House Judiciary considers highway blocking bills Wednesday


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highway shutdownThe House Judiciary Committee this week is scheduled to consider two bills that target the Black Lives Matter activists’ tactic of shutting down highways. Both bills are slated to be heard Wednesday afternoon at the State House.

Felony version

One of the bills (H5 192) is a House version of the controversial legislation Coventry Sen. Lou Raptakis submitted in the Senate that was met with heated a criticism from racial and economic justice activist who said it was an insult to the legacy of Martin Luther King (a version of this RI Future post was used on the ProJo op/ed page today) as well as defenders of civil liberties and the homeless, who warned of unintended consequences.

This bill would elevate the punishment for interfering with highway traffic during a protest from disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor punishable by “not more than six (6) months” in jail, to a felony  that “upon conviction” would mandate “a term of imprisonment of not less than one year nor more than three (3) years at the adult correctional institution.” It would create a new crime called “Unlawful interference with traffic” that would apply to “any federal or state highway.”

Delaying an emergency vehicle that results in a death would carry a sentence of five to 30 years in prison.

The lead sponsor is Rep. Ray Hull, a Providence police officer who is also Black and a Democrat. It’s co-signed by Republican Mike Chippendale, Foster, and Democrats Cale Kaeble, Burrillville, Pat Serpa, West Warwick, and Stephen Casey, of Woonsocket.

Misdemeanor version

The other bill (H5 193) would keep the crime a misdemeanor, but it would still increase the punishment from up to six months in jail to “not more than one year ” in jail. Its prime sponsor is Re. Dennis Canario, who represents Portsmouth and Tiverton, and is also co-signed by Hull, Rep. John Edwards, of Tiverton, Rep Joe Almeida, of Providence and Rep. Joe Sherkachi, of Warwick.

It’s punishment may be less Draconian, but it may apply to more roads in Rhode Island that the other bill. H5 193 says:

“For the purposes of this section, ‘freeway’ means a way especially designed for through traffic over which abutters have no easement or right of light, air, or access by reason of the fact that their property abuts upon the way, and shall include, without limitation, all roads designated as part of the interstate highway system.”

H5 192 refers only to “federal or state highways.” This would seem to exempt town roads while the previous language seems to include all roads in the state.

Mattiello open-minded on marijuana legalization


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mattielloHouse Speaker Nick Mattiello said he’s keeping an open mind when it comes to legalizing marijuana this legislative session.

“Right now I have no opinion on marijuana other than I know it’s an issue that will come up and we’ll consider it,” he told me on Friday. “I’m not necessarily opposed, I’m not necessarily in favor. I can tell you it’s not an item that is on my agenda right now but I will certainly consider it. I’m sure it will have some benefits, I’m sure it will have some costs.”

Here’s our full conversation on the matter:

Governor Gina Raimondo recently told NBC 10’s Bill Rappleye legalizing marijuana “is absolutely something we should evaluate because if we think it is inevitable and if there is a way to do it that is probably regulated so people don’t get hurt, we should take a look at it.” She said she is currently taking a “wait and see approach” as she said during her campaign.

At approximately 6:30:

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

Raimondo inauguration a chill affair


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DSC_9184A crowd of about 500 people braved the chill air and light snow to witness the swearing in of Rhode Island’s first female governor. There was a 21 gun salute, blessings from no less than six clerics of various faiths, and a poem from the state’s poet laureate.

Gina Raimondo‘s inauguration speech was half as long as yesterday’s from Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza, and though she set a positive tone, the meat of her speech seemed one of lowered expectations.

The job won’t be done in two, five, or ten years. The problems we face weren’t created overnight. And they won’t be solved overnight either.”

Perhaps it was the chill air, but I couldn’t help but feel that this was a speech that delivered little but nice sounding corporate jargon such as “growth strategy,” “create opportunity” and “deliver value.” There were plenty of calls for the public to join the new governor in her efforts to “foster an environment where businesses want to add jobs,” and to “ensure effective training opportunities for workers of all ages that align with the jobs that are in demand” but Raimondo offered no specifics, just generalities.

Then there was Raimondo’s call for “divine intervention.” Are things really that bad in Rhode Island?

Despite my critical tone I have high hopes for a Raimondo governorship, and look forward to seeing what she can accomplish.

My fellow Rhode Islanders, it is a great honor to address you today. I am humbled by the challenges before us, mindful of the many Rhode Island families struggling with some of the toughest economic conditions that we’ve ever faced, and deeply grateful that you’ve put your trust in me.

DSC_9055Let me begin by expressing our shared heartfelt appreciation to Governor Chafee for his more than 25 years of dedicated public service to our state.

Let us also acknowledge the brave men and women serving in uniform: our troops, first responders and correctional officers. Thank you for your service.

And let me thank my wonderful family for supporting me at every step. I love you.

The challenges that any governor inherits define the possibilities before them. And how we solve intractable problems is limited only by our creativity and by our courage to tackle the most difficult challenges.

Over the past 30 years we’ve watched the foundation of our economy – our manufacturing base – erode. Our manufacturing sector used to provide good, middle-class jobs for Rhode Island families. And as it has withered, nothing has taken its place.

In just the last year, we’ve had the highest unemployment rate in the country for nine straight months. We’ve been 49th among states where companies want to do business … and dead last for helping entrepreneurs.

At the same time, our government has become larger … but less effective. We face an unsustainable budget deficit … yet our roads, bridges, and school buildings are crumbling.

DSC_9087As a result, workers are insecure, families are vulnerable, and too many cities are teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. And, far too many young people are leaving to seek opportunities elsewhere.

But just as troubling, is a growing belief held by too many Rhode Islanders that our problems are just too big to solve … that there’s nothing we can do … and that our leaders don’t get it, don’t care, or are rendered ineffective by a broken system which caters to the few, the connected.

We’ve witnessed a growing acceptance that “this is Rhode Island” … it’s just the way things are. So we’ve lowered our expectations, deferred our dreams, and allowed corruption to take root.

Today we begin to change this attitude.

It is time to stop our decline, and to ignite a Rhode Island comeback.

It’s not something that will happen on its own or that we can wait for someone else to do. Every person within the sound of my voice and far beyond has a role to play. I need you, Rhode Island needs you, and generations to come need you to get involved and be part of the solution.

Most important, we must believe it is possible to have this comeback that our families deserve, and commit ourselves to a new way of doing things.

At times, these changes will be uncomfortable. So often we’ve resisted new ideas because people say, “We’ve never done it that way.” But, doing it the way we’ve always done it has landed us here.

We need new politics, and new ideas. Too many interest groups have crowded into this building for too long, putting their short-term self-interests before the long-term interests of all Rhode Islanders.

Today, I ask Rhode Islanders to think differently.

Ask yourself: what role can I play in the comeback of Rhode Island? How can we, as elected leaders, represent all of the concerns of a diverse people? How can business leaders develop new strategies to meet payroll and expand jobs here in Rhode Island? How can our educators create cutting-edge laboratories of learning, where we teach the next generation of innovators and leaders?

To get there, we may have to give up a little of our narrow self-interest, and give something back to our community. That’s how America works, and that’s how we will get Rhode Island back to work.

We need that eternal optimism shown by our founders … who believed in divine intervention, good fortune and, yes, providence – the idea that through God’s grace, all things are possible. Because they are.

The truth is – our only path out of this mess, is to create middle-class, family-supporting jobs. And so we must foster an environment where businesses want to add jobs and where we support our workers.

If we do that, if we rebuild this economy, everything is possible. And if we don’t, nothing else will matter.

DSC_9148Let’s create a place where people know that you can “make it in Rhode Island.” Whether it’s the young man preparing to graduate from high school, the new mom who sees nothing but promise for her children, or the little girl who knows she can be anything she wants with hard work. I want Rhode Island to be a place of boundless opportunity for everyone.

Middle class jobs are how we keep young people in Rhode Island … how we move people off of public assistance … how we rejuvenate neighborhoods, and secure the resources to invest in education and infrastructure, and save for a rainy day.

But more important than all of that, a steady job is the lifeblood of a healthy and thriving family.

I learned this growing up, watching my father who worked for nearly three decades at the Bulova watch factory. As a kid, I saw that there was a job for everyone in his car pool. But I also remember him struggling to start all over again when the company moved his job overseas. Too many Rhode Islanders today face similar job uncertainty and challenges.

Every decision we make must pass the test of whether or not it will create opportunity for Rhode Island families. In everything we do, we must ask ourselves “how will this create good middle-class jobs?” and then have the fortitude to act accordingly.

To spark Rhode Island’s comeback, we have to do three things:

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Snipers keeps a watchful eye…

First, BUILD THE SKILLS our students and workers need to compete in the 21st century;

Second, ATTRACT entrepreneurs and investment in industries of our strengths, to stimulate our economy and create jobs;

And third, INNOVATE, including in our state government, to enhance accountability and deliver value to taxpayers.

We all know the economy is changing rapidly. The question is whether we are preparing Rhode Islanders to be winners in this new environment.

Education is a ladder of opportunity, so we need to modernize our school buildings, support dedicated educators, and make college accessible for more families.

We need to ensure effective training opportunities for workers of all ages that align with the jobs that are in demand.

To create stable jobs, we also have to cultivate conditions that will make businesses want to invest here. Before adding jobs, they want to know that there will be a steady supply of well-trained workers and a 21st century infrastructure.

They look for clear and streamlined regulations and a predictable tax structure. And, perhaps most importantly, a level playing field, where everyone can get ahead based upon “what you know,” not “who you know.”

We need a growth strategy, focused on our strengths in the marine science, health care, tourism and food industries, which we implement every day.

And we must revive our manufacturing sector: if we make things here, families can make it in Rhode Island.

We also have to innovate in everything we do, including the way government works in Rhode Island. Let’s operate a government that is customer-friendly and creatively finds ways to help families succeed.

It is time to redesign government, modernize hiring practices and instill accountability for results.

Let’s improve Medicaid by cracking down on fraud, delivering better care, and improving efficiency…

Let’s provide more digital services to citizens, and facilitate online permitting for businesses….

And let’s help our cities and towns share services to reduce operating costs.

Instead of simply throwing money at problems, we must be outcome-oriented and insist on citizens getting their money’s worth from their tax dollars.

We must do all of this with urgency because our budget shortfall is severe this year, and there are even darker clouds on the horizon. We cannot continue doing what we’ve been doing … annually scraping together enough cuts and revenues to make it through the next year.

Let’s commit ourselves to eliminating our structural deficit over the next several years to put our state on sound footing, and to making the tough choices so that we will also be able to invest in job-creating priorities.

My fellow Rhode Islanders, at this moment we face a choice. We can continue on our current path … avoiding the difficult decisions because we are afraid of special interests or political ramifications, or simply of changing the way we’ve always done it.

If we stay on the course we’re on, our children will be left behind, more cities and towns will go bankrupt, and other states will continue to pass us by.

But there’s another choice … a better path.

I want everyone to have the opportunity to make it in Rhode Island, so I am asking you to join me in reaching for something better.

The job won’t be done in two, five, or ten years. The problems we face weren’t created overnight. And they won’t be solved overnight either.

At each step of our journey, we will measure our work in lives changed, opportunities created and families saved.

This is my pledge to you: I will wake up every morning focused on expanding opportunity for families in Rhode Island … no matter how long it takes, or how many obstacles are thrown in our way.

I don’t have all the answers—just ask my kids. They will tell you that.

But I will go anywhere and work with anyone who wants to do what’s right for Rhode Island. I am committed to collaborating with Speaker Mattiello and Senate President Paiva Weed, who I know share my focus on getting Rhode Islanders back to work.

The challenges before us are real; I get that. But hear this Rhode Island, together we will meet those challenges.

As I prepared for this day, I spoke with a friend of mine … someone who many of us know and are praying for … Sister Ann Keefe.

Sister Ann’s work has been teaching non-violence. And, like most things in life, it’s a work in progress. But she never loses faith.

At a time when all you have to do is hear the word Ferguson … you realize that the challenge of our time is to simply get along a little better and to respect one another … to be a better example for our children … to teach them that solving a problem shouldn’t mean caving in to those with the loudest voices. It often means listening to those who are the quietest.

I would ask that if you remember only one thing from this day, that it be this: we’re all in this together.

Governor Mario Cuomo, who sadly passed away last week, reminded us that “we must be the family of America, recognizing that at the heart of the matter, we are bound one to another.”

Our collective future is tied to rebuilding our economy in a way that expands opportunity for all families and leaves no one behind.

I believe this is why we are all here today. We are tying our fates together, and with God’s guidance, we will find a way.

Thank you, God bless all of you and God bless the State of Rhode Island.

Patreon

One week later, Ferguson protesters still marching in PVD streets


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DSC_7984Yesterday’s “March Against Police Violence in Solidarity with Ferguson and Mexico” was altogether different from last Tuesday’s Ferguson protest in Providence.

The organizers, the response of the police, the extent of the press coverage and the racial makeup of the attendees was not the same as last week. Even some of the subtleties concerning the goals of the protest were different, though to be clear, the main goal was to challenge racism, racial profiling, militarized policing and police murder of people of color.

DSC_7945The crowd started to build around 7pm at Burnside Park, with marchers working on their signs in the park with the materials provided by the organizers. There were less marchers this time and the crowd tended to be whiter, though there was substantial representation of people of color.

There was more of a police presence this time around. The police were never far away, and though they never interfered with the protesters, they made sure to let their presence be known.

Organizer Rebecca Nieves McGoldrick addressed the crowd in Burnside Park and said that given the events of last week, tonight was going to be a “pretty calm and peaceful protest,” by which I took her to mean that there were not going to be any arrests or provocative actions like flag burning or highway blocking. She was true to her word.

DSC_7972The plan was to rally at Burnside Park, march past the Providence Place Mall and to the steps of the State House, where there would be a four minute moment of silence for Mike Brown (one minute for every hour his body laid in the street) and then a “speak out” in which anyone could step forward and let loose whatever was on their mind.

DSC_7978The march through downtown and to the state house was guided by the police, whose red and blue lights provided an almost stereoscopic illumination. There were chants of “Hands up, don’t shoot” and “This is what democracy looks like” among others. There were many signs of support from passing motorists and mall patrons, but also one or two negative reactions.

Upon approaching the mall, I was amused to note that the police were blocking the highway on ramp, which I assume was meant to prevent protesters from storming up the ramp and blocking the highway a second time.

DSC_7989The big surprise of the evening was finding, upon our arrival at the State House, a phalanx of police officers standing at the top of the state house steps, protecting the building. It was an intimidating reminder of police power to have between 15 and 20 armed officers silently observe the protest from on high.

DSC_8005There was a solemn and somber four minutes of silence, interrupted only by the occasional chime of an unmuted cellphone, then the speak out began. I’ll have a rundown of what the speakers spoke about in a later post, after I’ve sorted out all the video, but for now let me present some highlights.

This march was organized to draw parallels and solidarity between what’s happening in the United States, where abuses of police power against black and brown people is a growing problem, and the terrible situation in Mexico, where the militarized drug war and an a destabilized government is resulting in the murder and disappearance of young protesters. Police forces in Iguala, Guerrero, Mexico murdered six people and “disappeared” 43 students from the Raúl Isidro Burgos Rural Teachers’ College of Ayotzinapa.

DSC_8009The growing militarization of police forces and the crackdown on human rights is world wide, from Hong Kong to Mexico to Ferguson.

The organizers of this protest put it succinctly:

“We are calling for the demilitarization of police. We are calling for police and government transparency and accountability. We are calling for an end to the drug war. We are calling for an end to neo-liberal policies that increase economic inequality and disenfranchise indigenous people and people of color. We are calling for an end to systems of institutionalized racial oppression. We are calling for justice.”

DSC_8013As the night wore on, and a light drizzle of rain and dropping temperatures thinned the crowd of protesters, over twenty people participated in the speak out. For the most part the listeners were polite and patient, and everyone who wanted to speak had their chance.

The last 20 or 30 protesters then turned to the silent police officers and handful of reporters who toughed it out to the end and waved farewell.

Like last week’s protest, this was a positive, cathartic experience, continuing the conversation around race and police violence. Legislators and elected officials take notice: things are changing.

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The election over, it’s time for a $15 minimum wage


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Mattiello
Speaker Mattiello

On Tuesday, voters in Alaska, Arkansas, Nebraska and South Dakota passed measures to raise the minimum wage in their states. These states are Republican strongholds, yet minimum wage increases passed overwhelmingly: 68.6% vs 31.3% in Alaska, 65% to 35% in Arkansas, 59.2% to 40.8% in Nebraska and 54.7% to 45.3% in South Dakota. These are conservative, hard-core red states, but the measures passed because no matter where on the political spectrum Americans stand, most of us believe in the fairness and justice of earning a living wage from a forty hour a week job.

Meanwhile, in California, ultra-liberal San Francisco leap-frogged all the competition by passing a $15 minimum wage ordinance in their city, and Oakland went to $12.25.

So what’s going on in Rhode Island?

Last year, the state raised the minimum wage to $9, from $8. This happened as hotel workers were fighting in Providence for a industry-specific $15 minimum wage and in short order a line was inserted into the state’s budget, without public debate or vetting, that prevented cities and towns from setting their own minimum wage floors.

Hunger Strike Rally 007The hardworking hotel workers had successfully petitioned the city council into placing a $15 minimum wage measure onto the ballot. Citizens of Providence would have voted on that measure Tuesday, if not for the actions of the General Assembly. There is little doubt that the measure would have passed here in Providence. I mean, seriously, are voters in Alaska, Arkansas, Nebraska and South Dakota more compassionate than voters in Providence?

Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello and Budget Committee Chairman Representative Raymond Gallison did everything in their power to circumvent the will of the people and democracy itself in a sickening display of cavalier corporate bootlicking. Indeed, so great is Mattiello’s obsequious desire to serve corporate interests that he specifically targeted Maria Cimini, the only representative to raise any objections to the measure, by backing her opponent in the primary. Cimini lost her bid for re-election.

Elorza 001
Jorge Elorza

Over the course of the election here in Providence, many candidates have voiced their displeasure at Mattiello and Gallison’s power grab. Mayor Elect Jorge Elorza, said that he would actively work to have the law overturned, so that Providence and other cities might set their own minimum wage floors. In the October 22 mayoral forum Elorza even hinted that he supports a $15 minimum wage. I look forward to seeing Elorza at the State House in support of whatever bill is introduced to overturn the measure. Gina Raimondo is also on record as saying that the minimum wage needs to be increased to $10.10 (though she has never committed to $15.)

The Economic Progress Institute says an adult needs at least “$11.93 an hour to afford their most basic living expenses.” That’s $3 over our minimum wage and probably still another $3 shy of a living wage.

Raising the minimum wage to a living wage will prevent more Rhode Islanders from slipping into poverty, losing their homes and postponing their educations. It will give parents, now working two and three jobs to keep an apartment, more time to be parents and keep their kids off the streets and out of trouble. It will increase the purchasing power of Rhode Islanders, driving money to local businesses. It will reduce people’s dependence on financial debt traps like payday loans, and allow people to start bank accounts to earn credit and plan their retirement or their kids college.

Raising the minimum wage to a living wage will help people live lives of meaning without the stress of grinding poverty and the hopelessness such a life inculcates. Even the more conservative states are acting in lieu of a federal increase. The more progressive cities across the country are acting in lieu of a meaningful minimum wage in any state.

For this to happen in Rhode Island, we need to pressure the General Assembly to reverse last year’s law that prevents cities and towns from helping hourly-earning residents out of poverty.

Bad night for progressives and Democrats in House


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RI State House 4The Narrative is that it was a big night for Democrats in Rhode Island. But not so much in the state legislature.

In House of Representatives especially. The chamber controlled by conservative Democrat Nick Mattiello saw the GOP membership almost double – from six to 11 while Democrats dropped a total of six seats.

Linda Finn of Portsmouth lost to Republican Dan Reilly and Larry Valencia of Richmond lost to Republican Justin Price. Scott Guthrie and Lisa Tomasso, both of Coventry, lost to Republicans Robert Nardollilo and Sherry Roberts. And Donna Walsh of Charlestown lost to Blake Filippi, an independent from Block Island.

The good news is Aaron Regunberg, of the East Side of Providence and Shelby Maldonado of Central Falls won. That Peter Palumbo lost to Republican Robert Lancia can be seen as a wash to progressives if not Democrats.

Things weren’t quite as bad in the Senate, but Democrat Cathy Cool Rumsey lost to Republican Elaine Morgan.

Here’s a list of some of the legislative seats I was watching:

Portsmouth/Middletown (House District 72)

Linda Finn 45.9%

Dan Reilly 53.9%

Narragansett / Wakefield (House 34)

Teresa Tanzi 53.5%

Steve Tetzner 46.3%

Providence, East Side (House 4)

Aaron Regunberg 82.5%

Ethan Gyles 16.8%

Coventry (Senate 21)

Margaux Morrisseau 35.8%

Nick Kettle 54.7%

Coventry (House District 26)

Nick Denice 43.7%

Patricia Morgan 49.4%

West Warwick (Senate District 9)

Adam Satchell 55.7%

Michael Pinga 44%

North Kingstown (House District 31)

Julie Casimiro 46.8%

Doreen Costa 53.1%

North Kingstown (House District 32)

Sharon Gamba 47.8%

Bob Craven 51.8%

Richmond (House District 39)

Larry Valencia 42.5%

Justin Price 57.4%

Central Falls (House District 56)

Shelby Maldonado 83.4%

Albert Romanowicz 16.5%

Central Falls (House District 56)

Elizabeth Crowley 84.7%

Dan Bidondi 14.8%

Cranston (House District 18)

Art Handy 65.9%

Don Gendron 33.8%

Newport (Senate District 13)

Teresa Paiva Weed 54.6%

Mike Smith 45.1%

Legislative races to watch


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The State House in November.
The State House in November.

Progressives already lost Providence legislator Maria Cimini this election season, but we’ve also picked up Lauren Carson down in Newport. Here are some of the races where the liberal left could pick up – or lose – legislative seats.

In Portsmouth/Middletown, Rep. Linda Finn is in a dog fight with young Republican Dan Reilly, whom she beat two years ago to first win the seat. Finn says Reilly has been claiming credit for legislation he didn’t author, and telling other tall tales on the trail.

Also on Aquidneck Island, Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed, who has the support of the Sierra Club, also has a challenge from Republican Mike Smith.

In Narragansett/Wakefield Rep. Teresa Tanzi‘s opponent Steve Tetzner, an NRA-supporting mortgage broker, spent more than $100,000 on his campaign touting fiscal conservancy.

On the East Side of Providence, Aaron Regunberg already passed one big test by beat Heather Tow Yick in the primary, but he still needs to fend off Ethan Gyles, who is running as an independent. Whomever wins will be replacing former House Speaker Gordon Fox.

In Coventry, Margaux Morrisseau is hoping to win the senate seat currently held by Nick Kettle, who is best known for fake Facebook pages and disparaging homeless people. Morisseau runs the New Leaders Council, a training program for progressive activists, and for leading the fight for payday loan reform. And on the House side in Coventry Nick Denice hopes to unseat Republican Patricia Morgan.

Nearby in West Warwick, Senator Adam Satchel, a teacher and a Democrat, is defending his seat against independent Michael Pinga.

In North Kingstown, self-described conservative Democrat Julie Casimiro, a charter school supporter, is challenging tea party favorite Doreen Costa, who has the backing of the local fire fighters union in the race. The GOP could also pick up a seat if Republican Sharon Gamba beats conservative Democrat Bob Craven for a House seat.

Central Falls City Councilor Shelby Maldonado hopes to beat independent Albert Romanowicz and Dan Bidondi is running again Senator Elizabeth Crowley.

In Richmond, Rep. Larry Valencia is running against Republican Justin Price. In Cranston Rep. Art Handy is running against Republican Don Gendron.

One would think Rep. Mike Marcello would have a race on his hands, after making an unsuccessful run at being speaker of the House. He’s running against Lillian Jean Delmonico and Robert Quattrocchi.

Many urban progressives have already effectively won their races because they are unopposed, including Edith Ajello, Chris Blazejewski, Juan Pichardo, Gayle Goldin, Josh Miller of Cranston and Dave Bennett of Warwick.

What other races should I be watching?

Conservatives from both parties scramble NK political alliances


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casimiro costa2Rep. Doreen Costa is too conservative for North Kingstown Town Council President Liz Dolan, a Republican who endorsed Democrat Julie Casimiro for the House District 31 seat.

But Costa’s conservative credentials didn’t stop the local fire fighters’ union from throwing their support behind the tea party right-winger who sponsored a right-to-work bill in the state legislature.

“We haven’t had that conversation yet,” said Ray Furtado, president of IAFF 1651, which represents NK fire fighters, when I asked him about Costa’s support for right-to-work legislation. “We looked at who has been in our corner.”

That’s not how Dolan decided who to support.

The town council and fire fighters are mired in a bitter legal battle over staffing issues, and both House candidates have been advocating that the council drop its lawsuit. Furtado said “in no way, shape or form is this negative about Casimiro” noting they decided to endorse Costa before Casimiro decided to run.

Dolan said she broke ranks and backed a Democrat because “I have not been impressed with Doreen’s record.”

She said Costa’s allegiance to the NRA, her role in the Exeter recall election and her hyper-concern over holiday decorations have made her ineffective at representing the district. “We need to bring this party back to where it is more moderate,” Dolan said.

Costa accused Dolan of lying saying, “I had nothing to do with that Exeter recall.”

She also portrayed herself as a moderate. “People have me as this extremist and I find that very offensive,” she said. “I’m not as to the right as people think I am.”

At least not two weeks away from a general election, she’s not.

When asked why she sponsored a right-to-work bill, Costa said, “I did it because I was asked to do it.” At first she said she didn’t recall who asked her to sponsor this bill, and then she remembered, she said, that it was two union teachers whose names she did not know.

“It’s not something I would ever revisit,” Costa said about right-to-work legislation. “Not right now anyway.”

About her bill to drug test people who benefit from certain public subsidies, Costa said, “I still think it’s a good idea but I am not going to put it in again.”

She is still undecided about payday loan reform and raising the minimum wage, but she walked back her vote against same sex marriage. “If I had that to do over again, I would probably vote yes on marriage equality,” she said.

On guns, though, Costa said she’s as conservative as ever. “I will not change my mind on gun legislation.”

Casimiro chalked up Costa’s tack to the center as typical election-year politics. “I think Doreen is running scared right now,” she said.

But Casimiro also has a reputation for being a conservative – a conservative Democrat. “I am fiscally conservative,” she said.

She said she’s also pro-choice, pro-marriage equality and will support working class legislation. “I would absolutely raise the minimum wage,” Casimiro said. “It’s not a living wage.”

Casimiro is a board member of two charter schools in Rhode Island: Blakcstone Valley Prep in Cumberland and Southside Elementary in Providence. “It doesn’t make me anti-labor,” she said. “It means I’m pro-kid.” She added that she “works in some of the worst performing schools in the state” through her work with Family Services of Rhode Island.

Her husband is a Republican and she says she donated to Allan Fung’s first campaign for mayor of Cranston when they worked together at MetLife. This year Casimiro is voting for Gina Raimondo, whom she said she has been campaigning with. “I’m on Team Raimondo.”

NEARI backs Maria Cimini’s primary opponent


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Maria Cimini

Maria CiminiLiberal legislator Maria Cimini, who represents the Mt. Pleasant and Elmhurst areas of Providence, is being opposed in her bid for reelection not only by House Speaker Nick Mattiello but also by NEARI, the state’s largest teachers’ union.

“Our PAC committee determined her opponent, who strongly supports our issues, would have a greater impact on those issues in the legislature,” said NEARI President Larry Purtill. “Difficult decision but one we felt was in best interest of our members which is how I believe we should be making decisions.”

In the Democratic primary for House District 7, NEARI is backing Dan McKiernan, a lawyer in private practice.

Cimini administers the state SNAP program as a research associate at the University of Rhode Island, and as such she is dues-paying member of the NEA. More importantly, she says, she worked towards teacher-friendly education reforms as a legislator.

“I’ve been extraordinarily proud to support and champion issues related to supporting educators, administrators and students,” she said. “I’ve been proactive in researching issues of high stakes testing and teacher evaluations, I’ve been vocal in my opposition to some policies as well as supportive of reforms promoted by the NEA.”

She added, “I’m disappointed that as an ardent union supporter in my personal life and my professional and political career that the NEA has chosen to support my opponent.”

Mark Gray, president of the Young Democrats of Rhode Island, took issue with the endorsement.

“We have great respect for the members of NEA and their continued advocacy for children in our state, but we disagree with the NEA endorsement in House District 7,” he said. “Representative Cimini is a champion for Rhode Island workers—NEA members included.  Last year, she successfully argued for over $12 million to be returned to the state budget to ensure we met our commitment to the pension fund for workers.  She has consistently advocated for fully funding school districts and for ending the malpractice of high-stakes testing. Finally, she’s been a fearless advocate of our state’s most disadvantaged people: those who can’t afford child care, housing, or food for their own families.  We feel that the interests of teachers, students, and young Rhode Islanders have been well represented by real Democrats like Maria Cimini.”

McKiernan could not be reached for comment. (I’ll update this post if I hear from him)

Both candidates address education on their campaign websites.

McKiernan says on his website:

“I will focus on the economy because it impacts ALL of us.  A down economy makes it hard for those in private enterprise to make a living. It reduces tax revenues, stressing those who work for the government.  This makes it harder for the government to fund other activities, including educational and social welfare programs.  A down economy hurts all of us.”

Cimini’s website says:

All young people are deserving of a high quality education that prepares them to be successful in the workforce, in the community, and in life. Schools have a responsibility to develop the next generation of leaders, not test takers. Rhode Island needs a statewide school funding formula to ensure that all children have equitable access to high quality education.  Schools must support young people not only academically but also by being safe places for social emotional growth both during the school day and after school time. 

Legislative Impact

  • Increased higher education funding by $4 million
  • Serves on the Commission to Study the Affordability and Accessibility of Public Higher Education in Rhode Island
  • Co-sponsored the Safe Schools Act to direct RIDE to create and implement statewide policy on cyberbullying prevention
  • Passed legislation to create the RI Family Engagement Advisory Council.  The Council, composed of teachers, parents and administrators, will make recommendations on developing policies to make families more active in the life of their children’s schools

Lt Gov. hopeful Ferri has a plan to reform lobbying


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Rep. Frank Ferri testifies on his bill that would reform paypay loans in RI. In the background is Bill Murphy, former House speaker, a lobbyist opposed to the reform.
Rep. Frank Ferri testifies on his bill that would reform paypay loans in RI. In the background is Bill Murphy, former House speaker, a lobbyist opposed to the reform.

Frank Ferri, who bills himself as a “progressive Democrat for Lt. Governor,” released a plan today that would distance legislators from lobbyists during the session, and double the time retired legislators have to wait to become paid lobbyists.

“No business wants to come to a place where the government can’t be trusted,” according to his plan, which you can read here.

Ferri, a state representative from Warwick running for lt. governor against Ralph Mollis and Dan McKee, said:

“The system is broken, and to make matters worse, those tasked with oversight and compliance responsibility have not done their jobs. It’s no wonder Rhode Islanders have lost trust in government. Public service should be about advancing and protecting the interests of a legislator’s constituents, not building relationships that the legislator can use later to pad his or her wallet.”

Ferri’s proposal would double the amount of time – from one year to two – that a former legislator would have to wait to become a lobbyist. A committee chair would have to wait for years under the proposal and the House speaker and Senate president would have to wait six years. It would also ban lobbyists from loaning legislators money.

It would also prohibit lobbyists and political action committees from donating to legislators during the session. In explaining why, he lifts the veil a bit on how the sausage is actually made on Smith Hill.

“In a practice that has become so ingrained within our state’s political culture, legislators typically hold fundraisers every week during the legislative session,” according to the proposal. “It is so commonplace, that committee hearings are often scheduled around these events.

These social hours are, on the surface, harmless opportunities for legislators to mingle with constituents and each other. However, for professional lobbyists, they provide unmatched hours of special access to Assembly leadership and committee chairs – access that the average constituent can’t afford. These fundraisers have replaced the smoke-filled back rooms of years past to become the modern day place where legislation is really won and lost.”

The plan would also make available online the names of lobbyists who testify on legislation.

“The committees already collect this information in the form of sign-in sheets. Instead of these sheets being quietly filed away, they should be posted online so that the public can see for themselves who is speaking for or against a particular bill. The House and Senate could adopt this policy immediately, and Ferri has written to the House Speaker and the Senate President to ask them to adopt the policy in their respective 2015 rules.”

RI Sierra Club announces legislative endorsements


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RI Sierra Club Logo QuahogThe Rhode Island chapter of the Sierra Club has released the endorsement of the following candidates for state representative. As part of the oldest environmental group in the country, our selection committee based this on a questionnaire we did with Clean Water Action which was sent to every candidate running. Also, for incumbents, the Environmental Council of Rhode Islands legislative scorecard was used. Additionally, as is the policy of Sierra Club nationally, special weight was given to candidates who come from in activist background, particularly those who have worked with us on campaigns in the past.

House
Edie Ajello – H. 1 Providence
Chris Blazejewski – H.2 Providence
Aaron Regunberg – H. 4 Providence
Maria Cimini- H. 7 Providence
John Lombardi – H. 8 Providence
Grace Dias- H. 11 Providence
Art Handy – H. 18 Cranston
Dave Bennett H. 20 Warwick
Joe Solomon H. 22 Warwick
Scott Guthrie – H. 28 Coventry
Teresa Tanzi -H. 34 Narragansett/South Kingstown
Donna Walsh – H. 36 Charlestown/Westerly/SK/BI
Larry Valencia – H. 39 Richmond/Exeter/Hopkington
Jay O’Grady – H. 46 Lincoln/Pawtucket
Linda Finn – H. 72 Middletown/Portsmouth
Deb Ruggiero – H. 74 Jamestown
Lauren Carson – H. 75 Newport

Senate
Gayle Goldin- S.3 Providence
Doris De Los Santos – S. 7 Pawtucket
Adam Satchell – S. 9 West Warwick
William Conley- S. 18 East Prov/Pawtucket
Stephen Archambault – S. 22 Smithfield/N. Prov/Johnston
Margaux Morisseau – S. 21 Coventry/Foster/Scituate/W. Greenwich
Josh Miller – S. 28 Cranston
Cathie Cool Rumsey – S. 34 Charlestown, Exeter, Hopkinton, Richmond, W. Greenwich
Sue Sosnowski- S. 37 South Kingstown/Block Island

We thank every one who returned the surveys. We received a record number of responses and some of the decisions were difficult but everyone was considered carefully. There will be a second announcement of endorsements for the Governors, Lieutenant Governor and Treasured along with additional State Representative endorsements.

Congratulations to all those selected in this first round of endorsements and we will work with your campaigns and other endorsees to get you elected.

RIPDA announces legislative endorsements


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cropped-ripdalogoThe Rhode Island Progressive Democrats last night voted to endorse 17 candidates in General Assembly elections. Here’s the list of the 17 candidates (only six men!) from around Rhode Island who earned their endorsement:

  • Edie Ajello, Providence, House District 1
  • Joe Almeida, Providence, House District 12
  • Dave Bennett, Warwick, House District 20
  • Lauren Carson, Newport, House District 75
  • Maria Cimini, Providence, House District 7
  • Cathie Cool Rumsey, Charlestown, Richmond, Hopkinton, Exeter, West Greenwich, Senate District 34
  • Doris De Los Santos, Providence, N. Providence, Senate District 7
  • Dave Fasteson, Smithfield, North Providence, Johnston, Senate District 22
  • Linda Finn, Middletown, Portsmouth, House District 72
  • Gayle Goldin, Providence, Senate District 3
  • Shelby Maldonado, Central Falls, House District 56
  • Margaux Morisseau, Coventry, Foster, Scituate, West Greenwich, Senate District 21
  • Aaron Regunberg, Providence, House District 4
  • Adam Satchell, West Warwick, Senate District 9
  • Jennifer Siciliano, Warwick, House District 22 (Frank Ferri’s seat)
  • Teresa Tanzi, Narragansett, Peacedale, Wakefield, House District 34
  • Larry Valencia, Richmond, Exeter, Hopkington, House District 39
Here’s their full press release:

Being a real Democrat in the General Assembly is not easy. The Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate both oppose a woman’s right to choose and received endorsements from Right to Life last election cycle. In 2012, they also both received endorsements from the NRA, who gave them A ratings and thousands of dollars of illegal campaign contributions over the course of their careers. Both of them are staunchly opposed to repealing the 2006 income tax cuts for the rich. On far too many core issues, the leadership of the General Assembly Democrats sides with the national Republican Party over the national Democratic Party. But the candidates we have endorsed fight for true Democratic Party values.

The battle between the two wings of the Rhode Island Democratic Party is often characterized as part of the national battle between the progressive wing and the Wall Street wing. We do not see it that way. The issues that divide the Democrats in the General Assembly—issues like reproductive rights, gun safety, and tax fairness—are issues where the national party is united.

When choosing endorsements, we looked for real Democrats who stand with the national Democratic Party on most core values. A few of our endorsees might not be considered particularly liberal in other states, but each one is a real Democrat. We are proud to support them in the battle to return our state to the basic Democratic Party values Rhode Islanders support so strongly.

Following these principles, we have chosen the following seventeen real Democrats, most of them facing competitive races, for our endorsement:

Why is Nick Mattiello scared of Maria Cimini?


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Maria Cimini

Maria CiminiWhen it comes to championing progressive causes, no one in the Rhode Island General Assembly is any braver than Providence Rep. Maria Cimini.

For years, she has lead the charge – against the richest special interest group in Rhode Island – for a less regressive income tax structure. And this year she valiantly defended on the House floor during the late-night budget bill debate, the Providence hotel house keepers – some of whom live in her district – as House leadership effectively nixed their effort to implement a city-wide hotel-industry minimum wage. She’s always standing up for the poor and standing up to the powerful.

Such progressive bravery has won Cimini not just the respect of this blog, but also the ire of House Speaker Nick Mattiello. He tells the Providence Journal he’s backing Cimini’s primary opponent because she didn’t back him for speaker, didn’t apologize for that and because she doesn’t agree with him on policy.

According to the ProJo Mattiello said, “Representative Cimini didn’t support me for speaker and never came to me to indicate she would support me in the future. She didn’t ask for my support in her race and Dan McKiernan did come and ask. Like me, he is a moderate, and his political viewpoints are more in line with the voters of his district and the state of Rhode Island.”

Mattiello is wrong to use his considerable political influence to settle Smith Hill vendettas. And the people of District 7 deserve a legislator elected based on his or her merits, not their loyalty to House leadership.

On the other hand, if he thinks his trickle-down economic policies represent the Elmhurst area of Providence better than Cimini has done, well then it’s his right to oppose her reelection.

But Maria Cimini deserves strong progressive support for her steadfast allegiance to working class Rhode Island. She’s fought hard against high stakes testing and she fact-checked Ken Block (when ). She’s been a champion for tax equity and a higher minimum wage. And she may need our help depending on how adamantly Speaker Mattiello works against her.

20+ community groups urge veto of ‘criminal street gang’ bill


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State HouseOn the last day of the 2014 legislative session, the General Assembly approved legislation that could place at-risk youth in prison for more than a decade–for a crime as simple as graffiti. The legislation (H-7457 as amended and S-2639 as amended) allows up to 10 additional years on the sentence of anyone convicted of any felony “knowingly committed for the benefit, at the direction of, or in association with any criminal street gang or criminal street gang member.”

More than 20 community groups, including the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, Providence Youth Student Movement, and the Rhode Island Civil Rights Roundtable, have come together to urge Governor Chafee to veto this dangerous legislation.

In a letter to Governor Chafee, the groups note that this legislation offers an overly broad definition of “criminal street gangs,” does not differentiate between a “gang” that engages in occasional random acts of vandalism and one that has been involved in murders and other serious felonies, and will likely target at-risk youth who have made a mistake.

Here are excerpts from the groups’ letter to Governor Chafee calling for a veto: 

“Young people may often be coerced into committing crimes for a gang, facing threats of punishment and harm if they fail to do so. Under this bill, they would bear the brunt of the enhanced sentencing provisions. The bill could even have the unintended effect of encouraging gang leaders to make more use of teens in this position, and help insulate the leaders themselves from the enhanced sentences envisioned by this legislation.”

“Instead of assisting youth who are at risk of becoming involved with dangerous individuals, this legislation puts the state in the position of locking up these at-risk youth for lengthy periods of time with exactly the kind of individuals we should be trying to help them avoid.”

“It is the minority community that suffers the most from gang violence. But it is also our community that suffers the most from overly harsh sentencing laws that, either in purpose or effect, target inner city youth and adults. Rather than imposing more and harsher punishment on offenders, including teenagers, the state should be much more focused on prevention, education and mediation activities.”

There’s still time for you to join the effort to stop this legislation. Call or email Governor Chafee and tell him you want this legislation vetoed.

More opportunity than danger for legislative progressives


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state house lawnFor a state that claims its General Assembly members are too ensconced, there certainly are a lot of legislators running unopposed. More than 44 percent of incumbents will be alone on the ballot.

But in the contested races, there seems to be more opportunity than risk for the progressive caucus in the General Assembly. Here are some of the battlegrounds around Rhode Island where liberal candidates can either pick up a seat or may be in danger.

Providence

The most high profile legislative race pits activist Aaron Regunberg, best known for helping to organize the Providence Student Union, against Heather Tow-Yick, and others. It’s Gordon Fox’s East Side district, and liberals would like to replace the former speaker with a died-in-the-wool progressive such as Regunberg – whose successful effort to suspend the NECAP graduation requirement leaves him with tons of political capital.

Senator Gayle Goldin faces a tough primary challenge from Chris Wall, a local real estate agent as does Rep Maria Cimini by Daniel McKiernan. Rep Scott Slater, District 10, has two primary opponents.

Portsmouth

Linda Finn is the progressive incumbent in House District 72, but two years ago she narrowly beat then-incumbent Republican Dan Reilly. Reilly is well-liked across the isle, but Finn is loved by the left.

Central Falls

Hunger striker, former Peace Corp member and City Councilor Shelby Maldonado is challenging incumbent Rep. Gus Silva. Now that would be quite a voice to add to the House progressive caucus!

Coventry

Republican firebrand Patricia Morgan has bet big on being a thorn in the side of leadership and taking on local firefighters. Now, she’ll face a tough reelection campaign against Nick Denice. He’s a certified fraud inspector. Morgan is a longtime GOP insider with a bad habit of misstating facts and trashing the working class. Also in Knotty Oaker Country, Rep. Scott Guthrie will face Republican Bobby Nardolillo, of the Nardolillo Funeral Home family.

On the senate side, The left’s best chance of gaining a seat in the Senate is with Margaux Morriseau. She’s challenging Coventry Sen. Nick Kettle. Morriseau is best known for leading the charge for payday loan reform, but she is also a leader of the New Leaders Council, and a longtime employee with NeighborWorks Blackstone River Valley. Kettle is best known for creating a fake Facebook page on a State House computer or disparaging homeless people.

North Kingstown

Julie Casimiro, development director at Family Service of Rhode Island, is challenging tea party extremist Doreen Costa. This would be a good swap for the left.

Newport

Rep. Peter Martin, a Democrat and Fifth Ward throwback, faces a tough challenge from environmentalist Lauren Carson.

Which race did we forget to flag? Let us know in the comments below.

Hotel worker Hunger Strike: Day Two


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Hunger strikers: Shelby Maldonado, Santa Brito, Ylleni Ferrares and Mirjaam Parada

There will be a rally today at the State House at 5pm to support these brave women, and also to support the Just Cause bill, which would protect tenants from no-fault evictions. The Senate has passed this measure, but the House has yet to do so. Passing this bill would allow tenants to stay in their homes and pay rent to the bank, after their landlord is foreclosed upon, as long as they pay rent and do not violate their lease.

Come out today and let the General Assembly know that we want legislation that helps everyone, not just the rich and connected.

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Santa Brito, Ylleni Ferrares and Mirjaam Parada
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Mirjaam Parada

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Providence City Councillor Davian Sanchez

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Hotel workers plan week long hunger strike for $15 minimum wage


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Mirjaam Parada, hunger striker

The Rhode Island House, under the leadership of Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, moved to strip away the political power of Providence hotel workers by inserting a provision in the state budget that would prevent municipalities from setting their own minimum wage last Thursday night. This week, the Rhode Island Senate takes up discussion of the budget, and though Senate President M. Teresa Paiva-Weed might wish to continue to ignore the demands of underpaid and overworked hotel workers, it will be hard to do so as five women engage in a hunger strike at the State House in protest.

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Jenna Karlin, Unite Here!

Starting Thursday, five women, including four hotel workers and Central Falls City Councillor Shelby Maldonado, will be camping out 24 hours a day at the State House, refusing any sustenance except water to call attention to the terrible way in which this year’s budget specifically targets low wage workers with the intent of politically silencing their voices. The plan is to strike until Governor Chafee makes his final decision on the budget, which will be a week from Thursday, if past experience is any indicator.

At a press conference Monday afternoon, Unite Here!’s Jenna Karlin talked about how finding volunteers for the hunger strike was not a problem. The problem was settling on only five people to participate, there were so many eager to step up for the cause.

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Evan McLaughlin, hotel worker

Mirjaam Parada is one of the hunger strikers. Parada works at the Omni Hotel and presently makes a comfortable wage in excess of $15, but she is participating in the strike out of solidarity with the workers at the Renaissance and the Hilton, who make far less than she does, and struggle every day to make ends meet.

Hotel worker Evan McLaughlin, who will not be participating in the hunger strike, wants everyone who walks into the State House over the next week to understand that the women not eating outside the the building are doing so because the General Assembly has decided that they do not have the right to petition their city government or fellow voters for fair wages under the new law.

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City Councillor Shelby Maldonado

This change in the law targets the Providence hotel workers, but the effect will be state wide. All 39 town and city councils in the state will lose the ability to determine a key aspect of their economy under the new budget. This is in some ways an end run around democracy itself: The Providence City Council put the measure to give hotel workers $15 an hour on November’s ballot for the voters of Providence to decide. The law championed by Mattiello’s House takes away the power of voters. It seems “big government” is only a problem when it affects a business trying to turn a profit and not when it affects a family trying to eat.

Central Falls Councillor (and union rep) Shelby Maldonado will also be participating in the hunger strike. Maldonado wants to best represent the people who elected her, and she feels she can best do this by championing the democratic process. The rights of the people to determine what is best for their communities is being usurped by a General Assembly that is beholden only to business interests at the expense of low wage workers, and this situation has to stop.

Earlier this year, Senate President M Teresa Paiva-Weed participated in a vigil in the main rotunda of the State House and spoke about this issue of poverty, and her responsibility as a legislator to address this problem.

“The Senate’s focus this session on the economy will be inextricably intertwined with the causes of poverty. We can’t move the economy forward without addressing the very issues that underline poverty.”

She said the vigil and a screening later in the day of [the movie] Inequality For All “will set a tone for the year and the message will be carried with us as we work to meet the significant challenges ahead.”

Even though it seems these words were forgotten by the Senate president moments after leaving her lips, one hopes that Paiva-Weed understands that how we treat our most vulnerable citizens best demonstrates our commitment to our moral responsibilities.

DSC_9621Ironically, just before the hotel workers took to the State House rotunda to talk about their planned hunger strike, there was an event in the Bell Room on the first floor of the State House to celebrate the release of a new cookbook, Extraordinary Recipes from Providence & Rhode Island Chef’s Table by Linda Beaulieu, complete with expertly prepared foods from some of the area’s best chefs. This juxtaposition of fancy food for the entitled political class and a hunger strike by poorly paid workers is a jarring reminder that things are not going right in Rhode Island.

Here’s the press conference video:

Budget bill is big on corporate welfare, short on renter protections


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Group bannerCrying the need to ease the burdens of doing business in Rhode Island, the House of Representatives recently passed a budget that lowers the corporate tax rate, raises the ceiling on the estate tax, pays millions to 38 Studios bond investors, raises the gas tax and the cost of a car inspection. One has to wonder how these easements will truly help businesses in Rhode Island, or lure others here, when the state’s consumers are forced deeper into poverty.

Along with raising the costs of living and depleting our tax revenue, the House, led by new Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, may literally enable the eviction of hundreds of Rhode Island’s renters by shelving important legislation.

Just Cause (H7449 and S2659), is a bill that would prevent the no-fault eviction of tenants whose landlords get foreclosed on by the bank. As housing costs rise, homeownership remains what it has always been – the American “dream,” never reality – unemployment refuses to abate, and banks continue to foreclose on homes, the threat of no-fault eviction looms over many Rhode Island families.

“Just Cause,” the informal title of the bill, refers to the state’s Landlord-Tenant Act, which describes “just causes” for eviction. The list does not include foreclosure. However, throughout the housing crisis banks have used foreclosure as a justification to evict hundreds of families from their apartments. The rationale for this, they allege, is that homes are easier to sell without occupants. One has to wonder at this claim, when a simple drive down through many parts of the state includes the shells of abandoned, vandalized, and near-worthless homes, owned by banks that foreclosed and evicted the residents. These homes are not easy to sell. In fact, the only people who will buy them are out of state investors, slumlords looking to mooch rent from Rhode Island families in exchange for criminal living conditions, and house flippers, who profit from crisis by buying cheap properties.

According to The National Low Income Housing Coalition, housing costs are already out of reach for many Rhode Island renters. In order to afford the fair market rent for a 2-bedroom apartment ($928 a month), a renter making the average wage ($11.92 an hour), would have to work 60 hours a week, 52 weeks a year. There aren’t a lot of people I know making the “average wage,” which must factor in wages lower and much higher than 12 bucks an hour. With the minimum wage at 8.oo dollars an hour, one has to wonder how many working Rhode Islanders pay their rent. Add to this the 1,468 foreclosure deeds filed in 2013 and you have a rental crisis, as tenants evicted because of foreclosure drive up the demand on scarce and unaffordable rentals. In addition, those vacant, foreclosed properties stand empty, occasionally burning down, dragging down surrounding property values and further exacerbating the homeless and housing issues of our state.

No fault evictions due to foreclosure are increasing homelessness, reducing the availability of homes, pushing up rents, and fueling a housing crisis. It’s immoral and bad for the economy to allow banks to put families out, especially when they’ve done nothing wrong and are able to pay rent. Why would Speaker Mattiello, the primary opponent of the legislation, prefer a vacant home, homeless family, and devastated neighborhoods to a property occupied by tenants who pay rent and maintain the building? Even while the Senate leadership, through the efforts Senator Harold Metts, shepherds the bill towards passage, Speaker Mattiello remains adamantly in support of an international banking industry in opposition to the state’s people and economy.

It’s time to question the ideology that subsidies for the rich and corporations produce economic prosperity. It’s time for the state’s government to utilize regulations like Just Cause to bolster a struggling economy (at no cost to the state!), and protect the interests of the majority of the state’s people.

It’s time for Speaker Mattiello to reconsider the cost of shelving this legislation.

E-cigarette bill is a boon for tobacco industry


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ecigaretteThe House is set to vote today on an e-cigarette bill that will benefit only the tobacco industry, according to anti-tobacco advocates.

“The voices for the tobacco industry are receiving more attention than the advocates trying to protect our kids,” said Karina Wood, the director of Tobacco Free Rhode Island.

The group lobbied for new state regulations (but no new taxes) for a new tobacco product known as electronic cigarettes, or e-cigarettes – or, if you’re a tobacco industry lobbyist a “vapor product.” Whatever you call them, it heats liquid nicotine from tobacco without burning it; the bi-product is technically not smoke.

The House bill crafted by Tobacco Free Rhode Island and sponsored by Rep. Helio Melo initially labelled these contraptions as tobacco products, because they use nicotine from tobacco. But at a hearing by the House Judiciary Committee, a new version of the bill was adopted that labels e-cigarettes as “vapor product.”

The definition change is significant, Wood said, because it effectively removes any and all punishment from selling e-cigarettes to minors.

“It’s basically saying it’s illegal, but we won’t punish you if you do,” she said. “What am I supposed to think?”

Last year, Governor Chafee vetoed the so-called e-cigarette bill because, as he said in his veto message, it defined them as a “vapor product.”

He wrote, “The sale of electronic cigarettes should be illegal, but it is counter-productive to prohibit sales to minors while simultaneously exempting electronic cigarettes from laws concerning regulation, enforcement, licensing and taxation. As a matter of public policy, electronic cigarettes should mirror tobacco product laws, not circumvent them.”

The House votes on the bill today, and South Kingstown Rep. Teresa Tanzi is urging her colleagues to reject the bill.

“This bill serves to protect big tobacco’s interests over our children’s health,” Tanzi said. “By not classifying e-cigarettes as tobacco products, we will be eliminating decades worth of hard fought protections that we know help prevent addiction, while turning the marketplace into an unregulated wild west. This bill will leave a whole new generation vulnerable to addiction.”

The time was now for marijuana reform


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Beth Comery is a former Providence police officer who has become an advocate for taxing and regulating marijuana in her retirement.
Beth Comery is a former Providence police officer who has become an advocate for taxing and regulating marijuana in her retirement.

There is little doubt that that Rhode Island will one day regulate marijuana like alcohol. The political winds are just too strong. The nation supports it. And we are a solid blue state. Even among the few Republicans, Ron Paul scored better here than he did in all but two other primaries.  The real question for marijuana reform is not if but when.

Sadly, it looks like the tax and regulate bill will not move this legislative session.

One of the most common arguments I have heard for delaying a move to sensible marijuana regulation is that we need to wait to see how decriminalization gets implemented here in Rhode Island and to see how legalization works out in Washington and Colorado. I find that attitude shortsighted and slightly heartless.

The crises caused by the drug war are very real and very immediate. While decriminalization is a sensible step that eases the pain, it does little to alleviate the damage done by the black market. Under decriminalization, we continue to subsidize the largest organized crime operation on the planet, the Mexican drug cartels. We may not consider the slaughter south of the border to be a major concern, but I assure you, few things matter more to the people of Mexico. And if we ever hope to secure our borders, we cannot continue to subsidize the gangs that make our southern border such a lawless place.

The effects are felt at home as well. Marijuana money fuels gang violence on our streets, too. It still absorbs severely limited police resources. And most importantly, marijuana continues to be used without any regulation whatsoever.

This means there are no controls on purity or additives. I have had many friends who have inadvertently and unwillingly ingested cocaine, tobacco, and other dangerous drugs because they were secretly mixed with marijuana.

This means there is no labeling of potency. Marijuana users have relatively little idea how large the dose they are ingesting is, making safe and responsible use much more difficult.

This means there is no restriction on youth access. Drug dealers do not card their clients.

Most of the many sensible regulations in this bill would be impossible without a legal framework to operate under.

A second reason not to delay moving to a regulated marijuana regime is economic.  Many of the jobs in the East Coast marijuana industry will be located in the first state that allows those jobs in.  If we are the first adopters, we will maintain an advantage in this industry for decades.  And I hardly need to tell you how desperately we need jobs.  It does not help to delay them.

Nor do I need to tell you how urgently the revenue in this bill is needed to address the fiscal problems plaguing our state.

We must act now to end the black market.  We must act now to create jobs.  We must act now to help mend our fiscal mess.  For once, Rhode Island should take the lead on something good.


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