Protest Scheduled by Former Tenants, Community Activists Targeting CA Developer Getting $3.6M

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Protest Scheduled by Former Tenants, Community Activists Targeting CA Developer Getting $3.6M

Rosinha Benros
A protest has been planned for Saturday, October 15 from 11 a.m. to noon at Hope Artiste Village in opposition to controversial developer Lance Robbins -- spearheaded by former tenants, as well as a community activist who helped to defeat the proposal in 2015 to move the PawSox to Providence.

Robbins' Urban Smart Growth was recently awarded $3.6 million in tax credits from Governor Gina Raimondo and the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation to complete nearly 150 lofts at Hope Artiste Village in Pawtucket - and previous tenants and business associates have been speaking out. 

"Pawtucket has been through enough with the PawSox fiasco and the closure of the Memorial Hospital Birthing Center and ICU," wrote event organizer David Norton. "Pawtucket lacks any sort of defense against the governor and state house leaders allowing wealthy individuals to come in and ravage our local economy and suck every last dime out of our struggling community. Please join us in protest of this horrible situation," wrote Norton. 

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Robbins has had a highly controversial thirty-year track record, starting in Los Angeles, CA in which he was known as the city’s most “notorious slumlord” to his ownership of the Hope Artiste Mill, where a growing number of former shop owners call him everything from “the lowest of the low” to “morally bankrupt.”

Growing Movement

GoLocal reported that a growing chorus of leaders have been calling on Commerce to halt the tax credits in light of Robbins' track record. On Friday evening, Commerce RI announced that they would take a look at the award of $3.6 million in light of issues unveiled in the GoLocal investigation.

Rosinha Benros, who said "this just isn't fair" about Robbins' being awarded the millions in tax credits after her experience with the developer, said that she is looking forward to the protest. "
"I had a good conversation with [Norton]," Benros told GoLocal on Friday. "I'm so happy that we're going to be putting things together."

Benros said that learning of the story of another restaurant owner at Hope Artiste Village furthered her interest in getting involved. 

"When I heard of Deana's story, at the Bread Lab, that was not an accident," said Benros, of former owner of the Bread Lab, Deana Martin, relaying her issues with Urban Smart Growth -- which included sprinklers destroying her equipment. 

"Deana told me the sprinkler story -- that was not an accident," said Benros. "They do those things, to drive you crazy, to make you leave. They push you and push you." Robbins and Urban Smart Growth have refused repeated request for comment.
 


Lance Robbins Controversies Through the Years

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