Side of the Rhode: Who's Hot and Who's Not in RI Politics?

Dan Lawlor, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Side of the Rhode: Who's Hot and Who's Not in RI Politics?

Every Friday, Dan Lawlor breaks down who's rising and who's falling in the world of Rhode Island politics. Check out who made the lists this week.

Hot

Representatives Karen MacBeth and Mike Chippendale - “We’ve kicked the hornets’ nest,” Representative Chippendale told Go Local. MacBeth and Chippendale are the Chair and Secretary of House Oversight, and have both been leading investigations into the state’s failed investment in 38 Studios. For their efforts, both have received threats in the mail against their families - and both continue to do the work of investigation. As Chippendale said,“We’re moving in the right direction.”

Representative Frank Ferri - Ferri is floating a run for Lt. Governor. The Warwick Progressive has been a champion of regular Rhode Islanders (from equal marriage rights for gay couples to keeping Rocky Point a public park to regulation of pay day lenders). Perhaps he’ll work for bringing the LG’s office onto the same ticket as the Governor. Ferri will shake up a primary race dominated by two establishment political figures- Secretary of State A Ralph Mollis and Cumberland Mayor Dan McKee.

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Dr. Dan Harrop - Stronger alternatives mean a healthier democracy. Harrop is working with House GOP Leader Brian Newberry to a host a “Victory Fundraiser” from 6:30–8:30pm on the 15th for several Republican Assembly candidates at the American Restaurant, ranging from former Portsmouth Rep Dan Reilly to newcomers Ana Santana (Providence) and Lacey McGreevy (South Kingston). The Providence party is still recruiting City Council candidates.

John Taraborelli - Last summer, Providence Monthly’s Taraborelli wrote, “We can all debate what kind of a job Mayor Taveras is doing – it’s our right as participants in this great democratic experiment – but one thing we can all agree on is that it’s a damn tough job.” To help a new person earn that “damn tough job”, Taraborelli, the writer and columnist, has shifted to working as Mayoral candidate Jorge Elorza’s Communication Director.

Sam Zurier and Keith Olivera - The Providence City Council and School Board are moving toward greater coordination. This past week, the President of the School Board met with the City Sub-Committee on Education to present and discuss issues around school autonomy. It’s a good sign that the adults involved with our schools are having more conversations with one another. A stronger partnership between the City Council and School Board could do wonders to support and engage families and young people.

Institute for Study and Practice of Nonviolence - “The sheer number of deaths of young people by young people prompted [us] to do more than preach and teach,“ noted Sister Ann Keefe, one of the Institute’s founders. Come on out tonight to ”Invest in Peace“ - a fundraiser from 6–9pm at the Roger Williams Botanical Center to benefit the work of the Institute for the ”reduction of gang or group related violence in Rhode Island." In 1999, 26 people were murdered in Providence; in 2000, 30 people were homicide victims. Responding to the violence, the Institute opened in 2001 - and by 2006 there were 11 murders in the city. Last year, following a series of cut backs in programming, there were 14 lives lost. Do your part - let’s invest in peace.

The Late Br. Paul Goodwin, FSC - “The great teachers always stay with you. Deeply saddened by Bro. Paul Goodwin’s passing, but so thankful for all he taught us,” tweeted US Senator Jack Reed on news of the passing of his high school English teacher at La Salle Academy. Br Paul first taught at La Salle in 1959, and despite long periods of work in New York, his last year was this past Spring. To paraphrase Br Paul, “Always remember, be an eagle, not a chipmunk.”

Not

Gordon Fox - As GoLocal reports, “A former subcontractor for 38 Studios is alleging that his firm was ordered to work on former Speaker of the House Gordon Fox’s business colleague Michael Corso’s bar as part of their contract - and has produced what he says is documentation to prove it. Project manager Michael Rossi with SyNet, Inc. has revealed a budget for work which he says shows at $25,000 line item for work to be done at Corso’s Tazza Cafe in 2011 – under a job order for the failed 38 Studios.” As Fox once said, “If you put lipstick on a pig, it’s still a pig.”

1,117 - That’s the number of Rhode Island children who were in emergency homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters and transitional housing during 2013. According to RI Kids Count, children made up 25% of the people who used shelter services last year. Check out the proposed solutions from RI Coalition for the Homeless.

Deborah Gist - A big shakeup! The Education Commissioner’s policy agenda was directly challenged this week, as the Senate Education Committee voted to ban the use of high-stakes testing as a graduation requirement until 2017.

US Drone Policy - “The Senate has quietly stripped a provision from an intelligence bill that would have required President Obama to make public each year the number of people killed or injured in targeted killing operations in Pakistan and other countries where the United States uses lethal force,” writes the New York Times. Obama’s policy has been rightly criticized from US Senators Rand Paul to Mark Udall. As Amnesty International noted, “A basic report on the number of people killed shouldn’t be too much to ask.” Where does our delegation stand on the issue?

220 Blackstone Street - A piece of Providence history is up for sale. The City Property Committee discussed transferring ownership of the Edmund Flynn School (defunct since 2012) from the City of Providence to the Providence Redevelopment Authority. Flynn, in 1968, was one of the first intentionally integrated K–5 schools in the city. Dr Harold Devine, a former Superintendent and one time teacher at Flynn, told GoLocal, “We have all heard that famous saying that every problem has a solution that’s quick, simple and wrong. Today’s problem solvers would be well advised to remember that.”

Patrick Conley - The State’s Historian Laureate, real estate owner, former Providence College developer, and one time Cianci chief of staff recently wrote a fiery op-ed in the Journal denouncing the Coastal Resources Management Council and the Department of Environmental Management, alongside cheering for the regulation mindset of Rhode Island’s Gilded Age. Conley has done much good to illuminate the state’s history, but his recent advocacy around environmental regulations raises an eyebrow. As RI Future blog noted, Conley and DEM “are in court over two separate issues… Both involve properties Conley owned that leeched toxins onto abutting properties, according to DEM documents.”

**Davian Sanchez ** - While the City Councilor is right to call for more transparency in city government (always great), it is bizarre Sanchez is doing so while he faces a $9,420.00 fine from the Board of Elections for failure to file his campaign finance disclosures. Sanchez has taken the lead on neighborhood issues, but needs to settle his accounts. The young Councilor faces several possible opponents in the Democratic primary, including activist Mary K Harris, who was involved in the city’s 100 person May Day parade.


INVESTIGATION: Fox, Corso and 38 Studios

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