Whitcomb: Make Newport a Bigger Convention City? Cape Congestion; Trump Cozy with Twin River

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Make Newport a Bigger Convention City? Cape Congestion; Trump Cozy with Twin River

Robert Whitcomb, columnist

“On a thousand small town New England greens,

the old white churches hold their air

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of sparse, sincere rebellion; frayed flags

quilt the graveyards of the Grand Army of the Republic.‘’

 

-- From “For the Union Dead,’’ by Robert Lowell (1917-1977)

 

 

Make Newport a Big Convention Town?

In the summer, of course, Newport is packed, but not in the winter. As Bob Curley, writing in Newport Life, noted in an article about hotels in the City by the Sea: “Newport has a classic resort town problem: not enough hotel rooms in the high season — when hotel occupancy tops 90 percent — and not enough visitors to fill those rooms in the off-season, when occupancy drops to about 40 percent.’’

 

So some people have long pushed to have a really major (500  guestrooms and big meeting halls for plenary sessions, etc.) convention-center style hotel to draw major national and even international meetings, and so many more visitors,  year round. (The Newport tourist season, has, it is true, been lengthening in recent years, in part because of the proliferation of events created at least in part to snare more tourists  and other visitors year round.)

 

Newport -- the perfect convention destination?
A convention center might make economic sense, but would most Newporters want a lot more people in the off-season?

 

Mr. Curley notes that Newport now has about 2,360 hotel rooms (though more are soon to come), while the subtropical old East Coast tourist cities of Savannah (with 10,000 rooms) and Charleston (with 13,000) have many more. But is tight little Newport set up to handle a huge increase, even if it can get it despite that little cold snap called winter?  Maybe. It handled thousands of sailors back when it hosted the Navy’s destroyer fleet.

 

To read Mr. Curley’s article, please hit this link: 

 

 

Wider Cape Bridges = More Traffic

There are big plans afoot to replace the Bourne and Sagamore bridges, over the Cape Cod Canal, with wider ones,  with the hope of easing the flow of traffic, especially, of course, in the summer, and making the crossings safer. There would be an additional third lane in each direction on each bridge. In fact, after a while the wider bridges would be as jammed as the current thrillingly narrow ones, which were built in the 1930s. More roads and lanes draw more cars.

 

If only there were daily, year-round train service to get more Cape-bound people off the road.

 

There is CapeFLYER’s Boston to Cape Cod passenger train service, over the canal’s railroad bridge, offered Friday evenings, Saturdays and Sundays from Memorial Day weekend to Labor Day. It goes from Boston’s South Station to Hyannis via Braintree, Brockton, Middleborough/Lakeville, Wareham Village, Buzzards Bay and Bourne, with scheduled travel time from Boston to Hyannis (the Cape’s Los Angeles) of 2 hours and 20 minutes. But much more train service is needed to reduce the traffic on and approaching the highway bridges.

 

 

The Boston Laundromat

The Boston Guardian, that city’s biggest weekly, reports that 30-50 percent of the property sales in the past decade have been for cash! This suggests money-laundering and international flight capital.  Real estate is one of the most effective ways to hide ill-gotten gains. (The Trumps know a bit about this.) And it sure puts people who must finance some of their purchases at a big competitive disadvantage in Boston’s still-hot real estate market.

 

President Donald Trump
Foreign ‘Policy’ Bluster, Retreat and Chaos

“Now imagine how {National Security Adviser John} Bolton would react if a foreign power demanded that the United States give up its nuclear arsenal. Or drop its support for allies such as Israel. Or stop its subsidies to major corporations such as Boeing and Alcoa. Or end its spying on other countries. Or even usher President Trump out of office before his term expires.

 

Yet those are the rough equivalents of the demands the Trump administration is making on North Korea, Iran, Venezuela and China — simultaneously.’’

-- Max Boot, writing in The Washington Post

Please hit this link to read his essay:

 

Trump’s erratic, contradictory and even chaotic policies (if you can call them “policies’’) are weakening the United States by undermining our credibility. Consider Iran, about which, essentially acting without important allies, except the murderous Saudi regime, Trump makes assorted bellicose statements that he can’t back up without war. So he gets cold feet and pulls back.

 

Regarding North Korea, Trump, in turn, expresses his “love’’ for mass-murderer/dictator Kim Jong Un, then threatens that blood-soaked regime with military action and then goes back toward love, for a little while. Trump from time to time cites “great progress’’ toward persuading Pyongyang to denuclearize – progress that turns out to be a chimera. Kim uses smoke-and-mirrors diplomacy and Trump’s wishful thinking as cover for continuing to build up his weapons capability.

 

A somewhat similar thing has happened with Venezuela. The Trump administration makes loud noises suggesting that we’re gonna overthrow that once prosperous nation’s dictator, Nicolas Maduro, but then has to retreat because Maduro’s foes turn out not to have the hoped-for support in the military necessary to overthrow him.

 

All this flailing around, led by a notably unstable, irresolute and narcissistic president, driven not by patriotism but by whatever he thinks will make himself look like a “winner,’’ makes America look weak and its leadership incompetent and so encourages our adversaries to test us in dangerous ways.

 

Trump’s erratic, contradictory and even chaotic policies (if you can call them “policies’’) are weakening the United States by undermining our credibility. Consider Iran, about which, essentially acting without important allies, except Israel and the murderous Saudi regime, Trump makes assorted bellicose statements that he can’t back up without war. So he gets cold feet and pulls back.

 

Facebook, Google and Amazon -- should they be broken up?
Need to Go After Worse Monopolists

A U.S. district judge has ruled that Qualcomm Inc has violated antitrust law by abusing its dominance in cellphone microchips to suppress competition and extort excessive licensing fees from phone makers. Fine, but speaking of competition suppression, why not go after Google, Facebook and Amazon?

 

Putting the Brakes on Marijuana Legalization

I have long thought that states should stay away from profiting (or at least profiting as much as they do) from the sale of potentially (and often actually) addictive and otherwise unhealthy goods and services in order to avoid raising broad-based taxes to pay for essential government services and physical infrastructure.

 

The latest chase for state revenue is for allowing “recreational use’’ of marijuana – a psychotropic drug that can impair coordination, cause cognition and memory loss and whose effects on the still-developing brains of adolescents and young adults may be particularly deleterious.

 

Is legalization losing steam?
There’s also evidence that marijuana can be a gateway to using other, worse drugs. Time to put the brakes on marijuana legalization, much as the states want a slice of the money from pot sales. It was good to read that New Jersey and New York have just put on hold legislation that would permit recreational pot use.

 

Trump and Twin River

In other addiction-promotion industry matters, there’s Trump’s intervention to try to stop a casino from being built in southeastern Massachusetts – a project long sought by the Mashpee Wampanoag Indians. Trump was trying to help limit competition for the Twin River Casino Management Group, which owns casinos in Lincoln and Tiverton, R.I.

 

Trump was doing a favor for Twin River lobbyist Matthew Schlapp, the chairman of the American Conservative Union, the husband of White House strategic communications director Mercedes Schlapp and a longtime Trump ally.

 

Twin River'sJohnTaylor
But then, all casino operations are, to a lesser or greater extent, heavily politicized because these cash machines are licensed, regulated and taxed by government. Of course, Trump himself was a failed casino operator in the famously corrupt city of Atlantic City, N.J.  Casinos have tended over the years to be excellent sources of bribes to public officials.

 

By encouraging smoking and heavy drinking in casinos, which tend to fuel increased betting, they also hurt public health. Yes, it’s a legal business, but why should government be promoting these things?

 

 

Smaller and Richer

Justin Fox, writing in Bloomberg, had a good piece on how some cities can shrink in population but yet get richer by reinventing themselves. Pittsburgh, which moved from steel and other manufacturing, to high tech, higher education, and health care, is probably the best example.

 

Mr. Fox also cites among other cities Pittsfield, Mass., once heavily dependent on manufacturing, especially General Electric’s, but that has now positioned itself as a tourist, arts and college center in the middle of the Berkshires. Then there’s Barnstable County, Mass. (aka Cape Cod), another scenic area, which has become a favored retirement center for affluent older people. (That doesn’t seem a perfect recipe for long-term economic growth, if Cape Codders really want that growth.)

 

Pittsburgh's affluence fueled by meds, eds and tech
So once distressed cities can reinvent themselves. Still, it seems to me that truly long-term prosperity, with a strong middle class, is more likely with a highly diversified mix of services and manufacturing.

 

To Mr. Fox’s article, please hit this link:

 

 

Coastal Crops

“Of all New England dishes, clam chowder probably evokes the strongest feelings. In 1939, for instance, a bill was introduced into the state legislature in Maine suggesting that to make a clam chowder with tomatoes be deemed illegal. Almost passed too."

 

-- From Inside New England (2010), by Yankee magazine’s Judson D. Hale

 

The Maine Coast is becoming an international center of aquaculture, especially of oysters and other shellfish and edible seaweed, even as the warming of New England waters drives the lobster catch further north and east. The number of these saltwater farms has increased rapidly in the Pine Tree State, with the epicenter in the Damariscotta area. It’s worth a trip up there by present and potential aquaculturalists from southeastern New England, although their crop mix might be a bit different from Maine’s because of our warmer water and different coastal geology.

 

 

Reject Roundup

As plant life, especially weeds, explodes at this time of year, many home gardeners will stock up on Roundup, the Monsanto herbicide. But they should avoid it. Increasing evidence suggests that it’s carcinogenic, among other health and environmental dangers. There are effective alternatives, such as vinegar and some safe brand-name herbicides.

 


Memorial Days

The other day I was at a memorial lunch, or, as such things are called these days, a “celebration of life,’’ in honor of a friend of half a century who died a few months ago.


It was in an old house in a beautiful town on Buzzards Bay and the day was gorgeous – near the start of the lushest two or three weeks of the year. The breeze going through the newly leafed branches of the tall trees behind the house made a summer-sounding rustle.

 

Memorial Day
The departed lady’s old friends, some of them neighbors, sipped drinks and ate little sandwiches as they reminisced and went through photo scrapbooks with pictures going back many decades. There were lots of anecdotes and quiet laughter. The lady almost always had a contagious joie de vivre. As someone noted “She always wanted to have fun,’’ and wanted others around her to have it, too. You could have a worse agenda.

 

Trying to match the now rather aged faces of some of the guests with the photos of them in the scrapbooks was a challenge.


The event reminded me of how much this time of year is a time of leavings, as much as the blooming plants might suggest otherwise. Of course, the end of the school year (which, regardless of age, we always feel) is one reason, but it’s also because people, in general, tend to move in the late spring.

 

The soft air, the greenery and the sense of endings created a kind of almost agreeable melancholy.

 

Pay Back

Boomer1, by Daniel Torday, is a sort of high-octane nightmare comedy novel wherein a frustrated Millennial with an economically worthless degree finds ways to lash out quite theatrically, if ultimately dangerously, against what he sees as selfish Baby Boomers’ power in America’s increasingly winner-take-all economy.  And yet in the end, generational definitions become diffuse as the pasts of Boomers flow into the present.


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

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