alison Nathan in Manhattan ruled. While AFP had argued that once the pictures appeared on Twitter they were freely available, the judge said that Twitter’s terms of service did not give the news agency a license to publish the images without Morel’s permission.”

Coincidentally enough – two local media organizations used photos ostensibly taken from Facebook today: the Providence Journal and RI Future.

We used Jenny Norris’ picture of Linc Chafee, Gina Raimondo, Frank Ferri and Art Handy at the House Judiciary Committee hearing on marriage equality last night. I couldn’t be at the hearing, but I saw Norris’ picture on Facebook and asked her if she would mind if we used it. She agreed and I think it was a pretty good deal all around: we got great art and she got a little notoriety.

As an aside, I think crowd-sourced journalism works well for a progressive news/opinion outlet and I hope we do more of it. To that end, please send your pictures, videos, story ideas, rants and raves to me at editor<at>rifuture<dot>org.

The ProJo, it seems, took a picture from the Facebook profile of an alleged drug and gun dealer whom police arrested recently. In the picture, the man is armed and holding a large amount of cash. Ironically, police became aware of him because of such pictures on Facebook, according to the Journal piece, and first reached out to set him up there.

The story doesn’t explicitly say the picture was lifted from Facebook, but it implies as much: “Except for one. The handle of a revolver is exposed in Main’s waistband, as he shows off money in one hand and a bagged substance in another.”

I don’t point this out to pick on the ProJo. I just thought the timing of it all was coincidental.

ProJo Belittles, Misinforms Unemployed Letter Writer


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The Providence Journal is entitled to its opinions. But as the state’s paper of record, it should also respect the opinions of others.

Instead, the ProJo editorial page has a habit of tacitly belittling those it disagrees with – one of the most insidious forms of mainstream media bias – evidenced today by a demeaning editor’s note on a letter from a reader.

In the LTE, Dan D’Alessio, of North Providence, explains how he lost his unemployment benefits because of the brinksmanship during the fiscal cliff negotiations. Clearly frustrated, he writes, “I’m sure our Founding Fathers would disapprove of just how ineffective big government has become. Please let me know in a timely fashion as possible what I am supposed to do now, since I am at my wit’s end.”

At the end of his letter, the Journal offers him a response: “Editor’s note: There was no unemployment compensation at the time of the Founders.”

First off, the Journal is wrong about this. According to the Social Security Administration’s history on social services in America, “The first colonial poor laws were fashioned after those of the Poor Law of 1601. They featured local taxation to support the destitute.” It may have been administered much differently, and it may have come in a different form than a direct deposit (oftentimes, out of work colonists would get put to work on “poor farms”), but to say it didn’t exist isn’t accurate.

Secondly, it entirely misses the point. The writer, in case it needs clarifying, was arguing that politics now gets in the way of government, and the founding fathers wouldn’t like that. You can disagree with the sentiment, but whether or not a certain program existed then is really irrelevant.

Thirdly, and I think most importantly, it came across as a nasty pot shot – and was likely meant that way. Yet another indication of just how dismissive the Journal is to the plight of the less fortunate.

Does anyone think a similar editor’s note would have been attached to a letter questioning what the founding fathers would think of pension reform politics?

Here is D’Alessio’s letter, and the ProJo’s response:

My DLT experience

My unemployment compensation ran out in the last week of December.

Since that time Congress has passed a one-year extension and President Obama signed the bill. The late signing is 50 percent of the reason I was not able to   continue to collect my unemployment benefits. The other 50 percent is because I am unable to get through on the phone to a representative of the Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training.

I did leave an online message about my plight, and I’m sure that many other Rhode Islanders have as well. So far, I have not received any mail or phone call from any of the department’s representatives.

I’m sure our Founding Fathers would disapprove of just how ineffective big government has become. Please let me know in a timely fashion as possible what I am supposed to do now, since I am at my wit’s end.

Finally, when I first started collecting unemployment I was able to fill out all of the necessary forms online except to pick a personal identification number. I tried then to speak to representatives by telephone but my attempts were all in vain. So I decided to drive to DLT headquarters to speak with someone just to get a PIN (I think it would have been prudent to use the last four digits of a person’s Social Security number) but I was told that I could not speak to anyone.

All I wanted to do was speak to someone in authority to explain a problem the DLT created for itself but I had an antidote for. Perhaps the agency could   use an out-of-work thinker and problem solver like me.

Dan D’Alessio North Providence

Editor’s note: There was no unemployment compensation at the time of the Founders.

Did a Progressive Coin Term ‘Right-to-Work’?


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Progressive journalist Ray Stannard Baker. An NPR story this morning said he may have coined the term “right-to-work.” Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.

One need look no further than the opinion of the Providence Journal to see just how extreme the anti-labor laws misidentified as right-to-work rules truly are. Even the right-skewing ProJo editorial page calls them “right to be paid less” laws.

“There’s a strong argument to be made that since all in a union shop benefit from the wages and benefits won by the union, which are usually higher than in a nonunion shop, all should pay dues,” says today’s lead editorial. “No free loaders.”

GoLocalProv “mindsetter” Mike Riley disagrees. He thinks Rhode Island should adopt this union-busting legislation. Of course, Mike Riley also made the worst investment in Rhode Island since 38 Studios – in himself! (Super interesting, by the way, that the state’s lawyer fighting for pension reform, John Tarantino, gave Riley money – great get, Ted Nesi!)

But back to those bleed-labor-to-death laws known as “right-to-work,” earlier this week I reported this: “Best I can tell, the term has been around since the late 1960′s.” Well, it turns out National Public Radio was able to tell a whole lot better than me.

It turns out, they reported this morning, that not only has the term been around since around 1902, but it was probably first coined by a progressive! What?

Here’s what Nelson Lichtenstein, the director of the Center for Study of Work, Labor and Democracy at UC Santa Barbara told Morning Edition today:

“Way back at the beginning of progressive reform movements sweeping the country … Ray Stannard Baker, and he was a progressive but he thought of union movement as kind of corrupt and so he was one of individuals who coined it.”

Interestingly enough, Baker was from Lansing, Michigan and covered the Pullman Strike for the Chicago News-Record.

Of course, NPR pointed out that it was in fact the Taft Hartley Act of the 1947 that made it possible, but it seems it was a progressive who coined the term.

A double whammy to us liberals! Not only is it hard to argue against a “right to work” but we came up with it!! No wonder it works so well!!

The saving grace is that Lichtenstein agrees that the phrase is somewhere between meaningless to misleading. He said,”It actually has no meaning in the law, it became codified and used by the right and the analogy would be right to life.”

This is very similar to what the New York Times told me earlier this week.

When a reporter asked him what liberals might call the converse, he said, simply: “Collective bargaining over industrial wages.”

And then suggested maybe it was time for the left to come up with its own phrase (rather than just inventing one for the right, I suppose).

Indeed, we have – the right to work for less … and even the conservative Providence Journal editorial page has picked up on it!

ProJo Stories Show Where Gina Values Transparency


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There was an interesting juxtaposition of articles relating to pension politics and Raimondomania stripped across the top of A1 of the Providence Journal this morning; one was about the outside money coming into the Ocean State, and the other was about local money leaving.

In the first article, about pension reform politics being funded in no small part by a Texas hedge fund billionaire who used to trade for Enron, Mike Stanton writes, “Raimondo has said she sees no problem with the law that EngageRI doesn’t have to reveal its donors.” (Read our post on this from yesterday)

In the second article, about all the time and money Raimondo has spent outside of Rhode Island, Kathy Gregg reports that Raimondo tells her, “…it is more important than ever that [a] treasurer bend over backwards to be transparent and open with our investors…”

This, in a nutshell, is what most frightens progressives about Gina Raimondo: she so often seems more aligned with the interests of Wall Street than Main Street.

“Raimondo talks about ‘truth in numbers’ — she should tell the truth about who her financial backers are,” said Mike Downey, president of Rhode Island’s largest public sector union, to the Providence Journal.

We ought to be as open with our citizens as we are with our investors. In fact, we ought to be even more open with our citizens than we are with our investors! Any politician would certainly agree with this premise, if asked the question outright. But actions always speak louder than words, and thanks to some good reporting by the ProJo, we now see that Gina doesn’t seem to place the same kind of value on political transparency as she does financial transparency.

Story Isn’t Whether to Sit Down, But Who’s At Table


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Sorry, Providence Journal, much as you might not like it, we are no longer debating whether or not the state should be negotiating pension reform with organized labor as your over-hyped headline and otherwise great long-form story on the drama this morning suggests.

Remember, after all, on Tuesday when you broke the news that the governor is, in fact, talking with union leaders about this very topic?

As a point of fact, the executive branch is already at the table. The question at this point is whether or not treasury wants a seat there too.

My guess is Raimondo will eventually join the talks. In fact, Chafee ought to request her presence at the next meeting between he, and labor leaders Bob Walsh and George Nee.

I’m sure all three of these players believe she’d be a valuable voice in those discussions. And, more importantly, our elected leaders shouldn’t shy away from engaging with their adversaries. Remember, talking doesn’t equal acquiescing. Or, sitting down and holding your ground are not mutually exclusive.

As much as EngageRI might not want her to give labor any credence, she ought to listen to the more politically viable advice coming from the likes of Mayors Angel Taveras and Allen Fung, who both told WPRO this morning they would sit down too.

In the meantime,the one thing you can take to the bank is that the local mainstream media will tie itself in knots trying to defend Gina and disparage Linc.

Progress Report: RI Tops Region in Food Insecurity; Pension Compromise Talk; Roger Williams and Thanksgiving


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URI gave a great effort against Ohio St. on Saturday before falling to the 4th-ranked team in the country. (Photo by Bob Plain)

We’re now the number one state in New England for food insecurity, reports the ProJo this morning. 15 percent of households in the state can’t afford the food it needs. This is a crisis of epic proportions that goes largely unaddressed because the influential class doesn’t tend to know many people that are affected by it.

To that end, kudos to these Providence College students who helped deliver leftover cafeteria food to some of the most needy people in our community.

Scott MacKay, who knows how local politics works as well as any Rhode Islander, suggests its time for the state and labor unions to strike a deal on pension reform … letting the legal system work it out, he argues is potentially very expensive and at the least very risky for taxpayers. Plus, Providence and Mayor Taveras has shown that this is a far better option politically, as well.

Speaking of pension reform, not one of the 17 state legislators who voted against it lost in the election for doing so, reports GoLocal.

And back to RIPR for a moment … Ian Donnis seems irked that I’m still irked that WPRI kept Abel Collins out of a televised debate! Interestingly, I actually think WPRI did Collins an electoral favor by snubbing him – he got more earned media by not being included than he would have had he debated, which wasn’t his strong suit as a candidate in the first place. That said, I don’t think affect on outcome is the standard by which media organizations should determine who should and should not be included in debates. I think it should be based on what potential voters should know about their options … news coverage doesn’t exist for candidates to benefit from, it exists for consumers to learn from.

The Boston Globe reports America owes Thanksgiving to Rhode Island’s own Roger Williams, not the Puritans who are often giving the credit.

Whose at fault for Hostess filing for bankruptcy? Labor, which didn’t agree to an 8 percent pay cut, or the CEO who took a 80 percent pay increase before asking employees to make a sacrifice? Either way, that’s no way to come to the negotiating table.

Progress Report: Tax Fairness; the End of Reaganomics; Free Market Lesson for Mike Riley; Curating the News


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

If Obamacare’s survival was the biggest policy victory of the election, a close second has to be tax equity. In his first post-election presser, Obama said yesterday the nation needs to ask the richest 2 percent of the population to pony up a few more tax dollars if we’re to avoid a fiscal disaster. Congressional Democrats are in a great position to win this no-brainer before the new year, and we’ve got Senator Sheldon Whitehouse to thank for making this a kitchen sink issue with his Buffett Rule bill of last session.

Our state legislators would do well to follow this lead and pass their own tax equity bill in 2013. Speaker Gordon Fox told me on election night that the conversation has already begun.

Speaking of tax policy, the ProJo editorial board is incorrect when it asserts that state workers are to blame for Rhode Island’s relatively high cost of government. It’s got far more to do with our small size, high density and desire for top notch services and amenities.

But there’s also a larger takeaway from last Tuesday’s election on economic policy. Newsweek/Daily Beat correspondent Michael Tomasky writes:

Trickle-down economics died last Tuesday. The post-election chatter has been dominated by demographics, Latinos, women, and the culture war. But economics played a strong and even pivotal role in this election too, and Reaganomics came out a huge loser, while the Democrats have started to wrap their arms around a simple, winning alternative: the idea that government must invest in the middle class and not the rich. It’s middle-out economics instead of trickle-down, and it won last week and will keep on winning.

ProJo columnist makes a great point about Mike Riley’s sour grapes concession speech in which he blamed the media for the electoral drubbing he took from popular incumbent Jim Langevin.  He writes, “Riley did say something wise, but he somehow missed how it applies to his own campaign: ‘Hopefully someday many of you will do very well because of your own hard work. You will have succeeded and you will have failed, but ultimately it will be you — and not somebody else that did it to you.'”

Here’s one way the media mistakenly makes it seem like there is fraud and waste in the public sector: GoLocal reports that 52 percent of state education dollars makes its way into the classroom. “That seems small,” says an advocate for smaller government. But it’s not. Does anyone think Hasbro spends half its resources on manufacturing toys? Or your favorite restaurant spends half of its total revenue on your food? Not if the cost was calculated the way GoLocal looked at ed. funding. The reality is we hold the public sector to a ridiculously high standard, which we should, but we shouldn’t mistake our high standards with inefficiency.

I’m absolutely thrilled to be participating in Journalism Day at URI, my alma mater! I’ll be on a panel talking about news curation, or as the URI journalism department calls it, aggregation. Whatever you want to call it, it’s the art of finding, packaging and adding value to already existing content. It’s a super important component of advocacy journalism in general and media criticism in particular for pretty obvious reasons. It’s also a super important component of beat reporting for the most obvious reason of all: it’s a service to readers. We’ll be discussing whether or not it’s ethical, which I actually think is a question that long ago was settled in the affirmative, but as with most topics, I’m more than happy to have the debate…

Progress Report: For, and Against, Fox; Patch on Walmart; Warren for Banking; Belcourt Castle and Karen Silkwood


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George Nee and Gordon Fox get reacquainted with each other on election night. (Photo by Bob Plain)

There’s an interesting – and small – mix of conservatives, moderates and populists who seemingly aren’t supporting Gordon Fox’s effort to be re-elected speaker of the House. His detractors from the left – Reps Scott Guthrie of Coventry and Spencer Dickinson of South Kingstown – have a disdain for pension cuts in common.

Guthrie may seem like the smartest progressive at the State House if and when the pension reform lawsuit gets decided. The retired Coventry fire fighter has long contended that Rhode Island was breaking a contract with its employees by changing the deal. As for Dickinson, I like him a ton, but I won’t be calling him a progressive until he can better support civil liberties. Unlike Guthrie, Dickinson doesn’t support marriage equality.

There’s a similarly diverse coalition that nominated Fox, reports Ted Nesi. Rep. Edith Ajello is the most influential progressive legislator in the House and Rep. Doc Corvese is the single biggest detractor of the liberal agenda in the chamber. Lady MacBeth, what some progressives jokingly call the religiously anti-abortion Rep. from Cumberland, also seconded Fox’s bid.

By the way Scott MacKay chastised the ProJo for buying into the hype that Fox’s reelection as speaker was in any doubt. Sometimes in journalism it’s hard to separate a good narrative from actual real life events and consequences; doesn’t mean both aren’t newsworthy.

Rhode Island has the fourth most student loan debt in the nation … so let’s all focus on how our corporate tax rate is causing our economy to sputter…

Jack Reed is right: Liz Warren should be on the banking committee. There was an excellent quote by MIT prof Simon Johnson in an excellent piece in Sunday’s New York Times about the optics of not doing so for Democrats: ““Not putting her on banking would make the Democratic Party look like a creature of Wall Street, which, by the way, it is. But they don’t like to be too explicit about it.”

Here’s how Patch not-so-subtly shills for Walmart in a story posted to most sites in RI (emphasis mine): “Shoppers in Massachusetts and Rhode Island will have to wait until after Thanksgiving to take advantage of Black Friday sales at retail giant Walmart.”  (Or you can !)

Speaking of Patch, the company reports it cut costs by 30 percent in an effort to become profitable. Local editors have seem their freelance budgets literally disappear and some are being asked to take on second sites, like Joe Hutnak who now oversees both Johnston and Smithfield Patch. No wonder they gush about Walmart … they share the same business model!

Puerto Rico is moving closer to becoming our 51st state, says the ProJo editorial page. I’m sure the GOP would prefer the Bahamas or Bermuda…

Twin River is hiring! Reason enough to be glad that full casino gambling is coming to the Ocean State … though I wish Newport was getting table games too. The City-by-theSea could have had one of the classiest and coolest destination resort-style casinos in the country. Twin River, on the hand, might be able to compete with the other regional gambling parlors that will soon be sprouting up all over New England…

Speaking of Newport …. did you hear that Carolyn Rafaelian, Alex and Ani designer, owner and founder, bought Belcourt Castle. On one hand, it’s pretty cool that Rhode Island’s most successful businesswoman will own one of the state’s most well-known mansions. On the other hand, old Newport miss the Tinney family, who were kind like the Adams Family of Aquidneck Island! Trivia: Rafaelian won’t be the first jewelry designer to call Belcourt home!! In the late-1980’s it served as a sort of haunt (pun intended) for local artists…

On this day in 1974, Karen Silkwood dies in a mysterious one-car accident on her way to meet with a New York Times reporter and a union organizer about the nuclear plant where she worked and was poisoned with plutonium.


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