Former RI Director of Administration Blasts Brookings Report as "Business as Usual"

GoLocalProv News Team

Former RI Director of Administration Blasts Brookings Report as "Business as Usual"

The Brookings Institution released its strategy report on improving Rhode Island’s competitiveness on Tuesday, citing “five advanced industry and two opportunity growth industry areas” for potential growth in Rhode Island.

Gary Sasse, former state budget director and current director of the Hassenfeld Institute for Public Leadership, called the report just 'business as usual," however. "How is the Brookings report that targets specific growth industries any different? Will it turn out to be Greenhouse Compact circa 2016?" he asked. 

At a press conference on Tuesday at the the Rhode Island Foundation, Governor Gina Raimondo urged attendees to make the report a reality

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"We have what it takes, but the folks in this room have to seize the opportunity," said Raimondo.

Last August, GoLocal’s Russ Moore wrote that Rhode Island native Mark Gallogly, whose private equity firm, Centerbridge Partners, manages $65 million in Rhode Island pension fund money, stepped forward to help fund the study by Brookings that's intended to recommend solutions to improve the state's economy.

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Brookings released the following statement on Tuesday. 

In the fall and winter of 2015–2016, the Metropolitan Policy Program at Brookings worked in association with Battelle Technology Partnership Practice (now TEConomy Partners, LLC) and Monitor Deloitte to advance a new competitive strategy for the state of Rhode Island. 

This slideshow summary of the project’s final conclusions finds that Rhode Island possesses unique assets for building an advanced economy that works for all but stands weakened by the decline of its core “advanced industries.”  Given that erosion, the slideshow asserts that five advanced industry and two “opportunity industry” growth areas hold out solid potential for growth in the Ocean State and recommends that Rhode Island should embark on a three-part strategy to strengthen its advanced industries and improve its statewide platform for growth.

Commerce Secretary Stefan Pryor said at the press conference that egislative priorities were already being laid out in accordance with the plan.

"We left some blanks in last year’s legislation," said Pryor. "We left room to prioritize on the basis of a report on where we ought to invest - and emphasize -  to drive the economy.  The Economic Planning Council voted to adopt the plan as areas to invest even further."

The Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity criticized the "central planning" aspects of the report - among others.

"It's even worse than we thought it was -- this reliance on academia, non-profits, there's a lot of special interests," said Center Director Mike Stenhouse. "Who's really behind this?  The philosophical issues, that we can centrally plan a government centric economy, two is the overt corporate welfare and three the cronyism and the process."


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