Community Activist Raises Questions of Elorza Taking Credit for Zoo Free Days

GoLocalProv News Team

Community Activist Raises Questions of Elorza Taking Credit for Zoo Free Days

For years, Roger Williams Park Zoo has offered Providence residents a “thank you” by offering entry free on the first Saturday of each month.

This month, the offer was tagged by Mayor Jorge Elorza as a sponsor of this program. And one community activist, Shannah Kurland, took to social media to put forth critical view of the Mayor’s politicization

Kurland wrote on Facebook, “Every first Saturday is free at the zoo, the natural history museum and the botanical gardens for Providence residents. This has been going on for years and years, so funny to see the mayor out his name on it. It's the tiny crumb we get for subsidizing recreation for the suburbs.”

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Kurland is the attorney for Providence Youth Student Movement (PrYSM), a group created to confront and end state, street and interpersonal violence affecting the Southeast Asian community in Rhode Island.

According to the Roger Williams Park Zoo’s website — First Saturday of the Month is Free for Residents of the City of Providence, “As a “thank you” to Providence residents whose tax money helps to support the Zoo, the first Saturday of every month is free to residents of the City of Providence (not East or North Providence).  Proof of residency (such as a driver’s license or a utility bill with your name and address printed on it) must be shown at the ticket window.”

Massachusetts Lawsuit

In 2012, the then-Massachusetts Attorney General indicted former Treasurer Tim Cahill. According to an April 2012 article in the Boston Globe, "Coakley's office announced in October 2010 that it would investigate whether Cahill's campaign illegally coordinated with the Treasury to run a $1.2 million advertising campaign designed to boost Cahill's image as the Lottery's overseer during his gubernatorial campaign.

In a statement on Monday, Coakley said the ad campaign "was carefully coordinated to promote (Cahill's) own campaign for governor."

“This was more than a million dollars in taxpayer money that was intended to benefit the public and the Lottery," Coakley's statement said. "We allege that the timing, amount budgeted and coordinated messages of the Lottery ads all point to a decision made by Treasurer Cahill to abuse his position of trust and put his own political ambitions over the best interests of the taxpayers he was elected to represent.”

Former MA Treasurer faced charges
Resolution of the case

As GoLocal Worcester reported in March of 2013, "Former state Treasurer Tim Cahill will not be retried by Attorney General Martha Coakley for allegedly misusing a state lottery ad campaign for his own benefit. Instead, Cahill will pay a $100,000 civil fine."

A mistrial was declared in the corruption case against Cahill in [] December after the jury deadlocked on the charges stemming from state lottery ads that ran during Cahill's campaign for governor in 2010.

The jury acquitted Cahill's former chief of staff Scott Campbell, who faced similar charges.

A grand jury indicted Cahill, a GoLocalWorcester MINDSETTER™, in April 2012 following an investigation involving taxpayer-funded state lottery advertisements that his office produced while he was running for Governor. 


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