Guest MINDSETTER™ Twaddell: A Modest Proposal

Guest MINDSETTER™ Mandy Twaddell

Guest MINDSETTER™ Twaddell: A Modest Proposal

Rhode Island’s abysmal ratings on the national scale hold back our promise. We want new companies to locate here, yet 45 states do better at landing them. States with good public schools attract businesses.  Rhode Island spends the money, but our schools rank last in New England.  Next door, Massachusetts schools stay at the top. Why can’t we compete when we have the same history, ethnic diversity, first ranking colleges, and smart, hard working people?  Why are we so pitiful?

Our road repair is the worst in the nation. Ask Rhode Islanders about the state they love, and you will hear a level of frustration that has them fantasizing a move.

Why are we like this? Our history has something to do with it.

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Rhode Island’s political structure was forged in colonial times when communication was achieved by horseback or rowing a boat. Today communication is instantaneous, and being small, one can travel from one end of the state to the other in an hour or less.

We can reverse our negatives by changing our outdated structure. Why not consolidate all 39 cities and towns, merging them into three counties:  Bristol County combining with Newport County, Washington and Kent becoming one,  and Providence County merging Cumberland, Woonsocket, and Pawtucket.

Think of the monies the taxpayer would save. Police, Fire, and Garbage, handled by the county with one umbrella State Department of Education; duplication and redundancy disappearing, and deficits reduced.

And if change and improvements were really possible, we would slim down State Government too. Rather than the General Assembly, we would replace it by a unicameral body with one representative for each 30,000 citizens.  Let’s make them full time members, with no outside employment. Pay them desirable salaries and benefits, so that our talented citizens will seek election. Make it worth their while, but limited to 12 years of service. 

We should combine the Lt. Governor’s office with the Governor’s. The two candidates would stand for election as a team, with the Governor given a line item veto.

Change is in the air.  You can’t help but notice the dissatisfaction with the way things are.

One of these days, we who love Rhode Island will finally say,  “Now is the time. Let’s do it!”  


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