Lots more tasty tidbits of local news
By Will Collette
[Boston Public Library] |
Great article on Tarzan Brown
The national Native American news
service, Indian Country
Today,
ran a terrific biography on Ellison “Tarzan” Brown, who was perhaps
Charlestown’s greatest athlete ever. The article is written by Tarzan Brown’s
great-nephew John
Christian Hopkins.
The
article is rich with photos showing his victories in the Boston Marathon in
1939 and in other competitions, plus shots of him later in his life before his
tragic death in 1975.
I had heard a few of these stories from his
late daughter Sis Brown (I worked with Sis on various organizing projects in
the 1970s) and read a lot more about him. But this new article added more information and
texture to the life story of a complex and troubled man.
Mr. Hopkins goes into detail about Tarzan
Brown’s up-bringing, his quirky running style, the story behind his disappointment
at the 1936 Olympics in Germany and his efforts at redemption as a repeat
Boston Marathon champion. Mr. Hopkins doesn’t gloss over Brown’s flaws,
especially his problems with alcohol and how that factored into his death in
the parking lot of a Misquamicut bar.
I highly recommend reading the whole
article which you can get on-line by clicking
here.
Westerly
Council gives Craven terrible review
When Charlestown’s assistant town solicitor Bob Craven was hired
part-time by the town of Westerly to serve as a special zoning officer to deal
with the terrible Copar Quarry in Bradford, I thought he had hit the ground running.
In short order, Craven issued a comprehensive cease-and-desist order against Copar citing the many problems
reported by Copar’s neighbors.
But, like so many stories, there was a lot more to it than that.
But, like so many stories, there was a lot more to it than that.
Naturally, Copar appealed this order to District Court, but it looked
for a while that Westerly would gamely argue its case to hold Copar accountable
for what it did to the people.
Well, it seems like it was all too good to be true. As the District
Court case proceeded, Westerly looked like it was ready to fold. Inexplicably,
Westerly town government ceded enforcement jurisdiction to District Court Judge
Brian Stern.
Then, Westerly folded and entered into a settlement agreement with Copar
that left hardly anyone, except maybe Copar, happy. Click here to read the settlement agreement.
According to Sun investigative reporter Dale Faulkner, it turns out that the Westerly Town
Council thinks the collapse of Westerly’s case and the resulting settlement was
all Craven’s fault for doing sloppy legal work. They came within a whisker of
refusing to pay the final $3,172 balance on Craven’s bill to the town.
Craven testified in a deposition that he issued the cease-and-desist
order based on third-party reports and not on his actual knowledge of Copar’s
transgressions. He also admitted that he did not actually write the order
himself but did not identify who did.
Council members Jack Carson and Patricia Douglas publicly expressed
their “displeasure” with the quality of Craven’s work.
The
Council ultimately agreed to pay Craven the last amount due to him after both
the Town Manager and Town Solicitor pleaded with them to do so, noting that at
least technically, Craven had fulfilled the terms of his agreement with the
town.
Rhode Island home values climb while Charlestown’s real estate
market tumbles.
From Zillow: Charlestown home values turning downward again. |
The Rhode
Island Association of Realtors report that home prices in Rhode Island as
a whole jumped by 5% in the first quarter of 2014. However, Zillow reports a drop in home values in
Charleston, 1.1% compared to one year ago.
Charlestown home values are expected to
drop by another 1.1% over the next year, according to Zillow.
These lowered numbers pretty much match up with the results of Charlestown’s
official revaluation of town properties.
Rental market sparse |
The current median value of Charlestown
homes is $314,300, according to Zillow,
which the average listing price for homes in Charlestown is $425,000. Given
that spread, it’s not surprising to see that Zillow
rates the Charlestown real estate market as “cool.”
Zillow
also listed 22 Charlestown homes as being in the pre-foreclosure stage. As
usual, Charlestown’s biggest real estate problem continues to be the lack of
year-round rentals. Zillow
only identifies four rentals (see map, right) in town. Rentals on those four units range from $1,100
to $1,750 a month.
Local group wins DEM grant
The Local Catch of Charlestown won a $7,500
grant from DEM under the Local Agriculture and Seafood Act (LASA). Only 17
groups among the 92 that applied won grants. Charlestown’s Community Garden was
one of those 75competitors who did not get funding in this round.
As I examined the list of winners, it
seemed like DEM tried to spread the money around the state with some
consideration given to population as well as the merits of the project. About
half of the grants went to groups based in the cities. That’s not a criticism,
by the way, since every grant award seems worthy. Just an observation.
See the complete list by clicking
here.
Charlestown loses in ProJo summer-fun contest
Charlestown out in the second round |
The Providence Journal set up a gimmicky
little contest, the Summer
Guide Challenge, to try to engage its dwindling
readership. They set up a “March Madness” style competition using NCAA-style
brackets to try to determine readers’ favorite summertime attractions.
Charlestown started out with three of the initial 32 contenders with Rhythm
& Roots, the Seafood Festival and Burlingame Park among the starters.
In the first round, two were out. Rhythm
and Roots was matched up against the Seafood Festival and the Seafood Festival
won. Burlingame Park was matched against the East Bay Bike Path and lost. In
the second round, the Seafood Festival was paired against the Newport Folk
Festival and, to my surprise, lost by 16 votes.
Big bucks
The national AFL-CIO just
released its 2014 guide to Executive compensation and we have the results for Rhode Island’s top corporate moguls.
While the average Rhode Island
worker’s salary was only $43,489, Rhode Island’s Top Ten receive a good deal
more than that. Note that only companies that publicly trade their stock are
listed. That’s because they are required by law to disclose executive
compensation while privately held companies (e.g. Gilbane) are not.
1. Larry
Merlo (CVS Caremark, Woonsocket): $31.3 million
2. Scott Donnelly (Textron, Providence): $9.9 million
3. Brian Goldner (Hasbro, Pawtucket): $9.7 million
4. Steven Spinner (United Natural Foods, Providence): $4.8 million
5. Michael Clarke (Nortek, Providence): $3.8 million
6. Vincent Sadusky (Lin Media, Providence): $3.8 million
7. David Whalen (Costa, Lincoln): $2 million
8. Joseph MarcAurele (Washington TR Bancorp, Westerly): $1.3 million
9. Martin Kits Van Heyningen (KVH Industries, Middletown): $1.2 million
10. Jeffrey Thompson (Towerstream, Middletown): $581,909
2. Scott Donnelly (Textron, Providence): $9.9 million
3. Brian Goldner (Hasbro, Pawtucket): $9.7 million
4. Steven Spinner (United Natural Foods, Providence): $4.8 million
5. Michael Clarke (Nortek, Providence): $3.8 million
6. Vincent Sadusky (Lin Media, Providence): $3.8 million
7. David Whalen (Costa, Lincoln): $2 million
8. Joseph MarcAurele (Washington TR Bancorp, Westerly): $1.3 million
9. Martin Kits Van Heyningen (KVH Industries, Middletown): $1.2 million
10. Jeffrey Thompson (Towerstream, Middletown): $581,909
I hate to see
this happen
Yet
another iconic Rhode Island business has been taken over by a foreign company.
This time it’s Autocrat Coffee, our most popular purveyor of the syrup just
about every Rhode Island kid was raised to believe was one of the four basic
food groups.
The buyer
is James
Findlay International, Ltd. Of Great Britain which bought 100% of Autocrat for
an undisclosed amount (both Findlay and Autocrat
are privately-held companies, not subject to SEC disclosure rules).
British
companies own much of Rhode Island’s banking (Citizens Bank is owned by the
Royal Bank of Scotland) and power generation (now controlled by London-based
National Grid, and the “national” doesn’t mean American).
So, what
can we expect? Tea syrup for milk?
Follow-up on corporate lawyer’s plea deal on social host bust
Donegan's NKPD mug shot |
Donegan ended up cutting a deal to have all
charges dropped in return for Donegan making a $5,000 donation to Mothers Against
Drunk Driving (MADD). Apparently, no one consulted with MADD, because MADD
publicly rejected the money saying they wanted no part in a deal that lets rich
people buy their way out of trouble.
Another
organization stepped up to accept the money (surprise!) – Amos House,
the homeless program in Providence, saying that they
believed in giving people a second chance. Unspoken was Amos House’s general
need for money. Cathy and I have been long-time, faithful supporters of Amos
House, but this decision is making me wonder if I want to give them a second
chance.
Taxes
too high?
While conservative groups, especially the Tea Party, like to blather on
about taxes with the latest push being to eliminate or greatly reduce sales
taxes, there are some hard facts often not mentioned in the debate.
Here in Rhode Island, it is telling that right-wing groups have stopped
talking about income taxes – since they’ve already won that battle by
dramatically winning huge income tax cuts for the wealthiest Rhode Islanders.
Instead, it’s all about sales taxes this year and how we need to get rid of it
entirely, and not just lower it from its current 7% to perhaps 6.5% to be on
par with Connecticut and Massachusetts.
The Rhode Island right likes to point to states like Florida and Texas,
and pretend that there are no taxes in those wonderful havens for retirees.
Except it’s not true. In addition to high property taxes that are often levied
on individual homeowners by several taxing jurisdictions (county, municipal,
school district, fire district, etc.), there’s also an incredibly complex sales
tax system.
Most of the so-called high tax states, such as Rhode Island, Connecticut
and Massachusetts, have but a single statewide uniform sales tax. But according to the Tax Foundation, the states considered the lowest tax and
least government intrusive tend to have the most byzantine sales tax systems.
For example, Texas has 1515 separate taxing districts that can, and
often do, layer on added sales taxes with each taxing district having its own
rules as to what it taxable and what is exempt. Iowa has almost 1,000 such
taxing districts. Oklahoma has 587.
Depending on where you live, you might have to pay several different
sales taxes on each purchase, often adding up to a lot more than 7% and then
have to deal with an entirely different taxing scheme in the next county over.
Misquamicut Springfest this weekend
All these activities and more take place at Misquamicut Beach. For further information on Springfest Weekend contact 401-322-1026, Misquamicut Beach on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or www.misquamicutfestival.org.
Gun lobbying
groups are nuts
I’m
not just talking about the NRA’s Wayne LaPierre. Gun nuttery shows itself even
in small things. For example, I discovered that the US Sportsmen’s
Alliance
is fired up and angry about a proposed piece of Rhode Island legislation sponsored by Representative Scott J. Guthrie (D-Coventry), HB 7858.
This bill would make it a felony for a hunter to hunt deer on your
property without your specific written permission. Being quite close to
Burlingame, I take this matter quite personally. I’ve had no trespass-no
hunting signs up on the edge of my land for years but always assumed that if
some yahoo in hot pursuit of a deer stepped across my property line that I
could have him busted. The LACK of such legislation makes me angry because
nobody’s f***king Second Amendment rights trumps my right to be safe and secure
in my home.
Republicans
are nuts
"Old Abe," the war eagle, was the mascot of the Wisconsin Infantry Regiment |
Secession by the Southern slave states led directly to America’s deadliest war, the Civil War, in 1861. The state of Wisconsin, at the time still a sparsely populated frontier state, sent more than 90,000 soldiers to fight on the Union side. They were widely considered among the best troops to fight in the war. 12,216 did not come home.
Way to go, Wisconsin Republicans!