Whitcomb: Real-Estate Realities; Well-Placed Dr. Pedro; Encore in Everett; URI Needs Its Own Board

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Real-Estate Realities; Well-Placed Dr. Pedro; Encore in Everett; URI Needs Its Own Board

Robert Whitcomb, columnist
“Fish are jumping, quail whistle about us, school is out. And while living may not, in fact, be easy, the cinch of limitation is loosened. We know it will tighten in a while…in the effulgence of July, we do not forget January. This is the moral condition of New England….We do not long for endless summer… We know that only those who have stood beside the frozen water and shivered in the wind can take the full measure of sunlight and locust hum….’’

-- Boston-based detective novelist Robert B. Parker (1932-2010) in Arthur Griffin’s New England: The Four Seasons (1980)

 

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“To a praiseful eye
Should it not be enough of fresh and strange
That trees grow green, and moles can course
in clay,
And sparrows sweep the ceiling of our day?’’

-- From “Praise in Summer,’’ by Richard Wilbur (1921-2017). He spent most of his life writing and teaching in New England.

 

“Death destroys a man, but the idea of death saves him.’’

-- English Novelist E.M. Forster (1879-1970), in the novel Howards End

 

New England Summer

So we embark on another New England summer, very lush now but followed by a slow wilting. Sunburns, sand in the car, boats, bikes,  spicy smoke from grills, sweat, stings, Popsicles, porches, fireworks, thunderstorms, the whir of air conditioners, sand in sandwiches, mountains, asphalt hot enough to burn dogs’ paws, holding a hose, feeling excused to “waste’’ time and reading for pleasure. I think that most of the books I still remember well I read at least once in the summer, when the days seemed to stretch out to a far, blue horizon.

 

 

East Side of Providence
Municipal Funding

In the rumpus over a proposal in the Providence City Council that would target homeowners on the city’s East Side with higher taxes seemingly crafted for them (which might or might not be unconstitutional), a couple of much bigger and national problems seem to be mostly ignored. Much, but far from all, of the East Side is affluent.

 

One is the corrosive over-reliance on the property tax to fund town and city services and infrastructure, most importantly public education. Using broad-based state income and sales taxes is a much fairer and more efficient way to finance these things. (Remember that municipalities are legal children of the states, which are ultimately responsible for public education in the U.S.)

 

Second is the role of zoning laws (some of them labeled “snob zoning’’)  and regulations that discourage new-housing construction and greater density. Housing is so expensive in large part because local government makes it’s so difficult to build.
 

 

Favored With Tax Breaks

Groups with powerful and/or persuasive lobbyists can obviously be highly successful in getting tax breaks from state governments. Note, for example, insurance companies and film producers apparently getting tax credits and real-estate investors getting a break on capital-gains taxes in so-called opportunity zones, in this year’s Rhode Island legislative session.

 

But, of course, those not getting those breaks have to make up for the lost revenue. It has always seemed to me that overall economic development, if that’s what we want, would benefit if we got rid of most of these special deals, some of which are crony capitalism, and as much as possible make tax systems as simple, uniform and predictable as possible. And spend the tax revenue entirely on things that benefit as many people as possible – schools, transportation infrastructure and so on. But given lobbying and politics, I suppose that will never happen.

 

Speaker of the House Nick Mattiello
Favored Doctor

Other journalists study the entrails of Rhode Island law-making with clinical precision. All I can say is general: That the final product of the governor’s and legislature’s work this year looks pretty reasonable, especially in taking into account the possibility that a recession and falling tax revenue might be coming soon, despite the efforts of the Federal Reserve Board to maintain the easy-money environment (for which there will eventually be a big price) that’s been supporting the economy and especially the stock market.

 

But as usual, late in a session, some very dubious special-interest stuff pops up. Consider the story, spawned by the Web site UpriseRI, of House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello’s sticking in $1 million in state funding for the medically questionable alternative neurotherapy program of Mattiello donor and chiropractor Victor Pedro, like Mr. Mattiello, of Cranston – a treatment that Medicaid officials have refused to reimburse.  The politically astute Dr. Pedro’s operation, Cortical Integrative Therapy, has received $2 million in state funding over the past few years.

 

In any event, after the news media got wind of this fragrant deal, Speaker Mattiello withdrew the funding plan. Why we need strong local news media, continued….

 

To read the UpriseRI article, please hit this link:

 

State Decisions on State Land

The state-bought and state-owned Route 195 relocation land has taken disastrously too long to  be developed because of Providence red tape and politics, which makes getting anything done much tougher in Providence than in most other cities. The delay in building Jason Fane’s Hope Point tower is just the most dramatic example.  So Senate President Dominick Ruggerio’s bill to streamline development by taking away the city’s zoning power on the 195 land is very regrettably needed.  As with reforming public education, the management of Rhode Island’s capital has all too often shown itself bad at getting big things done.

 

And with a recession looking increasingly likely next year, the delays in developing the 195 space may result in lots of space there staying vacant for many years.

 

Reminder: In city after city, huge and famous projects, such as Boston’s Hancock Tower, New York’s World Trade Center’s Twin Towers and Paris’s Eiffel Tower, have gone up despite ferocious denunciations, and, after a few years, become beloved icons of their cityscapes.

 

David Dooley, President of URI
A Board for URI

Under the University of Rhode Island’s superb president, David Dooley, URI has become a more important research institution, with numerous economic and other benefits to the state and region flowing from that.  Some parts of the university are famous, especially its school of oceanography; others, such as pharmaceuticals and engineering, are less so but also doing world-class work. But to develop the sort of research strength and prestige of the University of Massachusetts and Connecticut, it needs a  more independent and nimble governance structure: It needs its own board of trustees, rather than having to answer to the state’s  Council on Postsecondary Education, which also oversees Rhode Island College and the Community College of Rhode, whose missions are not those of  major research institutions, though of course there is some research going on there, too, especially at RIC.

 

So the plan is to establish an independent, 17-member board of trustees to oversee URI. I’d guess that many members would be affluent URI grads who would make generous donations to their alma mater.

 

It’s past time to make this change. As Gary Sasse, former head of the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council, former Rhode Island Department of Administration director and now head of the Hassenfeld Institute at Bryant University, told GoLocal:

 

“I strongly supported it {the URI change}…that change can end up being the most important piece of economic development legislation the legislature considers this session.’’
 

Harvard College
The Kyle Kashuv Crisis

Harvard College has rescinded its offer of admission to Kyle Kashuv, a survivor of the mass shooting on Feb. 14, 2018 at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Fla., that killed 17 people. No, it’s not because he’s a big fan of Trump who reveres the NRA, which Harvard knew about when it accepted him. Indeed, his articulate outspokenness and that he went to that tragic school probably got him into Harvard, which only admits about 6 percent of applicants.

 

His problem was that Harvard learned that he had made virulently anti-black comments (extensive use of the “N’’ word) and, oddly, since he’s a descendent of Holocaust survivors, anti-Semitic remarks, too, via text and group chat before the shooting.
 

He asserts now that he was just being, well, silly, and didn’t really mean it: “We were 16-year-olds making idiotic comments, using callous and inflammatory language in an effort to be as extreme and shocking as possible,’’ and that despite, among other things, his links with Turning Points USA, which has a fair share of racists, he isn’t a racist.

 

Who knows? But his argument that his profuse apologies upon being found out, and his youth when he made his odious comments, should have been enough for Harvard to admit him anyway doesn’t wash. After all, all such institutions have to make judgments on the intelligence and character of teenage applicants. In the character department, his racist remarks look bad both for the overt racism expressed, however sincere or insincere it was, and for Mr. Kashuv’s apparent pathetic desire for the approval of his smug and maybe racist friends.

 

This is not a free-speech case. He can say or write whatever he wants, just as Harvard, as a private institution, can admit whomever it wants. Now we’ll see if Mr. Kashuv is truly regretful or tries to turn himself into a well-compensated “victim’’ on Fox News.

 

xxx

 

I’m in a group of high school classmates -- all white men and all except for me Trump voters in 2016 – who chat just about everyday by email. It’s astonishing how sharp our memories are from the early and mid-‘60s, although not so good about what happened last week. Although our time in school wasn’t a politically correct time, I do not recall any conversations as odious as Mr. Kashuv’s. There’s something about the online world – presumably the absence of real, eye-to-eye, physical presence -- that brings out bad behavior.

 

 

Big Betting in Greater Boston

I doubt that the gigantic Encore casino complex in Everett, that gritty old waterfront industrial city next to Boston, will steal much business from Twin River’s two Rhode Island casinos. Getting in and out of Boston, parts of which are often gridlocked, is too daunting, although I’m sure that many curious people from Greater Providence will check out Encore at least once. And it may lure a lot of tourists in Boston and Cambridge, e.g., people attending big medical and other professional meetings there who want some glitz and the adrenaline from gambling’s greed and fear, as well as very local gambling addicts who will  henceforth spend much of their time in Everett, of all places, destroying their finances.

 

How will Boston's new casino impact RI's
Meanwhile, maybe we’ll learn more about how to boost waterborne traffic in coastal cities by seeing how well Encore’s ferry service to the casino works.

 

Jim Folk, the casino’s transportation director, told WBZ: “It’s going to be great for the public. We’re going to actually be making connections from the South Shore where the MBTA runs service from Hingham and Hull into Boston and we can go and take those folks over from Boston to the North Shore.” Expand the epidemic!

The ferry will run seven days a week from about 7 a.m. to midnight on a triangular route connecting people to the casino, the World Trade Center, in the Seaport District, and Long Wharf downtown.

Fares will be $5-$7 depending on the route and will be open to the public, whether or not they’re going to the casino.

 

Anything to get people off the roads and the MBTA.

 

 

Income and Education

For decades, politicians and people in the nonprofit sector, especially think tanks and foundations, have argued that fixing public education is the most important thing in addressing yawning income inequality. But some economists and others have been arguing that that puts the cart before the horse.

 

First, some context from Thomas Kochan, a MIT management professor, and Barbara Dyer, executive director of MIT’s Good Companies, Good Jobs Initiative, who wrote recently in The Boston Globe:

 

“How did we end up here? One big reason is that productivity growth — where workers produce increasing amounts of goods or services per work hour — no longer drives pay. From the late 1940s into the 1970s, U.S. workers’ productivity and pay increased basically in tandem, leading to broadly shared prosperity. But then productivity and pay diverged — with productivity continuing to increase at a steady clip, and average hourly compensation for workers basically stagnating, after accounting for inflation. That means the benefits of productivity gains are going largely to company executives and investors.’’

 

Mr. Kochan and Ms. Dwyer note that by 2016, the top 1 percent of U.S. households had more wealth than the bottom 90 percent. That may be one reason that Trump won the 2016 election, although his voters’ median income was a bit higher than the overall U.S. median income; they liked the sound of his “populism.’’

 

To read their essay, please hit this link:

 

Billionaire venture capitalist and philanthropist Nick Hanauer looked at the challenge in a piece in The Atlantic:

“What I’ve realized, decades late, is that ‘educationism’ is tragically misguided. American workers are struggling in large part because they are underpaid—and they are underpaid because 40 years of trickle-down policies have rigged the economy in favor of wealthy people like me. Americans are more highly educated than ever before, but despite that, and despite nearly record-low unemployment, most American workers—at all levels of educational attainment—have seen little if any wage growth since 2000….

“Even the most thoughtful and well-intentioned school-reform program can’t improve educational outcomes if it ignores the single greatest driver of student achievement: household income.

“{T}he nation still has many high-achieving public-school districts. Nearly all of them are united by a thriving community of economically secure middle-class families with sufficient political power to demand great schools, the time and resources to participate in those schools, and the tax money to amply fund them. In short, great public schools are the product of a thriving middle class, not the other way around. Pay people enough to afford dignified middle-class lives, and high-quality public schools will follow. But allow economic inequality to grow, and educational inequality will inevitably grow with it.’’
 

To read his essay, please hit this link:

 

President Donald Trump
Another Opening, Another Show!

Trump’s neo-fascist, strident, lie-and-hyperbole-laden address in Orlando Tuesday to formally announce his re-election campaign pleased his fanatic followers, many of whom seem to live in a sealed room at Fox News. But after all, he’s a hell of an entertainer, for some people. Indeed, this corrupt real-estate developer and former casino operator’s real skill has been as a showman. Many of us are sick of his act, but millions can’t get enough of him.

Still, it’s hard to see that he made any converts Tuesday in his sarcastic singing to his choir. Trump, like most pathologically narcissistic people, has a difficult time being with anyone who doesn’t suck up to him. Unfortunately for him, a majority of the public dislikes him, despite the fact that the economic expansion that began in 2009 continues, floating on a sea of easy money. Still, if the economy stays strong, and with the Electoral College always favoring GOP states, predictable assistance in  2020 from Putin and other voting-system invasions that the Trumpians will facilitate, the caudillo could win. If he does, we’ll hold a wake for American democracy, free drinks for all!

On one of his themes – illegal immigration – at least give him credit for hyping it enough to discourage at least a few (mostly Republican) rich businesspeople from encouraging illegals to come here and work for tiny wages.

 

New Kind of Connecticut Farmer

Bren Smith is an “ocean farmer’’ at the Thimble Islands, along the coast of Branford, Conn. He grows kelp, mussels, oysters and clams, in a model example of highly sustainable aquaculture. His new book is Eat Like a Fish: My Adventures as a Fisherman Turned Restorative Ocean Farmer. There are some good ideas there for aquaculturalists around New England. For more information, please hit these links HERE and HERE

 

Reforming Down Charity

The GOP tax “reform’’ act of December 2017 has led to a drop in charitable giving, with the amount given by individuals going down an inflation-adjusted 3.4 percent, reports Giving USA, and total giving (corporations, foundations and individuals) declining 1.7 percent. (In a time of rising stock prices, some  very profitable companies, and foundations with growing endowments, have been giving a bit more.)

The newish law removed the incentive for many people to give by making it handier to take the expanded standard deduction than to itemize, with charitable gifts being one of the things you could itemize in your deductions.

Of course, most of us should give more. A few reasons people don’t: Generalized financial anxiety – the sense that the crazy debt-rich economy could start crashing without warning, so we’d better hang onto our money,  the need to support ill family members, and, somewhat paradoxically, the desire to have the maximum amount of money available to spend for stuff – fancy cars, fancy houses, fancy vacations -- to keep up with the Joneses. Conspicuous consumption.

And it’s a notably venal and selfish time.

With few exceptions, by the way, Democratic presidential candidates give much less to charities as a percentage of their (mostly big) incomes than the national average of all Americans, despite their frequent expressions of concern about the downtrodden. The exceptions include Sen. Cory Booker, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren. But Vice President Mike Pence, said to be a very religious man, has been very generous, as have been Sen. Mitt Romney and former President Obama.

Trump has kept his tax returns secret. His now-defunct Trump Foundation was a fraud that benefited him.

 

Please hit HERE and HERE for more information:

 

Art, War and Family History

The Belgian writer Stefan Hertmans calls his book War & Turpentine a novel but it is really more of a reconstruction of his grandfather Urbain Martien’s life starting with the Dickensian poverty of his upbringing as the son of a  gifted but ailing church painter, his military service in  the horror of World War I and then his later civilian life. It is superb as a chronicle of a European family in years that were sometimes traumatic but included times of beauty and joy, too – very personal but also serving as a wider social history.


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

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