Ten Tasty news nuggets for Progressive
Charlestown readers
By Will Collette
Red light cameras slow in coming, but
coming
When Tom and I first started
Progressive Charlestown, we did so just in time to cover two big summer issues
in 2011. One was the proposal to build new beach facilities at Charlestown’s
two town beaches to replace the dilapidated facilities we had.
The other was the proposal by now retired Police Chief Jack Shippee to find a vendor who would install red light cameras at Charlestown’s Route One intersections.
The other was the proposal by now retired Police Chief Jack Shippee to find a vendor who would install red light cameras at Charlestown’s Route One intersections.
Both efforts were vehemently opposed
by the Charlestown Citizens Alliance and its legion on anonymous commenters in
its “Voices
of Greed” screed. Voters didn’t listen and approved
the money for the beach facilities which look
great and are an asset to Charlestown’s tourist economy.
In May 2012, the Town Council approved
a contract with Sensys, a company they picked because they thought it was Rhode Island-based, but is actually a Swedish company with its US headquarters
in Florida. You gotta love Town Council Boss Tom Gentz’s due diligence skills.
Anyway, the deal was inked and has
since overcome a series of obstacles. Among them was getting RI Transportation
Department approval since all of the sites are on Route One, a state road. After another year passed, finally, RIDOT
gave its go-ahead.
However, this problem may soon be resolved. According
to Stankiewicz, it looks like “Sensys
America will be funding the necessary repairs to the ‘loop’ detectors on Route
1 to enable the red light system installation in time for the peak traffic
volume during the summer months.”
I’ve lived in communities covered by red light
cameras and have seen that they work so I hope they’re up and running for our
big summer rush.
Dave’s Coffee moving its headquarters
out of Charlestown
The Planning Commission has been hassling Dave's over their iconic M*A*S*H ambulance for years. Nice work, Planning Commission! [Photo by Will Collette] |
Dave’s
Coffee is building a new headquarters for its
growing business in Narragansett, and is also going to open another site for
its popular brew in Providence. It’s hardly surprising that Dave’s is making
the move to Narragansett.
Currently, they share space inside of
Galapagos, and if you’ve been there, you know it’s pretty tight just for
serving space, never mind for managing a growing business.
Rather than go through the agony that would be involved in trying to create some new business space in Charlestown – and running Planning Commissar Ruth Platner’s gauntlet – chalk up another lost opportunity for Charlestown.
Rather than go through the agony that would be involved in trying to create some new business space in Charlestown – and running Planning Commissar Ruth Platner’s gauntlet – chalk up another lost opportunity for Charlestown.
For an example of the kind of living
hell Platner and her plucky planners put growing businesses through, click here
for their torture
of Arrowhead Dental over its expansion. Guess
Dave’s didn’t want to go through that, and who can blame them?
Donna Walsh, Charlestown Worm Ladies
get media praise
Two of Donna Walsh’s legislative
initiatives received recent media praise. Last week, she was listed as one of GoLocalProv.com’s
“Who’s Hot” figures for her steadfast efforts
to win passage of her bill
to require that magistrate judges be selected based on merit and not because “they know a guy.”
She’s been trying to
get this passed for years. ProJo
columnist Ed Fitzpatrick likened Donna’s annual battle as similar to Sisyphus trying to push a boulder up a mountain. Though Fitzpatrick’s
comments were laudatory, Donna’s Republican opponent Tina Jackson, who
apparently didn’t read the whole article, used the article to attack Donna for
her so far unsuccessful efforts.
Criticism from Jackson about Donna’s fight for
ethical judicial opponents was pretty funny, given Jackson’s
multiple arrests and convictions for drug
crimes, assault and theft.
Nancy Warner, founder of the Worm Ladies of Charlestown. [photo by me] |
Donna was also highlighted
in a Providence Phoenix story on this year’s
composting conference. Donna is the author of new legislation that would
require commercial recycling of food waste.
In that same article, the Worm Ladies of Charlestown were also featured for their efforts to promote safe and effective composting by using non-invasive red wiggler worms.
In that same article, the Worm Ladies of Charlestown were also featured for their efforts to promote safe and effective composting by using non-invasive red wiggler worms.
I think my photo of chief Worm Lady Nancy Warner in my own piece on the Worm Ladies was a much better shot.
Double good news
for Westerly Hospital
Union struggle at L&M set the stage for labor peace at Westerly Hospital [Photo by me] |
A couple
of encouraging signs of health for Westerly Hospital: first, the unions
representing Westerly Hospital staff have negotiated
a new three-year contract without having to go
through the trauma that nurses and medical staff went through at Westerly’s
corporate parent, Lawrence & Memorial Hospital of New London.
As you may
recall, L&M was wracked by a four-day unfair labor practice strike followed
by a two-week management lock-up between Thanksgiving and Christmas. This
struggle was extensively covered here in Progressive Charlestown largely
because of its implications
for local Westerly Hospital.
L&M
workers were fighting issues familiar to Westerly Hospital – the outsourcing of
union jobs by management to non-union subsidiaries. That battle finally ended
in a signed contract that both sides considered fair and reasonable.
Now,
apparently, L&M has decided to cut to the chase and work a similar deal
with its workers without the ordeal of a long labor dispute. There are 420
Westerly Hospital workers who are members of two locals of UNAP (United Nurses
and Allied Professionals).
The other good
news came from L&M management on March 17 when they reported that Westerly Hospital has
been restored to financial stability over the ten month period since L&M’s
June 1 purchase of the hospital. They also reported on capital investments they
are making at Westerly to honor their pledge to improve the hospital.
Rhode Island gun
nuts upset over new bills – still smarting over drubbing they took in Exeter
I'll bet that smarts |
The
Rhode Island Gun Blog was simply frothing as they denounced
new gun control measures being considered in the current session of the
General Assembly. The gun lobby spent several weeks organizing turn-out for a
March 18 day of hearings on these bills.
The
gun lobby told its supporters that the situation was desperate because
supporters of sensible control now have thousands of supporters across the
state. Especially troubling to these gun people is this: “Legislators
are emboldened by the failure of the recall effort in Exeter. They think we’re
pushovers.”
They are referring to the gun
nut effort, sparked by Tea Party wingnut Representative Doreen Costa (R), to recall the four Democratic Town Council members
in Exeter who wanted the Attorney General to take over issuance of concealed
carry permits because Exeter does not have its own police force or the means to
conduct an adequate background check. This carpetbagger recall campaign was defeated
by a 2 to 1 margin with voters turning out in
record numbers for the special election.
Among the measures the gun lobby opposes is State Representative
(and NRA member) Donna
Walsh’s bill to ban firing guns from aircraft
which was sparked by last
summer’s helicopter shooting incident in Charlestown, saying “bummer [shooting from a
helicopter] looks like fun.”
History reveals another bit of CCA Party hypocrisy
Deb Carney |
In the recent tumult over the fate of the former
Whalerock land purchased by Charlestown for $2.14 million and renamed the
Charlestown Moraine Preserve, CCA Party pundit Mike
Chambers and former Town Council President Deb Carney slugged it out over
how the town should proceed. A one-sided battle indeed pitting a martial arts
black belt against a blowhard – you can figure out for yourself which is which.
I think three-knockdown rule was designed to keep pugs like Chambers from suffering irreparable injury.
I think three-knockdown rule was designed to keep pugs like Chambers from suffering irreparable injury.
During that “debate,” Chambers kept referring back
to the original bond that funded the town’s purchase of the property, clearly
not knowing what he was talking about.
The 2004 Charlestown Financial referendum. Note Question 1 and compare this to the CCA-controlled Council's actions. |
Without rehashing that dispute, Deb just
pointed out to me that one aspect of the town’s 2004 Financial Referendum
included explicitly asking for voter approval to put $30,000 into a special
fund to be used for any legal expenses that might be used in connection with
its dispute with the Chariho School District, another issue that Chambers used
in his argument without knowing what he was talking about.
Deb says, “Contrast to the action of this Town Council to spend
$50,000 in legal services for the Whalerock deal without asking the taxpayers.”
She is referring to the deal announced by Town Council
Boss Tom Gentz to spend
$50,000 of town money to hire a special lawyer, John O. Mancini, to represent the town and a group of anonymous abutters
without voter approval. Hell, this deal was OK’d behind closed doors with no
open debate, public discussion or a vote.
What a difference 10 years and CCA
Party town control makes.
No Earth Day clean-up
money for Charlestown
I
recently posted a notice about grants available to help fund Earth Day
clean-ups, figuring that since CCA Party Town Council Boss
Tom Gentz made such a big deal last year about trying to get volunteers to
come out on Earth Day to clean up the beachfront properties owned by
non-residents, he might want the town to go after these funds to do it again.
That would make those properties all nice and clean for the arrival of those non-resident beach folks who are such reliable contributors to the CCA Party's campaign fund.
That would make those properties all nice and clean for the arrival of those non-resident beach folks who are such reliable contributors to the CCA Party's campaign fund.
But apparently not, since the DEM
has just issued its list of grantees for this year and no group from
Charlestown got any of that funding.
Danger, Danger!
Soon, you
may be getting alarm notices from the CCA Party about a bill recently
introduced by local state Representative Spencer Dickinson (D) who represents
part of South Kingstown. The bill, H-7507,
is a version of a favorite bit of regressive legislation called “no stricter
than” legislation within the environmental community.
These “no stricter than” bill basically forbid local governments from enacting local rules or ordinances that place stricter environmental protections than the basic minimum standards set out in state and federal law.
These “no stricter than” bill basically forbid local governments from enacting local rules or ordinances that place stricter environmental protections than the basic minimum standards set out in state and federal law.
Charlestown
counts on the current flexibility in the law to set standards on environmental
issues, such as cesspools, that are stricter than state law. Dickinson’s bill, H-5707,
would eliminate that ability.
But
before you all panic, let’s check a little political reality. Spencer Dickinson, who is a building contractor by trade, is an arch-enemy of the now
former House Speaker Gordon Fox. Spencer’s future ability to get anything he
proposes taken seriously will depend on the outcome of this week’s battle to
succeed Fox – and whether Spencer backs the winning faction.
If
he backs conservative, pro-business Nick Mattiello, then maybe this bill has
legs. However, Spencer would then lose all liberal cred in his very liberal
district and will likely lose in November. His Republican opponent is a self-proclaimed, 31 year old beauty queen.
If he backs any center-left contender for Speaker, he might come out better off, but not on this bill.
If he backs any center-left contender for Speaker, he might come out better off, but not on this bill.
A
center-left win for the Speaker's chair would keep Reps. Art Handy (D-Cranston) and Donna Walsh on as House Environment chair and vice-chair, respectively. They can be counted on to oppose this bill.
Either
way, I recommend not getting worked up over this bill. We’ll know in a week or two
how the turmoil in the House shakes out and whether Spencer Dickinson remains
in the dog house along with his bills.
How dangerous
are Charlestown intersections?
Colin Foote - since his tragic death, his family has been fighting for improved safety on the road |
In
my February
27 “Charlestown Tapas,” I noted that GoLocalProv.com
listed Charlestown’s Route One and Route 216 intersection as the third most
dangerous intersection in Rhode Island. Apparently, town leaders took some
umbrage at that dubious distinction, at least for that intersection. As Town
Administrator Mark Stankiewicz
reported to the Town Council:
Recently there was an article on
the internet citing the intersection of Route 1 and Rand Ross Hill Road (route
216) as one of the “10 Most Dangerous” in Rhode Island. It would appear some of
the information in the article was not completely accurate. Police Chief
Jeffrey Allen has noted none of the 3 fatal accidents was at that intersection
and the accidents occurred over a number of years. As noted in the Charlestown
Police Department (CPD) files, the fatal accidents were:
- 2010 at the intersection of Rt. 1 and West Beach Road (this took the life of Colin Foote)
- 2009 at the intersection of Rt. 1 and Prosser Trail
- 2009 at the intersection of Rt. 1 and Kings Factory Road
New South County
magazine launched