Should the Attorney General Investigate Ken Block's Claims?

GoLocalProv Political Team

Should the Attorney General Investigate Ken Block's Claims?

In one of the first salvos of the 2014 campaign for Governor, GOP candidate Ken Block took aim at the decision-making process of the Chafee Administration and their efforts to relocate the Parole Board office in downtown Providence. As GoLocal first reported, Angus Davis, the activist CEO of Swipely came out in opposition of the office being relocated to 40 Fountain Street two week's ago. Davis made serious charges about the motivation and the process to move the Parole Board.

Block held a high profile press conference on Tuesday calling on the Attorney General Office to investigate the process as well as the record of the State Properties Committee. Late yesterday, the Attorney General's office told GoLocalProv, "The Office has received the complaint. It is the policy of this office not to comment on the validity of a complaint until such time as it is properly vetted and investigated. Once the investigation and review is complete, the Office will make its determination through the release of a finding to the parties involved."

Properties Committee Responds

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Block raises a series of issues about the decision of the Properties Committee. Late Tuesday, the State Properties Committee issued the following statement:

“A plan is in place to catch up with the missing minutes for the State Properties Committee meetings. We regret that due to the fact the Committee is extremely short staffed, the minutes were not filed in a more timely manner. The State Properties Committee hired court reporters earlier this year to transcribe the minutes from digital recordings. Department of Administration staff members are in the process of finalizing the minutes, and a plan is in place to upload these minutes to the Secretary of State's website as soon as possible.

“Transparency is a top priority for this administration and we regret that these minutes were not filed in a more timely manner,” said Executive Director Ronald N. Renaud, Department of Administration.

Davis' Charges

Previously, Davis, the CEO of one of Rhode Island's fastest growing companies, charged that the decision of the State Properties Committee was a political decision. 

Davis wrote in the letter to Chafee:

Your administration's proposal to move the Department of Corrections parole and
probation offices to a new downtown location is deeply concerning. Despite the fact
this will triple costs to taxpayers, it is a terrible idea to attract violent offenders to a
downtown location for their meetings with parole and probation officers.
My company, Swipely, was recently named by Inc. Magazine as the fastest growing
technology company in RI and the third largest private job creator in our state.

Davis concludes with:

I don't expect state government to help my business succeed, but I at least ask it to
do minimal harm. This decision by your department of administration is bad for
tourism, bad for the growth of Providence's economy, and dangerous to my
employees who must walk through this high-crime area every day and night.
We cannot reduce crime and violence in downtown Providence by turning it into a
government-mandated criminal convention center - please put a stop to this
misguided proposal immediately.
 


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