Guest MINDSETTER™ - R.I. General Assembly is Missing in Action
Blake Filippi and the Other Members of the House Minority Caucus
Guest MINDSETTER™ - R.I. General Assembly is Missing in Action

Since mid-March, our House Republican Caucus has called upon our colleagues to fulfill these constitutional responsibilities, most especially to serve as the necessary check and balance to the Governor’s nearly unrestrained power during this emergency. Some of the Governor’s executive orders have restricted fundamental Constitutional liberties; particularly the freedoms of movement and association. Walmart and Home Depot are open for business, but we’ve been excluded from houses of worship, the beach and large family gatherings.
Our calls for action were initially met with weeks of silence and dismissal from House Leadership, who then contrived a window-dressing informal “COVID-19 Task Force” with zero legal authority that met only once. Other unelected boards and working groups have also joined the mix – while the bipartisan, duly elected Representatives and Senators, closest to the People of Rhode Island, have been effectively shut out. Why?
GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLASTWithout legislative oversight of executive branch policies and proclamations, this emergency is run with little lawful supervision. This is not a healthy condition for our Republic, and the public is concerned, as they should be.
The House Oversight Committee is responsible for this needed supervision and public dialogue. In the past, our House Oversight Committee has been the watchdog for the most vulnerable in our state, spending weeks investigating the dead children in DCYF care; it got to the bottom of the EBT benefit debacle with UHIP, and provided the energy behind reforms to critical senior medical transportation with MTM.
The House Oversight Committee not only offers a critical look at past practices; it also provides a public forum to prepare our future response efforts. While we must review and recommend (if necessary) alteration or revocation of the Governor’s emergency dictates that have impacted our families, neighbors, houses of worship, and local businesses – we also must begin to chart our future informed by what we learn at these public hearings.
Specifically, we must meet to review the processes for unemployment claims, contact tracing and mail ballot security. We must meet to discuss the metrics for evaluating distance learning and ensure that access to resources for teachers and students are equitably distributed throughout the state. We must learn the rationale for essential business designations and closures, and how we are going to empower small businesses to survive. We must meet to investigate state response efforts to supply our healthcare professionals with PPE. We must review protocols implemented for those disproportionately affected in our minority communities. Most important, we need to meet to address the crisis among our at-risk seniors in nursing homes – the one demographic that has by far seen the greatest number of fatalities in our state.
The House Oversight Committee is needed now, more than ever. Yet, it sits idle, waiting to be called by a House leadership that has shirked its duty. This must change. Our House Oversight Committee colleagues must resolve to meet and demonstrate that our system of government remains strong – that checks and balances remain firmly in place. Once again, we appeal to our colleagues: let’s do what we were elected to do and get back to work!
Rhode Island House Minority Caucus
Representative Blake A. Filippi, Minority Leader
Representative Michael W. Chippendale, Minority Whip
Representative John W. Lyle, Jr.
Representative George A. Nardone
Representative Brian C. Newberry
Representative David J. Place
Representative Justin K. Price
Representative Robert J. Quattrocchi
Representative Sherry Roberts
