Guest MINDSETTER™ Sam Bell: Let Matos Lead as Council President

Guest MINDSETTER™ Sam Bell

Guest MINDSETTER™ Sam Bell: Let Matos Lead as Council President

Sabina Matos
For too many years, our city has sadly been plagued with a crisis of leadership on our City Council.  Our city faces severe challenges, and it needs decisive leadership from our sole legislative chamber.  We need a Council that is not afraid to take on difficult problems, and at the same time we do need a Council that provides stability after years of drama.
 
Balancing these two imperatives is a difficult task, and it requires an exceptionally qualified Councilor to fill the role.  Fortunately, following the resignation of indicted Council President Luís Aponte, Councilwoman Sabina Matos became Council President.  As the President Pro Tempore of the Council, Matos was next in line for the Council Presidency, according to the city charter.
 
Representing Silver Lake and Olneyville since her upset primary win over a more conservative Democrat, Sabina Matos is part of a new generation of Latina leadership in our city.  Known for her careful approach to policy and a strong work ethic, she has cut a profile as a pragmatist reformer.
 
While still maintaining collaborative working relationships with her colleagues, Matos is a woman with strong personal ethics.  She has not been afraid to stand up for a better vision when previous Council leaderships have made misguided choices.  
 
Recently, she was a prominent dissenter against then-President Aponte's shock decision to delay (and subsequently water down) the Community Safety Act--a police reform ordinance designed to reduce racial profiling and protect our immigrant community.  
 
She has also been a key voice for reforms of the corruption-plagued Board of Licenses, even leading community opposition to the powerfully connected Dusk 2 Dawn nightclub.  (Represented by a team of lobbyists headed by the School Board President, Dusk 2 Dawn used a sketchy end-run around city ordinances to fight for special exemptions from key regulations that other nightclubs follow.)
 
Perhaps most importantly, she has pushed for reforms to the special tax deals to provide massive subsidies for luxury housing projects managed by politically connected developers.
 
Matos has certainly made decisions I have disagreed with.  It is probably fair to say she is not the most progressive voice on the Council, but on a council without a progressive majority, she is an excellent consensus choice.
 
City Hall is still in many ways a place several decades behind the times.  Some elements of Providence's political culture may find it difficult to accept a highly qualified woman in a position of power.  Unfortunately, certain more conservative Councilmen and lobbyists are falling into this predictable pattern.
 
Matos deserves a chance to implement a better vision for Council leadership.  Our Council has seen far too much instability and corruption.  Our city has serious challenges to address, and we need a leader to begin the process of reforming City Hall.

The Power List - Politics, 2016

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