How Chafee just saved our economy from a $124 million hit


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chafee sos1On Monday, Lincoln Chafee did something incredibly important for our state’s economy.  Following Connecticut, New York, and Pennsylvania, he stopped severe cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), a program that provides food assistance to families at risk for hunger.  Passed in the most recent farm bill, these cuts were vigorously opposed by each member of our national delegation.

By increasing funding to the Low Income Heating Assistance Program (LIHEAP) by $1.4 million, Chafee has guaranteed the state an extra $69 million in SNAP funds.  According to the Department of Agriculture, the economic multiplier for SNAP is 1.79, so the $69 million will translate into a projected $124 million of GDP.  That would be a huge hit to the economy. Stopping it is very big news.

We face a hunger crisis in America.  Millions of families struggle to put food on the table.  Because of what Lincoln Chafee did, not only will our economy avoid a big hit, fewer Rhode Islanders will go to bed hungry.

Chafee now undecided on legalizing marijuana


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chafee state of stateEarlier this year Governor Linc Chafee told RI Future that he wanted to wait to see “what other states do” before he considers helping Rhode Island become just the third state in the nation to legalize marijuana. But after a high profile conversation with Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper at the National Governors Conference this weekend he seems to be re-evaluating his options.

“The legislation to legalize marijuana is currently winding its way through the General Assembly,” said spokeswoman Faye Zuckerman. “If it were to reach his desk, the Governor would evaluate it at that time.”

Last week, it was learned that Colorado expects $133 million in new revenue after it became the first state (with Washington) to tax and regulate the sale of marijuana. Then Bloomberg News reported on Chafee’s reaction to Hickenlooper’s cautionary advice on legalization.

From Bloomberg:

Colorado’s numbers “opened a lot of eyes,” Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln D. Chaffee, an independent, said in an interview. He said Colorado’s fiscal forecast fostered a discussion about whether to “regulate it and tax it in these tough times.”

Chaffee, who previously served as a Republican U.S. senator, said the ill effects of the long-running fight against drugs should hasten discussion about new approaches worldwide. He said legalization measures have been proposed in Rhode Island and didn’t rule out signing one.

“We’ll see how these bills come out of the legislature,” he said.

Wingmen: Why did Chafee call out the tea party?


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wingmenThis week on NBC 10’s web-exclusive Wingmen segment – starring me, Rapp and Justin Katz – we discuss the tea party’s influence on state government and why Governor Chafee called them out in his State of the State speech.

I do think the tea party has an outsized influence on state politics and public debate. (They have their own radio station, for crying out loud!) I also think Rhode Island gave austerity a pretty fair shake and it hasn’t served us very well.

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

‘It was a great evening for the arts’ – RISCA director Randall Rosenbaum


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risca“It was a great evening for the arts,” said Randall Rosenbaum, executive director of the Rhode Island Council on the Arts, in an interview about Governor Chafee’s State of the State speech last night. Chafee suggested $1 million for the arts as well as a $35 million voter-approved bond earmarked for the arts spending.

Rosenbaum said the money would go towards upkeep, restoration and safety upgrades at some of the many historic and/or aging theaters and galleries around Rhode Island. He mentioned, among others, PPAC, Trinity and the Second Story Theater in Warren. He also pointed out how such spending has a direct and demonstrable effect on the Ocean State economy:

“These investments actually turn into an opportunity to make these arts facilities work better as an economic generator for our state,” he said. He said there is $300 to $400 million in direct spending because of the non-profit art industry, not to mention all the additional economic activity that spending generates and that there are some 13,000 artists or people in creative professions in the Ocean State.”

Rosenbaum, who celebrates 19 years with the state Council on the Arts next month, said Chafee isn’t the first governor in recent memory to offer vociferous support to the arts. Linc Almond, he said, pledged to commit $1 million to art grants and “we got really close to that” securing $965,000 in grants. “During the Carcieri Administration we started a fairly steep decline,” he said, funds cut by 40 percent. He applauded Chafee for holding the line during lean years on this program.

You can listen to our entire conversation about how the arts can and does drive the local economy.

Text of Linc Chafee’s State of State speech


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chafee sos1Mr. Speaker, Madam President, members of the General Assembly, fellow General Officers, members of the Judiciary, distinguished guests, and my fellow Rhode Islanders.

It is a pleasure to join with you tonight in this chamber in this remarkable building, which for more than a century has served as a forum for the democratic debate that fosters our unique and very lively experiment.

It continues to be a privilege to serve the people of the great State of Rhode Island. Three years ago, when I was sworn in as Governor, I said that if we were willing to take on the hard work necessary to correct our course, we could lay the foundation for a new era of opportunity for Rhode Island. I am more determined than ever to honor that pledge – to affirm the trust the public has placed in us by making the right decisions to position our state for long-term prosperity.

I stand here today mindful of our challenges, but also hopeful for the future, and proud of the positive steps we have already taken.

I am proud that we are making Rhode Island a better place to live, work, and raise a family. We have increased funding for public education at all levels. We have taken steps to preserve and protect our environment and reduce the harmful effects of climate change. And, we have successfully launched HealthSource RI, the state health care exchange.

I am proud that we are identifying problems and finding ways to solve them. The DOT is no longer borrowing to fund basic transportation projects. We have dramatically reduced wait times at the DMV. And we have brought Central Falls out of bankruptcy to a new era of fresh leadership.

I am proud that we are living up to our state’s long legacy of diversity and tolerance. We have rescinded the divisive E-Verify law. We have given to all qualified Rhode Island students the opportunity to receive in-state tuition. And, we have extended the freedom to marry to all loving Rhode Island couples.

Rhode Island is steadily moving forward, but as you know, too many of our citizens are still struggling, and we have much more work to do. With that in mind, tonight I respectfully submit to you my fourth state budget and recommended bond issues that invest in our state’s future.

I am pleased to submit this budget to you on time– for the second year in a row. We are always looking for ways to become more economically competitive, and once again, this budget contains no broad-based tax increases.

I am also very proud of our team of directors and dedicated state employees who helped make difficult decisions. As Governor, I have been committed to spending taxpayer dollars wisely, and our talented team of directors deserves great credit for once again spending less than their enacted budget. I am also particularly gratified that the state has ended each year that I have been Governor with a healthy surplus.

Many of you know by now that I like to be consistent in my priorities. As with previous years, this budget invests in public education, infrastructure, and workforce development while also continuing to support our cities and towns and our local property taxpayers. I believe this is the right recipe for lasting growth and success for Rhode Island.

Recently, we marked the 50th anniversary of President Johnson’s “War on Poverty”, a key component of his Great Society. This is a milestone which prompts us to reflect on our collective progress on this front – both as a state and as a nation. While we would all agree that this is a war worth fighting, I don’t think any of us could say it’s a war we’ve won. On the contrary, I strongly agree with Pope Francis, President Obama, and other leaders who have expressed alarm at the widening disparity of opportunity in our communities.

It seems as though the battleground in the “War on Poverty” is increasingly the fundamental question of whether the government has a role to play in helping Americans help themselves out of poverty and up into the middle class. To that question, I answer an unequivocal: yes, government can be a force of good in people’s lives.

Unfortunately, the Tea Party and so-called conservatives have waged a war of their own on beneficial social programs that have proven to grow our essential middle class. Meanwhile our national economy sputters and the wealth disparity grows larger.

The struggle for equal opportunity for all isn’t just fought at the World Bank or in Washington, but in State Houses across the country, as well. We in this chamber have the responsibility to address it here in Rhode Island.

Education has always been the great equalizer. No matter where you start, if you get access to a good education and work hard, you can succeed. As President Johnson put it in his “Great Society” speech of 1964, “Poverty must not be a bar to learning, and learning must offer an escape from poverty.”

Each year that I have been Governor I have made public education a priority, and that continues tonight. I propose an additional 38 million dollars to continue to accelerate Rhode Island’s K through12 funding formula. Thank you for your past support of this initiative and let’s keep it going.

I have also worked with our three college presidents and have included an additional 10 million dollars in the budget to ensure a second year of tuition freezes at URI, RIC, and CCRI.

If you accept the funding levels I have proposed, we will have dedicated an additional 189.8 million dollars to public education in Rhode Island over my four budgets. There is no better or smarter investment we can make. It will pay dividends and help close an equality gap that threatens our future.

My budgets have been a course correction from the deep cuts imposed by the previous administration toward public education.

The State of the State offers an opportunity not only to reflect on the year behind us, but also to look ahead. This past year, through our Sustainable Communities initiative and a 1.9 million dollar federal grant, we commissioned several studies to do just that: to look at what we can expect from the years and decades to come, and how best to prepare.

And here’s what one of those studies – PolicyLink’s An Equity Profile of Rhode Island – tells us.

  • That the face of Rhode Island is changing. We are becoming an increasingly diverse state, and our economy is changing in turn. Consider that:
  • Rhode Island’s share of people of color increased from 7 percent to 24 percent between 1980 and 2010.
  • That all of our state’s recent population growth is attributable to people of color, who will continue to drive growth for the foreseeable future.
  • That by 2040, 41 percent of Rhode Island’s residents will likely be people of color, with Latinos reaching more than a quarter of the total population.
  • The study also says that communities of color are growing not just in our core cities, but throughout Rhode Island.
  • And, that today, 36 percent of Rhode Island’s youth population is people of color, while only 9 percent of our seniors are. The gap quadrupled between 1980 and 2010.

This is the future of Rhode Island. And the best way to prepare for it and translate it into prosperity is to ensure that all Rhode Islanders have access to quality public education. We cannot afford to have disparity in Rhode Island where there are areas of opportunity and others where poverty and lack of education self-perpetuate and hold back our economy as a whole.It was proven by the Dorr Rebellion of 1841 and the Bloodless Revolution of 1935 that hardworking and determined immigrants could make Rhode Island a better place to live. If we can open the doors of opportunity to those who are driving growth in our state, it will be a bright future for all, not just for some. The PolicyLink Study also said regions that embrace equity and diversity experience greater economic success.

But learning doesn’t end with a high school diploma or college degree. At any stage of life, education can help give Rhode Islanders the skills they need to get back on the job quickly.

Even in these difficult economic times, there remain jobs open in Rhode Island that are going unfilled. We can do more as a government to close this “skills gap.” For the first time last year, I included in the budget state money to complement federal support for workforce development. This year, I propose continuing this targeted investment in workforce training and assistance programs to help our people get back to work and meet the needs of Rhode Island employers.

As I said earlier, our investment in infrastructure continues in this budget. But Rhode Island’s infrastructure is more than our roads and bridges.

We have made great strides at upgrading the campuses at our state colleges, and I propose to continue this necessary work. Renovations and new construction for URI’s College of Engineering are expensive but I wholeheartedly support placing a 125 million dollar bond issue to the voters for this project. This is an exciting addition to the new Biotech and Life Sciences, College of Pharmacy and Chemistry buildings already completed or under construction at URI.

Congestion and gridlock are becoming more commonplace throughout the state. Therefore, I propose a 40 million dollar bond be placed on the November ballot. These funds will be used to undertake major enhancements and renovations to mass transit hub systems at key locations in our state. To facilitate this work, I have included 250,000 dollars from the Rhode Island Capital Plan Fund for the preliminary design of this new hub strategy. As we all know, good mass transit will spur economic growth.

We are moving forward with the important runway expansion at T.F. Green, which will enhance and improve Rhode Island’s gateway to the country and the world. The thoughtful development of the 195 land in the heart of Providence also continues, with smart decisions by the members of the Commission. And we recently announced exciting news at one of Rhode Island’s great success stories, Quonset Point, where General Dynamics Electric Boat signed a new 25-year lease agreement to expand its footprint and bring more good-paying jobs to our state.

Here in Rhode Island, our spectacular natural environment is among our most precious resources. My administration has therefore made and will continue to make investments to protect and responsibly use some of our state’s most beloved natural assets. In this year’s budget, I have proposed a 75 million dollar environmental bond question to be put before the voters. These funds would support improvements to vital DEM programs, such as brownfield remediation and land and open space acquisition. They would also provide additional resources to municipalities to improve our water and wastewater systems.

Since our founding, Rhode Island’s identity and economy have always been tied to the sea. We enjoy it and we depend on it, and my administration has been committed to the protection of our renowned coastline and ocean access points that draw tourists from around the world. Building on the success of the 2012 America’s Cup World Series in Newport, my proposed budget includes 10 million dollars to create an event center at Fort Adams State Park. This facility will allow Rhode Island to host large-scale, world- class sailing events, such as the America’s Cup, the Extreme Sailing Championship, and the Volvo Ocean Race, which will have its only North American stopover in Newport in 2015.

One of Rhode Island’s premier assets is our long and rich history, evidenced by the many special buildings found across our state. I was pleased last year that we reopened the historic tax credit program, putting nearly 35 million dollars back to work to help create jobs for Rhode Islanders. However, the demand for tax credits has far outpaced what was made available. Therefore, I propose providing access to an additional 50 million dollars in historic tax credits.

These are important investments, but getting the economy going requires more than repairing our bricks and mortar. It requires strategically deploying resources toward carefully selected segments of the state’s economy. Last year, you in the General Assembly enacted legislation exempting certain works of art from the statewide sales tax. This is an exciting step toward making Rhode Island the true “State of the Arts.” To build on this momentum and support our arts, culture, and historic assets, I am calling upon Rhode Islanders to make a 35 million dollar commitment through a bond referendum to move this critical segment of our economy forward.

For those who still do not recognize the connection between the vibrancy of our arts and culture and the strength of our economy, consider these facts:

    • A national study released last month estimated the creative sector’s contributions to the national gross domestic product at over 500 billion dollars annually – or at least 3.2 percent of the entire GDP.
    • Here in Rhode Island, another recent study reported that in one year alone the state’s 1,163 arts and cultural organizations created 5,200 jobs and over 324 million dollars in economic activity. For a small state such as ours, that is a big contribution.

Therefore, in addition to the bond item, I have proposed 1 million dollars in general revenue in support of the arts. I also recommend the establishment of a new Creative and Cultural Director at the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation, modeled after similar recent moves by Massachusetts and Vermont. I also recommend moving the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts and the state Film Office to the Commerce Corporation to synergize and enliven the state’s creative apparatus. The Commerce Corporation will now be a valuable tool for organizing customized programs for the arts, design shops, historic sites and intellectual property producers, all of which drive so much of our economy.As I mentioned earlier, our state is growing more diverse with each passing day. In addition to operating honestly and effectively for Rhode Island taxpayers, our government should reflect the diversity of the population of our state. With that in mind, building on the Executive Order on Diversity I signed last year, I recommend the creation of a new Executive Division dedicated to diversity. I look forward to a strong proactive approach to these efforts.

I also see an opportunity in the near future to change the tax climate in Rhode Island. I and the Congressional Delegation have lobbied in recent years for passage of the federal Marketplace Fairness Act. This would level the playing field between bricks-and- mortar and online retailers by allowing each state to collect sales and use taxes from sellers with no physical presence in the state.

After a series of encouraging signs, including 69-27 passage by the U.S. Senate last May, I now urge the House to take action on this important legislation.

While current Rhode Island law dictates that should Marketplace Fairness Act pass, the state sales tax would be reduced from 7.0 to 6.5 percent, I believe that there are more effective ways to use the resulting revenues to increase our relative competitiveness. Should the legislation pass, my proposed budget calls for reducing the corporate tax rate to 6.0 percent consistent with my goals in previous budgets. I also propose to eliminate the sales tax on electricity and gas for all businesses. While the New
England Governors recently proposed a comprehensive energy strategy to prepare for the years to come, this does not help us today. The reality is that commercial energy rates continue to rise, as evidenced by the recent 23.2 percent increase here in Rhode Island.

My budget also reserves some funds in anticipation of competition from Massachusetts casinos in the coming years, which will adversely affect our revenues.

One more word on Marketplace Fairness: if it does pass, we won’t be the only state to realize a windfall. Others, including Massachusetts and Connecticut, will also gain a new revenue stream, and they will likely use it to make their tax structures more competitive. They’ll have the discipline, and Rhode Island cannot afford to be the outlier. The temptation to spend the money on short-term fixes will be there, but we have to resist it and put those resources toward the long-term competitiveness of the state.

And good tax structure is only part of the equation of encouraging business growth in our state.

New England is facing serious challenges in the energy sector. The first is cost – we have some of the highest in the country because we are at the end of the pipeline. The second is climate change. We know it is happening and humans are causing it with emissions from burning high carbon fossil fuels. That is why I am working with the other five New England governors and five Eastern Canadian Premiers to achieve collectively what no single state or province can accomplish on its own – to build out our transmission lines and pipelines – so we can tap into clean, affordable and reliable hydropower, clean wind and solar power, as well as ensuring that we have adequate natural gas to contain our electric costs. I personally have visited the vast hydroelectric facilities in Quebec and Labrador. We do have the potential to make this region the low- cost green energy capital of North America.

Finally, I would like to discuss the status of Rhode Island’s ongoing economic recovery.

By nearly every measure, Rhode Island is on the upswing. The last employment report, showed all of the factors examined – unemployment rate, unemployed residents, employed residents, labor force, and Rhode Island-based jobs – moving in the right direction. Since I took office in January 2011, we have created 11,100 Rhode Island- based jobs.

Yet I know that this is not enough. Too many of our citizens are still unable to find work, and too many of our young people have left Rhode Island. Our social safety net continues to need mending. And, our programs to help Veterans can always be strengthened.

As a U.S. Senator, I opposed the Bush economic policies because I knew they had the potential to cause a devastating collapse. And, they did. And now the national recovery has been too slow, but we are moving in the right direction. Rhode Island was hit harder than almost any state; it will therefore take time to crawl back out of the hole. But the most damaging mistake we could make is neglecting the fundamentals of a strong economy – quality, affordable public education, sound, forward-looking infrastructure projects, and worker training and development initiatives. This is how we will build a sustainable economy that will benefit all Rhode Islanders without leaving behind those who are struggling the most. And we must not repeat the sins of the recent past and shift the burden to our cities and towns and our already overburdened property taxpayers.

There is no question that this has been a difficult period for Rhode Island, but we are poised to emerge from it more resilient than before. Rhode Island is getting stronger with each day, each week, and each year – that is the state of our state. And if we continue to follow a steady, deliberate, compassionate course, avoiding short-term decisions and quick fixes, the coming year will once again be better than the last.

Your job as legislators is to make laws; my job is to oversee the efficient operation of state government. There are so many good people working for the State of Rhode Island, and I, for one, am very proud to be a “state worker.”

In closing, I would like to quote someone who may surprise you. Not Roger Williams, but rather one of our more recent arrivals, Taylor Swift of Westerly. When asked about her new part-time home state, she had this to say: “I’ve been in Rhode Island a lot … Man, Rhode Island’s a good place. It’s a really good place.”

Thank you.

Governor Chafee on the broken promise of the Great Society


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Speaking at the Rhode Island Interfaith Coalition to Reduce Poverty Interfaith Vigil yesterday at the State House, Governor Chafee reflects on the failed “War on Poverty” and the broken promise of the great Society.

Governor Chafee talks about learning to surf in Costa Rica, shares pictures


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chafee surfing
Photo courtesy of Gov. Chafee

Governor Lincoln Chafee said he’s “still sore” after learning to surf in Costa Rica during the holiday break. “We had some big sets come in and, you know, getting through those big waves breaking over your board,” he said. “It was kind of scary at times, I will say.”

But mostly, he said, the waves were “gentle” and it was “kind of a beginners’ area” as he and his “college-aged children” learned to surf together.

“We got up at dawn every morning to catch the early morning waves and then come back exhausted and come back for the evening waves.”

chafee surfing2
Photo courtesy of Gov Chafee

You can listen to our entire conversation here:

Chafee, Ferri, Miller: Three lawmakers talk marijuana legalization


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rhodeislandmarijuanaMarijuana policy experts from afar have suggested Rhode Island could become the third state in the nation, after Colorado and Washington, to tax and regulate cannabis. But local political policy experts have suggested it won’t happen this year because it’s an election year.

I spoke with three State House lawmakers yesterday about the prospect for Rhode Island to legalize marijuana this year: Governor Linc Chafee, Senator Josh Miller and Rep. Frank Ferri

Chafee said he doesn’t think it will happen this year, saying he would like to see what happens in Colorado and Washington and what revenue estimates look like before moving ahead.

Senator Josh Miller, a progressive Democrat from Cranston, didn’t sound overly optimistic. “I’m not sure there’s enough people who understand or take it seriously enough to totally embrace it but I think it will be a serious discussion.” But he did say the revenue projections “will be hard to ignore.”

And for those who think the politics of the election cycle will trump policy (there are very few legislators who actively oppose legalization) Rep. Frank Ferri likened its chances to marriage equality. (Ferri is gay and worked for many years to pass same sex marriage; it passed last year)

Here’s my takeaway: legalizing marijuana will create jobs, raise tax revenue and every lawmaker I spoke with yesterday said that should be the major priority of the General Assembly this year. If there is a non-reefer madness reason not to tax and regulate marijuana – beyond the reefer madness offered by the Providence Journal and the electoral concerns of those in power – I’d like to hear it.

For more on this debate, see this article from Reason (August, 2013): Marijuana’s Bright Future. And this one from the American Prospect (December 2013): Pot’s Uncertain Future.

Also please listen to this RI Future podcast featuring an informed conversation between pro-legalization advocates Jared Moffat and Rebecca McGoldrick with East Greenwich drug counselor Bob Houghtaling, who said he could support legalization if done right.

RI, others to EPA: make Midwest, South stop polluting Northeast


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air pollutionRhode Island, and seven other nearby states, have formerly asked the EPA to require nine Midwestern and Southern states to do a better job mitigating the air pollution caused by fossil fuel industries because it affects air quality here in he northeast.

“Our goal is to eliminate Ozone Alert Days in Rhode Island,” said Governor Chafee in a statement. “Rhode Islanders still face bad air days each and every summer because of air pollutants from upwind states. Stronger controls, including the expansion of the Ozone Transport Region, are needed to level the playing field and improve air quality in downwind states such as Rhode Island.”

The eight states petitioning the EPA are: Rhode Island, Vermont, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland and New York. The states being asked to regulate carbon pollution in the atmosphere better are: Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia.

The EPA will rule on whether to approve the tougher regulations for the nine Midwestern and Southern states.

According to a news release from the governor’s office, anywhere form 70 to 98 percent of ozone pollution comes from such upwind states.

Abel Collins, program director for the Sierra Club said:

We applaud Governor Chafee for working to protect the health of Rhode Island families from out-of-state pollution. We are confident this is a sign that the Governor plans to take similar action to promote renewable energy locally to reduce the demand for dirty energy.

Environmental Protection Agency data shows that in many parts of Eastern states, like Rhode Island, more than half the harmful smog and air pollution associated with coal plants originates from out of state. By working together to protect our families from out-of-state pollution, these eight Governors are showing a commitment to public health and a readiness to lead our nation away from the dirty energy sources of the past toward a clean, renewable energy future.

As the cost of coal continues to rise, clean energy prices have become competitive and affordable, saving money for consumers. Governor Chafee can lead the way by acting to and invest in cleaner, healthier wind and solar power in New England.

Chafee calls for truce in war on Christmas


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xmass treeIn an attempt to avoid the annual holiday season skirmish over what to call the dead tree in the State House veranda, Governor Lincoln Chafee said in a statement today he’s willing to acquiesce and call it a Christmas tree.

Here’s his statement:

In 2011, my first year celebrating December in the State House I gave a simple six word instruction to the planners of the annual tree lighting: “Do what they did last year.”

Despite the myriad of pressing issues facing Rhode Island and the nation, this presumably happy event became a focal point for too much anger. Strangely lost in the brouhaha was any intellectual discussion of the liberties pioneered here in Rhode Island 350 years ago in our Charter. Because I do not think how we address the State House tree affects our “lively experiment,” this year’s invitation calls the tree a Christmas tree.

Secretary of State Mollis has offered to light the tree, and I have accepted his gracious offer. The tree lighting will be on Thursday (December 5, 2013) at 5:30 p.m. in the State House rotunda. Once again, our many thanks to all those who have worked hard to make our State House festive.

Good move, Governor! Had it come down to it, we would have again had your back … but we are more than happy to leave well enough alone and focus on more important issues … like taking the consumerism out of Christmas!

Chafee improves gender gap appointment by 19%


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Of the more than 2,000 Rhode Islanders who serve on boards and commissions 677 are women. And of the 166 boards and commissions in state government there are 38 with entirely male membership.

But the gender gap in appointed government is actually getting much smaller under Lincoln Chafee, who was lauded today by the Women’s Fund of Rhode Island for increasing the percentage of female appointees from 15 percent when he took office to 34 today. Also of his six senior staffers, half are women.

The Women’s Fund celebrated Chafee’s improvements in a press event at the State House.

I am pleased to announce that the Governor continues to have a strong record of appointing women to cabinet level positions, state boards, and commissions. More than 75 percent of the boards we monitor have women serving on them,” said Marcia Coné, CEO of the Women’s Fund. “However, as we celebrate the improvements we have made, there are still some gaps.  While our intention is to increase the number of women who serve, the overarching goal of RIGAP and the Women’s Fund is to ensure there is diversity at the intersection of race, class, and gender on each and every board, commission, department, and within the administration senior staff. This will guarantee that our government remains inclusive and representative of the population.”

And made this info-graphic to go with it:

gap graphic

Lincoln Chafee will be leaving the building


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chafee raimondo
Linc Chafee will not be running for governor against Gina Raimondo or Allan Fung

In an announcement that quickly made national news and immediately reshaped the 2014 gubernatorial campaign, Lincoln Chafee said today that he won’t run for re-election.

Chafee’s announcement sets up a likely Democratic primary between Providence Mayor Angel Taveras and General Treasurer Gina Raimondo. The news was a relief to many progressives, who feared that liberals Chafee and Taveras would cancel each other out, giving Raimondo a clearer path to victory. A primary between Taveras and Raimondo would seem to me to be a good opportunity for Rhode Island to see the clear difference between progressive and conservative Democrats.

After the announcement, Matt Jerzyk, tweeted, “!….!!….!!!”

Chafee began his political career as a Republican and was elected as an independent in 2010, when he prevailed in a three-way race in which fourth-place finisher Ken Block siphoned away votes from the more conservative candidates. Earlier this year, he became a Democrat.

Chafee has had a spotty relationship with the progressive community since becoming governor. He is seen as a champion of the marriage equality movement but a foe to ending homelessness. He lost the confidence of organized labor for supporting pension cuts but he gained respect among civil libertarians, environmentalists and peace activists who have appreciated his principled efforts to defend their causes. Many feel that he was well-intentioned as governor but out of touch with working class Rhode Islanders, while some lauded his efforts to help financially-struggling cities. His relationship with the conservative community in Rhode Island was much more clear: they didn’t like him and were very vocal about it.

Linc Chafee stammers and stutters when he speaks and he holds the most high-profile state-based position in an industry that places a huge reward on fast talking. But if you ever talk to him for more than a soundbite, he’s a a tremendously thoughtful and bright guy.

Here are some of my favorite pictures I’ve taken of Chafee over our years of working together … and here’s to many more!!

Ray Sullivan, of Marriage Equality Rhode Island, and Gov. Chafee celebrate his executive order recognizing same sex marriages from other states. (Photo by Bob Plain)
Ray Sullivan, of Marriage Equality Rhode Island, and Gov. Chafee celebrate his executive order recognizing same sex marriages from other states.
Chafee listens as Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien speaks at the State House.
Chafee listens as Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien speaks at the State House.
Governor Chafee addressing at Bryant University in 2012. (photo by Bob Plain)
Governor Chafee addressing at Bryant University in 2012. (photo by Bob Plain)
With Jon Brien
With Jon Brien
chafee jiggers 2009
At Jiger’s Diner in East Greenwich, 2009.

The ProJo opinion: Stop saying things we don’t want to hear


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ProjoI get that the Providence Journal editorial board (read: Ed Achorn) really doesn’t like union workers, and feels very strongly that public sector retirees should bare the brunt of elected officials’ overly-optimistic and/or irresponsible plan for dealing with future employee expenses, but I think that calling for a judge to chide the governor for speaking to the media is more than a little bit of an extreme reaction from Rhode Island’s paper of record.

“On Latino Public Radio Saturday, Governor Chafee brazenly ignored a judge’s gag order, imposed for the benefit of all parties,” read this morning’s editorial.

As journalists first, Achorn, et al should be more weary of siding with secrecy, even when it suits their special interest. But that’s their prerogative as chief ProJo philosophers. It’s a journalism high crime, however, for their editorials to so pervasively misrepresent reality for what read like cheap political pot shots. For example, does anyone believe the Journal when it writes that Chafee leaked this “brazenly?” I suspect “accidentally” or “clumsily” might be more accurate adverbs.

More importantly, today’s editorial misstated the situation it was ostensibly explaining. The governor “publicly pitched his hopes to ‘make the unions happy’ with concessions that he asserts will not cost taxpayers too much money,” according to the piece.

Well, not exactly. Or, more precisely, not at all. What Chafee actually said, according to the Providence Journal, was, “There might be some room for something that won’t cost the taxpayers a whole lot of money but will make the unions happy.”

One has to wonder if the Projo takes issue with the statement or the sentiment. I so highly doubt there would have been a similar opinion offered from the Providence Journal if Gina Raimondo said there was a potential solution that was going to make George Nee and Bob Walsh really sad.

The editorial then asks the judge to give the governor a little talking to for the breach, and cautions Chafee about his legacy. I’d be concerned if I were Governor Chafee, too. After all, the so-called paper of record is saying things about him that aren’t true.

Session spells more good news than bad for RI NOW


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Gov. Chafee signs into law the Temporary Caregivers Insurance bill.
Gov. Chafee signs into law the Temporary Caregivers Insurance bill.

The good news outweighed the bad news this legislative session for the Rhode Island chapter of the National Organization for Women, according to its bi-monthly newsletter that was sent out today.

“Perhaps never before have so many activists taken to the streets and to the State House to support and oppose issues of deep concern to Rhode Island’s citizens,” the email newsletter said. “RI NOW testified or submitted written testimony on close to 40 bills covering diverse topics including women’s health, marriage equality, economic equity, ending violence against women, and more. We lobbied members of the General Assembly and activated our members and allies through lobby days and online action alerts.

Here’s how the progressive group that advocates for social justice and women’s issues scored the session:

The Good News

  • Rhode Island passed Marriage Equality for all;
  • Temporary Caregivers Insurance will allow workers to take time off from work to care for a family member without risking financial ruin;
  • Numerous bills were stopped that would have limited a woman’s access to reproductive health care services;
  • The “Choose Life” license plate bill, which passed in the General Assembly was vetoed by Governor Chafee;
  • Funding for Court Advocate Program that serves victims of domestic violence was restored.;
  • Child care assistance was expanded so that women don’t have to lose their child care simply by taking a modest raise or promotion;
  • Minimum wage workers, two thirds of whom are women, will see the minimum wage rise to $8 in 2014;
  • Home-based child care providers have won the right to negotiate with the state to improve the state’s child care system which serves low income families

The Bad News

  • While great progress was made on eliminating gender rating in health insurance and expanding family planning services for low income women, we fell short of the support needed to get these through.
  • We made progress but fell short of the support we needed to create a dedicated funding stream for violence prevention through increased marriage license fees.

RINOW is planning a post-session party on July 27 at India Restaurant on Hope Street. More info here.

 

Thank you, Governor Chafee


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220px-Lincoln_Chafee_official_portrait
Governor Lincoln Chafee

Governor Lincoln Chafee wisely vetoed the “Choose Life” license plate bill last night, holding fast to his oath to protect and uphold the Constitution of the United States.

The bill, which would have put the state of Rhode Island in the dubious position of passing the collection plate for CareNet, an Evangelical church posing as a crisis pregnancy center, was hastily cobbled together and forced through the General Assembly at the 11th hour by Senate President M Teresa Paiva-Weed as a sop to religiously conservative groups still sore about the passage of marriage equality.

Not only did Governor Chafee veto a bad piece of legislation, he also sent a strong rebuke to a Senate President and General Assembly that plays fast and loose with rules when doing so becomes politically expedient and self-serving.

Some conservative religious figures in Rhode Island have been busy rationalizing the bill and obfuscating the meaning of the First Amendment and the principle of separation of church and state, sowing confusion in the hopes that their anti-American, theocratic agenda can gain a foothold in our legal system. It is fortunate that Governor Chafee stood strong against this bill because the lawsuit that would inevitably arise has the potential to go all the way to the Supreme Court. Defending the “Choose Life” license plates would put taxpayers on the hook for this defense, to the tune of potentially millions of dollars. Under this analysis vetoing the bill becomes a form of fiscal prudence.

Governor Chafee, in vetoing this bill, also stood by women and his pro-choice values. Women’s rights and access to reproductive health care are under serious attack across the country. A “Pro-Choice” license plate is small potatoes when compared to some of the legislative outrages occurring in Texas, North Carolina and elsewhere, but it is telling that a bill like this could be passed by the Rhode Island General Assembly in the same year that a bill that sought to increase funding for women’s health failed. The priorities of the General Assembly are profoundly out of whack, and the Governor’s veto may serve as a needed corrective.

Here in Rhode Island, we not only respect the core American principles of freedom of (and from) religion and freedom of conscience, we invented them. The founder of our state, Roger Williams, ensured that Rhode Island was the first government, anywhere on Earth, that separated the church from the state. This radical principle has helped transform the world from one in which a person’s beliefs were forced upon them by a theocratic and capricious government under threat of banishment, imprisonment or death to one where free thought and free expression are the norm.

Governor Chafee did a small thing when he added his signature to that veto yesterday, but he also did a great thing, when he defended your right to conscience and expression.

Thank you, Governor Chafee.

Veto anti-choice ‘Choose Life’ license plate


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plateOne of the more controversial bills to pass in the General Assembly, in its last week, would create a special “Choose Life” license plate. This has many folks crying foul. The organization that would benefit from the sale of this special license plate is religiously affiliated. Should the State be collecting funds for a religiously affiliated organization?

The bill was transmitted to the governor’s office on July 10. He has seven days to veto this bill or it becomes law. (Wednesday, July 17)

The Rhode Island Progressive Democrats of America (RIPDA) recently sent the following letter to the governor and we urge other like-minded folks to contact the governor’s office to ask him to veto this legislation. We also ask that you contact the governor at (401) 222-2080 or by email at governor@governor.ri.gov.

Dear Governor Chafee:

Re: S298 Sub A & H5053 Sub A

The Rhode Island Progressive Democrats of America urge you to veto the recently passed legislation that allows the non-profit organization CareNet to benefit from “Choose Life” license plates.  It would be in direct conflict with both the RI and US Constitutions for the state of RI to collect and distribute funds to CareNet, whose mission statement is “to share the love and truth of Jesus Christ in both word and deed.” They are also known to spread scientifically inaccurate misinformation about abortion. We are steadfast in our commitment to the separation of church and state and we value our founding ideal that our great state “be maintained with full liberty in religious concernments.” Under this ideal CareNet has the freedom to produce and sell bumper stickers with the message of their choice. The state should not be complicit in proselytizing on the subject of personal reproductive decisions.

Governor, we ask that you veto the “Choose Life” license plate legislation recently passed by the General Assembly!

Respectfully,

The Rhode Island Progressive Democrats of America

Chafee concerned about religious license plates


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Governor Lincoln Chafee
Governor Lincoln Chafee

Governor Chafee, in a report out from Channel 10 News, said, “he is “very concerned” about legislation to authorize a “Choose Life” license plate.” Though he did not promise a veto, he did say “he’s opposed to using state license plates to support a religious organization.”

The Governor is right to be concerned. This legislation basically puts the state in the position of passing out the collection plate for an evangelical church. CareNet, the recipient of the money, calls itself a faith-based crisis-pregnancy center, but  in reality the center is owned and operated by the Cathedral of Life Christian Assembly. Since when has Rhode Island and the United States been in the business of respecting or establishing a religion?

Of course Representative Doreen Costa, who champions the Second Amendment, shows her usual and absolute disregard for the rest of the Constitution, saying, with a decided lack of cleverness, “If you don’t want it, don’t buy it. Nobody’s forcing you to buy this. It’s your decision. Again, it’s your choice.”

Of course, this isn’t about somebody’s right to put a message on the back of their vehicle. This is about the government co-opting a purely religious message in an attempt to fund a purely religious enterprise. If CareNet wants to sell bumper stickers, let them. But the government should not be involved in marketing them.

One more thing: A putative “Christian” organization like CareNet might be expected to conduct itself in a more honest, straightforward way. Deception and dishonesty are not among the many virtues espoused by Jesus, yet in setting themselves up as a crisis pregnancy center, CareNet gives off the look and feel of an organization that provides full and accurate medical information. They do not. They lie to women.

Their website says that “Common After Effects of Abortion” include depression, eating disorders, increase in drug or alcohol use, difficulty sleeping, flashbacks and loss of self esteem.  The truth is that mainstream medical opinion and the American Psychological Association agree that there is no such thing as “post-abortion syndrome.”  In fact, there is evidence to suggest that to the extent women do encounter these kinds of issues, it is entirely caused by the rhetoric of religious anti-choice activists.

The Christians I know don’t feel the need to lie to make their point. They espouse honesty, and do not seek to shame and psychologically harm women.

The Channel 10 piece included a statement from a CareNet spokeswoman who said that the center “offers counseling for women who choose to abort,” yet the website says “CareNet Pregnancy Center of RI does not… refer for abortions.” All they offer is post-abortion counseling, a new and lucrative market places like CareNet have created out of whole cloth.

Lies.

This entire bill is about lies foisted upon Rhode islanders by a small clique of anti-abortion theocrats who would do anything to take away a woman’s right to choose. The Governor is right to be concerned and so should the rest of us. Ask Governor Chafee to veto this bill.

Contact the Governor and let him know. It takes a minute, and might save the country.

governor@governor.ri.gov (401) 222-2080

Progressive Dems dismayed by Chafee’s support for Gist


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RI4M_chafeeThe following is an open letter to Governor Chafee from the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats in response to the renewal of Education Commissioner Deborah Gist’s contract:

Working teachers have gotten together with their leadership to give voice to the despair they feel over the conditions in the Rhode Island schools.  One of those troubling conditions is the Commissioner’s insistence that the state use a standardized test to determine whether students can graduate from high school and as a means of evaluating teachers—the very test that is specifically designed for improving curriculum and specifically not intended for the purposes for which Commissioner Gist plans to use it.  Many educational researchers have repeatedly indicated that the testing frenzy is totally counterproductive to the educational outcomes of students and the data is proving that. Even Bill Gates, who, since 2009, put enormous resources behind qualitative testing, has recently made a turnaround in his thinking. Students need to be engaged and involved in their educational experience. Superintendent Gist’s fixation with testing is the antithesis of engagement. It is factory model teaching.

Another area of concern is Superintendent Gist’s background and alliances within the country’s educational community.  Her association with Eli Broad, for example, indicates an agenda that has more to do with the privatization of schools and the elimination of teachers’ unions than it does with providing an excellent education for Rhode Island students.

Finally, the teachers have repeatedly spoken about the condescending attitude the superintendent exhibits toward teachers, parents, and students in almost every interaction. Her unwillingness to even entertain suggestions is becoming legendary throughout the state.

Every public meeting has become a vote of no confidence in the Superintendent of Rhode Island Schools from teachers around the state. This same sentiment was reflected in the Providence Journal poll where readers were invited to vote on whether Supt. Gist’s contract should be renewed and an overwhelming number voted no. The unions commissioned another poll where 400 plus teachers were called at random with the same negative results. Do you really think that extending the contract of a Superintendent who is held in such low regard by the very people she is supposed to lead is in the best interest of the children of Rhode Island?

When you were first running for governor, the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats invited you to participate in a formal endorsement process where members of our Executive Board asked you and other candidates—each separately—to comment on issues facing Rhode Island. One segment was devoted to education and, when you were asked about your thoughts on charter schools and mayoral academies, you were eloquent in your response about how you were not a big fan of these kinds of schools because they drew money away from the regular public schools, and you felt the state should be committed to an equally high quality education for all our students rather than special treatment for a relatively small segment of the population.  As an organization we were delighted with that response and highlighted it in messages we sent out to our whole organization urging them to not only vote for you but to actively work for your election. We remain mystified by what appears to be a complete reversal from the ideals you espoused during that interview. If the commitment to Rhode Island school children you expressed when running for governor was authentic, it is hard to understand the basis for a decision to renew Deborah Gist’s contract.

At the very least, we would urge you to delay the vote and assign a member of your staff to do some investigation into the latest research on high-stakes testing and the people who are backing these type of “reform “ efforts, what their agenda really is, and exactly who stands to gain from such “innovations.”  You certainly need to have that information before making an informed decision, and you need to share it with the Board of Education so they too have all the facts before their vote.

In last month’s poll, 60% of working teachers said they would not take up teaching if they had to do it over again.  That is a heart-breaking statistic.  We have no greater resource than the intelligence and skills of our youth and no better guardians than their teachers.  Please show them the respect and the care they deserve.

Who Do We Pay?


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obligation opportunityWith the House of Representatives bringing in its “neutral” expert on defaulting on the 38 Studios moral obligation bonds, the lingering question to me still remains. Why is it alright to unilaterally bail out on our pension obligations to state employees, but our “moral” obligations to bondholders who knew the risks must be honored at all costs?

That was the question posed to Gov. Lincoln Chafee a month ago by columnist (writing then for Bloomberg View) Josh Barro.* Chafee’s never answered that fundamental question, and Barro rightly excoriated the Governor for claiming to call for moderation when in fact he called for a more radical version of pension reform than what was enacted.

Discovering the answer to the question (why can we ignore pensioners but not bondholders) is not where the conversation around the interview with Chafee went, of course; WPRI’s Ted Nesi discussed it before turning instead to the idea of moral obligation bonds as essentially general obligation bonds. And ultimately, Reuter’s Felix Salmon jumped in with a bit of commentary that completely lost Barro’s thread, instead laughably painting Chafee as Machiavellian in his approach to bonds.

But the question still remains; why are we valuing capital more than labor here? These pensioners did their duty for the State, whether it was operating its government, hunting down its criminals, taking care of its people, or any of the other thousands of little things state employees do. In exchange, beyond the wages it paid them, the State promised as well to ensure they could take care of themselves in their retirement. Then, when it was unwilling to pay for it, the State reneged on this promise; now it’s facing a lawsuit.

The bondholders, on the other hand, provided the capital used to pay for 38 Studios, a game company that spent poorly, was bad at managing its money, failed to produce a profit, and ultimately left the State with a massive financial hole. The State is promising to pay them their money back, with interest.

The pensioners provided actual value to the State, the bondholders did not. A question for 2014 for any elected official that suggests we should pay back the 38 Studios bonds but voted for pension reform is to explain how the bonds are more valuable than our state workers’ labor.

The simple political reality is that bondholders have simply always been more powerful and dominant in state economic policy than its workers; going back at least to the era immediately following the Revolutionary War (a sobering thought as we approach Gaspee Days). Even though paying back the bonds will pull money out of Rhode Island’s economy, the bondholders will suggest that they can cost the State even more money by damaging its credit ratings. Sadly, these credit ratings are put out by the same agencies that said that subprime mortgages were a top-tier investment… leading to the collapse in the economy five years ago.

Ultimately, because it’s far easier to tabulate the value of capital rather than services rendered over a worker’s career, our credit ratings aren’t hurt when we spurn our obligations to pensioners. There’s no doubt in my mind that we’re in the society that Ta-Nehisi Coates quotes Chris Hayes as suggesting we’re in, one “that applies the principle of accountability to the powerless and the principle of forgiveness to the powerful.

P.S. It’s also worth noting the words we use to describe the two situations; we’re “defaulting” on our bonds, but merely “reforming” our pensions. Maybe people against paying back the 38 Studios bonds should use the phrase “bond reform.”

And for more on this topic, see RI Future posts by Mike McDonald (Gina’s moral obligation Wall St not RI, April 7) and Bob Walsh (Pension lawsuit primer, June 26, ’12)

*CORRECTION: An earlier version of this post referred to the “conservative columnist Josh Barro”. Today, Barro declared he’s not a conservative, and is currently a “neoliberal”.


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