Photo credit: Brian Thompson |
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because you don’t get an e-mail doesn’t mean we’re not still publishing lots of
hard-hitting stuff! So bookmark us and visit often, or use
any of the other available methods to keep up with what’s going on.
By Linda Felaco
November Town Council
meeting
*In Italian, the title of the classic spaghetti Western is actually “The good, the ugly, the bad.” |
The November
Town Council meeting is perhaps best summarized as “Il buono, il brutto, il
cattivo.”* First, our very own Tom Ferrio presented a proposal on behalf of the
Charlestown Democratic Town Committee to give
year-round residents a break on their property taxes. (Use Progressive
Charlestown’s Magic
Tax Calculator to find out how this proposal would affect you.) Then Jim
Mageau took to the podium to continue his bizarre vendetta against the Friends
of Ninigret. Then the town council voted in favor of both the stacking of
the affordable housing commission with people opposed to affordable housing and
Ruth
Platner’s sham “residential” wind energy ordinance (which it appears pretty
much no one expects to be enforced, presuming it could be). So while the
rest of the world, and indeed the rest of Rhode Island, and in particular South
County, moves forward to put wind power squarely on the list of new,
nonpolluting energy sources, Charlestown
sucks fumes.
Transparency in
action (not)
Show us your files, Deputy Dan! |
Another bone of contention at the November council meeting
was an unsuccessful proposal for the council to sign on to a joint
letter to the Chariho school committee demanding clarification of certain
budget figures that some members of the three town councils don’t seem to
think add up. Meanwhile, Will has been trying to get “Deputy
Dan” Slattery to disclose the contents of the 2-inch-thick file he created in
the course of his “investigation” of Mageau’s charges against Friends of
Ninigret, to
no avail, and has now taken his case to the attorney
general. Stay tuned.
Will also delved into a troubling
lack of transparency regarding the sources of the funds that bankrolled the
lobbying for the state’s pension reform law.
There was also very little transparency on display at
Thursday night’s Planning
Commission meeting on the advisory to the Town Council on the proposed changes
to the state’s affordable housing law, for which no documents were made
available to the public. The old expression “Do as I say, not as I do” comes to
mind. Shrubbery
and parking were also on the agenda, but were shelved when the meeting ended
up running over 3 hours long. Though we did learn that not only does Deputy Dan want the Chariho budget to conform with fourth-grade math, but Town Council President Tom Gentz wants council documents written in fourth-grade English.
The Pound Papers
Our
investigative series on Lisa DiBello’s business dealings in connection with
the town’s beach concessions continues with the Pound
Papers, in which we learn that for the first time in the history of the
concessions at the town beaches, this
summer’s contract will not be renewed next year and will be put up for bid a
year early. Let’s hope that now that the bids
on the new beach pavilions have come in under budget, we’ll have better run
concessions at our new facilities.
Meanwhile, "Prince Valiant" Jim Mageau has once again come
to the defense of the Fair Maiden and fired
off a screed vilifying Progressive Charlestown, Will and Cathy Collette,
and various and sundry other individuals for <gasp> expecting a member of
the town council to actually follow the rules. Will
and Cathy
each published separate rebuttals.
Speaking of Mageau, Will makes a modest proposal: Make Mageau a line item in the town budget.
Speaking of Mageau, Will makes a modest proposal: Make Mageau a line item in the town budget.
This land is your
land
Part 4 of this series on the Charlestown Planning Commission
details the most powerful force in the universe, namely, the
power to obstruct. Readers may be surprised to learn that under the town
charter, the Planning Commission’s only real areas of authority are over the
comprehensive plan and property lines.
The need for
affordable housing
Tom Ferrio wrote very movingly about some
real-life examples of the need for affordable housing here in town. Along
those lines, I wrote about my own experiences with home
buying and “sweat equity.”
Pension “reform,”
signed, sealed, delivered
Our
local legislators voted yes, and the governor has signed the bill. Public
employees have been screwed. Their unions have been put down. Gina Raimondo is
the new DINO superstar. Governor Chafee can now forget about every other
campaign promise he made. And most Rhode Islanders who don’t write for
Progressive Charlestown are happy. Sigh.
Redistricting
Every 10 years in the year after the U.S. Census numbers are released, the districts for state senators and representatives must be adjusted to
make them equal in population. Will analyzes the potential changes to local districts for representatives and senators.
The War on Christmas
comes to RI
In defense of her first piece of legislation, a symbolic
resolution that the tree traditionally erected in the statehouse this time of
year can only be called a Christmas tree and not any “other non-traditional
terms,” Doreen
Costa (R-“Peanuts”) defies Governor Chafee’s plan to call it a holiday tree and
vows to hold her own lighting of her “Charlie Brown Christmas tree” in her
office on Tuesday when the official tree lighting ceremony is held. Not to be
outdone, the
Catholic Diocese vows to hold a counterceremony as well. Meanwhile, in
Sweden, the
residents of Gavle have torched a 40-foot straw goat. Alcohol may have been
a factor. ‘Tis the season.
And in honor of the season of giving, we’ve posted tips for shopping
locally this Christmas and some alternative
gift-giving ideas.
Online commenting,
anonymity, and privacy
Finally, a lively discussion has been going on regarding Progressive
Charlestown’s commenting policy and broader issues of privacy
and anonymity.
What with social networking, online databases, Google, GPS tracking, cell phone conversations in public places, and game and reality TV shows, how
much privacy does anyone really have anymore?