Whitcomb: Good News for Real Stores in RI; No Beach Fees; Barr Family Members Well Placed to Protect

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Good News for Real Stores in RI; No Beach Fees; Barr Family Members Well Placed to Protect

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
"The first of April, some do say,

Is set apart for All Fools' Day.
But why the people call it so,
Nor I, nor they themselves do know.
But on this day are people sent
On purpose for pure merriment."


-  Poor Robin's Almanac, 1790

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“Europe is far too weak and divided to stand in for the U.S. strategically. Without U.S. leadership the West cannot survive. The Western World as virtually everyone alive has known it will certainly perish before our eyes.’’

---- Joschka Fischer, former German foreign minister, after Trump’s election

 

 

"Trump now means Greed, selfishness and ugly. So sad.”

-- The late Barbara Bush, in a 1990s diary entry

 

 

Westminster Street, Providence
Good News for Main Street

The Rhode Island General Assembly has passed, and sent to Governor Raimondo to sign, long-overdue legislation to collect sales tax from online retailers.  Previously, only brick-and-mortar stores had to collect it in the Ocean State.

 

This bill will not only bring in millions of dollars more in state revenue a year, it will also help make Rhode Island’s physical stores better able to compete on price with online retailers, thus helping local stores retain local employees, pay local property taxes and state income taxes and otherwise be members of the state and local communities, unlike out-of-state online retailers, which generally  couldn’t care less about how we’re doing here.  This is particularly good news for owners of small stores and for communities’ downtowns.

 

Of course, most brick-and-mortar stores must have at least some online presence, too.

 

 

No beach-fee increases

Parking fees at Rhode Island state beaches won’t be raised modestly after all, mostly because of opposition in the General Assembly. Instead, the state will raise -- for the first time since 2002! – fees at state campgrounds and some other state park rentals. But this will not provide the state Department of Environmental Management with the money it needs to better maintain, let alone improve, the state beaches, where visits have steadily increased over the years.

 

Before surrendering, the Raimondo administration, through the DEM, was proposing a $2-a-day increase in  state residents’ beach-parking fees, bringing the cost to $8 a day during the week and $9 a day on weekends. For non-residents, the DEM had wanted a $4 increase for parking, bringing the total to $16 a day during the week and $18 a day on weekends. For season passes, the DEM had proposed a $10 increase for residents, bringing the cost of a pass to $40, and a $20 increase for non-residents, bringing the cost of a season pass to $80.

   

Here are some partial comparisons with adjacent states:

 

The parking fees for Massachusetts state beaches for Bay State residents: ocean beaches, up to $12 day; inland beaches, up to $8 a day. For nonresidents: up to $20 day for ocean beaches and $15 a day for inland beaches. For Connecticut state beaches: on weekdays, $9 a day for Connecticut residents and $15 for out-of-state vehicles; on weekends and holidays, $13 a day for Connecticut people and $22 for out-of-state folks.

 

The abandoned higher Rhode Island beach fees were reasonable and fair – and needed.

 

 

Sailing Hall of Fame's move to RI is finalized
Summery News

Meanwhile, RI’s Commerce Corporation has approved a $200,000 grant to help bring the Sailing Hall of Fame to Newport, where it obviously belongs.  The Providence Journal reported that the institution’s president, Gary Jobson, raised optimism that it would be able to move into the Newport Armory by saying that $3.5 million of the estimated total $4.3 million to $4.5 million cost of the project had been given or raised. The hope is that the museum will open sometime next year, making the City by the Sea an even more interesting place to visit.

 

Meanwhile, the Commerce Corp. also approved about $2.2 million in tax credits to go to the Farm FreshRI food hub planned for the Valley area of Providence. The hub would be a place where food and farm business would, in The Journal’s words, “work together to boost local and regional food production’’ with the challenge that the region’s farms are small and few. The hub will be near United Natural Foods Inc.’s headquarters. So maybe they’ll start calling the neighborhood the “Food District.’’

 

Farm FreshRI plans to build a 60,000-square-foot headquarters on the site, which will also house retail and wholesale distributors and a year-round farmers market.

 

Anyway, both the Sailing Hall of Fame and farm food are pleasant reminders that summer will soon be here.

 

 

To Boost Infrastructure, Reform Labor Contracts

I’m always pushing better public-transportation infrastructure, especially by expanding mass transit. But even if Donald Trump and Congress came through (which they probably won’t) with the big plan he once promised, the huge  pension and health-care costs of public employees in the  transportation sector would sharply limit the work that needs to be done to bring America’s transportation infrastructure to the level of other Western nations.

 

Nicole Gelinas, a senior fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute has some good ideas on this in a piece in Governing, such as:

 

“As a start, states and cities should receive bonuses in any {federal} infrastructure plan for requiring current workers to take responsibility for their own health care if they retire before the Medicare age of 65. After 65, public-sector retirees, like those in the private sector, should pay their own Medicare premiums. Pension costs are harder to reform, but newer public-sector workers should expect to stay on the job until at least 65 rather than being allowed to retire and begin drawing benefits earlier.’’ 
 

 MBTA, etc., take note. To read her piece, please hit this link:

 

 

Suicide Prevention in R.I. Public Schools

Three Rhode Island state representatives – Rep. Terri Cortvriend and Senators James Seveney and Dawn Euer, with the help of lawyer Kevin Vendituoli and others -- have filed an admirable bill to require all public school districts to have suicide-prevention policies, including training all employees in suicide-threat awareness. It will probably end up being called “Nathan’s Law’’

 

That’s Nathan Bruno,  a Portsmouth High School sophomore and one-time football player who was 15 when he committed suicide last year after Ryan Moniz, then the school’s head football coach, threatened to resign unless his players learned the identities of two students who, with Nathan, had sent Mr. Moniz harassing text messages and phone calls.

 

 

Warmer on Great Blue Hill

Observations at the famous Blue Hill Observatory, atop Great Blue Hill in Milton, Mass., show that over the past three decades there have been nearly six times as many daily records broken for heat as for cold.

Don McCasland, program director at the observatory, which has kept weather data since 1884, told The Boston Globe that the average annual temperature is, in The Globe’s words, “warming at Blue Hill much faster than in the past. Temperatures rose less than 1 degree from 1820 to 1919, but just over 2 degrees from 1920 to 2019.’’

 

“That is 3 degrees warmer in two centuries, and that is a large increase in a short amount of time,’’ he told The Globe.

 

To read The Globe’s story, please hit this link:

 

Blue Hill is famous for many dramatic weather events there, perhaps most notably for the 186 mph gust recorded there in the Sept. 21, 1938 hurricane.

 

The hill is also a cute ski area, and I have happy memories of the inexpensive fun it provided. It has snow-making machinery; it couldn’t be in business without it.

 

 

Harvard University
Reduce Costly College-Admission Complexity

In taxes, regulations and, yes, the college-admissions process, complexity favors the rich, who can afford to hire help to game the systems. I’ve often written about how tax complexity favors the wealthy. But Meghan Kruger, writing in The Washington Post, zeroed in on how the ever-more complex college-admissions process favors kids from affluent families. Among her observations:

 

“For students, it can begin even before the application comes together — with endless decisions about which classes to take, which tests to sit for, and which extracurriculars to pursue. (For some elements of our society, it can even begin with which preschool to attend.) Add to that the questions of which essays to write, which recommendations to solicit, which deadlines to aim for, as well as a host of other considerations. The result is a million different permutations, with only a tiny fraction likely to lead to a fat envelope.’’

 

And:

 “{C}ollege applications are preparation for the real world, which is overrun with {figurative} roads and byways so crisscrossed that it is impossible to negotiate them without the kind of professional help only the wealthy can afford.’’

 

“{I}f our goal is a more level playing field, sometimes transparency and simplicity can be the greatest equalizers of all.’’

 

To read her piece, please hit this link:

 

And wouldn't it nice if our money-and-status-obsessed culture put more emphasis on students’ character and dignity than on where they get into college?

 

 

Nature’s Barber

Even a relatively mild winter like this year’s does quite a job in pulling dead or dying branches from the trees, as witness the eerie wooden wreckage on our roads and sidewalks, waiting to be picked up as the sodden brown grass turns slowly green.

 

 

Driving a standard
Labor-Saving Devices Can Be Bad for You

I much enjoyed psychiatrist Vatsal Thakkar’s piece, in the March 24 New York Times headlined “Bring Back the Stick Shift,’’ especially because it reminded me of how much fun I had driving my 1964 VW “Bug” with its stick shift and clutch. Cars with stick shifts give you more control than you get with automatic shifting. Remember “popping the clutch’’ to start a car that otherwise wouldn’t?

 

But Dr. Thakkar’s essay focused on how a stick shift (manual) system can be safer than an automatic transmission because it keeps you alert -- in a sense, smarter or at least more vigilant. Which makes me wonder if all these advances such as GPS, Alexa and even hand-held calculators are making us more stupid by letting us avoid thinking – indeed letting us go through much the day semi-conscious. So a lot of young people quickly forget after they leave school how to add, subtract and do percentages, and they can find it difficult to read paper maps since Google Maps, etc., might get them where they want to (except when they’re really wrong).

 

Anyway, as for driving, Dr.  Thakkar concludes that the “cure for our attentional voids might be less technology, not more.’’

 

To read his piece, please hit this piece:

 

Can’t Blame Israel for Keeping Most of Golan

Anyone who has seen  (as I have) the gorgeous Golan Heights can understand why the Israelis claim the western two-thirds of them  (a claim that the Trump administration has just formally recognized) that they seized in the Six Day War, in 1967. These mountains, which overlook the Sea of Galilee, were frequently used by Syria, long a brutal, corrupt and violently anti-Israeli dictatorship, from which to shoot at the Israelis below. Before the Israelis took over most of the heights, they presented a grave security threat to Israel.

 

Put Your Workers on Boats

Now, this is the way to get people to use mass transit: A bunch of companies in Boston’s Seaport District have arranged for a new ferry service between the district and North Station to only cost $5 for a one-way ticket instead of the $13 it costs now. The service is basically geared to the eight companies’ employees, though there will be space for other people, too. Now they’ll be able to avoid some of the headaches of ground transport in downtown Boston, and this will reduce the number of congestion-and-pollution-causing corporate shuttle buses carrying folks between North Station and the Seaport.

 

Meanwhile, Boston Harbor Now is promoting two new ferry routes to state officials: one linking some Boston Harbor wharves and the other connecting with Quincy.  The more cars off the road the better, and most ferry travelers arrive at their destinations happier than if they drive or take a bus.

 

 

Amazon Warehouse
Amazon F.R. Employment Shrinkage

At year's end, Amazon’s Fall River warehouse/distribution center employed 951 full-time workers, more than 400 fewer than it had a year earlier, says the state. It employed 1,800 people in 2017. Never believe a company’s employment projections!

 

Wait until the robots really take over!

 

Consider that Stop & Shop’s parent company, the Dutch food retailer Ahold Delhaize, has started putting robots named Marty in many locations to scan the floors for such hazards as spills and dropped groceries. Marty is then supposed to alert store staff. Eventually, I suppose, other robots will do the cleanup, too.

To read more about Amazon in Fall River, hit this link:

https://www.tauntongazette.com/news/20190327/report-employee-numbers-drop-30-percent-at-fall-river-amazon

 

 

President Donald Trump
Plenty of Collusion

History will judge Donald Trump and his family and retainers as having colluded with the Russians. Consider the Trump crowd’s unreported meetings with representatives of that hostile foreign power;  the Trump crowd’s links with Moscow-linked WikiLeaks; its handing over campaign data to a Russian intelligence asset; Trump’s urging the Russians to use the emails  that they stole from the Democrats; firing the FBI director to obstruct the investigation of the Russia scandal; Trump’s efforts during the 2016 campaign to get a hotel built in Moscow; his drive to remove sanctions against Russia, and the Trump Organization’s long-term laundering of Russian mob money through real estate transactions.

 

In all this, a question comes to many observers: If Trump, his Mafia-like family and his retainers were not involved in nefarious relationships with Vladimir Putin’s regime, why did they repeatedly lie as the story about the Russian effort to elect Donald Trump unfolded (and continues to unfold). And then beyond the Russia story, what does it say about Trump that he surrounds himself with the people he does?

 

As for Atty. Gen. William Barr, a well-known GOP partisan with a very expansive view of (Republican) presidential power, and his misleading, indeed farcical, version of the Mueller report that he put out last Sunday. Note that last year Mr. Barr wrote a memo calling Robert Mueller’s probe into the obstruction matter “grossly irresponsible’’ and “fatally conceived’’. No wonder that Trump named Barr to be his chief water carrier at the Justice Department.

 

Is Mr. Barr now working diligently to cover up (er, “radact’’) as many of his boss’s transgressions as possible before releasing some of the Mueller report to the world. Barr is exactly the wrong kind of person to be attorney general.

 

Then there’s Mr. Barr’s family:

 

His son-in-law, Tyler McGaughey, has been hired by Trump to work in

the White House counsel’s office, where, the White House says, he’ll “advise the president, the executive office, and White House staff on legal issues concerning the president and the presidency.”  He’ll be in a good position to help his father-in-law protect the president.

 

Meanwhile, Mary Daly, Barr’s oldest daughter and former director of Opioid Enforcement and Prevention Efforts in the deputy attorney general’s office, has moved to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), the Treasury Department’s financial-crimes unit. That means that she’ll be in a strong position from which to warn Trump if some honest law-enforcement folks might want to expand their explorations of  Trump’s seamy finances. She might be able to help kill some investigations in the cradle.

 

The brazenness of the Orange Emperor’s court has a certain grandeur.

 

 

Cheated by Their Selfish Elders

It's hard to blame many Millennials for backing social-democratic or out-and-out socialist policies considering how they feel  betrayed by Boomers, who, while protecting their Medicare and Social Security  for themselves, have undermined the programs’ future with huge tax cuts primarily benefiting the rich, failed to maintain America’s infrastructure and are  leaving a gigantic federal debt.  All too many Boomer politicians protect the privileges of the old (because they vote so heavily) while ignoring the needs of younger people.

 

German Lessons

James Hawes has created something of a miracle in writing The Shortest History of Germany. His is a fast-paced and scintillating cause-and-effect narrative, from Roman times on, of what has often been Europe’s most powerful nation since the ruthless Prussian Otto von Bismarck  welded  it together in the 19th Century. With wit and a brilliant distillation of events, supplemented by graphics, he shows how Germany has been torn between the liberal democracy of the West and the authoritarianism to the east. He frequently cites the toxic role that Prussian militarism, arrogance, paranoia and bigotry have played in German -- and European -- history.

 

And he points to parallels, some unsettling, between current and past events in the culture that gave us both Goethe and Hitler.

 

The Central Event

A memoir by Robert Goolrick called The End of the World as We Know It is centered around one traumatic event in his early childhood in a bucolic Virginia college town – an event you don’t learn about until quite late in the book. I wonder how many people see one event as the most important of their lives, for good or for ill, from which all else flows, no matter how long they live.

 

Why Hondurans Head North; Brazil’s Tough New Boss

At the April 4 Providence Committee on Foreign Relations (thepcfr.org) meeting we’ll hear what James Nealon, former ambassador to Honduras and former assistant secretary of homeland security, has to say about the political and economic forces driving so many people to try to flee to the United States from Central America.

 

And at the April 10 PCFR meeting,  we’ll hear Brown Prof. James Green talk about the political and economic forces that have led to the election of  Brazil’s new right-wing president,  Jair Bolsonaro – and hazard some guesses on what might happen next in that huge  nation (208 million people,  world’s eighth biggest economy).

 

Professor Green is executive director of the Brazilian Studies Association. He lived eight years in Brazil.


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