Sistare says he didn’t deny Pryeor communion


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Father Brian Sistare, the priest at Sacred Heart Parish in Woonsocket, responded during mass on Sunday to allegations that he told gay married congregants they could not receive communion unless they ended their marriages and that he is using his position with the church to campaign against proponents of same sex marriage.

You can listen to him here:

After the service, I asked Sistare if he wanted to talk more about it. He declined, but said he felt it was inaccurate to suggest that he had denied gay married parishioners communion when he had simply told them they could not get communion until they were no longer married.

 

Priest to legislators: I will campaign against you from church


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sistareA Catholic priest is said to have sent an email to legislators who voted for same sex marriage threatening to use his bully pulpit as a church leader to get them unelected.

“I’m praying for each of you, that you turn back to God,” said an email purportedly from Father Brian Sistare, who is now the priest at Sacred Heart in Woonsocket. “I’m also going to let my Parish know exactly how you voted, so come re-election time, you will not be re-elected.”

As non-profit entities, churches are legally forbidden from engaging in political campaign activity.

The email was sent to the 26 state senators who voted for marriage equality and was signed and seemingly sent by Sistare. Sistare, who was a priest at St. Rocco Church in Johnston at the time, did not return a call for comment earlier this week to RI Future and has since declined to comment to other media outlets as well.

Sistare is said to have told married gay parishoners that he would not serve them communion unless they ended their marriages. Divorce is considered a sin to devout Catholics but the church does have an annulment process.

Here’s the full email sent to state senators:

Dear RI Senators who voted for “marriage” between members of the same sex,

       Yesterday was a very sad day for our little state of Rhode Island.  I’m still shocked that each of you took it upon yourself to take the place of God and redefine what He has established.  Marriage has always been understood as the union between one man and one woman.  This is a 5,000 year old fact!  I’m wondering what you will do when a mother comes to you and asks to be married to her son, or a cousin wants to marry her first cousin, or when a man wants to marry 2 or 3 women, or a human being wants to marry his animal?  What will you do, now that you have decided that Marriage is no longer a sacred union between one man and one woman?
        For those of you Senators who are baptized Catholics, I invite you to go to the Sacrament of Confession to receive God’s Mercy and Forgiveness for your grave sin of voting against God yesterday, so you’ll be able to receive Holy Communion again in the Catholic Church.
        For those of you who claim to be a disciple of Jesus Christ, I also invite you to repentance in your own faith tradition; and to those who claim no religious affiliation, I pray that you also see the error of your ways.
        Your decision yesterday will have a lot of consequences on those of us who hold God’s definition of Marriage between one man and one woman.  Already my Pastor from my hometown of Westerly is being accused by a confirmed lesbian, of violating the tax exempt status of the Catholic Church for telling his parishioners to contact Senator Algiere about his upcoming vote – unfortunately, Senator Algiere, you betrayed your own Catholic Faith and your constituents in voting for sodomy yesterday.  Also, my little niece Giana was coming out of school the other day when her fellow 4 year old classmate remarked to her that 2 women could marry.  Thankfully, my niece told the little boy the TRUTH that this isn’t the case, that Marriage is only between one man and one woman.
        I’m praying for each of you, that you turn back to God.  I’m also going to let my Parish know exactly how you voted, so come re-election time, you will not be re-elected.
Fr. Sistare
St. Rocco Church
Johnston, RI

Gay Catholics in Woonsocket denied communion

Pierre Laveillee, left, and Lew Pryeor are legally married gay Catholics who were told they could no longer receive communion.
Pierre Laveillee, left, and Lew Pryeor are legally married gay Catholics who were told they could no longer receive communion.

While many gay Rhode Islanders gained a new right last week, Lew Pryeor and Pierre Leveillee lost one yesterday.

The Catholic couple from Woonsocket was told by their priest, Rev. Brian Sistare of Sacred Heart, that he would  no longer give them communion at Sunday service.

“I have been a Catholic all my life,” Pryeor told me yesterday after he was informed of Sistare’s decision to deny them the sacrament. “I like to go to church and light a candle for my family. Now, I feel like I can’t do that anymore.”

Pryeor and Leveillee have been together for 34 years and were married in 2007. The couple moved to Woonsocket two years ago. He said they were always accepted at the other local Catholic churches they have attended in Warwick and West Warwick over the years.

His new church in Woonsocket, Pryor said, “is pushing people away when they should be reaching out. They may not agree with me, but they shouldn’t throw rocks at me.”

The couple will leave Sacred Heart and look for a more accepting Catholic church in Woonsocket.

Pryeor went to Sacred Heart on Monday to talk to Sistare about his politically conservative sermons. After suggesting that Sistare not alienate parishioners with the priest’s personal politics,  Pryeor said Sistare informed him that he would not give him communion anymore because his marriage to Leveillee is not recognized by the church.

Pryor said the priest told him he would give him communion if he ended his marriage to Laveilee.

Sistare, who could not immediately be reached for comment, is new at Sacred Heart, said Pryeor, who has been taking issue with his new priest’s politically-charged sermons.

Pryeor been posting on Facebook about Sistare’s sermons. From Sunday, July 28:

ok pierre and i went to church today .. new young priest at the Sacred heart church . Instead of saying how we all should follow the ways of the Pope, reaching out to everyone , He talked about the Governor again.. All right already not everyone likes Chafee but instead of showing negativity towards someone due to their beliefs try to reach out to those that are lost are needing help.

And this from Sunday, August 3:

mass was ok today but What political party was my priest refering to as a party that is wrong for thinking the rich should give up some of there money.

Pryeor and Leveillee have been congregants at Sacred Heart since moving to Woonsocket two years ago. Pryeor organized the annual church festival. They live one block from the church and bring their grandchildren to mass. Pryeor said he and Leveillee have been congregants at Catholic churches in both Warwick and West Warwick before moving to Woonsocket and their relationship and their love has always been accepted by other priests.

Other gay couple who attend Sacred Heart have posted on Pryeor’s Facebook posts that they, too, have been told they would not be offered communion.

Catholics believe that the Sacrament of Communion – eating unleavened bread blessed by a priest – is akin to eating the body of Jesus, who they believe is the son of god born of a virgin birth.  Devout Catholics believe communion should not be given to sinners until they repent.

The church has a legal right to deny anyone any part of their ritual it sees fit. But preaching politics from the pulpit may be another matter. As a tax-exempt organization, church’s have a legal obligation not to use their non-profit status to push its leaders’ personal politics on its parishioners.

Sistare is also a part of the campus ministry at Mount St. Charles Academy in Woonsocket. He’s also on Twitter, where he follows many conservative politicians and FOX News personalities. In January,  tweeted this to Gov. Chaffee:

@LincolnChafee Do RI a favor & go take a job w/ Abomination adm. in DC. Will have to answer to God w/ your support of abortion and sodomy!

Join me for a neighborhood conversation next week


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cicilline primary victoryNext week, I am coming home to host the first two of several neighborhood conversations about the challenges we face across this great state, and I wanted to make sure RI Future readers knew about next week’s events in Woonsocket and Bristol.

As your voice in Congress, it is critical that I hear directly from you on the challenges we face and how my office can better serve you. That’s why I look forward to discussing a wide range of topics with you including my jobs and manufacturing agenda for Rhode Island, protecting the guarantee of Medicare and Social Security, honoring our responsibilities to our veterans, keeping student loan rates low, and achieving comprehensive immigration reform.

I’d also like to share with you some additional information about the services my office can provide to help you better navigate federal agencies as well as how to access important services provided by the federal government. Please join me at one or both of the following Neighborhood Conversations:

For more information, please call my office at 729-5600 or email me at David.Cicilline@mail.house.gov. Thanks and I look forward to seeing you next week in Woonsocket or Bristol.

Fighting truancy with poverty


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State House Dome from North Main Street

State House Dome from North Main StreetRep. Stephen Casey of Woonsocket has figured out a new way to punish the poor in Rhode Island.

He’s backing a bill that would kick parents off of government assistance programs if their children don’t have good attendance records at school. The bill only applies to welfare recipients, and not parents who receive tax breaks from the state. In other words, it targets poverty and exempts affluence.

Such legislation is becoming more commonplace in the General Assembly as class politics increases here in the Ocean State. Last year Rep. Doreen Costa introduced a bill that required social service recipients to be drug tested before receiving benefits but did not put similar conditions on those who get tax breaks from the state.

Advocates say the idea is to incentive better behavior. I think this line of reasoning ranges from being flawed logic to disingenuous debate. If poverty increases the likelihood of truancy or drug use, which it does, increasing poverty won’t decrease truancy or drug use.  If this worked, fire fighters would carry flame throwers instead of water hoses! Casey, a Woonsocket fire fighter, should know you don’t fight fire with fire.

Whatever the stated purpose of such legislation is, they function best at stigmatizing government assistance to the poor.

Truancy is an issue in Rhode Island. But divesting from the families of those who aren’t showing up for class won’t increase attendance. It will, on the other hand, make being poor a little bit more onerous on both the poor and by extension the rest of the economy as well.

Category One Memorial Designation Commission?


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Woonsocket Cross 01Where can I find the Category One Memorial Designation Commission? As far as I can tell, it does not exist, despite legislation passed last year mandating the creation of such an authority.

After the Freedom from Religion Foundation challenged the constitutionality of a large Christian cross on public land in Woonsocket, the General Assembly hastily passed, at 2:59am on the last day of the session, an odd and mostly useless bill, H8143A. The bill was originally written with the intent of getting around the First Amendment, specifically the part that says, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;” which the Supreme Court has routinely held applies to the erection of permanent religious monuments on public land.

This bill established the “Category One Memorial Designation Commission,” a body of five nominees who will “hear and make determinations on requests by members of the general public to designate items within the state as category one memorial items.” Category one memorial items are those that have “attained a secular traditional, cultural or community recognition or value,” are located on government owned land, and were in existence prior to January 1, 2012. The hammer drops with this line: “The potential identification of an item or the item having recognizable identification with a known or established religion shall not exclude the item” from being so designated.

Once an item or memorial has achieved “Category One” status, what then? “Upon deliberation, the commission may communicate their majority decision to designate an item as such in written form to the city or town clerk of the municipality wherein the item is located, for recording in the land deeds, and to the chief executive of the municipality.”

That’s it.

Wait.

That’s it?

The original version of the bill, H8143, the one that did not pass, took a much harder stance, and contained the line that, “The state of Rhode Island declares that a category one memorial item shall not be deemed or viewed as the making of a law regarding the establishment of a state religion” and “It shall be the policy of the state to defend against any non-governmental challenge to the placement or continued existence of any category one memorial item on any state or municipal property.” The bill would have established a $1 million fund for the Attorney General to use in defending such items from lawsuits.

Of course this version of the bill, had it passed, would have never survived court scrutiny. The legislature can’t pass a law that violates the Constitution by inserting a clause that says such violations don’t count, so the watered down version was passed instead.

I recently got to wondering what the status of the “Category One Memorial Designation Commission” is right now. According to the legislation, the permanent commission is to be made up of five members, three to be appointed by the Speaker of the House and two by the Senate President. In February 2013, an odd numbered year, the Commission was to “elect from among themselves a chairperson.”

None of this has happened.

According to the Woonsocket Call, as of March 5, 2013 Representative McLaughlin, who authored the legislation, said “he is working with legislative leaders to make the first appointments to the commission.” This delay means that the Commission won’t be able to be established or begin its work until February 2015, since the legislation specifically says, “The members of the commission shall, in February of each odd-numbered year, elect from among themselves a chairperson.”

In the meantime, how is the important work of declaring certain memorials “Category One Items” to get done?

Representative McLaughlin seems to have confused the original, unconstitutional legislation with the declawed and useless legislation that passed, saying, “the law is in place to protect the monuments and others like it.”

Even the Woonsocket Call, which is sympathetic to the Woonsocket Cross, could not help but point out that “As written, the law seems only to define a category one memorial item and create a commission to so designate such structures, but it doesn’t specify any protections from legal challenges.”

I’ve written emails to Speaker Fox, Senate President Paiva Weed, the chairperson of the Rhode Island Historical Society and the the Adjutant General of the National Guard, all of whom are supposed to be involved with the commission member selection process, and to Representatives McLaughlin, Hull, Dickinson and MacBeth who wrote and introduced the bill, asking about the status of the commission.

But so far I have received no response.

Rhode Island’s Economy: A Moral Failure


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

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

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

Woonsocket Supermarkets On The First Of The Month


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Stop and Shop in North Smithfield. (Photo by Dave Fisher)

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) boom-and- bust cycle continued in Woonsocket this month, but not all local grocers benefit to the same degree.

Woonsocket is home to two supermarkets. A Price Rite – which traffics in highly discounted groceries – and a Shaw’s – which is operates a bit more in the middle-class price range –  located within a half mile of one another. The only other supermarket options for the 40,000-plus resident of Rhode Island’s forgotten city are a Park and Shop – located just over  the state line in Blackstone, Mass. – and two Stop and Shops which straddle the city – One right on the city line in North Smithfield, and another just over the state line in Bellingham, Mass.

The Blackstone Park and Shop and the Bellingham Stop and Shop are off-limits to Woonsocket SNAP recipients; the state-administered, federally-funded benefits don’t travel over state lines.

I decided to take a ride up to the Woonsocket Price Rite location, in an attempt to shed a bit more light on the first-of-the-month melee at local grocery stores. The parking lot was packed with cars, and there was a steady stream of customers entering and exiting the store. More customers waited outside the store for  the next bus to come by to take them home with their groceries.

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As I walked through the store, the wide aisles were easy to navigate, but things changed as I approached the checkout lines. The lines stretched into the  ends of the grocery aisles. Carriages were packed, overflowing in many cases, and customers were bagging their own groceries on the counter across from the ends of the checkout lines.

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I managed to speak to a pair of ladies who were exiting the store for a bit before store management descended on me and informed me of their store’s policy of “No Solicitation” of store employees or their customers. The women were exiting the store with two carriages absolutely bursting with food. One of the women, who didn’t want to be identified, told me that most of her SNAP benefits, along with a good portion of her disability supplement had been eaten up in this one trip to Price Rite. In total, she had spent over $500 in this one shopping trip.

Not surprisingly, there is a Check n’ Go payday lender less than 100 feet from the doors of the Price Rite, and an Advance America lender less than a 5 minute walk away.

Her disability stems from a hip injury that makes standing or sitting for long periods of time extremely painful. That pretty much rules out any job there is. She also has a four-year old daughter with autism. Her older children help her take  care of the youngster, which makes it difficult for them to find full-time work with a flexible enough schedule to continue to help with the care of the disabled girl.

The Woonsocket Shaw’s Supermarket on April 1, 2013.

As I drove to the Shaw’s, again less than a half-mile from the Price Rite, and expected to find a similar situation. Instead I was surprised to find a virtually empty parking lot. Aisles and  checkout lines were not overly crowded; some completely empty. A quick trip to the North Smithfield Stop and Shop showed a similar situation. Virtually empty lot, empty aisles, and short lines at the checkouts.

Supervalu Inc., the parent company of Shaw’s Supermarkets, is selling off five of its grocery chains, including Shaw’s and Albertson’s, after years of being squeezed by intensifying competition. The Woonsocket Shaw’s may be closed due to decreasing revenue.

Why is a supermarket in a city where one-third of the residents receive SNAP benefits not benefiting from expenditures of those benefits? How do companies like Shaw’s and Stop and Shop – that have many more locations in the region – not offer a price point that would make them competitive with the discount grocer?

Lastly, if – and more likely when – the Woonsocket Shaw’s location closes, the city will be left with only one supermarket. A supermarket that has a stigma amongst the middle-to-upper class remaining in Woonsocket as the “poor peoples market.” My last question is, how long will it be until those folks, by hook or by crook, are forced into shopping there?

Fox “News” And The War On Woonsocket’s Poor

If you didn’t know that local conservatives were going to take to Fox “News” to exploit Ken Block’s food stamp fraud report, I would like to bet you that the sun will rise tomorrow morning. Then, maybe we can go double or nothing on whether or not the days will get longer until late June, when they will then get shorter for about the next six months.

The Providence Journal this morning reprised Dave Fisher’s post from Friday about Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine going on Fox “News” and blaming the city’s economic woes on the fact that one in three residents needs SNAP benefits.

The ProJo picked up on the similar themes as did Fisher’s post*: Fontaine inaccurately claimed that Block’s report uncovered “massive fraud” (or, me and Fontaine have an entirely different idea of what the word massive means) and that even the Fox anchor was surprised that Fontaine was blaming the poor for the city’s problems.

Unfortunately Fontaine wasn’t the only conservative using Block’s investigation to bash our poor on national television.

Rep. Doreen Costa, the voice of the tea party in the General Assembly, was on a Fox segment that included not-too subliminal messages of “‘Rhode’ to Economic Disaster” and “Who is ruining our economy?”

Costa, whose major legislative accomplishment is a failed bill that would mandate drug tests for welfare recipients, is no stranger to this form poor-bashing-as-political-shell-game. Here’s how it works:

Fox: “Why is Rhode Island suffering so much?”

Costa: “Well, I think Rhode Island is suffering so much because we don’t have any jobs here and because no business friendly legislation has been put in up at the State House…”

Fox: “Do people at least recognize that this is a problem or are you the lone ranger in this?”

Costa: “I don’t think people up at the State House even think this is an issue, they just want to keep giving out and giving out and giving out…”

Fox: “If you are trying to help these people, do you think they are trying to help themselves?

Costa: “That’s a good question. We just had a major report…”

There’s a lot in here that is either blatantly wrong or half-true to the point of being misinformation.

  • Rhode Island is suffering from a lack of jobs, but it’s not the kind of jobs that the myriad of business-friendly legislation at the State House addresses. In other words, putting the DEM under an economy czar isn’t going to get anyone off food stamps in Woonsocket, probably few – if any – Woonsocket residents lost their jobs when 38 Studios failed and I’d reckon that doing away with the sales tax would do far more damage than good, in the short and long term
  • So I get that very few people in politics care that the mayor of Woonsocket and the state Rep. from North Kingstown are spreading lies and half-truths about Rhode Islanders living in poverty on Fox, but what do Costa’s legislative colleagues think of her spreading lies about them. The idea that no one at the State House thinks about these issues is not in any way, shape or form true.
  • I like Doreen plenty but the idea that she is “trying to help these people” on SNAP benefits, as the Fox reporter said, is cartoonishly incorrect. She may be a member of the middle class – Costa sells advertising for WPRO – but her overarching philosophy of trying to shrink government down until it can be drowned in a bathtub is nothing but bad news for the working and middle class folks of Rhode Island and good news for the corporate elite.

To date, I think Fisher – WHO LIVES IN WOONSOCKET – has done the most interesting journalism on the Washington Post’s Woonsocket piece. He points out that while the city and the schools are going bankrupt and a third of the residents – and the local economy itself – is reliant on SNAP benefits, Woonsocket is also home of Rhode Island’s largest private sector employer, CVS, which gets more than $15 million in local and state tax breaks and pays its CEO $18 million a year.

There’s something to all that that I believe is the major reason Rhode Island finds itself in such bad economic shape.

I think conservatives, moderates, liberals and progressives all agree that the state’s struggles are pretty much concentrated in our urban areas. And I think everyone also agrees that the systemic poverty in Woonsocket, West Warwick, Central Falls, Pawtucket and Providence is terribly bad for Rhode Island (I think it’s the state’s biggest economic obstacle). Here’s where there is disagreement: do we want to continue with austerity measure and trickle down ec0nomics or do we want to try some bottom-up solutions.

I don’t think the couple dozen ACI inmates who may – or may not be – scamming the system will affect either our real-life economy or our made-up CNBC rankings one way or another.

Fontaine On Fox News: Blames SNAP Not CVS


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“Is this America the one we want? One and a quarter million immigrants getting food stamps, one-third of the people in your town.” – Fox “News” to Woonsocket Mayor Leo Fontaine about the Washington Post’s story about SNAP benefits.

It isn’t just progressive news outlets like RI Future who are shining a light on the alarmingly high percentage of Woonsocket residents who can’t afford to feed themselves without public assistance. Fox “News” interviewed Mayor Leo Fontaine about the national spotlight the city finds itself in.

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“This comes down to a point of are serving a need or are we creating a need?” Fontaine says.

As a Woonsocket resident, a progressive blogger and a candidate for mayor, I would like to know if the current mayor thinks SNAP benefits are serving or creating a need. In fact, it’s this very question that makes the Post story so politically charged. It’s why it was big news this week for liberals, conservatives and moderates alike.

Speaking of moderates, Fontaine added immediately after big picture question, “Here in Rhode Island we just had a study done showing massive abuses of these programs, food stamps being going to people who are deceased, food stamps being given to people who are in prison.”

He was referencing, of course, Ken Block’s report on SNAP fraud.

Fontaine concluded his opening salvo on national television by showing the Fox anchor that a voter registration form comes attached to SNAP registration forms, which he finds troubling.

“I think that this gets to the very root of the problem that are we serving a problem or are we creating a problem,” he said.

Even the Fox employee was surprised by Fontaine’s conservative take on the situation.

“I’ve got to say I’m surprised to be hearing you saying this,” he said. “I thought I was going to be talking to a man who was a vigorous defender of the food stamp program because your town is so reliant on it.”

Woonsocket is on the verge of bankruptcy. The schools almost closed last year because they didn’t have enough money and more than half of our high school students failed the NECAP test. The Washington Post and Fox “News” are both talking about how our economic engine is the disbursement of food stamps.

And yet the biggest business in the state, CVS, is located here in Woonsocket. The starving city gives the Fortune 500 company $275,000 in local tax breaks.

The state is much more generous. It gives the former ALEC corporate member a $15.4 million annual tax break. Gary Sasse called it “corporate welfare or socialism for the well-connected” in Wednesday’s Providence Journal.

And while the state forgives the former ALEC member of half its annual tax bill for an employee tax break, CVS is asking employees to pay an extra $600 a year or submit to a more invasive health care screening, reports the Providence Journal this morning.

As Rhode Island and Woonsocket are struggling, the nation’s largest drugstore made $3.88 billion in 2012 and CEO Larry Merlo took home $18 million in salary and bonuses.

A third of Woonsocket is on food stamps, CVS’s CEO’s salary went up by a third and now he gets $3 million more than the state gives in tax breaks.

“It seems that that’s not quite the America we want to see,” said the Fox “News” anchor to Mayor Fontaine.

The Value of Agency


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A recent article in The Washington Post on the effects the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) has on Woonsocket has once again placed the federal program in Rhode Island’s sights. Though the article is an indictment of our collapsed economy, a single part of the article focusing on the family’s finances seems to have caught the attention of both right and left. Here’s the offending part:

For the past three years, the Ortizes’ lives had unfolded in a series of exhausting, fractional decisions. Was it better to eat the string cheese now or to save it? To buy milk for $3.80 nearby or for $3.10 across town? Was it better to pay down the $600 they owed the landlord, or the $110 they owed for their cellphones, or the $75 they owed the tattoo parlor, or the $840 they owed the electric company?

And here’s Marc Comtois over at Anchor Rising:

They made some of the all too typical mistakes: teen pregnancy, move in together, have another child on their already low income and all exacerbated by a recession where the low-skilled are first and worst hit. Their economic ignorance and inability to prioritize is displayed by their $110 cell phone bill and tatoo parlor debt. That won’t help earn them much sympathy.

Yet, while they don’t seem to really “get it”–and I don’t want to give them a pass–society and the system certainly enable their naivete and ignorance. In today’s world, having a cell phone is simply a given–well nigh a “right” in the eyes of many–and spending money on tatoo’s is another norm, like getting your ears pierced used to be. That’s what you spend your cash, your “extra” money, on. Food comes from SNAP.

Here’s our own Dave Fisher, linking this story to the educational models of the state:

While I can certainly empathize with this couple, the fact that tattoos are an expense in a budget this small is patently ridiculous. Even for those with disposable income, body art should be considered a luxury.

Why do they not know this? Is this a failure of our education system, or a failure on their parents’ part? Is it just poor decision making?

In any case, the esoteric mathematics knowledge supposedly assessed by the NECAP has no relevance in their lives. Knowledge of simple Home Economics, on the other hand, may actually help this young family squirrel away some money and someday be able to wean themselves from the teat of federal assistance…

…And I’ve got some news for you, folks: When they fail, we — the royal we — have failed.

I like both writers, and on most issues they could not be further apart, but here you see them neatly align, almost parroting their arguments (though there are significant differences between the two). I’ll get to their arguments, but first I want to make a media point.

Post continues on next page (see “Pages” below “Related Posts”)

Weekend Epiphanies: Oh, SNAP! I Failed the NECAP

Saturday afternoon, I joined lawmakers, legislators, educators, and other concerned citizens in taking the mock NECAP math test sponsored by the Providence Student Union at Providence’s Knight Memorial Library. I have to give the folks over at PSU a lot of credit for organizing this event. It certainly opened my eyes to what our soon-to-be graduates are facing in Rhode Island.

First, let me say this. I have not had any formal mathematics education in over 20 years. Even when I was taking courses in trigonometry, algebra, and pre-calculus on a daily basis, I struggled with the subject matter. I always managed at least a ‘B’ in these classes, but literature, history, and music were the areas in which I excelled.

Since high school, I have never entrusted my formal education to any particular institution. By that, I mean that I’m an over-read, under-educated multiple college dropout who, oddly enough, considers his life to this point to be a relative success. At the end of the day, I’m happy, and I sleep really well.

But I digress. I walked into the mock NECAP test on Saturday with no expectation of coming remotely close to passing, and when I opened the test booklet and read the first question, that expectation was immediately reinforced.

As I delved further into the test, furiously and with futility trying to brush the cobwebs from corners of my mind that never worked well in the first place, I started to think about the applicability of these conceptual and very specific mathematics within my daily life. To put it bluntly, I found none.

As an example, one of the questions was:

x>|x|

Name all the integers that make this expression true.

My mind raced. “How can x be greater than x? What do the open brackets mean? Is that absolute value? Why do I have the song Sundown by Gordon Lightfoot stuck in my head? Man, this is really difficult.”

I suppose the point is this.

I saw, on this test, a set of very specific problems that — unless you are planning on a career in mathematics or the applied sciences — have little to no relevance within the vast majority of career choices. Unless you are planning on a career as a builder of triangular prism shaped holding tanks, knowing how to calculate the volume of one is pretty useless knowledge.

Side note: I scored 10 percent on the test, and given the sense of utter and complete failure I had when leaving the library, I’ll take that as a victory.

On Sunday, I woke to an inbox full of links to a Washington Post story on the boom-and-bust retail cycle created by the first-of-the-month distribution of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, benefits in Woonsocket. One point of clarification for the Washington Post: Woonsocket is a city, not a town, thank you very much.

Sadly, a third of Woonsocket residents receive this assistance, and local food retailers experience a boom in sales on and around the first of any given month, and business drops off dramatically beginning in the second week of the month.

The young couple that is the focus of the story both work full-time at a local supermarket. They bring in about a combined $680 a week, before taxes. After taxes, that number shrinks to a bit over $450 per week. I would challenge anyone who dares say that those who collect state and federal assistance are “moochers” to attempt living on $1,400 a month without some type of assistance.

Now with the NECAP and mathematics fresh in my mind, a section of the article really jumped out at me. I read this paragraph in astonishment.

For the past three years, the Ortizes’ lives had unfolded in a series of exhausting, fractional decisions. Was it better to eat the string cheese now or to save it? To buy milk for $3.80 nearby or for $3.10 across town? Was it better to pay down the $600 they owed the landlord, or the $110 they owed for their cellphones, or the $75 they owed the tattoo parlor, or the $840 they owed the electric company?

While I can certainly empathize with this couple, the fact that tattoos are an expense in a budget this small is patently ridiculous. Even for those with disposable income, body art should be considered a luxury.

Why do they not know this? Is this a failure of our education system, or a failure on their parents’ part? Is it just poor decision making?

In any case, the esoteric mathematics knowledge supposedly assessed by the NECAP has no relevance in their lives. Knowledge of simple Home Economics, on the other hand, may actually help this young family squirrel away some money and someday be able to wean themselves from the teat of federal assistance.

I always thought that the point of teaching math isn’t really to learn math, it is to learn reasoning and problem solving skills in order to have the ability to make sound decisions; an area in which this young family, whether by lack of education or prioritization, is clearly failing. And I’ve got some news for you, folks: When they fail, we — the royal we — have failed.

WaPost Investigates RI SNAP Benefits Too


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The big story on the front page of the Washington Post this morning is the same one we’ve been talking about all week locally: the SNAP program. But instead of looking into the , the Post took a different angle: a third of Woonsocket is on food stamps and the local economy ebbs and flows with as does their dispersal.

Read this important story here

Food stamps, not job creators, are driving growth there. In other words, the private sector has failed Woonsocket.

This is not a scoop. Rhode Island has known for a long time that the cities with a lot of factories are the places that suffered the most when factory jobs left Rhode Island. So now Woonsocket, Central Falls, West Warwick, Pawtucket and Providence – the cities with the most factories – are all failing.

I firmly believe this is the biggest reason for Rhode Island’s economic mess and the most important issue facing the state. Not pensions or payday loans. Not high-stakes testing or binding arbitration. Not equitable taxes on businesses or their CEOs. Not welfare fraud and not corporate welfare. And not even the master lever or marriage equality.

I think Ken Block would do Rhode Island a great service by asking Chafee if he could use his considerable efforts and energy to look into why one in three people in Woonsocket can’t afford to feed themselves and why public sector assistance programs are driving the economy there.

In Woonsocket, What It Means To Be A Green


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One of the first questions people ask when I tell them that I’m running for mayor of Woonsocket is, “Are you a Democrat or Republican?” My usual response is, “Well, the election is non-partisan, and I don’t think a D or an R next to anyones name is particularly relevant when it comes to local government but, if you must know, I am a member of the Green Party of Rhode Island.”

This response is usually met with either a) a quizzical look, or b) “Oh, you’re one of them treehuggers.”

At this point, I will usually try to impress upon that person that, even though we may be surrounded by bricks, steel, and concrete in our urban environment, we are still part of nature. We do not have dominion over nature, and as we’re seeing with rising sea levels, more violent and frequent snow and rain storms, and longer and more intense heat waves, nature is, in fact, exhibiting dominion over us.

Now, I  am not the type to be out on the high seas, trying to sink whaling ships, or chaining myself to a tree to prevent development – I will say, however, that new development in a city and state that are losing population seems counter-intuitive – but I do understand that a reverence for nature and a restoration of the natural balance of the planet is in order to prevent the further economic and social degradation of our city, state, country, and planet.

Often, environmental protection and restoration, and the development of jobs and the economy are pitted against one another in the political arena. The arguments for favoring economic development over protecting the environment usually revolve around the creation of jobs. While we certainly could use an influx of jobs in Rhode Island, I believe the potential to create jobs in the environmental protection, restoration, and clean energy sectors is far greater than the potential in the traditional “job creators” in the retail, service, construction, and financial sectors.

Think of the amount of jobs that would be created if we invested in removing ourselves from fossil fuel-based energy production. Investments in solar, wind, geothermal, and waste-based energy production would create more, and more lasting, good paying jobs than continuing to invest in oil, coal, and natural gas fired energy production. These investments would create jobs throughout the spectrum of skill and pay grades, from the equipment operator used to prepare sites and install these technologies, to the scientists, engineers, architects, and designers who envision their implementation and continue to improve their efficiency. We will also need manufacturers to produce these technologies, and long-term jobs are created to provide for the maintenance of these technologies.

Investments in restoring the quality of our air, water, and soil would also create jobs in all of these sectors. Rhode Island, acre for acre, is the most polluted state in the country. If we decided to clean it up, we could create a lot of jobs.

As it stands, our entire economy is based on the production and consumption of a finite supply of fossil fuels. It is also assumed that, in order to have a healthy economy, it must grow at 2-3 percent  in perpetuity. Now, I’m no economist, but the idea that infinite growth can be based on the production and consumption of finite resources seems like a fantasy to me.

I’ve also heard from some recently, the belief that renewable energy sources and technologies cannot be sustained or advanced without federal subsidies. I could argue against the merits of this belief for days, but I think that the following is a more telling, and compelling, argument.

It would appear that the polluting fossil fuel industry cannot be sustained without them either.

According to a study and policy proposal by the conservative think-tank The Brookings Institute, the U.S. provides $4 billion per year in subsidies to these companies that power our lives, but pollute the commons in the process. The report also recommends eliminating nearly all of those subsidies. I should think that those dollars would be better spent on energy sources and technologies that can provide energy, don’t sully our air, water, and soil in the process, and actually stand to significantly improve  the quality of life for not just Americans, but the rest of the world as well.

In closing, I’ll offer you this, the Ten Key Values of the Green Party. Read through them. Most folks who consider themselves Democrats read them and say, “Wow! I’m really a Green.” I’ve even met quite a few folks who consider themselves Libertarians that read the values and switch.

You could choose between the right or the left, but wouldn’t you rather move forward?

Why I Am Running


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The first question that most folks ask me when I tell them that I’m running for mayor of Woonsocket is, “Are you crazy or just a glutton for punishment?”

Well, watching the degradation of our once thriving city certainly drives me nuts, but I don’t think I’m a masochist, so, I guess that that’s a yes and a no.

First, I love Woonsocket, and I am proud to have been raised and live here.

Our government – almost by its very nature – is a very reactionary beast

Now, I’m not saying that every problem we face is foreseeable, the disappearance of $10 million from Woonsocket’s School Budget that precipitated the activation of the Woonsocket Budget Commission being a prime example of this, but if we fail to plan for foreseeable problems, we will have fewer resources available to deal with the unforeseeable issues when they materialize. Our leaders definitely need to think on their feet, but it it important to not get caught flat-footed on easily recognized future issues. It is more important than ever for our leaders to have a vision for the future of our municipalities and state, and a plan that is guided by the voice of the people.

Voter participation in Woonsocket is atrocious

This, I believe, is due to many factors, but  I will outline two of them here.

One, the biggest – some may say only – voting bloc in Woonsocket is the elderly. Our parents and grandparents are clearly still very invested in the political process, but it seems that our youth and minority populations have given up on the political process, and who can blame them? You can only be marginalized for so long before you become disenfranchised. Our leaders have, quite frankly, pandered to the elderly population at the cost of every other potential voter in Woonsocket. If the youth and minority population wants to be heard and have their concerns addressed, the only option is to speak up at city council and school committee meetings, and at the polls. At the end of the day, whether you’re young or old, black or white, liberal or conservative, I think we can agree that what we want is a safe, prosperous community that attracts good families and businesses, and allows them to thrive and succeed.

Two, nothing seems to change for the better, no matter who we elect.

This fact has stopped the participation of some of the staunchest advocates of our political process. How often have we heard the refrain, “Why vote when nothing ever changes?” I think that this is largely due to the ideological approaches to government by both of the major parties. The left wants to raise taxes, the right wants to cut spending and services. In Woonsocket’s case, both things are happening.

Now, I’m no economist, but if taxes go up, there should be a corresponding increase in services, and if services are cut, taxes should go down. Woonsocket  seems to be in a Twilight Zone episode where taxes and services are inversely proportional. That said, I believe that we can certainly be more prudent and efficient in how we spend the little revenue that we do have, but, like any business owner will tell you, you don’t have to sell more widgets to make more money, you should first reduce your overhead.

What we need in a leader

We need a leader  that will break the mold of the old-school approaches to solving financial crisises, which are clearly not working. One only has to look to the City of Braddock, Pennsylvania and Mayor John Fetterman to see examples of how new approaches can revitalize failing cities and towns.

We need a leader that can reinvigorate our young people, and in a city that was built by immigrants, we definitely need to embrace and include those growing populations in the process.One of the biggest strengths of this city, state, and country is our diversity of cultures, creeds, and ideologies. We need to capitalize on that.

We need a leader that has a plan, but that plan needs to be guided by what the residents of Woonsocket want to see in their city and government. I’ll add that, just because someone doesn’t vote – or doesn’t vote for you – doesn’t mean that they are not constituents. To that end, I will begin a listening tour of the city in March  to hear the concerns and ideas of citizens and business owners alike.

There is a lot of negativity about Woonsocket, from within and without. We need to recognize our successes and potentials and put much more focus on those.

Most importantly, we, as citizens, must realize that the successes and failures of our cities, towns, states, and countries do not rest solely on the backs of our elected leaders. We are just as responsible for every outcome, good or bad. For better or worse, we are all in this together, so let’s come together and start watching our neighbors backs.

I urge all Woonsocket residents that have given up on or never participated the process to register to vote, because this November, you will see a very different mayoral candidate on the ballot.

For updates on the campaign, you can follow my blog, like my facebook page, and follow me on Twitter @DAFisherRI.

Dave Fisher To Run for Woonsocket Mayor


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Dave Fisher, campaign manager for congressional candidate Abel Collins and former editor at ecoRI.org, announced on a new blog today that he plans to run for mayor of Woonsocket. The site is called Dave Fisher for Mayor of Woonsocket.

“I really believe we can stop the downward slide of the city of Woonsocket by providing some new leadership and fresh ideas at the local level,” he said in a YouTube video posted to the blog. “It pains me to see the decline of this city that I grew up in that I have so much pride in.”

He also speaks of recreating a culture that values diversity, arts and public education. He does not mention if he will seek the support of the Democratic Party, which is traditionally conservative in Woonsocket. Fisher managed Collins campaign for CD1. Collins ran as an independent.

In his first blog post, he takes aim at current Mayor Leo Fontaine.

Fisher is best known as a local progressive journalist who has authored several posts for RI Future and many for EcoRI, where he served as an editor prior to working for Collins.

Progress Report: Why Public TV Matters; Public Cars for Legislators; Woonsocket School Committee; Climate Change


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Image courtesy of WeKnowMemes.com

Remember way back in the days when we feared Mitt Romney might become president and, if he did, he would cut public funding to PBS? Well Rhode Island already beat Romney to this nightmare scenario for liberals … WSBE Ch.36 is being transitioned off the state payroll beginning this month, reports Bill Rappleye of WJAR, and the local PBS affiliate now has about two years to become self-sustaining or else…

WSBE’s budget was dramatically cut in the 2012 state budget and both Gov. Chafee and the legislature should strongly consider reinstating the funding next year. Are there perhaps some potential synergies with Capitol TV? It’s easy to see why the mainstream media wouldn’t give much coverage to public broadcasting cuts, and WJAR deserves credit for reporting this story. It’s also easy to see why publicly financed television is important, in light of WPRI’s decision to keep Abel Collins out of its televised debate.

Speaking of WPRI, the other local TV station reports that state legislative leaders sometimes drive state vehicles to private events. It’s a well-reported story and plenty newsworthy but I often find myself wishing that Tim White would use his considerable investigative prowess to shed light on more meaningful issues than publicly-funded company cars and state workers who take long lunch breaks – like this one, for example. My guess is this type of red-meat-for-Republicans reporting is being driven by the same corporate forces and trickle down mentality that kept Collins out of the debate and thought Rhode Island needed a show catering to corporate executives…

And speaking of red meat for conservatives … Woonsocket voted to make school committee members appointed rather than elected officials. Town councilors and municipal officials across the state are no doubt jealous of the control the city just wrested away from the school department.

Look for financially-struggling West Warwick to be the next to consider this huge change in how local public education is managed.

Might Hurricane Sandy be the bellwether that gets Rhode Island to act on climate change? EcoRI runs a great piece that makes the case it should … meanwhile legislative heavyweights Sen Josh Miller and Rep. Chris Blazejewski are teaming up to study the effects of climate change on the Ocean State.

Here are some of the best overreactions to Obama being reelected. Though my favorite wing nut of the week is the Montana legislator who asked for his salary in gold and solver coin.

If you don’t think Republicans’ war on taxes is a part and parcel of class warfare, famed GOP strategist Lee Atwater might agree with you … but, then, he seemed to think it was part and parcel of a race war!

On this day in 1776, a British newspaper reports that former friend to England Ben Franklin has taken up with the revolutionaries in the American colonies…

Stephen Casey for Woonsocket State Rep


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The fact that Stephen Casey requires endorsement is a bit ludicrous, considering he defeated his Democratic primary opponent by a safe margin and has no other party opponent on the ballot come November 6. But a “Do over, ‘cuz I wasn’t ready!” write-in campaign by his primary opponent has Casey continuing his election efforts in order to ensure the Woonsocket, District 50 House seat is his.

And it damn well should be.

Stephen Casey deserves this seat on merit alone. The twelve-year Woonsocket resident is a firefighter and the son of a current town politician. He and his wife, Debra, own a home on Park Ave. where he mows his own lawn and pays taxes on his house and two older cars. In Woonsocket, his taxes are higher than he would like, but necessary to avoid desperate measures for Woonsocket, such as the city being handed to a receiver to be taken into bankruptcy. Casey is willing to accept this current sacrifice as a necessary reality, but hopes that, as a representative, he can provide a strong voice to bring Woonsocket back to economic, middle class stability.

Casey holds a degree in communications from Boston College and, before becoming a firefighter, he worked in the financial industry in both customer service and supervisory roles. He supports serious reconsideration of the state tax codes, instituted in 2006 and re-instituted in 2010. The regressive tax policies were initially designed to attract job creators by “simplifying” the tax codes. In reality, the policies gave tax breaks to the wealthiest Rhode Islanders and left working families to make up the difference. Apparently, seeing as the state boasts the second highest levels of unemployment in the nation, (and, according to the RI DLT’s LMI, Woonsocket’s are higher than state average) the current tax system has not served its purpose. Casey supports tax equity, where millionaires and working families all pay their fair share of taxes. Furthermore, Casey believes in a long term approach to attracting business to Woonsocket, starting with straightening out the city’s school system, thereby making it a desirable place to raise a family. He emphasizes Woonsocket as being a well located community, but businesses are moving out rather than moving in. Casey aims to change that.

Stephen Casey believes in a hands on approach to everything he does. He has personally marched the streets of the city, knocking on doors and offering a winning smile and an open mind. He listens and offers main street solutions to problems created by wall street and its supporters. He attends School Committee and Council meetings to find out what the people say about Woonsocket’s strengths and weaknesses.

At a fundraiser event held at a local Woonsocket tavern, one found, not only suits and ties but jeans and Patriots jerseys as well. This reflects Casey’s attitude toward making change his highest priority. “I never fancied myself a politician.” he said in an interview. Rather, he saw a problem and decided to take a level headed approach to helping to solve that problem. He discussed it with his wife and the two agreed to tackle the problem from the middle class out and the bottom up.

Stephen Casey is a newcomer to politics and he believes in taking the high road. When asked about his message he says, “I’ve never been into name calling … people are tired of hearing it.” He wants people to get out and vote. That is their right as Americans and he emphasizes the sacrifices Americans have made throughout history for that right. And if they are tired of politics as usual and desire change, vote for Stephen Casey.

In this author’s opinion, they already have and that is why Casey took the primary. The people of district 50 made their decision once and now, in spite of the obstacles that have been placed before him in what should be a clear road to the House of Representatives seat for Woonsocket, the people will vote again. If they want an honest, hard working, hands-on candidate determined to do whatever is in his power to change Woonsocket and Rhode Island for the better, they will vote Stephen Casey.

For these reasons, my endorsement for House of Representatives: District 50 – Woonsocket goes to Stephen Casey.

RI Small Businesses: Beware of ALEC’s Minions


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Jon Brien recently announced that he would be running a write-in campaign to retain his seat in Rhode Island’s House of Representatives.

At a press conference to announce the egotistical continuation of his campaign on September 20, Brien was surrounded by owners of local business including Pepin Lumber, The Burrito Company, and American Beauty Signworks. This is pretty ironic, given his involvement in the ultra-conservative American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).

ALEC is an organization that promulgates legislation written by, and to the benefit of, giant corporations, like Wal-Mart, Home Depot, and hundreds of others, the vast majority of which make no bones about the fact that the expansion of their operations inherently drives small, local businesses out-of-business.

Why these business owners would choose to support a candidate that is involved in an organization that is actively trying to decrease their market share is beyond comprehension.

Brien is much more than just a member of ALEC, he serves on its board of directors. He and Republican state Senator Francis Maher, Jr. serve as ALEC’s co-chairs in Rhode Island.

The majority of business owners and citizens in Woonsocket — whether they support Brien or the winner of the primary, Stephen Casey — would agree that our taxes are too high, but that statement invariably has an unspoken addendum, which is, “Our taxes are too high in relation to the services provided in return.

Brien can rail against the tax rate all he wants, but where and when has he ever demanded a proportionate increase in city and state services in return for those high rates? He hasn’t, and that’s because he is a small-government neo-conservative masquerading as a Democrat.

I would urge all small business owners in Rhode Island to be wary of supporting candidates that are in any way associated with ALEC. The last thing this state needs is an influx of big-box stores and corporations — or legislation that favors them over the small businesses that contribute to the character, richness, and the local economy of our great state. They may set up shop here, but the jobs they create are usually low-paying, providing few or no benefits to their employees, and their corporate profits often wind up out-of-state, and in many cases, overseas.

Jon Brien Lays Blame

Joining an ever growing list of sore losers, most recently his friend Doug Glabinske, Jon Brien announced a write-in candidacy for House District 50 today; the same seat he lost in the recent primary to Stephen Casey. Citing administrative issues for people not being able to vote or being sent to the wrong polling place, Brien wouldn’t lay blame on anyone or group specifically, but alluded to the fact that he lost because constituents couldn’t vote. The problem with that line of reasoning, though, is that even if voters were at the wrong polling place and couldn’t go elsewhere or weren’t helped, they could have cast provisional ballots that would have been counted later, if necessary.

Brien then went on to blame the public employee unions for targeting him. However when naming his opponent, he went out of his way to say about being a union member, “There’s nothing wrong with that.”

Brien blames the city’s fiscal woes on public unions but doesn’t attend Budget Commission hearings, even though he’s been asked multiple times by chairman Bill Sequino. If he did educate himself about the city’s finances, he might learn that every one of the municipal unions in the city has made concessions over the past two contract cycles, with the firefighters giving up the most. Speaking about what he believes to be the cause of the city’s problems, Jon Brien should take the time to learn exactly why the city’s finances are the way they are.

However, as stated above, he’s never attended a  hearing of the state-appointed body that may ultimately decide the city’s future. Instead he cites professional obligations. Isn’t part of his professional obligation to his constituents to be current on matters concerning the city he represents? How much different is attending a 3 pm meeting of the budget commission than getting to the State House for the Rise of the House? Disengaging from problems demonstrates irresponsibility, not leadership.

Much of the fiscal woes facing the city today are a direct result of a lack of leadership. For years, city administrations refused to raise taxes. While that worked to get re-elected, it put the city in a deep hole. Most of the blame is now laid on the school department, but looking deeper, the school committee will respond that they were in debt years ago when the school funding formula vote was taken in the RI House, supported by Rep. Brien, and that caused the struggling system even further into debt.

When it comes to the supplemental tax, Mr. Brien states he wouldn’t vote for anything until he saw a concrete plan. However, he never met with city officials to offer any advice, leaving Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt to take the leadership role on the issue. On the subject of his co-sponsorship of the 38 Studios deal, he says they were given incomplete information and the only reason his name was added was because he had been involved in EDC legislation in the past. The question remains though, if unable to vote for a incomplete supplemental tax bill, then why vote for a bill releasing hundreds of millions of dollars when not in complete knowledge of the details?

If anything was learned from this press conference, it was that one man’s ego was bruised and he can’t accept that he was voted out of office and will do anything to hold onto power.


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