RIF Radio: ACLU’s Steve Brown on NECAP waivers, Tiverton’s Rep Canario on GMO labeling


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Friday Jan 24, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State Futurists. This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

waterfall 1_24_14Later on in the show, we’ll be checking in with we’ll be checking in with Steve Brown of the ACLU on Waivergate, the latest fiasco with the NECAP graduation requirement. We’ll also here from Rep. Dennis Canario, a legislator who represents Sakonnet and parts of Portsmouth, on why he is pushing a bill this session to label genetically modified foods.

Our show today is brought to you by Largess Forestry. Preservationists and licensed arborists, no one will care for your trees better than Matt Largess and his crew. If you’ve got a tree or a woodlot in need of some sprucing up, call Matt today for a free consultation at 849-9191 … or friend them on Facebook.

It is Thursday, January 24 and the unemployment rate is up, but so is our population. And, if you ask me, so is our collective psyche. I can just kinda feel it everywhere I go that Rhode Islanders are feeling better about the biggest little state in the union … And I give major credit to Linc Chafee, the Rhode Island Foundation and all the other folks who work tirelessly to focus on what’s great about Rhode Island and pick us up by our bootstraps. Seriously, if we can break the inferiority complex that the Ocean State has long suffered from, we’ll have done something a lot more important than simply created some wealth and maybe a couple jobs…

There were 400 more unemployed people in Rhode Island in December than the previous month bringing the total number to an almost eerily even 49,900, reports the Providence Journal this morning.  This has become our monthly box score and reporters, politicians and pundits comb through these monthly numbers the way I poured over NBA agit in the ProJo when I was a kid…

RIF Radio: Neil Steinberg talks about economic intersections and making it happen


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Monday Jan 23, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State Futurists. This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

Today is Thursday, January 23 and our show today is brought to you by Largess Forestry. Woodland preservationists and licensed arborists, no one will care for your trees better than Matt Largess and his crew. If you’ve got a tree or a woodlot in need of some sprucing up, call Matt today for a free consultation at 849-9191. That’s 849-9191 … or friend them on Facebook

neil steinbergA little later on, we’ll be talking to Neil Steinberg, executive director of the Rhode Island Foundation about the next step fort the Make It Happen RI movement … today the group will release a report on how to resurrect Rhode Island’s economy called Economic Intersections of Rhode Island: a private sector generated action agenda.

But first, the news…

Providence Journal columnist Ed Fitzpatrick helps Common Cause bring the gubernatorial candidates to the table to sign a meaningful People’s Pledge that would limit undisclosed, out-of-state money in the campaign. RI Future blogger Sam Howard has been all over this issue too, and he posted his third piece on it yesterday.

Also on RI Future this week, Steve Ahlquist has been running a series on reproductive justice … you should check out the videos he’s been posting as they show this is a broad-based issue that is more about freedom and economic prosperity for women than anything else.

And the AP’s David Klepper reports states all over the country – including Rhode Island – are considering legislation to label GMO foods. We’ve written a lot on this one Futurists, so let’s keep the pressure on … so far, only Maine and Connecticut have passed laws to label genetically modified ingredients.

Rep. Dennis Canario, from Portsmouth, Tiverton, Little Compton, is sponsoring the bill in the House. In a press release he said, “Knowledge is power and people need to know what they are putting into their bodies.” And added, ““I am not interested in launching a fight for an outright ban on genetically engineered products, but I am interested in educated consumers.

 

RIF Radio: A working class Christmas: lefty-themed holiday songs to call attention to the reason for the season


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Monday Dec 23, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Happy Holidays Ocean State and fellow futurists … This is Bob Plain and as always I am podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. But this is a special edition of the RI Future podcast celebrating that solstice time of year – or, as we call it here in America, Christmas.

Because so many of us suffer from seasonal affective disorder, and maybe take a little bit of umbrage at all the wanton consumerism posing as peace on earth and goodwill towards all people, we put together an extended podcast today dedicated to all the Christmas tunes Jesus would want us to spin at his birthday party … none are about how disgustingly sweet our lives can be or religious dogma or getting presents. Instead our playlist – ranging from rap to rock and from punk to funk – are about the real reason for the season: building community between our brothers and sisters during this otherwise dark and depressing time of year.

Footnotes:

John Lennon “Happy Xmass (War Is Over)

The Kinks “Father Christmas”

Stevie Wonder “Someday at Christmas”

Woodie Guthrie  “1913 Massacre”

The Mighty, Mighty Bosstones “This Time of Year”

The Flaming Lips “Christmas at the Zoo”

Run DMC “Christmas Is”

The Sonics “Don’t Believe in Christmas”

The Ramones “Merry Christmas, I don’t want to fight tonight”

Robert Earl Keen’s “Merry Christmas from the Family”

Steve Earle “Christmas Time in Washington”

Billy Squier “Christmas Is the Time to Say I Love You”

Simon and Garfunkel “Silent Night”

MXPX “Auld Lang Syne”

RIF Radio: DePetro to return Tues; gambling for charity; gravel mining in Westerly; income inequality, social mobility


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Monday Dec 16, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

mill pond benchIt’s Monday, December 16 and Rhode Islanders have officially survived more than half of the holiday season without having to hear from John DePetro, though GoLocal reports (mindsets?) the notoriously nasty morning shock jock will be back on WPRO tomorrow morning … that’s got to be a dicey proposition for Alex and Ani, which could become the focus on storefront protests if labor decides to take its anti-DePetro protest to the next level…

Twin River is in the news today … the state-sanctioned gambling parlor in Lincoln is . And as news breaks that Twin River is hoping to expand into the Monte Carlo of the Deep South, several state lawmakers are catching flack for playing charity blackjack at Twin River … the big winners included Reps Scott Slater and Lisa Tomaso and Senator Mike McCaffrey.

In any case, I’m really glad Reps Scott Slater and Lisa Tomaso were able to redistribute a couple bucks from Twin River to local food pantries.

If it’s true that the Exeter recall campaign reflected the strong opposition to changing gun laws in Rhode Island, as Rhode Island Public Radio reported the day before the vote, then those who’d like to see stronger gun laws in Rhode Island should have nothing to fear from the NRA. 63 percent of this pretty rural and relatively gun-loving community voted against a recall that was, ostensibly, about the right to bear arms … or at least the right to get a permit to carry a concealed handgun from the local town clerk instead of law enforcement, as the rest of Rhode Island requires…

And kudos to Progressive Charlestown for beating the rest of the state on the Exeter recall story, by the way. This left-leaning blog that covers South County actually consistently has some of the best stuff in the state … for another example read Will Collete’s coverage of the COPAR quarry disaster wreaking havok with area drinnking water. The city of Westerly says COPAR is illegally mining a granite quarry for gravel, and while the issues is stuck in court, COPAR is allowed to go right on mining gravel.

Watch this weekend’s Newsmakers for a great debate on whether Edward Snowden was a hero or a criminal … my thought: the two aren’t mutually exclusive. For example, Nelson Mandela was both a criminal and a hero. So was Robin Hood, for that matter. And for a famous right-wing example of hero/criminal …  a bunch of pretty well to-do Boston merchants decided to launch about a million bucks worth of tea into Boston Harbor.

MIT, Harvard and Brown have a new study that shows there’s little to no correlation between high stakes test scores and “the ability to analyze abstract problems and think logically.”

Is economic inequality the “defining issue of our time,” as President Obama said recently?  Paul Krugman of the New York Times say so and Ezra Klein of the Washington Post has a more nuanced answer.

The key to this debate isn’t whether it’s fair or not that some of us get to be rich and others have to be poor … it’s the lack of social mobility. Put in Rhode Island terms, if you grew up in Barrington, chances are you are going to make a decent living as an adult. And if you grow up in Central Falls, chances are you’ll struggle financially.

RIF Radio: Remembering Nelson Mandela, JP Morgan screws RI, RI screws foster families, NECAP forum in EG


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Or listen here.

Tuesday Dec 10, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. That was Nelson Mandela in 1964 telling the South African court that sentenced him to life in prison, that he was doing the right thing by fighting oppression with every and any available tool, even his own soul.

nelson mandelaThis is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

It’s Tuesday, the 10th of December and the world says goodbye to Nelson Mandela today, one of the bravest and most principled people to ever walk the earth. Nelson Mandela did whatever it took to fight for equality, and he willingly suffered any consequence of his actions. He started by practicing the law, and when that proved ineffective, he turned to Che Guevara and tried his hand at terrorism, that tack landed him in jail for 27 years. But he served his sentence with a smile, knowing that the righteous path is not always the comfortable path. When his white oppressors visited him in jail, he treated them like guests at his home. These incredible show of grace and dignity changed the world.

Our song of the day, a little later on in the program will be Mandela’s famous “I am prepared to die” speech…

Well … JP Morgan evidently isn’t too big too fail in Rhode Island … the big bank makes the debit cards people use for SNAP benefits and some other social services, said people’s personal data was hacked between July and September. The state is just learning about it now, and Rhode Island officials seem furious about delay. The multi-national bank said that was the extent of the breach, but – you know what – I don’t trust JP Morgan … if you’re too big too fail, I generally don’t trust you any farther than I can throw you.

The average foster family needs 72 percent more financial aid than they receive from the state, according to Mark Reynolds of the Providence Journal. Said another way, the state only pays for about 28 percent of the cost of caring for a child in state custody; the rest we job out to volunteers… As a former foster parent, I can attest that the state doesn’t offer anywhere near enough to actually raise a child … Taxpayers, activists and elected officials, we should be ashamed of ourselves for allowing this to happen. I really want to hear what every candidate for governor thinks about this.

There will be a forum on high stakes testing at East Greenwich Town Hall tonight. Organized by local drug councilor and RI Future correspondent Bob Houghtaling, he’s been trying to get the rest of the state to listen to the concerns coming from the kids and activists in our inner cities.

Nelson Mandela’s funeral will be live-streaming everywhere today, and as I said earlier, our song, if you will, of the day, is the epic speech he gave when he was sentenced in life in prison in 1964.

RIF Radio: DePetro in exile, Brien out of exile, Exeter recall, Jim Langvin, EJ Dionne celebrates working class heroes


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Monday Dec 9, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

hideaway waterfallIt’s Monday, December 9th, and there is snow on the ground for the first time this winter but it’s quickly turning into freezing rain … but   in even worse news for commuters, WPRO’s hate-radio shock jock John DePetro will probably be back on the air today after a mysterious week in exile off that culminated with him calling into his own show to apologize for calling female activists whores.

The week before DePetro went into exile, the Providence Journal had reported – incorrectly I should note – that labor’s attempt to get Alex And Ani to stop advertising with WPRO because of DePeptro’s misogynistic comments had failed. Since then, the campaign has gone viral with several national labor leaders pushing the boycott on social networks.

In a press release on Friday, For Our Daughters, said, “This is now a national campaign and will touch Cumulus advertisers in multiple media markets.” Make no mistake, Cumulus and WPRO management take that threat very seriously….

And here’s the other pressure point: union strategists say they are asking every single elected official in Rhode Island to boycott WPRO until DePetro is gone.

For years, Rhode Islanders of all political stripes, including this blog, have made a moral arguments about getting rid of DePetro … credit the labor movement for speaking a language a corporate-owned radio station will listen to: their wallets. …As my weekly podcast colleague Mark Gray pointed out on Thursday, remember this next time someone tells you unions aren’t doing good for everyone in the Ocean State!

Click here to sign the petition.

The other big story this week will be the Exeter recall: both the ProJo and the AP had in-depth weekend stories on the issue and RIPR plans a series on the recall for later this week.

At issue, in a nutshell, is a bunch of right-wingers and gun nuts have formed an alliance to recall the Democrats on the Town Council because they outsourced issuing gun permits to the state. But the real reason they are being recalled certainly has more to do with a provision in the town charter that calls for the next highest vote getter to replace recalled councilors. Ah, the Rhode Island Republican Party … if you can’t win, find a loophole.

…Ok, I’m wondering if I read this right in today’s Providence Journal: Woonsocket candidates to fill Lisa Baldelli Hunt’s seat in the legislature have less than 48 hours to declare? Dave Fisher, if you’re listening, get your paper work in order, because progressives all over the state would love to see you make a run for a seat in the House of Representatives.

And speaking of Woonsocket … and being in exile, for that matter, the ProJo also reports this morning that old RI Future frenemy Jon Brien is back and serving as Woonoskcet’s city prosecutor … The former ALEC Democrat has been laying very low since he lost his bid for reelection … and I welcome my old pal back to the fray.

EcoRI reports that bike sharing is coming to Providence … a Portland, Oregon company applied for and received permission to start the program and is now looking for funding … might I suggest asking uber, the company that had a harder time setting up a similar business with cars…

Tonight at the Peace Dale congregational church, Rhode Islander who moved to Israel 8 years ago, will be showing a documentary on the Palestinian village of Susya, which is scheduled for demolition…

Pulitzer Prize winning investigative journalist Seymour Hersh reports that the Obama Administration didn’t tell the whole truth when it came to Syria’s chemical weapons programs … but what might be most interesting about this is the New Yorker, where Hersh usually drops his bombshells passed on this one. So did the Washington Post. It was published by the London Review of Books, and proofed by a former New Yorker fact checker. Someone is loosing some cache over this one: it could be Obama, it could be the New Yorker or it could be the Hersh. Stay tuned…

Hey, yesterday I found a dead otter on the side of Rte. 4, and several people were surprised we have these fury semi-aquatic mammals in the Ocean State, so I’m going to be doing some reporting on them later this week.

langevinAlso … I’d like to thank Congressman Jim Langevin and the thousands of other Rhode Islanders who came by the Shady Lea Mill this weekend for our annual open studios party. As I told the congressman, with more than 40 artists and artisans here at the mill, we’re probably the densest cluster of commerce in the West Bay. And thanks to the general assembly, the artists here – or anywhere in the Ocean State – don’t have to pay sales tax anymore. This is real live economic development for Rhode Island that maybe didn’t get a ton of attention because it doesn’t adhere to the normal political dichotomies … tax haters and artists rarely have cause to celebrate the same social causes but they do in this case … and rumor has it the New York Times is working on a story about it…

Today in 1921, GM engineers discovered that putting lead into gasoline was good for car engines. Two years later, when leaded gasoline was first sold to consumers, the guy who invented it couldn’t make the ceremony because was bed-ridden because of lead poisoning. Lead poisoning would kill two of his colleagues and several Standard Oil employees who manufactured it. The worst part is GM could have achieved the same result by adding alcohol to gasoline, but there was no way to patent that. Not until 1995, did we finally outlaw leaded gas.

EJ Dionne, a Washington Post op-ed writer originally from Fall River, says it’s cool to be a blue collar again.

 

RIF Radio: Injured owl, ‘Actually Andy,’ minimum wage and more

waterfallMonday Dec 2, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

It’s Monday, December 2nd … the first work day of the least productive month of the year. But don’t worry, economy … while fewer people are producing goods and services more people are consuming them. December also almost always has the highest consumer spending of the year.

And speaking of the economy…

Politifact uses some political oxygen to debunk a pretty archane untruth about the minimum wage debate … put forth into the marketplace of ideas by a Facebook meme. It was something about how many times Congress increased its own salary in relation to how many times the minimum wage was raised … nothing too germane to either the economics or the morality of minimum wage politics, but it is an interesting reminder of where information comes from these days … the answer: everywhere and anywhere.

Here are some additional minimum wage claims that Gene Emery should fact check: only a third of minimum wage workers are teenagers, and three quarters of Americans, including a majority of Republicans, support raising the minimum wage. And here’s a really fun fact: had it kept pace with the earnings increases of the one percent in America, the minimum wage would be about $50,000 a year. Instead, it hasn’t even kept pace with inflation, and hasn’t been enough to escape poverty since 1982 – that’s more than 30 years of enforcing slave wages from one of the richest people in human history. More on this phenomenon from Oswald Krell on RI Future.

Dan Schiff, the CEO of the Rhode Island Foodbank, told WPRI Newsmakers this weekend that the $20 million cut to SNAP benefits for Rhode Islanders will not only hurt the poor, but it will also hurt the grocers, super markets and other small businesses where poor people spend their food stamps. One in five Rhode Islanders use food stamps, and he dispelled the conservative dog whistle that waste and fraud is an issue.

Tom Sgouros has a great post on the accounting scare tactics that come in to play when the media calculates future government expenses. In this case, Tom’s talking about the next evil Republicans and conservative Dems will be railing against: other post employment benefit costs, known Draconianly as OPEBs.

Rhode Island’s most famous – and, in my opinion, most beautiful -winter residents are back. Snowy white owls have been seen at Sachuest Point in Newport, Beavertail in Jamestown and a young one was found with a broken wing at Quonset Airport here in North Kingstown yesterday. You can see pictures of the injured owl on the Wildlife Rehabilitators of Rhode Island Facebook page.

Today is Day 2 of Karen Ziner’s amazing series in the Providence Journal about transgender teenager Andy Noel. It’s a story about bravery and individualism … and it’s a sign of the times, that the paper of record would dedicate so much ink to this topic, but also that it had to shut off the online comments on account of how outrageous they became … we still have a ways to go, but people like Andy Noel are helping us get there.

Now back to my favorite news story so far of the Christmas season: is the Pope a progressive? Justin Katz and I debated the issue on NBC 10 Wingmen last week and he follows that up with an explanation of how he and the head of his church can be at such economic odds, writing, “A progressive Franciscan isn’t exactly a contradiction in terms.”

Not at all. In fact, we have tons in common. Read Steve Ahlquist’s post about what it means to be a progressive that he published just days before the Pope wrote about what it means to be a Catholic and you will see how similar these two groups tend to think. Conversely, I’d argue that the Chicago School is sinful. Katz writes that he can’t make a coherent rebuttal to the Pope’s game-changer. That’s because there isn’t one.

RIF Radio: Universal pre-K for RI, the COPAR quarry in Westerly, steroid era of Thanksgiving


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waterfall1126Tuesday Nov 26, 2013
North Kingstown, RI – Good morning, Ocean State. This is Bob Plain, editor and publisher of the RI Future blog podcasting to you from The Hideaway on the banks of the Mattatuxet River behind the Shady Lea Mill in North Kingstown, Rhode Island.

It’s Tuesday, November 26, the day before the day before Thanksgiving … or, this year, the day before the storm. The weather prophets are predicting a miserably stormy Big Wednesday, so if you’re traveling, be careful.

The steroid era in baseball may be over but not in Thanksgiving … since 1965 the average weight of a turkey has increased from 18 to 30 pounds, according to Mother Jones. God help the human race if it’s true that we are what we eat….

There’s an environmental catastrophe taking place in Westerly as we speak. The COPAR quarry is mining gravel to the detriment of nearby wells all over the area, and not even an ongoing lawsuit seems to be able to put at least a temporary halt to it. You can read more about it on Progressive Charlestown, our sister blog. It’s an amazing story of how an environmental disaster can be done before the public sector has time to react.

But here’s the good news of the day, and maybe of the gubernatorial campaign is that Providence Mayor Angel Taveras said he’ll implement universal pre-kindergarten for Rhode Island toddlers if we elect him governor. Take that folks who say Angel is a progressive in name only!! This would be a huge. Currently there’s free market nursery school for rich kids and Headstart for poor kids but there isn’t a whole lot in between. This would mean every kid in Rhode Island would be guaranteed a pre-K education, and Taveras says he’ll also push to fund full day kindergarten.

This is the biggest and best idea I’ve heard in terms of fighting the too huge achievement gap between suburban students and their inner city counterparts in the Ocean State. And forgive me if I still believe funding education is a more critical social issue than de-funding retirement.  The paper of record ran the universal pre-K story on page 3 and on page 1 had a story about how expensive post-retirement benefits are…

Speaking of the ProJo and the governor’s race … columnist Ed Fitzpatrick asks the candidates about their “Before I die” wish. Taveras wants to see his daughter succeed, Raimondo wants to succeed as a grandmother, Allan Fung wants to go to China, Clay Pell wants Rhode Island to have the lowest unemployment in the nation … and the 5-foot-5 Ken Block wants to slam dunk someday. To date, this is the most realistic prediction each potential candidate has given for the future – and don’t be shocked if Block starts saying every Rhode Islander will be able to slam dunk if he’s elected governor.

The Before I Die project is a public art initiative happening at spots around Providence … it’s a wall where folks can share their wish for the world or themselves. A really great idea to remind us to imagine the world we want to live in. Before I die I want war and poverty to be things that happened in the past tense. For Rhode Island, I just want every kid to have access the same great education. Charter schools and teacher evaluations and high stakes tests are all just distractions from that…

And speaking of public art … the I-195 commission is looking for people to instal art projects on the 20-acres of undeveloped land left vacant when the highway was moved. The commission will pay up to $2,000 for 12 to 15 installations. Details here.