Guest MINDSETTER™ Ford: RIPTA and Rhode Island Government Simply Not Working

Pat Ford, Guest MINDSETTER™

Guest MINDSETTER™ Ford: RIPTA and Rhode Island Government Simply Not Working

This week, GoLocalProv reported on widespread overtime abuse at taxpayer subsidized regional transportation authority RIPTA.

The investigation is fast on the heels of the revelation that a growing homelessness problem in Rhode Island is being exacerbated by the elimination of the RIPTA free ride program, effectively preventing the homeless from obtaining free meals at area shelters, and coupled with several major, and in some cases fatal accidents.

It appears that RIPTA is joining a growing list of Rhode Island government authorities that are in free fall financially, while simultaneously unable to deliver customer service at any level of proficiency.

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Rhode Island, as a society, is at a crossroads. Every significant Rhode Island government institution is in some form of death spiral. Our schools, our infrastructure, our retirement systems … and now our public transportation system.

Our choices are stark.

We can continue to cling to the romantic notion that government participation in our daily lives somehow introduces a measure of fairness … and social justice. Or we can wake to its abysmal failure. 

The realization that we have lost an entire generation to the failures of our public schools. That our excessive spending will burden future generations with unimaginable debt. That a significant portion of our population enjoy absolutely no quality of life. Our seniors, burdened by the outrageous cost of medical care. The middle class, caught in a vicious squeeze, their tax dollars supporting massive entitlement programs, while job prospects dwindle. Or the poor, held hostage by an educational system more interested in its own financial prospects, than in breaking an endless cycle of poverty … giving children the education they so desperately need.

A system so fundamentally broken that the poorest among us cannot simply travel to fulfill basic needs … food … shelter … even when they are made available … for free.

Government’s Growing Monopoly

The common denominator? A government that exercises a growing monopoly over all of our daily needs. Yet somehow misses the spark, the desire to create, that is only present when market demands, and the fruits of market successes are available to spur both drive and innovation.

We can continue to rationalize our confiscatory tax structure as some form of participation in a long ago formed social contract, or acknowledge that we continue to fund a corrupted institution so craven that it demands tribute from gambling … and just last year, some of the physically weakest among us … medical cannabis patients.

Folks, it’s simply not working. Those that say otherwise typically profit from maintaining the status quo. Try hard. Try really, really hard, to imagine a government entity that serves us well. No, not the hard working folks who often execute the most thankless tasks of government … but the bigger picture … Are we able to point to success at any level?

The answer is surprisingly old fashioned.

We must begin to look back to each other for private acts of charity. 

Heating assistance does not have to be the exclusive domain of a salary rich “not for profit." Private food banks dot the Rhode Island landscape. They need your help, especially between holidays. A gift card from a local supermarket can bridge the gap for a child’s dinners when a paycheck is still a few days out. 

Volunteerism should be an element of our daily lives. 

Read to children at the local library. Deliver meals to homebound seniors. Tutor a child in your area of proficiency. Coach a local team … even if your kiddos have already graduated college.

We must offer free market solutions and competition, to government provided services. Let individuals choose where to go to school …  where to work … where to shop … and how to get there. 

Make the State of Rhode Island earn our business … as opposed to simply feeling entitled to it. Allow innovation in the form of free enterprise to blossom, raising the prospects for all Rhode Islanders. 

Let’s start the conversation.

Pat Ford (pictured right) is the Chair of the Libertarian Party of Rhode Island. 

Top 100 Overtimers at RIPTA

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