- Good news - No bloodshed at Chariho meeting
- New neighbor – Manda Panda?
- Frank Maher as a campaign manager?
- NRA-RI takes another hit
- “Got Smarties®?
- How the other side lives
By
Will Collette
Chariho omnibus
meeting ends without arrests or serious injury
Representatives
from Charlestown, Richmond and Hopkinton managed to get together in one room on
January 15 to discuss their “differences” about the funding and operations ofthe Chariho School District without shots being fired.
Charlestown Town
Councilor Dan Slattery (CCA Party) managed to restrain himself to simply making
snarling remarks about Richmond Town Council President Joe Reddish’s effort to
get the towns to discuss changes to the Chariho Act.
I had heard some rumors about minor injuries to people sitting near Slattery when bristles flew off his brush-cut during some of the more heated exchanges.
I had heard some rumors about minor injuries to people sitting near Slattery when bristles flew off his brush-cut during some of the more heated exchanges.
Dan
Slattery tried to stir up some controversy by challenging Chariho
administrators over computers being supplied to students. According to Cynthia Drummond
of the Westerly Sun,
Slattery wanted to know “What is Chariho doing within
their own computer security system to ensure that the firewalls are there to
prevent the students from going outside?” I’ve heard he wants to make sure
Chariho students are blocked from access to Progressive Charlestown.
Manda Panda buys
the rights to GOP state Rep candidate Tina Jackson’s house
Jackson: paid no Fire District tax since at least 2006 |
I’m
not making any of this up. A company called Manda Panda
Partners LLC
owned by Fernando Cunha of Providence won the bid in the tax auction on the
Charlestown home of 2012 Republican candidate for House District 36 Tina
Jackson.
Among Jackson’s many delinquencies, she fell way behind on paying her
Charlestown Fire District taxes, having made no payments since 2006 or earlier.
Jackson
is also climbing the list of delinquent political candidates who owe fines for
violating disclosure rules. At the end of 2013,
Jackson owes $2,906
and that amount is increasing daily.
Jackson’s
tax liability was bought by “Manda Panda Partners LLC” of Providence. There are
a number of professional tax sale companies who participate in these tax auctions,
buying the tax liability and collecting the interest without necessarily taking
the property. However, there are consequences for Jackson. Here’s how the City of Providence’s Tax Collector explained what
tax sales mean to a homeowner:
Property is subject to "tax sale" when the taxes are
seriously delinquent. "Tax sale" means the City asks an interested
third party to pay the taxes owed to the City in your place.
In exchange for the payment, the City gives a tax lien on your property in favor of the party who paid your taxes. Unless you pay back the third party (not the City) the back taxes and fees, that party has the right, after one year and one day (366 days), to take title to your property through the court. This proceeding is called "foreclosing the right of redemption." This is a serious situation because you can lose your property by order of the court.
In exchange for the payment, the City gives a tax lien on your property in favor of the party who paid your taxes. Unless you pay back the third party (not the City) the back taxes and fees, that party has the right, after one year and one day (366 days), to take title to your property through the court. This proceeding is called "foreclosing the right of redemption." This is a serious situation because you can lose your property by order of the court.
Frank Maher gets a new gig
Former
state Senator for the northern half of Charlestown Frank Maher (R)
has been named to head the campaign of Republican Dawson Hodgson to unseat
incumbent state Attorney General Peter Kilmartin. Some say this puts an end to
the speculation that Maher would run in 2014 against Sen. Cathie Cool Rumsey
(D) who handily defeated Maher in 2012, though I think that opinion is
premature.
Maher had an
undistinguished career as a state legislator. His main claim to fame was
winning passage of an obscure bill that reduced the penalties on criminals who
use a crossbow in the commission of a crime. Why he would want to do that, you'll have to ask him.
Most
recently, Maher headed the
gun lobby astroturf group, “We the People [Who Are Mostly Not Residents] of
Exeter,”
in their unsuccessful effort to recall the Exeter Town Council majority because
the Council wanted town residents to have to undergo proper background checks
before getting concealed carry permits for handguns. Maher’s group
lost by a two to one margin when a record 40% of the electorate turned out to
vote on the first anniversary of the massacre of those little kids in Newtown,
CT.
Prior
to naming Maher to head his campaign, state Senator Hodgson seemed like he
intended to run a lively and serious – though decidedly uphill – campaign
against Attorney General Kilmartin. But with Maher at the helm, er, maybe not
so much.
I
was actually looking forward to seeing Maher run for office again so maybe
Hodgson will have second thoughts and send Maher back to Exeter.
Rhode Island gun
lobby takes another hit
For
years, the National Rifle Association has been making friends and influencing
people with its generous spending through its Rhode Island affiliate. But it
turns out they were doing so illegally.
After a complaint was
lodged by the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats (not that this will make any difference to Mike Chambers, there is no relation to
Progressive Charlestown, though we like them just fine), the NRA folded its
Rhode Island Chapter.
Now,
the Rhode Island Board of
Elections has upheld the Progressive Democrats’ complaint, confirming
that the NRA did indeed violate Rhode Island campaign finance law and levied a
fine of $63,000. While $63,000 is chump change to the NRA, given its gazillion
dollar treasury, it is one of the largest fines issued by the Board of
Elections and sets back the gun lobby’s political machine in our state.
Combine
that with the waxing the gun lobby took in the Exeter recall
election,
and maybe we’ll see some serious gun control measures get taken up by the
General Assembly.
WPRI
(Channel 12) reports that parents of students at
Portsmouth Middle School received a note from school officials warning
about a new substance abuse threat. Smarties® candies.
Yep, that
old kids’ favorite sugar candy is apparently being ground up and then snorted
or smoked. I swear I am not making this up.
From Peepresearch.org |
I checked
out this story on Snopes and looked at their message board (lots of fun). One commenter asked why school officials,
if they were worried about maggots, didn’t warn against the danger of eating Smarties®. That drew this reply
from one wag (it wasn’t me): “Because the fly
eggs are the most nutritious part of the Smarties!”
I
wonder what would happen if somebody (not me) tried snorting or smoking Peeps®?
How the other
side lives
Charlestown’s
ace real estate broker Ray Mott (Mott & Chace Sotheby’s Realty) put out a news release announcing the
sale of another Charlestown big-ticket property, this one at 24 Lagoon Avenue in Quonochontaug.
Though it’s relatively
small by Charlestown’s 1% standards at 2,700 square feet and only has an acre
of land, it sits on the Pond, and has its own dock, mooring and private beach.
It sold for just under $1.7 million.
But the seller didn't make much on the transaction. According to the Charlestown tax assessor's database, Jeanne Rollings of Rye, NY bought the property in 2004 (pre-real estate crash) for $1.6 million for a net gain of $95,000 after 10 years. The property was assessed at $1.524,700 before the sale.
Speaking of opulent shoreline properties, the Ocean House in
Watch Hill, Westerly, won AAA’s top rating again for the fourth
straight year. It is the only Rhode Island establishment to hold a Five-Diamond
rating. Its restaurant, Seasons, won a Four-Diamond rating for the fifth year
in a row.