Sunday, January 26, 2014

Community meeting with legislators draw larger attendance than usual

Rep. Donna Walsh and Sen. Cathie Cool Rumsey talk to town residents
By Will Collette
Usually, just a handful of people show up for community meetings with our local legislators, but not so last Saturday. More than a dozen people came to the Cross’ Mills Public Library on a dreary cold Saturday morning to talk with state Representative Donna Walsh and Sen. Cathie Cool Rumsey about the issues that concern them.
Donna represents all of Charlestown and Block Island, and parts of South Kingstown and Westerly. Cathie represents Charlestown north of Route One, plus Richmond, Hopkinton and Exeter.
Residents were very interested in Donna’s new legislation to cut the amount of trash going to our crowded state Central Landfill. Donna proposes a new law that would require restaurants and commercial establishments to pull food trash from their refuse so it can be recycled or composted.


“Too much food is wasted in general,” said Rep. Walsh, “If we can’t cut down on the waste in the first place, then let’s divert the waste so it can be converted into either animal feed or compost.”
Many of those in attendance said they already compost at home and thought the idea of large-scale recycling of food waste was long overdue.
Residents also supported other environmental initiatives such as banning plastic grocery bags and generally boosting the use of reusable resources and also boosting recycling. Many were surprised to learn that Charlestown now ranks lowest among Rhode Island cities and towns for recycling, which ran counter to their idea of Charlestown as an environmentally conscious community.
Audience members also noted that managing waste through more recycling and composting would generate much needed jobs for the local economy.
Other measures to boost the economy were lively topics at the meeting. Donna noted that her legislation to eliminate the sales tax on original art work took effect in December and that there was a well-attended workshop in Charlestown with the RI Council for the Arts to discuss how the new tax-free system would work.
“I want to see the state, our tourism council and businesses to get the word out, especially out of state to reach people who come to our area for vacation,” said Rep. Walsh. “In South County, we rely on tourism and I am hoping this will help generate more tourism dollars in our local economy.”
That led to a lot of brainstorming about ways to promote Rhode Island and its tourist economy.
Senator Cool Rumsey discussed the recently completed work of the Joint Commission on guns and mental health that she co-chaired with Rep. Deb Ruggiero (D-Jamestown).
Cathie explained that in the wake of the Newtown shootings in Connecticut just over a year ago, the Taskforce was created to look at whether Rhode Island was doing what it needed to do to restrict access to guns by persons with a history of violent mental illness.
She noted that the Taskforce discovered that Rhode Island was not feeding in names of persons who were treated or hospitalized for violent mental illnesses, largely due to strict medical privacy rules.
She said the state has to be careful to honor the rights of citizens, even when those rights come into conflict. Patients’ right to privacy, Second Amendment gun ownership rights, and the right of the people to be safe require a delicate balancing act.
She said the Taskforce intended to recommend to the General Assembly that it enact legislation to widen how much information Rhode Island will input into the national database that determines whether a potential gun buyer is allowed to make a purchase, but very carefully restrict that to persons who have been involuntarily committed to a mental institution who pose a “substantial risk of violence to themselves or others, not those who are committed but determined to represent a low risk of violence.”
Only basic identifying information, and not details about the person’s condition, would be included in the data sent to the national database.
It will be up to the General Assembly to evaluate the Task Force’s report. New bills would need to be drafted, enacted by both Houses and signed by the Governor before any changes are made.
Donna and Cathie invited all those present to feel free to contact them with ideas, problems or concerns. Rep. Walsh said “I get lots of great ideas from my constituents.”
Both Donna and Cathie discussed how getting good legislation passed isn’t easy and often takes time and patience. Donna noted that it took years to get her bill to get rid of cesspools enacted, and that she’s been working for over ten years to try to get a bill passed to require that state magistrate judges be selected on merit.

“I’m willing to take however long it takes because it’s the right thing to do,” she said.