Prov City Council votes to divest from fossil fuels


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providence chity council president meme

In a victory for the national movement urging colleges and cities to divest from fossil fuels, the Providence City Council voted this Thursday to divest from the fossil fuel industry. The resolution, introduced by Council President Michael Solomon and Council Majority Leader Seth Yurdin, commits the city to divesting its assets from the top 200 fossil fuel companies because of the industry’s contribution to the climate crisis.

“The Council has a moral obligation to ensure that no public money is being used to promote industries or practices that harm the health and well-being of the people of Providence,” said Yurdin. “Fossil fuels are a major contributor to rising amounts of carbon dioxide, and global warming is already approaching dangerous levels.”

With this resolution, Providence joins 15 other municipalities –including Seattle, San Francisco, and Madison– as well as 6 colleges that have already pledged to divest. Amongst the cities, Providence is the first state capital and the largest east coast city to divest.

Abel Collins, manager of the Rhode Island Chapter of the Sierra Club, celebrated the council’s decision. “Cities around the country will follow the leadership of Providence, the schools of the city too. In the process, more people will be educated about the danger posed by the fossil fuel industry, and perhaps even the political will to deal with the problem in Washington will at last be found. The City Council should be applauded for being on the right side of history.”

At the vote on Thursday, a group of Rhode Island climate activists rallied outside the council chambers in City Hall to show their support for divestment. The group, called Fossil Free Rhode Island (FFRI), is calling for divestment of the state, as well as all Rhode Island municipalities and public universities. To date, Fossil Free Rhode Island has collected over 400 petition signature in support of divestment, and has received the endorsement of a number of local business and nonprofits, including the South-East New England Program of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC-SENE). FFRI is part of a national fossil fuel divestment campaign that has spread to over 300 colleges and 100 cities, states, and religious institutions over the last 9 months.

“The growth of the national Fossil Free movement has been incredibly quick, and the victory in Providence will inspire the divestment movement at Rhode Island’s colleges. Divesting from fossil fuels is crucial for institutions truly dedicated to providing their students with a sustainable future.” said Peter Nightingale, a professor at The University of Rhode Island and a member of Fossil Free Rhode Island.

(The material presented above is from a press release issued by Fossil Free Rhode Island yesterday. For the resolution of the Providence City Council follow this link.)

Providence City Council considers fossil fuel divestment


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providence city council president memeThe fossil fuel industry is sitting on enough proven reserves to pump five times as much carbon pollution into atmosphere as it can withstand to still support a climate conducive to human civilization. The stock valuations of Big Oil and Big Coal are dependent on business plans that demands these reserves be burned. Indeed these companies are spending billions of dollars exploring for more. A way must be found to keep the dirty fuels in the ground. Unfortunately, the political power of the fossil fuel industry has thwarted every federal legislative effort to regulate carbon. It’s up to us now.

At Thursday’s Providence City Council meeting, a fossil fuel divestment resolution introduced by Majority Leader Seth Yurdin and backed by Council President Michael Solomon with enough other members to ensure passage will be taken up for consideration.

If the resolution passes (as seems likely), Providence will be the 16th municipality in the country to commit to divesting. Providence has a special place among the 16, because  it will become the only Capital City and the biggest city on the East Coast to make this bold statement against what has truly become a rogue industry.

The fossil fuel divestment initiative, branded simply Fossil Free, is the brainchild of 350.org founder Bill McKibben who came to Brown University in November as part of his nationwide barnstorming “Do The Math” tour. The tour sparked a movement on college campuses across the country now at 300 schools and counting, including strong campaigns at Brown, RISD, and the RI State Schools. The movement has clearly now spread beyond campuses to other large institutions. The growth of the Fossil Free movement has been astoundingly quick, faster than the Anti-South African Apartheid disinvestment movement of the late 1970s and 1980s upon which it is patterned.

I like to imagine the CEOs of the fossil fuel industry are beginning to squirm a little in their seats. While their share prices have not yet taken a hit, the combined investment funds of schools, churches, and municipalities makes up a very big number, more than a trillion dollars. If it’s all disinvested from fossil fuel stocks, the impact will be material financially. The bigger impact however is the public relations dilemma that the industry faces, which is potentially a much bigger financial liability.

Environmentalists are overcoming the billion dollar advertising budget of the fossil fuel giants. Using grassroots power, Fossil Free has finally been able to paint the most profitable industry in the history of the planet as the dangerous villain it has become. That’s why the symbolism of the Providence vote on Thursday will be more important than the tens of thousands of dollars that the City will eventually divest from fossil fuel companies.

Cities around the country will follow the leadership of Providence, the schools of the City too. In the process, more people will be educated about the danger posed by the fossil fuel industry, and perhaps even the political will to deal with the problem in Washington will at last be found. The City Council should be applauded for being on the right side of history. Consider coming down to City Hall on Thursday to do it in person.

Legacy of an organizer – Richard Walton and The Red Bandana Fund


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A very special event is happening this Sunday, continuing a legacy of community engagement created by the late Richard Walton.

To recognize those who keep working to right what's wrong.
To recognize those who keep working to right what’s wrong.

The 1st annual Red Bandana Concert is being held at 3pm at Shea High School 485 East Ave in Pawtucket. The purpose is to establish The Red Bandana Fund which will give an annual award to those groups and/or individuals that best carry on the ideals of Richard Walton. You can buy tickets here: http://www.soup.org/page1/RedBandana.html

Every summer, Richard would hold a magnificent gathering of community activists, artists, musicians and friends on his birthday at his shoreline house in Pawtuxet. A cigar box was placed on a card table and people were asked to make a contribution to Amos House or the Providence-Niquinohomo Sister City Project. People brought their checkbooks, food, drink, instruments, friends and their children for a full day of fun and companionship. The last party held there was in 2011 where as Richard billed it his 80th birthday Part IV. The year after, Richard did not have the energy to hold it at his house so the last one was successfully held at the Roots Cultural Center. Here’s what he sent me to announce it:

Hi, Steve:  I'm so damn disorganized.  I've probably already asked you this but I wanted to make sure.  You have such a wide circle of friends and I hope you are spreading the word about my 80th Birthday Party, Part V on Sunday afternoon, May 27 at Roots.  I just ran out of steam and didn't have the energy to pull together another big party here ... but Bill Harley and Len Cabral had the terrific idea of holding it at Roots, a damn good place.  This may well be my Last Hurrah but I didn't want what had become a tradition to end with no notice.  I hope it's a success.  More details follow ... and I certainly expect to see you there.  Thanks for your help.  Richard.

This year would have been his 85th birthday. When he passed, numerous people expressed the desire to continue the party both out of respect and to continue to support the causes Richard pushed for his entire life. So on Sunday, the tradition will be reborn with performances from some of Richard’s favorite musicians and a gathering of Richard’s large group of friends. Proceeds will benefit Richard’s organizations  with a silent auction and raffle and the sale of actual, Red Bandanas, imprinted with the image of Richard that you see here.

Local musician and two time Grammy winner Bill Harley put it this way:

This Sunday is the first annual benefit concert for the Red Bandana Fund honoring Richard Walton’s life and work. The first Red Bandana Award will be given to Amos House, an organization that truly represents Richard’s spirit and ideals.
If you’re in the Rhode Island area, we’d love you to be there. Richard Walton was one of my dearest friends, and I miss him every day. He was a very kind man, and very supportive, and also resolute in his commitment to the least in our society. The Red Bandana Award will be given annually, and we hope to make the concert annual, too.
My gut feeling on this is that the Award will become a focal point and affirmation of all the incredible work being done in southeastern New England, and will be a way for all of us active in issues of peace and justice to touch base with each other. I think it’s going to be around a long, long time.

I’m sure Richard would have loved this – I only wish he were here to see it.
Come if you can – it will be a great time. And a memorable one, too.

On behalf of the Red Bandana Fund committee, we invite you to come and lend your support for this unique event, the first of what we hope to be many as we continue to honor the life of this remarkable man.

To learn more about Richard Walton, you can read my posts on his passing here http://www.rifuture.org/rip-richard-walton-you-taught-us-how-to-live-part-12.html and here www.rifuture.org/rip-richard-walton-you-taught-us-how-to-live-part-22.html.

 

March Against Monsanto: Providence protests Frankenfood

frankefood rallyMillions of people this Memorial Day weekend enjoyed barbecues with all the genetically modified fixings. Most did so without a thought about how the world’s food supply is being forever altered for Monsanto’s personal profit. But not everyone spent the beginning-of-summer celebration stuffing their faces with Frankefood. On Saturday, more than two million people in 436 cities across the planet took to the streets to March Against Monsanto.

Here’s what the protest looked like in Providence – video by of Paul Hubbard and the soundtrack courtesy of Jared Paul, both local activists.

Telling a story about Councilwoman Castillo


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Indie Wire ImageThis is the beginning of an ongoing blog about making Councilwoman Castillo – The Film. Why make this film in the first place? It’s not just that Carmen Castillo is an inspiration to me. Of course she is. She is the salt of the earth. Committed beyond 100% to her community and her family. She can’t be bought off. It’s not unheard of to find a politician like that, but pretty rare.

So, you are thinking, this filmmaker is biased. Yes, it is a film with a point of view. But am I right? Is this the story we are telling? The film is about the unknown. We are following Castillo’s first term in office. Your guess is as good as mine as to how this story ends. Like the film on Facebook!

There are huge challenges for anyone elected to office, and I believe the challenges are greater for someone whose job requires they punch in and out for a regular shift each and every working day. It is hard to juggle meetings with constituents while cleaning 16 hotel rooms. This story will give us a behind the scenes perspective of what it takes to succeed. What does our democracy really look like on the inside? Why aren’t there more low-wage workers in public office? Watch the trailer on Kickstarter!

Social change is never about one person. The film will follow the collective efforts to bring change that take place in Carmen’s community during her first term in office. What will the issues be? What are the forces that will come together to make an impact? Does it help community activists to focus on politics, or is it a waste of time?

This is also a film about cleaning hotel rooms. We never hear from those who do the hardest work, but in this film we will! And when there are hotel workers in Providence fighting for better working conditions, we’ll follow that too.

Documentary serves many purposes. One is to save a record of current struggles for generations to come. If we don’t document what we believe is important, then our stories will get left out of the history books of the future. I think this story should be included.

I hope this film will start a national conversation. We all complain that we get more of the same out of our politicians, and most of us are not happy about it. How would public policy change if more low-wage workers were elected to office?

Kickstart the film! I’ll be blogging about production in the months ahead.

PVD Councilwoman Carmen Castillo: the movie


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

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

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

Guerney writes:

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

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

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

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

If Superman goes housing, make it mixed income


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The Superman Building from Smith Hill. (Photo by Bob Plain)
The Superman Building from Smith Hill. (Photo by Bob Plain)

With the fate of the Superman building unknown, downtown Providence could look very different in a few years. I’m relatively new to Rhode Island, but don’t want the state’s most well-known building to be housing only for the uppercrust.

Such redevelopment could not only gentrify downtown and push low income residents further out of Downcity which limits their ability to get to work and partake in the dynamic life of the city, but it also limits the ability of the city to attract the “creative class” that has been time and again pointed to as a way to rejuvenate a city’s economy (most recently by Governor Chaffee in his NYT justification for signing the same-sex marriage bill).

The thing is, there is a way to both revitalize downtown and ensure that it does not lock out either the poor that need access to the services (like the busses) and the jobs that the city has to offer or the creative class that may one day have the money to purchase high-income residences but maybe not the first time they buy or rent a home.

What Providence needs is a good model for integrated housing success. That can be found in Montgomery County, MD.

As early as 1974, Montgomery County developed a mixed income housing plan that required all new developments to include low and middle income housing if they wanted to build high-income housing. A pretty thorough description of Montgomery County’s plan can be found here, but the model breaks down to three components:

  • All new housing developments have to include a) a section of low income housing b) a section of middle income market rate housing.
  • A sizable chunk of the new housing is available for the county to purchase through it’s housing administration.
  • The housing administration then uses the low income housing for two things: 1) for section 8 voucher recipients and 2) to help low income residents purchase their first properties.

What Montgomery County developments mainly look like now is a dream for land use planners. It is more racially and economically integrated than most of the U.S. and it is relatively sustainable.

The thing is, the plan also resulted in some other not-necessarily foreseen consequences: good schools and a sustainable government structure.

Instead of having all the poor and poorly prepared students housed in schools segregated from the high performing schools which results in a bifurcated system where the poor kids get locked into low performing schools and the rich kids either opt out of the system or stay in locally based high performing public schools not available to kids from across town, Montgomery County has diverse AND high performing schools.

In fact, Montgomery County is ranked as one of the best school systems in the country. And what’s more, they have done better than almost all other school systems at decreasing the race and economic gap in test scores. The reason is obvious—struggling students are not all housed together in struggling schools. Instead struggling students are placed in the same schools (with the same funds) as high performing students. No school is overwhelmed by struggling students, they each have a mix to work with.

But they also have enough money to do so since the tax base includes people from all walks of life—not just the poor and not just the rich.

But if people can’t be persueded by what’s best for all incomes, we might want to consider what’s best for the future economic growth of the city. The “creative class” does not necessarily start life rich. They are artists, technicians, programmers, and engineers. They are also almost uniformly young–too young to have much financial capital at their fingertips for down payments on high-priced homes. Their careers are usually marked by relative poverty (or at least relative lower middle classism) as they embark on starting new businesses or enter their first jobs in tech firms. So if they can’t find housing close to what the city has to offer, they will go to a different city where they can get around without a car and still be able to access the cultural life they thrive on.

Montgomery County has a thriving technology industry and they are second to Boston in the number of biotech companies that are housed within their borders. Most of these were once start-ups where the owners and workers made very little in the first few years, and those companies that have found their footing and turned into money making ventures have stayed because their workers like where they live.

Downcity gentrification vs. big picture masterplan


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The Superman Building from Smith Hill. (Photo by Bob Plain)
The Superman Building from Smith Hill. (Photo by Bob Plain)

The Superman building is certainly one of – if not the – most iconic architectural structures in the Ocean State. We don’t want to lose that. But what’s happening with the inside the building is a pretty iconic example of the current economy. We do want to lose that.

111 Westminster began its existence as the George Bailey-esque Industrial Trust Tower in 1927 and, over the years, became the Fleet Tower, then briefly BankBoston, until eventually being swallowed up by Bank of America – the real life incarnation of Mr. Potter’s fictional evil empire.

It’s not hyperbole to note that the Christmas classic about community concern versus rampant capitalism “It’s a Wonderful Life” predicted that local bank profiteering would devolve into Bank of America-esque entities that would eventually turn on our economy. And that’s exactly what is happening. No Rhode Islander should be doing their banking with this company as they do this to our economy and our Capital City’s centerpiece (Pawtucket Credit Union and Bank Newport are local alternatives).

Going forward, I think it’s important the Superman building remain an iconic symbol of Rhode Island – and our economy. I’m not sold on the idea of more high-end housing, but I’m not viscerally opposed to the idea either. In general, I think it’s a wise use of resources for the government to assist the private sector, and see few similarities to giving Curt Schilling $75 millions to make a video game.

It’s the over-gentrification of Downcity that concerns me. The Nation recently published a special issue called “The Gilded Age: Bloomberg’s New York” that I suspect contains many cautionary tales for Providence, and other cities.

Similarly, I have concerns about turning Kennedy Plaza into a a parking lot for food trucks and other entrapments for upscale urban yuppies.

“The belching diesel fumes and comings and goings of bus passengers too often give this part of our capital city the feel of a third world country,” .

I strongly disagree. In fact, I think Kennedy Plaza is the one place in the state where one can find a cross-section of Rhode Islanders – suburban executives are just as likely to commute to the Capitalist Grill as urban ditch diggers are to take the bus to work. It isn’t bad when these diverse users of downtown Providence have to look each other in the face now and again.

I really like the idea of doing a big master planning effort that extends from the State House to the waterfront. It doesn’t seem to make much sense to make isolated decisions about the common future for the Superman building, Kennedy Plaza, the Dynamo House, the Jewelry District, Shooters and Conley’s Wharf. In fact, i think it’s a good urban planners dream come true. Rhode Island a once in a millennium opportunity to redevelop this entire swath of our capital city into a shining centerpiece for the Ocean State.

111 Photographs of 111 Westminster Street - by Peter Green, aka @downcityhawk. Click on the image for more info on this poster he made.
111 Photographs of 111 Westminster Street – by Peter Green, aka @downcityhawk. Click on the image for more info on this poster he made.

GCPVD on Prov. project: ‘A greater Kennedy Plaza’

This is what Kennedy Plaza could look like. Click here or on the image to read @GCPVD‘s post on the plan, who calls it a “A Greater Kennedy Plaza.”

"A Greater Kennedy Plaza"

Alisha Pina of the Providence Journal also has a good story here. She writes:

Plans will officially be New vision emerges revealed Thursday at 5:30 p.m. in the Providence Biltmore Ballroom. Governor Chafee and Mayor Angel Taveras are hosting the event. Honorary chairmen are U.S. Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse, and U.S. Representatives David Cicilline and James Langevin.

Wood says the entire project could cost $20 million and take, depending on how quickly they raise the money, four years to complete.

This I think is a fantastic project for Providence, i think. I note that the rendering includes street cars, which would also be a great thing for the Capital City.

Citizen Diplomacy: Cutler Unites Copenhagen, Providence


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Andy Cutler from Cutler and Company has started a unique citizen diplomacy project called Smaller Cities Unite!  The premise is actually quite simple, and pretty awesome.

He is creating a new model for connecting cool, smaller cities (those with less than 1.5 million population) across the world.  Smaller Cities Unite! seeks to form mutually beneficial collaborations among partner cities on multiple levels: student engagement, economic development, arts and culture, policy, and entrepreneurship.

Andy is recently back from his trip to Copenhagen, the first partner city included in Smaller Cities Unite!  While there, he met with 50-60 individuals over the course of about 11 days.  Why Copenhagen?  There are several reasons, namely:

  1. Both cities are amongst the first settled on their respective continents (Copenhagen in 1137 and Providence in 1636);
  2. Both are “college” towns rich in academic assets (Copenhagen has 14 colleges and universities and Providence has 7);
  3. Similar in geographic size (Copenhagen encompasses 34 square miles and Providence 20.5 square miles); population size (Copenhagen has 1.2 million residents and Providence has 180,000, but the Greater Providence Area has upwards of 1 million and is the 2nd largest city in New England and represents the 37th largest metro area in the U.S.)
  4. Both cities are globally acclaimed for their arts and design communities;
  5. Both cities are “gateway cities” (Copenhagen is not only a gateway city to Scandinavia, but also to most of Western Europe; Providence is a gateway city along the I-95 corridor in the Northeast Region of the U.S. stretching from Maine to Washington, D.C.)
  6. Language is not a barrier between Providence and Copenhagen as over 80% of Danes generally speak English.

But more importantly, Copenhagen does some things very well that Providence can learn from and Providence does things very well that it can teach Copenhagen.

I sat down with Andy on Wednesday to interview him about his experience.  Watch the video here:

One of the most important themes from his trip is that Copenhagen is very receptive to this sort of partnering, especially because it would be a mutual learning experience.  Smaller Cities Unite! is just as much about sharing information as it is collecting information.  Says Andy, “we weren’t just asking, we wanted to give too.”

  • Copenhagen is a world leader in bicycle infrastructure design for cities, something that would be incredibly helpful as the Providence Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission develops strategies for Mayor Angel Taveras to promote biking and walking in Providence.
  • Copenhagen (and Denmark) has committed to become completely energy independent by the year 2050. And to demonstrate its seriousness, the country generated 40% of its energy from renewable sources by 2012, eight years ahead of schedule.  As the Deepwater Wind project continues to move forward, there are likely lessons to be learned from Copenhagen’s experience with renewable energy.
  • Betaspring in Providence is unique and innovative in its approach to entrepreneurship and is recognized globally for the effectiveness of its 12-week accelerator program at growing, scaling, and funding companies.  Are there opportunities for the numerous entrepreneurs in Providence and Copenhagen to connect, partner, and break into new global markets?  There’s only one way to find out.
  • Providence has a much deeper sense of community and a much more tightknit network of support and collaboration, particularly for tech and design, than does Copenhagen.  Establishing this framework in Copenhagen and between Providence and Copenhagen will likely benefit both cities.

Establishing the initial connection was just the first step.  Andy is now thinking about what structures are necessary to make Smaller Cities Unite! a sustainable network of interchanges between Providence and Copenhagen to actualize the transfer of knowledge and ideas on an ongoing basis.  As the private sector was the initial source of the funding, they are likely to be necessary for future funding.  Additionally, there may be opportunities for foundation grant funding, or even public sector funds to promote and expand the project.  Anyone who is interested in donating time, resources, or ideas for the project should contact Andy Cutler at andy@cutlerandcompany.com or @andypvd.

Finally, Andy is grateful to his initial donors for this trip and wanted to identify them by name for their generous support.

Join The Movement: Marijuana Strategy Session


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The strategy for developing effective and safe marijuana reform is now underway. And we need your help.

The Coalition for Marijuana Regulation will be holding two important strategy meetings this week to help supporters develop effective testimonies for the upcoming bill hearing and plan actions to build support for the bill. The first meeting will be on Friday (2/22) from 2PM-4PM, and the second will be on Saturday (2/23) from 2:30PM-4:30PM, both in the Community Room of Rochambeau Library (708 Hope St.). Come to the meeting that best fits your schedule.

Please contact rebecca.e.mcgoldrick@gmail.com for further inquiries.

Providence Is Recovering


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras delivering his 2012 State of the City address. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Governor, Mr. President, honorable members of the Providence City Council, distinguished guests, and my fellow residents of our great Capital City –

One year ago I stood before you in this Chamber with an urgent message for our City and the entire State of Rhode Island. Providence was in peril. Despite many difficult decisions and painful sacrifices made to pull Providence back from the brink, we were still $22 million short of closing a $110 million structural deficit.

Crucial steps necessary to navigate our City safely through our Category 5 fiscal hurricane had not yet come to pass. We still needed to reform our unsustainable pensions. And we needed Providence’s large, tax-exempt institutions to contribute more.

As I stood before you on February 13, 2012, Providence was running out of cash, and running out of time. In the months that followed, there were some who said Providence could not avoid filing for bankruptcy.

BACK FROM THE BRINK

Today it is my privilege to deliver a much more hopeful report on the State of our City: Providence is recovering.

Through collaborative efforts and shared sacrifice, we have all but eliminated our City’s $110 million structural deficit, and we expect to end this year with a balanced budget. Working together, we have accomplished what few believed possible.

We were determined to address the root causes of Providence’s fiscal emergency and prepared to act unilaterally if necessary. And we knew our City would never achieve a lasting recovery without addressing our unsustainable and spiraling pension costs.

In April, following months of actuarial analysis and public testimony, this City Council unanimously approved a pension reform ordinance that put Providence’s pension system on a sustainable path.

We recognized that passing the ordinance would likely lead to a high-stakes lawsuit with no real winners – because a decision in favor of the status quo would push our City over the brink. However, faced with the challenge of negotiating pension changes with more than 2,000 retirees who were not represented by a single entity, we saw no alternative.

Fortunately, Superior Court Judge Sarah Taft-Carter ordered all parties into mediation, and an unlikely path to pension reform presented itself. Negotiations continued with our unions and our retirees, as we all committed to addressing Providence’s challenges collaboratively and in a way that pulls us together instead of tearing us apart.

Last month, Providence’s police officers – who serve and protect our City every single day and have not had a raise in six years – joined with Providence’s firefighters and retirees in agreeing to a landmark reform of our City’s pension system.

The agreement caps pensions, eliminates 5 and 6% compounded COLAs that were strangling our system, suspends all other cost of living raises and moves retirees over 65 into Medicare. It saves our pension system from eventual, inevitable insolvency, and reduces Providence’s unfunded liability by an estimated $200 million.

We owe deep thanks to our City workers from Laborers Local 1033, who were the first to agree to contract concessions to help our City, and then stepped up again to negotiate on pension reform. Thank you to Donald Iannazzi, Ron Coia, Vicki Virgilio and Local 1033.

Thank you to Providence’s firefighters and to Paul Doughty, Phil Fiore and Local 799. Thank you to the
Providence Police, and to Taft Manzotti, Clarence Gough and FOP Lodge 3. Thank you to Providence’s teachers and to Steve Smith and the Providence Teachers Union.

We extend a very special thank you to our retirees, who served our City honorably and have been called upon to accept pension changes in their golden years to help save our City. And let us not forget Providence’s homeowners and business owners for the sacrifices they have made.

I say it again. Providence is recovering.

Following our dire warnings a year ago that we would fall into the dark hole of insolvency without help from every stakeholder in our City, all of our major tax-exempt institutions joined us in pulling Providence back from the brink.

In a demonstration of leadership for which I will be forever grateful, Johnson & Wales University was the first to heed our call – committing to at least triple their contribution to Providence.

Brown University, a world-renowned institution and an engine of our City’s economy, stepped forward with a commitment of $31.5 million over 11 years.

The Rhode Island School of Design, recently named the best design school in the world, committed to more than double its annual contribution to our City.

And Providence College agreed to contribute an additional $3.84 million in the coming decade.

For the first time in Providence’s history, our three major health care institutions – Lifespan, Care New England and CharterCARE – agreed to contribute a combined $1.15 million a year in addition to the millions of dollars in uncompensated care they already provide.

Collectively, Providence’s major tax-exempt institutions have committed more than $48 million in new contributions to our City over the next 11 years.

Thank you to Johnson & Wales, Brown, RISD, and Providence College. Thank you to Lifespan, Care New England and CharterCARE. On behalf of the residents of Providence and all of Rhode Island, thank you.

The General Assembly was critical in helping the City reach new agreements with our tax-exempt institutions. We owe a debt of gratitude to our legislative leaders, without whom Providence’s recovery would not have been possible. Thank you to House Speaker Gordon Fox, Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed, Majority Leader Dominick Ruggerio, Majority Whip Maryellen Goodwin, Representative John Carnevale and the entire Providence delegation, along with legislators from across Rhode Island for believing in Providence and helping our Capital City.

And thank you, Governor Chafee, for advocating for cities and towns and for your commitment to Providence.

As a City and State we have demonstrated that even when the stakes are at their highest and the path forward is beset with obstacles, reasonable people can get things done when they are committed to working together. There’s nothing we cannot accomplish when we are united.

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Today I ask you to keep standing with me as we continue moving Providence forward, from peril to recovery and boldly into a future of new opportunities and the promise of greater prosperity.

We have survived the worst of our fiscal storm, but we must remain vigilant. Just weeks ago, Moody’s Investor Service said several years of year-end deficits have left our City “with little room for error in the event of future operating pressures.”

Providence’s reserve funds have been depleted, and we must manage our City’s finances responsibly and transparently, and work to replenish our reserves and restore our credit ratings in the coming months and years.

At the same time, we must act with all urgency to build our City’s economy, improve public education and public safety, and make our City healthier and more sustainable. We must address the devastating impacts of our nation’s foreclosure crisis and the worst economic recession since the Great Depression.

As with the national recovery, Providence’s recovery is slow. But we are headed in the right direction and there are clear signs of hope on the horizon. Though Providence’s unemployment rate is still unacceptably high, today we have the most Providence residents working since 2008. Four years after the burst of the housing bubble, foreclosure filings are finally going down in our City.

Next month, we will release a comprehensive plan to accelerate Providence’s positive momentum. I will have much more to say about economic development at that time, but there are a few strategies I will highlight here.

We must have a focused and coordinated approach to building on our assets. Our City is home to first-class research hospitals and universities and a developing Knowledge District. We have one of the largest industrial deep-water ports in the Northeast. We have one of most vibrant artistic communities in America. Small businesses act as anchors in every neighborhood of our City. Our young and diverse workforce is eager for training and opportunity.

We are already seeing signs of Economic Recovery. Projects representing tens of millions of investment are underway in the heart of our Capital City, including the revival of the historic Arcade – America’s first indoor mall – into a mixed-use development of retail shops and micro-lofts; a project transforming the former Providence Gas buildings into residences; Johnson & Wales University’s construction of a new parking garage and physician assistant building; and the creation of six new retail shops on the ground floor of the Biltmore Garage on Washington Street.

Last Wednesday, I attended events to celebrate the opening of Andy, Jr.’s, an Italian restaurant in the heart of Providence’s historic Federal Hill; Ellie’s, a Parisian-style bakery that recently opened its doors at the Biltmore Garage; Ameriprise Financial’s new offices downtown; Citizens Bank’s grant to help revitalize our City’s Olneyville neighborhood; and a topping-off ceremony for Brown University’s new, state-of-the-art environmental research and teaching facility.

Providence is recovering.

EDUCATION

Plans to grow our economy can never be divorced from efforts to improve our schools, and we are working to provide every child in Providence with a first-class education.

There is much work to be done. Only 46 percent of Providence’s fourth graders were reading on grade level last year. We have set an ambitious goal to have 70 percent of our students reading on grade level at the end of third grade in 2015. The ability to read on grade level is one of the greatest predictors of a
student’s future success. Up to third grade, children are learning to read. After third grade, they are reading to learn.

This fall, we launched Providence Reads – an initiative in partnership with more than a dozen businesses and organizations to increase grade-level reading, promote school readiness, improve school attendance and support summer learning in Providence.

GTECH and Walgreens are the lead sponsors of Providence Reads. Today, 160 volunteers are serving as mentors and helping students learn to read in Providence’s schools. GTECH Senior Vice President Bob Vincent and other representatives from GTECH and Walgreens are here with us this evening. I ask you to please stand for a moment so we can thank you for your commitment to our City and our children.

Tonight, I invite all of you to join us in our effort to ensure that every child in Providence reads proficiently by the end of third grade. Any of you who are interested in becoming a Providence Reads volunteer should please contact the Mayor’s Office.

It takes an entire community to transform public education. We are working closely with the Providence Children and Youth Cabinet, a diverse team of 130 community leaders helping to guide the future of education in our City. In October, the Children and Youth Cabinet released its ‘Educate Providence: Action for Change’ report, which provides baseline data and 11 indicators to measure our progress in educating children from cradle to career.

Our innovative idea to set low-income children on a path toward lifelong achievement by increasing the number of words they hear by their fourth birthday has been selected from more than 300 submissions across the country as a finalist in Bloomberg Philanthropies’ Mayors Challenge. Bloomberg Philanthropies has also awarded our City a grant to launch Leyendo, an initiative to teach reading to students whose first language is not English.

Our public education efforts were also recognized last year with numerous awards and recognitions: the White House Office of Faith Based Initiatives, the National Civic League, America’s Promise Alliance, and the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

We are working to transform Providence into the best urban school district in America.

PUBLIC SAFETY

Public safety is a top priority for me as Mayor. One crime is too much crime, and the job of keeping our City safe never ends. Along with so many other cities across our nation, Providence has experienced far too much gun violence.

Most other categories of crime in our City went down last year or remain among the lowest they’ve been in many years. The Providence metropolitan region is ranked the No. 6 most peaceful area in the country by the Institute for Economics and Peace, using an index that measures homicides, violent crime, incarceration, the number of police and the availability of small arms.

We must credit the Providence Police, who put their lives at risk every day and who serve and protect our City with dedication and professionalism. To help our brave men and women on the frontlines, this year we will use federal funds to conduct a Police Academy and hire a diverse class of up to 18 more officers. We are also conducting a Firefighter Academy and will hire up to 50 new firefighters, which will save the City up to $1 million annually by bringing down overtime costs.

We are working to improve public safety in direct partnership with our City’s residents and community leaders. Since last summer, we have been working with faith leaders to coordinate efforts in ex-offender re-entry programs and explore the creation of a Boston-style Ten Point Coalition in Providence.

We have more than tripled the number of Neighborhood Crime Watch groups in Providence to 15. And I am assisting a fundraising effort to support the Nonviolence Institute’s work to prevent violence and bring peace to our streets.

The availability of summer jobs and recreational activities play an important role in our public safety efforts. Last summer, the Providence Department of Parks and Recreation provided jobs to more than 700 teens in partnership with Workforce Solution and the Rhode Island Department of Labor and Training, and increased its sports and recreation programs across the City. We also worked with Project Night Vision and PASA to help them expand their summer programs.

Finally, I am committed to passing reasonable, common-sense gun control legislation this year that puts Rhode Island in line with our neighboring Massachusetts and Connecticut. I have reached out to every Mayor and municipal leader in Rhode Island to work together on this issue. As the leaders of our state’s cities and towns, we will be most effective if we coordinate our local efforts and speak with one voice at the State House and in Washington, D.C.

CITY SERVICES

One of the most important things the City of Providence can do to help grow our local economy is to deliver the core functions of City government with excellence. Often, City employees – our neighbors, friends and family members – go above and beyond to render extraordinary service. I recently learned of one example that I would like to share with you.

On the Friday before Christmas, Joe Elliott and Bill Newell – inspectors in the Office of Inspections and Standards – learned that an elderly woman in our City was living without heat. Inspecting the property, they found out that the problem wasn’t just a lack of oil or an unpaid gas bill, but that the woman’s home required significant mechanical work that would cost thousands of dollars.

Mr. Elliott and Mr. Newell thought that without some kind of intervention, the City might need to condemn this woman’s house and relocate her in order to prevent her from suffering. So they worked around the clock Friday, and kept working when they were off duty on Saturday and Sunday to make sure this resident’s heating problem was fixed.

They coordinated with National Grid and with contractors who volunteered their time and expertise to have the heating problem fixed at no charge. They weren’t being paid, and they weren’t even asked to do it. They did it because it was the right thing to do for this woman and for our City.

Mr. Elliott and Mr. Newell are here with us tonight, and I’d like to ask them to stand for a moment so we can thank them for their service to our City.

These two gentlemen are not the exception. Our City employees do great work every day, and they are doing more with less. Today, the number of people who work for the City is at its lowest level in more than 10 years.

Good city services matter – along with running an open, accountable and transparent government. A couple of weeks ago, the Open Providence Commission – a panel of city employees, Providence residents and good-government experts chaired by Common Cause Rhode Island Executive Director John Marion – released their report on how our City government can better serve its residents. My administration will work with the City Council to implement their recommendations in the coming months to continue moving Providence forward.

More than a year ago, when we stepped in to save ProCAP from closing its doors due to flagrant mismanagement, I described the agency as an important part of Providence’s human services safety net that deserved to be put on a path to recovery. Today, I’m very gratified that ProCAP has accomplished its reorganization and is once again providing vital services to our community under new management. Thank you, President Solomon, for your commitment to save ProCAP.

HOUSING AND INFRASTRUCTURE

One needs only to drive a few blocks to see the pressing need to address the continuing impacts of the foreclosure crisis in our neighborhoods. Together with the City Council, we have worked to implement new measures to protect our neighborhoods from the blight of abandoned and neglected properties. Using these new tools, our Nuisance Task Force is successfully dealing with properties responsible for creating danger and fear on residential streets that children and hardworking families call home.

There is much work to be done to improve Providence’s roads, and that is why we put a $40 million roads bond on the ballot last year. The roads bond was overwhelmingly approved by voters in November, with 89.5% voting yes. That is a mandate, and we are moving forward to begin repaving more 62 miles of roadway in the coming months and years.

We will continue to remake our infrastructure for the 21st century with Phase III of the Downtown Providence Circulator Project, which will install decorative street lights and restore two-way travel to more streets, improving travel in the heart of our City.

And we worked in 2012 with Governor Chafee and our Congressional delegation to bring cargo cranes to the Port of Providence. That infrastructure investment will be a vital piece of the puzzle as we work to turn Providence’s working waterfront into a hub of our state’s economy. Providence is recovering.

HEALTHY, SUSTAINABLE CITY

Together with our environmental community, we are taking bold steps to transform Providence into one of the greenest cities in the nation. The “Big Green Can” recycling program that we launched in the fall has already dramatically increased Providence’s recycling rate from 15% to 25% – a 67% improvement. As a result, we expect to save $250,000 this year.

This spring, our Lots of Hope initiative will begin converting vacant lots into urban gardens maintained by residents. We are also moving forward to implement a citywide biking plan and a pilot plan for composting across our City.

And, mark your calendars now, we are working to coordinate what we hope will be the largest volunteer, citywide cleanup that Providence has ever mobilized on Saturday, April 20. Please contact our Office of Sustainability if you would like to participate in our citizens’ effort to give Providence a spring cleaning worthy of Earth Day.

Last month, we won an important court victory against Big Tobacco when a judge ruled against the industry’s attempt to block Providence’s new ordinances that ban the sale of flavored tobacco products and store discounts aimed at children.

Thank you, Council President Solomon, Majority Leader Yurdin and members of this honorable City Council, for championing these ordinances that protect our children from the harmful effects of tobacco and the deceitful tactics of the tobacco industry. Thank you to City Solicitor Jeff Padwa, for your team’s strong legal defense of these important measures. We hope our success inspires other communities to follow our lead and take a stand against Big Tobacco.

Our Office of Healthy Communities is not just protecting children and families from the harmful effects of tobacco. It is also promoting farmers markets across our City and pursuing policy initiatives to make healthy, affordable food available in every neighborhood of Providence. Healthy students make good students, and healthy residents make for a stronger City.

ARTS AND CULTURE

We are successfully attracting large conventions and events to Providence such as X-Factor, Netroots Nation, Alpha Kappa Alpha, and the Dunkin’ Donuts AHL All-Star Classic that brought thousands of visitors into downtown Providence this weekend. Last summer, Providence’s hotel occupancy rate reached its highest level since 2004.

At the same time, the economic activity generated by our thriving arts and culture community is having a big impact on our economy. WaterFire has established Providence as a global city, and in September I was excited to join with WaterFire’s creator Barnaby Evans in bringing our signature event to Rome for the first large-scale lighting in Europe.

In the coming year, we will work with our partners at the Providence Warwick Convention & Visitors Bureau to promote our wonderful museums, restaurants, theaters and zoo. We will do a better job marketing our signature brands like WaterFire and the excellent First Works Festival that transformed Kennedy Plaza in September into an artistic and musical party the likes of which we have not experienced before in our City.

Thank you Senator Whitehouse and the rest of our Congressional delegation for securing the National Endowment for the Arts ‘Our Town’ grant that funded the FirstWorks festival. This grant is also supporting a planning effort to reconfigure Greater Kennedy Plaza – it is an exciting project that you will hear more about in the coming months.

Just last week, Rocco Landesman – who recently retired as the NEA’s chairman – wrote that “some of the most rewarding places I visited during my term were places that are very engaged in the arts, that have a great arts infrastructure and commitment to the arts. Providence, Rhode Island, would probably be at the top of the list.”

Our city has so much to offer and it is the reason that creative, entrepreneurial and visionary people see the promise in Providence.

PROVIDENCE’S RECOVERY

Almost two years ago, in my May 2011 budget address, I expressed my belief that together we would make history, saying: “As we move forward, let it be said of us that we came together and rose to the occasion. Let it be said that we set aside politics for the greater good. Let it be written that while others went into receivership, we solved our problems. Let it be written that while some looked to Providence’s fiscal crisis and saw nothing but darkness and foreboding, we seized this opportunity to show that hard work and shared sacrifice brought about Providence’s finest hour.”

Governor, Mr. President, honorable members of the City Council, distinguished guests, and my fellow residents of our great Capital City – we have made history. And the nation is taking notice.

The pension protection ordinance that this Council approved has been cited by the Wall Street Journal. Moody’s called our pension reform agreement, “a precedent other struggling Rhode Island cities and towns can follow.” And Governing magazine recently wrote that Providence “has become a leader among the many state and local governments that have acted recently to make their retirement systems more sustainable.”

Make no mistake; we expect to face challenges in the months ahead. But every day, I am reminded that Providence is truly the beating heart of our state.

Despite the crisis that has battered our Capital City these past two years, our colleges and universities continue to attract talented and entrepreneurial people from every corner of the world. The caliber of our restaurants, theaters and hotels has earned Providence a national reputation as the Creative Capital.

The state of our City is getting stronger. Providence is recovering.

Tonight, I ask you to envision a Providence in which jobs are plentiful on a path of grassy land leading through the heart of our City where a highway once stood; a City where crime is low, our schools teach with excellence and our diverse neighborhoods share an exceptionally high quality of life; a City known across our nation for its strong infrastructure and efficient public transit, its network of urban farms and its commitment to sustainable and healthy living.

We have laid the foundation to make this a reality. The promise of a new era of vitality and prosperity in our Capital City is within our reach.

On behalf of everyone who has worked so hard and sacrificed so much for the City we love, it is my pleasure to extend a heartfelt invitation to our neighbors throughout Rhode Island and across New England and our nation –

We invite you to be part of Providence’s comeback story.

Drinking Liberally Hosts “Sock It to Homelessness”


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In a fitting follow up to Bob Plain’s five part series  “Homeless Like Me,”  Drinking Liberally Providence will showcase the important work of the RI Coalition for the Homeless tomorrow night, Wednesday November 28 from 7pm – 9pm at Wild Colonial Tavern.  Participants are encouraged to bring new pairs or packages of socks to donate to the Coalition to help their clients as we head into the harsh winter months.

2012 was a powerful and important year for the RI Coalition for the Homeless because of the landmark passage of the Homeless Bill of Rights, the first bill in the nation to prohibit discrimination of individuals and families experiencing homelessness.

Come learn more about the Coalition’s tireless work to end homelessness in Rhode Island at our next DL and help out the homeless by donating pairs of socks or making cash or check donations to help those most in need as we head into the winter months. Donations may also be made online at www.rihomeless.org.

Drinking Liberally organizers also encourage participants to not only bring sock donations but to wear their own liberal statement socks with loads of flair. There may even be a prize for most creative sock.  Let us know you’re coming by joining our Facebook event. 
What: Sock It to Homelessness with DL PVD
When: November 28 7-9 pm
Where: Wild Colonial, 250 South Water St, PVD
Why: To celebrate the RI Homeless Bill of Rights & to help constituents in desperate need of socks to keep warm this winter

Broadway’s Columbus Theatre to Reopen


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Photo courtesy of Tom Weyman.

For years the marquee on the iconic Columbus Theatre on Broadway has read “Opening Soon” and now finally it’s true. The famed theater that has hosted everything from opera to porn reopens on November 17 with a show headlined by The Low Anthem, a local indie folk band that has made a name of itself on the national stage recently.

They will be joined by  Brown Bird, Roz Raskin and the Rice Cakes, Sugar Honey Iced Tea, Vudu Sister, Alec K Redfearn, “and a mystery guest to be announced later for all the right reasons,” according to an announcement on Low Anthem’s website.

“We invite you to be a part of the rebirth of Columbus Theatre!” says their website. “There will be 2 (or 3) stages. Julian’s double-decker food truck omnibus and Nice Slice pizza will be vending outside, and Revival Brewing will be supplying sweet juices. The kick-off show will be RIDICULOUS and may include charity hair-cuts by band-members.”

Proceeds from the show will go towards the restoration of the theater as well as to Providence charity that provides education and health assistance in Nicaragua. Click here for tickets.

Built in 1926, the Columbus is said to be named for its 1,492 seats. The Low Anthem of the theater’s rich history.

This theatre had seen everything, and embodied a century’s worth of American contradictions (note dubious anti-hero namesake). From the glorious heights of opera to the survivalism of it’s XXX film years, it has hosted everyone from Lightning Bolt to Julie Andrews. It has been the subject of endless first amendment law suits. It has been over the years lobbied, condemned, bent and bargained for like a cherished property of Monopoly America.

Low Anthem has been practicing in the theater as of late, according to their post.

The Columbus Theatre has become a rehearsal and recording home for we of The Low Anthem. It is a dream. We have set up shop in the 1930?s dance and acting school above the Broadway marquee. It is a magical place to work, replete with ghosts of bygone projectionists, world-class, double-proscenium acoustics, pop-corn machines, and enough ju-ju to drown a goo-goo.

Rethinking the Proper Role for the State Politician


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State House Dome from North Main Street
State House Dome from North Main Street
The State House dome from North Main Street. (Photo by Bob Plain)

There’s a “What can you do for me?” mentality about politics that I doubt anyone in Rhode Island will dispute.

People say over and over again, “The legislature stinks, but my guy is ok.” And then they vote for the incumbent.

Sitting legislators have the power of the budget to fund and disburse. Line items in the budget are a great way to fund important projects in local neighborhoods, but they’re also a great source of pork, influence and publicity.

When a politician builds a playground, what is she really doing but returning your tax money to your block? She might have shown up on groundbreaking day to hoist a shovel. And she’ll show up again for the ribbon cutting.

One voter recently told me that my opponent had regularly donated $2,000 to an organization she cared about. I asked if it came from him or from his campaign committee*, and she didn’t know. I said, no. I can’t do that, and I can’t even promise that I’ll have enough power to swing a line item. If you want business as usual, I told her, then you can vote for my opponent.

What is shocking is how inexpensively Rhode Islander’s sell their votes. A playground here, lifting a parking ban there, getting a sidewalk fixed here.

Even the pernicious practice of getting rides to the polls implies that a voter doesn’t care enough to walk or drive or arrange a ride to cast a ballot. Remember those pictures of women in Iraq with the purple fingers? They made it hundreds of miles and waited days to cast their ballots.

No politician is going to promise to raise taxes in an election cycle. And no politician is going to say, “We’re going to cut your funding.” (Well, the Democrats are saying the first about the rich, and the Republicans are saying that to the poor, but let’s set aside those quarreling minorities ;-)

So, in a time of shrinking tax bases and increasing costs, how can we solve our problems? Can a politician help?

Creating Connections

Not long ago, I met a woman who was taking care of her two grandchildren, ages 6 and 2. She’d had a good job, but had been laid off. When she did, she lost her child care, and now she couldn’t get a job because she couldn’t find someone to take care of the kids while she looked for a job. Catch 22.

I told her that I had no idea if I, as a possible State Rep could do anything to help her, but I’d see.

Half a block up the street, I met another voter who told me that Casey Family Services had a grandparents group.

The next day, I called them and learned a bit about The Rhode Island Partnership for Family Connections. 

Here was a group of grandparents helping other grandparents. I emailed the grandmother the information, and hope that she follows through.

A few days after that, I met with Ray Watson at the Mt. Hope Community Center. He said that his organization couldn’t host something like a baby-sitting group, because of insurance liability concerns. He also said that he would be happy to help or connect people any way he could.

“We try to make this organization part of the community,” he said. “We’re open most of the time. People can just stop by.”

We also brainstormed that a local FaceBook group to connect people with similar issues might be another low-cost solution. Another email went out to the Grandmother. I haven’t heard anything back yet.

Connecting the Threads

A few days later, I was at one of those unique Rhode Island meetings where twenty people spend an hour discussing the placement and economics of four or five crosswalks.

Held at the Rochambeau Community Library after hours (the next time someone asks why we have libraries, aside from the wealth of knowledge, they serve as one of our key non-religious meeting points), the purpose of the meeting was to explain the future traffic calming measures near the Hope Street “business district.”

The short version was this: because the Narragansett Bay Commission was going to repave the streets, the Hope Street Merchant’s association hired a firm to design a traffic calming plan. The NBC offered to pick up the tab for the new raised sidewalks (think Kennedy Plaza not Smith Hill) and pedestrian bumpouts. The only problem was that the NBC’s mandiate stopped at the Cumberland Farms, just north of Rochambeau Avenue. In other words, the one place in the neighborhood where children cross the street most frequently—the library—was on the outside of the domain.

Fortunately, most of the players were in the room, so I asked a few questions:

  1. Was the NBC hiring a contractor to do this work?
    Yes.
  2. Since the contractor would have workers, machinery and supplies on-hand wouldn’t it be more cost-effective to build six crosswalks instead of five?
    Maybe.
  3. Why maybe?
    Building any raised crosswalk creates drainage problems. Since the NBC was redoing the sewers and rebuilding the streets, they could pre-grade the streets to handle the runoff from the five they were agreeing to do.
  4. But it’s possible to build the crosswalk, right?
    Yes. Provided someone does the study and it doesn’t cost too much to fix the drainage problem.
  5. Does the City of Providence have money for this?
    Probably. There are some federal funds and some neighborhood funds that might be available.
  6. Would the city look into this?
    Yes.
  7. What’s the deadline?
    Before Christmas. If the City conducts the study and finds the funds and informs the Narragansett Bay Commission, they can write it into the contract with their construction firm and make it happen.

On the way out of the meeting, I explained this to Councilman Jackson. The architect joked that this was the first meeting he’d ever been to where people actually wanted more construction.

There oughtn’t to be a law…

In both of these stories, both the problem and solution were in the same geography. One woman’s answer was a block away or a FaceBook group away. One sidewalk’s answer was in the same room, just missing someone to rethink the problem.

Did the “politician” solve either problem? No. Someone else will have to follow-up and make sure that the solution is implemented.

What I did was create opportunities for these problems to be solved without raising taxes, levying fines or writing legislation. No closed door meetings or back room deals either.

Not a bad few days.

———–

*Campaign bank accounts can be used to make donations to non-profits, something I’ve already promised to do with the whatever small funds are left in my account after the election.

The Public Education / Transportation Challenge


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I’ve found a way for the Providence Public School System to save more than $400,000 annually in transportation costs.

Every month, the School Department buys thousands of RIPTA bus passes, which it distributes to high school students from low income families or who live more than three miles from their school. In May of 2012, according to RIPTA, the School Department purchased around 2,000 bus passes.

How much does the city pay for these? Full price: $62 per pass.

After making several phone calls, I learned that RISD and Brown University, which issue passes to their students and faculty, pay $1.15 per ride, if the number of rides exceeds 500,000.

If the Providence Public School system used this model, the savings to the schools would be more than $400,000 annually. The savings actually increases because this year, the school is giving out more bus passes to ninth graders.

The School Department’s goal is to get students from their homes to their classrooms. If “giving” them a bus pass makes that happen, then they believe it’s money well spent. At the same time, someone needs to use the power of those numbers negotiate a better deal for Providence.

The downside, of course is that this means a $400,000 annual cut to RIPTA.

What is a supporter of both public schools and public transportation to do?

Imagine abundance and pleasure in public transportation

Last week, while the Republicans were busy in Tampa imagining a future with no taxes, smaller government, no unions and a plethora of jobs and millionaires, was  dreaming about how we can get around our small state for the next 50 or so years.

I call for Rhode Island to become a leader in public transportation for the 21st century. Through an integrated system of trolley, bus, light rail, and commuter rail, citizens will be able to quickly and efficiently get to work, market, other cities and towns, and even to the beach. They’ll even be able to ride home after a late movie or show. (Currently RIPTA service ends around midnight.)

A high quality public transportation system will change the demographics of Rhode Island. It will encourage smart growth and eliminate sprawl.

I call for a system that can elegantly handle a tenfold increase in ridership within the next 10 years, reducing the need for one car per resident, reducing wear and tear on the roads and highways, and decreasing pollution and carbon waste.

Riding the bus doesn’t need to be free, but it does need to cost less, become more efficient and get you where you need to go when you need to go there.

We need a public transit authority whose goal is to maximize and increase ridership. As citizens we need to find a different model to fund it.

Current RIPTA funding is based on a fixed percentage of the tax on gasoline. This means that every time the price of gas goes up and people drive less, revenue for RIPTA goes down at the same time that the bus company is paying more for fuel and the ridership increases. This leaves RIPTA with less money to provide more services.

If we are determined to fund RIPTA through a gasoline tax, then it must be a percentage of the cost of gas, and a higher one at that – except that won’t work because people will drive out of state to buy gas. If we fund RIPTA through automobile registration, we must plan for a time when there are fewer automobiles registered. We must explore other options—public/private cooperatives, trolleys systems, jitney buses and so on.

Ultimately, to create a 21st century public transportation system, we must decouple RIPTA and the automobile. The goal of public transportation ought not to be just to provide free transportation to seniors , students and the disabled, but to reduce the need for and impact of cars on our cities and towns.

The Numbers

Approximate number of High School Students receiving bus passes in May 2012: 2,000
Number of days in the school year: 180
Cost of 2,000 bus passes per month for September-June: $1.24 Million
Maximum number of rides for those students during that time: 720,000
Cost of 720,000 rides @$1.15 per ride: $828,000
Minimum estimated annual savings to School Department: $412,000
Dollars cut from RIPTA, if these savings are implemented: $412,000

 

Gilding the Ghetto: George Romney Knew Better


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George Romney (Photo courtesy of Hemmings Daily)

Nationally, black and Hispanic/Latino public school students are now more segregated from whites than at any point in the last four decades.  Most policymakers and activists on all sides accept the fact that our metropolitan areas are segregated by race as well as class, and work within its confines.  In this age of greatly diminished expectations – the ‘twilight of common dreams,’ as Todd Gitlin once put it – it is assumed either that these patterns aren’t terribly important, or that the practical and political obstacles to changing them are too overwhelming.

Today, Democrats and Republicans alike unashamedly promote efforts to “gild the ghetto” with charter schools that are more segregated than regular public schools, and with compensatory education programs that have little chance of truly compensating. But the black-white academic achievement gap is unlikely to narrow much further without revisiting the imperative of residential integration in our metropolitan areas.  By ignoring segregation, we thrust the entire burden of our unjust social geography on urban and high poverty schools, leaving white and privileged suburbs untouched.

However, as Richard Rothstein and I argue in “The Cost of Living Apart,” in the September/October 2012 issue of The American Prospect, it wasn’t always this way.  From the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s these geographical inequalities were very much a part of our public discourse.  As Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) during Richard Nixon’s first term, Republican George Romney – Mitt’s father — led an ultimately unsuccessful crusade to use the power of the federal purse to ‘loosen the white noose’ and open up the suburbs along lines of race and class.  He believed that racial inequalities in education and opportunity could not be overcome any other way.  Forty years on, it seems clear that George was right.  Unfortunately, as the Democratic and Republican National Conventions near, it appears that neither party is willing to take up the banner of racial integration.

Racial segregation matters — in Providence and elsewhere

As Rothstein and I discuss in the longer paper on which our American Prospect article is based, social scientific research on school segregation is quite clear.  Geographically concentrating poor black and Latino children – as we do in the Providence metropolitan area, and throughout the United States — is harmful.  Integration, on the other hand, is beneficial.  Because black and Hispanic children in Providence and elsewhere are much more likely to be poor than white children are, racial segregation not only isolates them – it compounds the negative consequences of poverty, by concentrating it geographically. 

While we have much more research on the consequences of racial segregation for blacks than we do for Hispanics, both groups are clearly segregated here – in Providence, and in the metropolitan area as a whole.  This is one of the ten most segregated cities in the country for Hispanics.  In the Providence-Fall River metropolitan area, according to the U.S. Census, Hispanics have a ‘dissimilarity index’ of just over 70.7%; the index for the smaller black population is 65.5.  

What does this mean?  This means that 7 out of 10 Hispanics (and almost that many blacks) in greater Providence would have to move, in order to achieve an integrated pattern.  The dissimilarity index for Hispanics is slightly lower for Providence, 57.6%.  But all this tells us is that Rhode Island’s Hispanic population is heavily concentrated in the Capital City – and segregated within it.  The average Hispanic resident of Providence lives in a neighborhood made up 45.3% of other Hispanics, despite being just over 30% of the city’s population.

While approximately half of the residents of Providence are white, the school age population is overwhelmingly Latino and black — 84%, according to the latest RI KidsCount Factbook.  There are many reasons why this might be the case, some of them innocent and easily explained.  But the lack of affordable housing in the suburbs, due in large part to exclusionary zoning, is clearly a major factor trapping low and moderate income Hispanics and blacks in Providence.  Because of this, and because most public school children attend neighborhood schools, one consequence of the residential segregation of blacks and Latinos is school segregation.  26.4% of Hispanic public school students in Rhode Island, for example, attend extremely segregated schools (those with a 90-100% minority student body).

Combine this with Providence’s high rates of child poverty – among the worst in the nation for two decades now – and it should be abundantly clear that segregation matters.  Hispanic and black children in the Providence area (and nationally) are not only three times more likely to grow up in poverty than white children are; they are much more likely to live in predominantly poor neighborhoods and attend high poverty schools, even when they themselves aren’t poor.  Nearly four in ten black and Latino children in Providence grow up in poverty.  As a consequence the average Hispanic primary school student in the Providence metropolitan area attends a school with a poverty rate of just under 75%.  The numbers are comparably stark for black students.  For whites, who are disproportionately found in suburban schools, its 32.1%.  Just 4% of students in Barrington’s public schools live in poverty.

Politicians and experts typically refer to schools as “failing” if they are filled with poor children who don’t do well on high-stakes tests.  Faced with the obstacles posed by racial segregation and geographically concentrated poverty, however, such schools may be doing as well as they possibly can.  

Black and Latino children from poor Providence families disproportionately suffer from poor health, which causes frequent school absences.  A higher percentage of Providence school children changed schools during the 2010- 2011 school year than any other district in the state. During that time period, one in four (25%) Providence children changed schools, compared to the state rate of 14%.  Providence also has a very high rate of chronic early absence, the percentage of children in kindergarten through third grade who have missed at least 10% of the school year (i.e. 18 days or more). During the 2010-2011 school year, more than one in five (22%) Providence children in grades K-3 were chronically absent.  Children from poor families are much more likely to suffer from financial crises causing repeated household moves that result in changes of teachers and schools, with a resulting loss of instructional continuity.

Poor children are also more likely to be living in communities with high levels of crime and disorder, and to have parents who are incarcerated (or whose employment prospects are greatly limited by prior imprisonment).  Recent scholarship also indicates that children growing up in poverty experience high levels of stress at young ages, which not only affects their health — it shapes their cognitive development too.  Poor black and Latino students in Rhode Island on average attend low-performing high schools (according to test scores), where schools spend more time on discipline and ‘teaching to the test’ and less on instruction, while white students mostly attend high-performing high schools.  Poverty and inferior educational opportunities combine to drive blacks and Latinos out of high school at rates higher than that of white students, increasing the chances that their own children will grow up in poverty too.

Children stuck in high poverty schools — who are, again, disproportionately black and Hispanic — are often isolated from the positive peer influences of middle-class children who were read to frequently when young, whose homes are filled with books, whose adult environment includes many college-educated professional role models, whose parents have greater educational experience and the motivation such experience brings and who have the time, confidence, and ability to monitor schools for academic standards.

Recent research confirms that integration not only benefits black students but also does no harm to white classmates, provided the concentration of disadvantaged children is not great enough to slow the instructional pace or deflect time from academics to discipline. When children whose parents have strong educational backgrounds comprise a strong classroom majority, all students benefit from the academic culture established by that majority. Integration is no panacea, but without it other reforms to raise the achievement of disadvantaged children have less promise.

George Romney understood this.

Back to the future:  George Romney and the ‘white noose’

The Civil Rights Act of 1968 – the Fair Housing Law – was passed in the waning days of the Johnson Administration.  Its language was ambiguous.  It could be interpreted narrowly, as a prohibition against racial discrimination.  Or, it could be seen as requiring HUD to ‘affirmatively promote’ racial and economic integration across the metropolitan landscape.  Recognizing the role that government at all levels had played – and continued to play – in the racial segregation of American cities and suburbs, George Romney chose the latter interpretation.  Federal policy, suburban zoning laws and discrimination by realtors and the financial sector had “built a high-income white noose basically around these inner cities, and the poor and disadvantaged, both black and white, are pretty much left in the inner city,” he told Congress.”  His 1968 campaign book, The Concerns of a Citizen, urged “we must have open housing on a statewide basis; eliminate zoning that creates either large-scale economic or racial segregation; provide low-cost private housing through nonprofit organizations in all parts of the metropolitan area and throughout the state.” 

During his first 18 months in office Romney quietly developed a series of programs and proposals that put HUD (and Nixon) on a collision course with metropolitan segregation – and those who preferred to leave it untouched.  The latter group included the increasingly suburban base of the Republican Party. 

Operation Breakthrough was designed to build low and moderate-income housing in the suburbs.  While it wasn’t aimed at racial integration, Romney intended to use HUD funding to either entice or coerce suburbs into revoking their exclusionary zoning laws.  Open Communities, however, was directly aimed at the racial integration of the suburbs.  Hidden even from the White House, by the summer of 1969 Romney and his staff had taken a full inventory of all federal programs that could be used to open the suburbs, and had even draw up a list of possible target areas.

They were deeply critical of the failures of their predecessors.  The Kennedy and Johnson Administrations, despite all of their rhetoric, “lacked the political fortitude to deal with urban problems on a metropolitan-wide basis,” wrote Under Secretary Richard Van Dusen in an internal policy memo in the fall of 1969.  Instead, “they poured large amounts of money into the ghettos.”  “The white suburban noose around the black in the city core is morally wrong, economically inefficient, socially destructive, and politically explosive,” one staffer wrote to Romney in August 1969.  What was needed was a “frontal assault on suburbia.”  Using the carrot – the promise of federal funds – HUD began to put both programs into practice during the first six months of 1970.  Romney went to Congress in May 1970 to get legislative authority to use coercion (‘the stick’) as well.

George Romney was no lone crusader.  Indeed, it is a sign of how far even liberals have strayed in the 21st century from the dreams of the civil rights movement, that questioning metropolitan segregation was quite common among Republicans as well as Democrats in the 60s and early 70s.  President Johnson was somewhat vexed by the fact that each urban, suburban and educational task force he appointed in his second term seemed to call for metropolitan desegregation, even as he was casting about for alternative and more politically viable approaches to the urban crisis.  This included the famous Kerner Commission, which in 1968 called for the integration of “substantial numbers of Negroes into the society outside the ghetto,” through the reorientation of federal programs and the placement of low and moderate-income housing in the suburbs.  Failure to do so would condemn blacks to a “permanently inferior economic status,” rendering the U.S. “two nations, separate and unequal.”

Angered at Romney’s secrecy, and under increasingly intense pressure from suburban officials, Nixon made his position explicit in a series of statements between December 1970 and June 1971, declaring his belief that the federal government did not have the legal authority to ‘force’ racial and economic integration of the suburbs.  While he would enforce non-discrimination law, he insisted that racial segregation in the suburbs was a byproduct of economic considerations, not discrimination.  Privately, he even considered introducing a constitutional amendment banning federal efforts to force educational and residential integration.  Romney was pushed out after the November 1972 election.  “Nixon’s policy,” according to Charles Lamb, who served on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in the mid-70s, “was consciously designed to protect the status quo, to shield suburbs from economic, and thus racial, integration.  Its political intent was to preserve the Republican political base for years to come.”

Federal urban policy since then has focused primarily (and weakly) on improving the quality of ghetto neighborhoods (and their residents) by devolving resources and power to municipal authorities, public-private partnerships and Community Development Corporations (CDCs), not on the forces that create and sustain metropolitan inequality.  Particularly since 1980, federal and local governments have embraced an ideology of market accommodation in policy making that emphasizes privatization, decentralization, economic competitiveness, and creating a favorable ‘business climate.’  National policymakers in both parties have continued to deploy the rhetoric of decentralization and localism – for education, as well as urban policy more generally.  This approach enjoys support from free-market advocates on the right as well as community-based activists on the left.  Politically, it has granted both political parties a kind of cheap policy grace, presenting the appearance of doing something about poverty and urban problems, but without the political and economic costs that confronting metropolitan segregation, economic insecurity and an underfunded and inadequate welfare state would actually entail.  The social consequences of this persistent localism have been profound, setting in motion a kind of “feedback loop” that reinforces patterns of place-based racial and economic inequality.

Despite the growing ideological divisions of our age, there has been a surprising political convergence on issues related to urban policy, social services, and housing.  From the spread of charter schools, to the expansion of home ownership through financial deregulation, it is apparent that left and right agree on much more than is commonly assumed.  Virtually all of these points of agreement either hide or exacerbate racial and economic segregation, or geographically concentrate its deleterious consequences.  In many ways the Obama Administration’s embrace of urban charter schools, school choice, and the use of market models for the assessment of students, teachers and schools, is emblematic of this convergence.  Despite a lack of evidence of their efficacy, and growing empirical support for the integration of schools by class as well as race, the ‘achievement gap’ is virtually never discussed in terms of the intersection between inequality and social geography

George Romney understood that there is little chance we can substantially narrow the achievement gap without breaking up heavy concentrations of low-income minority children in urban schools, giving these children opportunities to attend majority middle-class schools outside their “truly disadvantaged” neighborhoods. But urban children cannot have a practical opportunity to attend such middle-class schools unless their parents have the opportunity to live nearby.

Occupy Providence Returns


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Artemis Moonhawk, left, and two other occupy Providence activists re-attach their banner to the statue of General Burnside. (submitted)

Occupy Providence is back in Burnside Park. But there are a couple of things different about this incarnation of the local 99 Percent movement.

One difference is they aren’t camping this time around. Not yet, anyways. But they have been meeting daily in what activists call the People’s Park for a little over a week now.

And for another, they aren’t getting along as well with Providence police as they did the first time around.

“A police officer shoved me,” said Artemis Moonhawk, who was a strong presence with the first incarnation of Occupy Providence and who has been organizing events and meet-ups throughout the winter, spring and summer in anticipation of the second one.

She said seven activists met in the park Thursday and attached the iconic Occupy Providence banner to a fence. Officers asked them to take it down saying there is a new rule banning signs in Burnside Park. Instead they attached it to some chairs and another officer came by and was a little more aggressive with his request. Moonhawk said he was angry the banner was still up and that she was shoved when she got up to remove it.

“This is the first time we have ever had any problems with the Providence police,” she said. “This opened up a big can of worms.”

Police confiscated the banner, she said. But activists plan to get it back from police tomorrow. They’ve organized a march from Burnside Park to the police station to retrieve it. Police said they could have it back.

There will also be a sidewalk occupation in front of the former home of 38 Studios starting at 2 p.m. on Saturday. Activists plan to meet at Burnside and march to the office building on Empire Street. On Monday, there is a vigil in Roger Williams Memorial Park on South Main Street from noon to 6 p.m. and again on Tuesday from noon to 5.

Across the nation, Occupy groups have been rekindling their protest against corporate greed and income inequality. On September 17, Occupy Wall Street plans a large, sit-in in front of the New York Stock Exchange on the one-year anniversary of the first night of camping in Zuccotti Park.

Taveras Impresses Even Conservative EG Rotary


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras at Netroots Nation. (Photo by Bob Plain)

At first blush one might guess the East Greenwich Rotary Club wouldn’t be the easiest audience for a progressive mayor of Providence to impress. But this, remember, is Angel Taveras, and I’ve honestly never known a politician with such a gift to win over various constituencies and to influence positive outcomes.

Angel inherited a cash-strapped city and handled it by getting the three-headed hydra of Providence politics – taxpayers, public sector unions and tax-exempt non-profits – to fork over their hard-earned money almost without so much as a debate. He also negotiated a peaceful and mutually beneficial outcome with the local Occupy crowd, a feat I believe to be unmatched in America.

Last week, he traveled downstate to the most conservative town around to talk to a group of business-backing Rotarians, and how do they greet him?

“You should run for governor!” he was told, according to East Greenwich Patch.

It’s easy to understand why Angel is so popular … he’s got an uncanny ability to level with both friends and foes, to tackle problems head-on and to date he’s proven he’s utterly unafraid of reaching consensus on any issue regardless of where a solution may fall on the political spectrum. That is exactly the set of skills Rhode Island needs most in a statewide leader.

He even explained to the group why it is that folks in East Greenwich ought to care more about the plight of Providence:

“We’re all co-dependent … Providence is the heart of the state. If your heart’s not healthy, the rest of your body isn’t. We’re all in this thing together.”

Taveras has already done wonders in healing the state’s heart … here’s hoping he the EG Rotarians, and many others, will get their wish and Angel will apply his considerable political acumen to the rest of the state via a run for governor in 2014.

ONA Says Business Stole Rather Than Wired Money


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A previous action by the Olneyville Neighborhood Association.

Saying the owner of a local money-wiring business stole thousands of dollars from them, a group of Olneyville residents who frequently send money to family  members in other countries will hold a rally at near the corner of Chalkstone Boulevard and Academy Avenue Saturday at 2pm.

“I work two jobs- usually 16 hours a day- just to support my family. Losing my hard-earned money had a huge impact on my family,” Eduardo Gonzalez, a customer of the business and event organizer, said in a press release. ” I am working with other … customers not only to get my money back, but to make sure that no one else goes through what we went through.”

The owner of the business could not be immediately reached for comment.

Susan Beaty, of the Olneyville Neighborhood Association, which is helping to organize the action, said some people have lost as much as $5,000 and others between $1,000 and $2,000. She said it’s hard to quantify the number of victims – which is one of reasons for the protest – but the group has held three informational meetings since learning of the potential crimes about a month ago and each meeting has attracted about 20 people.

Olneyville residents with family in other countries often utilize such businesses as a way to send money to their families back home. Undocumented workers often pay in cash. This makes them an easy target because they may fear going to the police with their problem because it could spark questions about their immigration status. Police have not been contacted yet.

“Many of these customers are Latino immigrant who used the service to send their hard-earned dollars home to support their families in Guatemala, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and elsewhere,” according to the press release.


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