Uprising in Ward 3: Marcus Mitchell wages write-in against Kevin Jackson


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Head shot of candidate Marcus Mitchell
Head shot of candidate Marcus Mitchell
Marcus Mitchell

The Providence city council seat for ward 3 appears to be suddenly in play. Economic development consultant and leadership author Marcus Mitchell is gathering support for a write-in campaign against previously unchallenged incumbent Kevin Jackson. And it looks like Mitchell can win.

Mitchell was the founding president of the Providence Community Library and has been a longtime Mt. Hope activist. This activism gives him significant traction in the all-important precinct 2818 that includes the Camp Street neighborhood. But even more importantly, he is married to Lynette Lopes, the daughter of former city councilor Danny Lopes. The Lopes clan enjoys significant influence on Camp Street and could play a pivotal role in winning votes for Mitchell.

Targeting a longtime foe

Kevin Jackson is not well-liked in much of ward 3 nor on the left in general. He is co-chair of Buddy Cianci’s 2014 mayoral campaign and boasts the ethics record to justify that position. He currently ranks #13 on the Board of Elections’ list of violators with more than $30,000 in unpaid fines for failure to file campaign finance reports.

Most on the left have long assumed that Jackson’s core of support in precinct 2818 would protect him from challenges from the hard-core liberal precincts farther up Hope Street. I live in one of these precincts, and I have actually said the words, “If I thought I could beat Kevin Jackson on Camp Street, I would run against him.”

Precinct 2818 put Gordon Fox over the top against challenger Mark Binder in 2012. Our takeaway was that this is The Machine’s stronghold, and that Jackson could marshall these forces just as Fox had.

We were wrong.

More bad news for Jackson

Marcus Mitchell is an experienced business and civic leader; he knows how to make things happen. And he knows how to decide whether it’s wise even to try to make something happen. Thus, he commissioned a professional poll to assess the situation; the results were a shock.

After 20 years on the city council, Kevin Jackson enjoys stunningly low support in ward 3. Mitchell’s poll asked, in essence “Does Kevin Jackson deserve to be reelected?” Only 16.9% said Jackson should be reelected versus 41.2% for electing someone new. 16.9% is not a large number. Even worse, on the initial question of Jackson vs. Mitchell (before message testing), Mitchell wins by a narrow margin. After message testing—the campaign violations and association with Cianci—it’s all over. Mitchell wins by 60 points. SIXTY!

Given that Jackson’s perceived stronghold on Camp Street will at best split 50/50 and that he is loathed in the other three precincts, Ward 3’s ability accurately to spell M-A-R-C-U-S M-I-T-C-H-E-L-L could decide whether Kevin Jackson is looking for a new job in 2015.

Here’s Mitchell in action after a victory for the Providence Community Library. It’s Game On in ward 3.

While workers struggle, hotel owners enjoy $1.4 million tax break


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In an effort to help transform the vacant and decrepit Masonic building into the posh, downtown hotel it is today, the 2003 Providence City Council granted a 19-year property tax “stabilization” to the project developers. Now years later, low-wage employees of the Renaissance Hotel are imploring the current City Council to implement a hotel-industry minimum wage, while Renaissance owners benefit from a $1.4 million tax break this year alone.

Renaissance room cleaner Santa Brito said Providence residents such as herself are picking up the tax slack for the Procaccianti Group, the Cranston-based multinational real estate holdings firm that bought the property in 2012.

“The City increased the tax rate on my house $427.28 this year,” she said. “I cannot understand why [the hotel] is getting a break on its taxes worth millions of dollars, when I have to pay more in my own taxes. There is something very wrong when the richest corporations are getting breaks and regular Providence residents are paying more, and they’re not even giving good jobs to our city in return.”

The Procaccianti Group, , will pay $284,219.18 in property taxes this year, said City Tax Assessor David Quinn. Without the stabilization, he said, it would owe $1,689,548.18 this year.

masonic tax stabilization

Tax stabilization plans, Quinn explained, are utilized to incentivize new development and to smooth tax fluctuations as city properties go through redevelopment.

According to the 2003 act passed by the Council, which you can read here, the Masonic Temple was a state-owned building that provided no tax revenue to the city. It says construction of the building was left unfinished in 1929 and in 2003 was “in a state of great disrepair.”

The act also says the state Economic Development Corporation (now dba as the Commerce Corporation) predicted the hotel would employ “140 people with an estimated payroll of $4 million, plus healthcare benefits.” Earlier this year, hotel workers and labor activists petitioned the Council to terminate the tax break based on the Procaccianti Group’s failure to provide living-wage jobs. The Council did not act on the matter.

Quinn said the Procaccianti Group will likely seek a second tax stabilization for an extended stay hotel it plans to build across the street from the Convention Center. Procaccianti also owns the downtown Hilton Hotel, and Quinn said the company is currently contesting its tax bill on that property.

“Hopefully they will compromise towards me,” Quinn said. “I’ve already compromised toward them. I have a simple philosophy: if people pay their fair share most people pay less.”

Cranston-based Procaccianti Group owns 3 hotels in Providence, 8 in Rhode Island and a total of 59 in 22 states, according to its website. Its local hotel employees have been fighting for better wages and working conditions for years. Recently they petitioned the City Council to approve a hotel-industry specific minimum wage of $15 an hour.

A Council subcommittee canceled a meeting to consider the proposal last week and has yet to reschedule it. If the Council doesn’t act on the matter, activists could get the issue on the November ballot by collecting 5,000 signatures. The issue has political implications for Mayor Angel Taveras, who is running for governor. He’ll need activist support to overcome Raimondo’s fundraising advantage, and if he wants activist support he’ll need to show progressive leadership.

When asked for comment, his staff said the Taveras wants to study the issue and would not like to comment on it further.

Providence to Seattle: a roundup of municipal minimum wage proposals


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minimum wageAs the Providence City Council considers implementing a $15 minimum wage ordinance for local hotel workers, it’s important to remember the Capital City would be by no means the first municipality to legislate a low-wage threshold.

Seattle made national news Monday for passing a $15 city-wide minimum wage, giving the left-leaning Northwestern metropolis the highest minimum wage law in the country. “Seattle wants to stop the race to the bottom in wages,” Councilman Tom Rasmussen said.

“This progressive and expensive city struck a blow against rising income inequality Monday when the City Council voted unanimously to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour, the highest municipal minimum of any metropolis in the country and the rallying cry of fast-food workers and union organizers nationwide,” wrote Maria L. La Ganga of the Los Angeles Times.

And across the country, many other municipalities are considering city-wide minimum wage laws.

Chicago lawmakers put a $15 minimum wage ordinance up for discussion last week, Reuters reports. The San Diego City Council is considering putting a $13.09 minimum wage ordinance to voters. But New York City could also be the next big city to implement a local solution to low wages. Mayor Bill de Blasio this weekend helped Gov Andrew Cuomo agree in spirit to allowing NYC to implement a $13 minimum wage. Earlier this year, Portland, Maine considered a municipal minimum wage too.

There are only a handful of cities around the country with all-encompassing municipal minimum wage ordinances, and they seem to come in clumps. SeaTac, Washington, the city that grew up around the Seattle-Tacoma airport, implemented by voter referendum a $15 minimum wage last year. Sante Fe, New Mexico passed the first city-wide minimum wage law in 2004, and was then joined by Albuquerque and several New Mexico counties. San Francisco also passed a minimum wage bill in 2004, and neighboring Oakland, San Jose and Richmond now have similar laws. There is a minimum wage law in Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and similar efforts afoot in Eau Claire and Lacrosse). New Orleans and Washington DC each have minimum wage laws.

According to 2011 data from the National Employment Law Center, there are more than 100 cities around the United States with living wage ordinances, many which apply specifically to businesses and industries that receive public assistance The Renaissance Hotel, from where the Providence effort emanated, received a $1.4 million property tax break from the city this year.

Los Angeles is considering a hotel-industry specific $15.85 minimum wage bill, much like the one in Providence. The proposal there exempts hotels will fewer than 100 rooms, and the Providence version exempts hotels with fewer than 25 rooms. In LA, hotel employees in the LAX neighborhood have had a minimum wage law protection since 2007.

Hasira S. Ashemu, the senior communications specialist for Los Angeles Alliance for a New Economy … pointed out the increase is already present in certain areas of the city. Hotel workers in the immediate vicinity of Los Angeles International Airport are a paid a minimum of $15.37. The wage was established in 2007 after the city adopted a “living wage” ordinance, raising the rates of hotel workers and LAX employees.

Here in Providence, Mayor Angel Taveras, who is running for governor, told WPRI he would like to study the idea.

There’s been some research done already, as Seattle debated a minimum wage. According to the Seattle Times today:

What have the effects been on employment?

Almost none, according to economists at the University of California, Berkeley, who have studied San Francisco, eight other cities that raised their minimum wages in the past decade, and 21 states with higher base pay than the federal minimum.

Businesses absorbed the costs through lower turnover, small price increases at restaurants, which have a high concentration of low-wage workers, and higher worker productivity, the researchers found.

Hotel worker Auro Rodriguez: ‘Mayor Taveras, we are just like your mother’


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DSC_8319Renaissance Hotel room cleaner Auro Rodriguez says she once sat down across from Mayor Taveras and that he told her the story of his hard-working mother, who put him through school and college with her hard work in low paying jobs. He promised, says Rodriguez, that he would not forget these workers…

So the question, I suppose, is where was Mayor Angel Taveras on Thursday night, when dozens of working women showed up to a City Council Ordinance Committee meeting that was to discuss the $15 an hour hotel worker minimum wage ordinance?

Why is Auro Rodriguez talking to my camera outside the locked door of the Mayor’s office, instead of to the Mayor or to the City Council?

The first video is translated into English, the second is in the original Spanish.

Watch video of Santa Brito speaking to Mayor Taveras and the Providence City Council, via video here.

Elorza, Smiley speak out on cancelled City Hall meeting


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Abandoned at City Hall

Thursday night’s last minute cancellation of the Providence City Council’s Ordinance Committee remains unexplained. Both the mayor’s office and members of the city council remain silent about the cancellation that left more than a hundred hotel workers and supporters, mostly women and working mothers, to arrive at an empty and unresponsive City Hall.

Two Democratic primary mayoral candidates did respond to my request for a comment on the cancellation, however. While not going so far as to support the $15 an hour minimum wage ordinance the hotel workers have brought before the City Council, the two candidates did champion the idea of open government and were critical of the decision to cancel the meeting without taking into account the sacrifices made by the workers to attend.

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Jorge Elorza

“This cancellation was an unnecessary and avoidable problem for those who planned on attending,” said Elorza, “As I made clear in my proposal on Revitalizing and Revamping City Hall, I believe that creating a friendly, customer service oriented atmosphere in City Hall is vital to maintaining the healthy functions of our government.”

Brett Smiley
Brett Smiley

Josh Block, Communications Director for the Smiley campaign, relayed the following statement to the hotel workers, “Brett shares your frustrations. He believes that, whatever decision is reached, it must be done in an open and transparent process. Brett is disappointed in the City Council leadership for playing politics and canceling the vote at the 11th hour without notifying the many hardworking men and women who made significant sacrifices and arrangements in order to show up and make sure their voices were heard.”

It is the right of every American that government be open and accessible. One might hope that the hotel workers be someday given an explanation and apology.

Santa Brito to Mayor Taveras: ‘Please support the working women of Providence’


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Santa Brito and child

After last Thursday night’s Providence City Council Ordinance Committee meeting in which the proposal to establish a $15 an hour living wage for hotel workers was to be discussed and voted on was cancelled, many of the women and men who made the effort to engage with their government were abandoned in City Hall with no way to speak to their government.

As Jenny Norris, MSW, said to me, “There are many, many, many, many, many barriers that prevent people from participating in government and policy discussions. What a shame it is when people actively overcome a lot those barriers only to be blindsided by a cancellation…”

Still, the women wanted to speak out, to directly address both the City Council and Mayor Angel Taveras. My camera caught them outside the Mayor’s locked office, and over the next few days I’ll be releasing their statements.

First up is Santa Brito. Santa has been a fierce advocate for hotel worker’s rights. She was fired from the hotel, possibly for her unionization efforts, shortly after giving birth to her child. The first video is translated into English, the second video is in the original Spanish.

 

Mayor Taveras and PVD City Council abandon working mothers


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DSC_8287Upon being elected Mayor of Providence in 2010, Angel Taveras, “speaking at the state Democratic Party gathering at the Biltmore, thanked his mother, Amparo ‘Milagro’ Ovalles, a Dominican immigrant who had raised him and his two immediate siblings largely on her own while working at local factories.”

Speaking of his mother, Taveras said, “Her example taught me that, through hard work and perseverance, anything is possible, and most importantly, that there are no insurmountable challenges,” adding in yet another interview, “I feel really blessed in many, many ways. My mother sacrificed a lot, and emphasized education so that my sister and I can live the American Dream.”

DSC_8378Everyone in Providence has heard the story of Mayor Taveras. He grew up poor, supported by his mother, a product of the Providence public school system. he later graduated Harvard and Georgetown University, to become the first Hispanic mayor of Providence at the age of forty. He routinely gives much of the credit for his success to his mother.

Even as recently as Tuesday night Taveras was playing this familiar tune. “Taveras talked of growing up poor in Providence — how his mother had his Easter Sunday suit put on layaway at Ann & Hope. ‘I tell you that,’ he said, because ‘you want to know who your governor is going to stand with when things get tough … working families.’”

DSC_8231Why is it then, when given a chance to actually stand with working families, Taveras skulked away and left them standing alone?

Last night, nearly one hundred hard working women, many of them supporting children in circumstances not too different from those endured by the Mayor’s mother, were left wondering why the Mayor and the City Council had abandoned them. Last night was supposed to be a meeting of the Providence Ordinance Committee to discuss the proposed $15 minimum wage for hotel workers. Working women secured childcare or brought their kids with them. They skipped meals, skipped overtime and traveled to the City Hall on foot, on buses or in carpools, only to find out that the Ordinance Committee meeting had been abruptly cancelled.

DSC_8182Those City Councillors who would face their constituents in the lobby of the City Hall seemed at a loss to explain the cancellation. Mayor Taveras had indicated to Channel 12 news that he wanted the measure held for further study, but as far as I can tell, the Mayor does not have the power or authority to cancel City Council meetings, though obviously he can exert enormous pressure if he has to. Rumors were flying that Committee Chair, Councillor Seth Yurdin, was being lobbied by hotel and/or mayoral interests, or that he had broken his foot in a fortuitous (for Mayor Taveras and the hotel owners) accident.

DSC_8191With memories of Angel Taveras’s biography in my mind, I couldn’t help but see in the bored faces of the children present in the halls of Providence City Hall the potential for them to be the Mayor of Providence themselves a few decades hence. I wondered what their story would be, and if they would remember Mayor Taveras as the kind of politician who stuck up for them when they were in need, or sold them out for the chance to be governor.

DSC_8175The parents of these children, 80% of whom are women and who all work exceedingly hard at their jobs, are being abused right now with long hours, low pay and crushing poverty. They and their children suffer the effects of economic uncertainty and the never ending stress of making ends meet. Just the act of agitating for better working conditions seems to have cost many of them their jobs.

It is within the power of Mayor Angel Taveras and Providence City Council members like Seth Yurdin to improve the lives of these women and lift them out of poverty, but they are avoiding their duty and appeasing monied interests by using shady tricks and delaying tactics rather than holding a straight up vote. This kind of back room dealing, where secret lobbying, money and political designs count for more than the efforts of organized citizens agitating for justice is shameful.

This measure deserves a straight up vote, and that vote needed to happen yesterday.

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Councillor Carmen Castillo confronts Councillor Sam Zurier
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Councillors Wilbur Jennings Jr and Carmen Castillo
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Councillor Kevin Jackson supports the measure

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PVD City Council considers hotel minimum wage bill tonight


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Hotel Workers Providence City Hall 012As the Procaccianti Group moves ahead with plans for a new hotel in downtown Providence, employees at another one of its downtown hotels will take their fight for fair wages to the City Council tonight. Employees and activists are requesting the Council pass a $15 an hour minimum wage ordinance for local hotel workers.

The Providence City Council will hold a public hearing to consider the idea today at 6:00 pm.

“I hope the Providence City Council does what is best for the average working mother like me and passes this ordinance,” said Santa Brito, a housekeeper at the Renaissance Providence hotel. “As elections come around, it’s a perfect opportunity to see who’s in the pocket of big business and who actually stands with regular working people of Providence, people from the neighborhoods, people who vote and who they are supposed to represent.”

Hotel employees at two Procaccianti Group-owned Providence hotels – the Renaissance and the Hilton – have been fighting to organize a union for years. The effort gained global attention in 2011, when local brass band What Cheer Brigade played backup to Joey DeFrancesco quitting his job at the Hilton. This year the employee strife has moved to the Renaissance, where activists say two employees have been fired for publicly protesting for higher wages.

Watch what Providence City Councilors are saying about the proposed minimum wage ordinance.


The Procaccianti Group, a property management company that owns and operates hotels globally, receives millions of dollars in tax breaks for the Renaissance hotel. Steve Ahlquist recently reported it lost its TAG accreditation for being LGBTQ friendly in 2013. The company would not comment on the matter. Today, the Providence Journal reports the Procaccianti Group would like to develop a third hotel in downtown.

“As a housekeeper in the Hilton Providence Hotel, I do grueling physical work and make only slightly above $9.00 per hour after eight years of service,” Hilton housekeeper Andrea Hernandez said. “On this paltry wage, I live paycheck to paycheck and can only afford the bare necessities. If I earned just $1.85 more per room cleaned, I could shop at local businesses and invest in my home. The whole city would benefit. There are hundreds of hardworking women like me in Providence hotels who deserve better. We hope the City Council will step up for working women in Providence.”

Hotel workers and their supporters will begin to gather in front of Providence City Hall today at 5:30. See the Facebook invite here.

PVD Councilwoman Carmen Castillo: the movie


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councilwoman castillo“In a day and age when most politicians are lawyers or businessmen, Councilwoman Carmen Castillo made history when she became the first hotel housekeeper to hold public office,” writes independent filmmaker Margo Guerney, who is making a documentary about the groundbreaking Providence city councilor.

Castillo, who was elected in 2012, has worked as a room attendant at the Westin Hotel for 17 years. She moved to Providence 20 years ago with her three daughters from the Dominican Republic. Her Facebook page has more links to food drives than fundraisers. She certainly a stereotypical politicians.

That’s why Guerney, a veteran documentary filmmaker, will spend the next three years making a feature length movie about Castillo and her pioneering efforts in elected politics.

Guerney writes:

How does Castillo’s role as a room attendant who is also a  lawmaker push our understanding of who should set policy?  Can local communities successfully fight for good jobs and resources?  What is it like behind the scenes at City Hall?

Castillo is one of many fighting for justice in her community. The film will introduce others who are part of efforts to bring justice and good jobs to the neighborhood, and will explore the challenges and issues they all face. Above all else, this is a film about our democracy: who gets to participate and on what terms.

You can – and should – support this effort on Kickstarter here. We definitely want the world to know these efforts are happening in Providence, Rhode Island. And even more importantly, why such efforts matter.

“Can you imagine how public policy would change if more elected officials were low wage workers?” Guerney asks in the video below. “That’s what this film is about. Who can participate in our democracy and are their limitations. Is Carmen pushing those limits? “We talk a lot about voting rights. But what about the ability to run for office? Who really has that ability?”

New Providence Subcommittee on Women & Healthy Communities

the adorable family of Councilwoman Matos, from her Facebook page

At the February 2nd meeting of the Providence City Council, Council President Michael Solomon (Ward Five) announced the creation of a new Women and Healthy Communities subcommittee of the Committee on Ordinances. Councilmembers Sabina Matos (Ward Fifteen), Carmen Castillo (Ward 9), David Salvatore (Ward 14), Seth Yurdin (Ward 1), and Samuel Zurier (Ward 2) were named as members of the subcommittee.

“The subcommittee on Women and Healthy Communities will take on issues affecting youth, families, seniors, and new residents, with a special focus on women and girls,” said Councilwoman Matos. “This is a fantastic opportunity to focus our attention on concerns that, all too often, are over-looked.”

The Council President explained that Providence was following the successful model of the Boston City Council, which established a similar committee in 2009. “I’m very proud that the Council has decided to create this subcommittee, which will serve as a new venue for discussions of how to best combat poverty, prevent violence, and stabilize our families and communities,” said Solomon.

The subcommittee will hold its organizational meeting in the coming weeks to elect a chairperson and vice-chairperson, and discuss upcoming agenda items.

GoLocalProv had this scoop!


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