Peeps®,
rankings, surprise resignation, big state land purchase, taxes and Taylor
Swift, reasons to get upset and finally, ticks
By
Will Collette
Nobel
Prize, please!
Leading
off this week’s Charlestown Tapas (crunchy little news bits for the discerning
reader) is this wonderful piece of news. Prairie Farms of Illinois has
come out with Peeps® flavored
egg nog for Easter.
This wonderful idea is, regrettably, limited to their market
area
in the Midwest and upper South, but I can only hope that they will either take
this national, or license the idea to other regional dairies so we all can
enjoy it.
It
may not replace coffee milk in the hearts and minds of Rhode Islanders, but
would be a much-welcomed addition for Peeps® aficionados.
State
Rep from Narragansett abruptly resigns
After
25 years in the state House of Representatives, Donald
Lally (D-District 33) handed in his resignation, effective immediately.
Lally just won another term last November running without an opponent. Lally
was second in seniority in the House.
Lally,
sometimes called “Landslide Lally” for his narrow margins of victory when
Republicans managed to recruit an opponent, doesn’t leave much of a legacy.
He was not known either for his work ethic or his achievements. In his letter to Speaker of the House Nick Mattiello, Lally cited the recent death of both of his parents and a realization that he wanted to spend more time with his family as the reasons for his surprise and immediate resignation.
He was not known either for his work ethic or his achievements. In his letter to Speaker of the House Nick Mattiello, Lally cited the recent death of both of his parents and a realization that he wanted to spend more time with his family as the reasons for his surprise and immediate resignation.
OK,
but pardon me if I think there might be more to this story. Stay tuned.
Meanwhile, Democrat Susan Cicilline Buoanno has declared her intent to run for Lally's seat in the special election that will have to held. She is the sister of Congressman David Cicilline.
DEM
closes deal for Kimball sanctuary
Charlestown is letting DEM take over Kimball Sanctuary without a Peep |
The
state
DEM is about to complete the purchase of the entire Audubon Society Kimball
Wildlife Sanctuary off Prosser Trail and adjacent to Burlingame State Park.
Last July, I first reported this deal here
when it followed on the heels of Charlestown’s adoption of the Slattery-Platner
Doctrine that holds that no state or federal agency can do business in
Charlestown without asking for the town’s permission.
I
asked Town Administrator Mark “Stonewall” Stankiewicz if DEM had had any talks
with the town about the Kimball purchase. Stankiewicz refused to answer, except
to say “there are no documents responsive to your request.” Happy Sunshine Week, Mark!
The
CCA Party leadership in town has been adamant about demanding check-off rights
on any land deals in town by the state, even to the point of getting our new
Libertarian state Rep. Flip Filippi (I-Lincoln) to introduce
state legislation imposing such a restriction on the state Water Resources
Board.
But
for inexplicable reasons, the CCA Party town leadership have been silent on
this transaction even though it involves a large and critically important piece
of land.
Unfortunate
rankings
In
the last Tapas, I noted that a survey showed how each of
Rhode Island’s 39 cities and towns ranked for safety. Oddly, Charlestown only
ranked at #15. Richmond at fifth place was rated tops in South County. South
Kingstown came at #8.
There’s
another survey out, this time by SafeWise, which
specializes in examining safety issues. They only listed the top ten with
Glocester coming in at #1. South Kingstown moved up to #3. Charlestown did not
make the list.
Charlestown
also failed to make the list of Rhode Island’s Fifteen Best Towns, as reported
by Rhode Island Monthly in their March edition. We’re just not on that list at
all. If you’re not a RI Monthly subscriber, you can’t see the entire article to
understand their scoring and rationale. They do offer you a peek at one of the
elements here.
I’m
sure there are lots of theories about why Charlestown isn’t doing very well in
these rankings. At 6.1%, we have
high unemployment.
We have very little
affordable housing;
no assisted living for the elderly. We have no public transportation. Our taxes
are relatively high, given that we offer almost no public services.
But
even though we have great beaches and scenic beauty, there isn’t much to do in
Charlestown. One objective way to measure that is to look at the recent revenues
given to the towns by the state as their share of the 1%
add-on tax for restaurant meals and hotel lodging.
In
December of 2014, Charlestown received a total of $8,097 in hotel, beverage and
meals tax which means our local establishments had revenues of over $800
thousand.
Click here for beverage and meal data and click here for hotel data.
But
compare that to Westerly which received $52,980 as its share of the revenue,
almost seven times more than Charlestown on over five and a quarter millions in
hospitality business revenue. South Kingstown received a similar amount -
$52,014 on more than $5 million in restaurant business in December.
Not
so bad numbers
Yet
again, Rhode Island
gets scored a “D”
by the advocates of charter schools who place Rhode Island 33rd out
of 42 states and the District of Columbia for fostering the growth of charter
schools. Good, although charter schools have a lot of grease with Gov. Raimondo
and practically own RI Lieutenant Governor Dan McKee.
In
statistics
released on St. Patrick’s day, it turns out that Italians slightly
edge out the Irish as the state’s largest ethnic group. The five municipalities
with the highest percentage of residents of Irish extraction are Middletown,
Narragansett, Charlestown (!), Scituate and
Jamestown.
Rhode
Island taxes are not as bad as you would think
In
the last Tapas, I noted a study by the
conservative think tank the Tax Foundation that rated Rhode Island as only
#38 among the states plus DC meaning Rhode Island’s tax burden is actually
among the lightest in the country.
Lest
you think that was a fluke, MarketWatch, a conservative investor website,
ranked “10 states with the worst taxes for
average Americans.”
Their
rankings are pretty much the opposite of what you would think with Indiana,
Florida and Texas coming in first, second and third place for having the
highest taxes on “average Americans.” While these, and the others in the Top
Ten, are often considered havens for the 1%, they stick it to the middle-class
through high property taxes, fees, and other kinds of regressive taxation.
“Taylor
Swift Tax” draws conservative fire
One
very exciting feature in Gov. Gina Raimondo’s first proposed state budget is
her idea to impose a state
level property tax on residential property with absentee owners assessed at $1
million
or more. This would hit right at the heart of the Charlestown
Citizens Alliance’s political donor base and I love it!
But
predictably, Rhode Island’s right is pretty upset. Here’s an article from Ocean
State Current where the headline pretty much tells you the whole story: “Raimondo’s
Outrageous Statewide Property Tax Actually an Attack on Property Rights”
Never
in a million years would I think Gina Raimondo would turn out to be a class
warrior, but the right-wingers certainly think so.
The
right-wing blog Ocean State Current cites an interesting and less
foaming-at-the-mouth piece by a new Rhode Island blogger (an anonymous but
intelligent one) who writes Coffee Black RI. This person,
whoever he or she might be, questions
whether the Raimondo proposal is also an apartment
tax since there are
plenty of properties all over Rhode Island that are residential, worth over $1
million and not owner-occupied, or whether the proposal is simply worded
sloppily.
That’s
an interesting question, but hardly a deal-breaker for me, even though Ocean
State Current describes it as “another disconcerting creepy-crawly of
progressive thinking.”
CCA
Party Wagon Train will be heading to Washington on March 25
The
Senate Indian Affairs Committee will host a roundtable discussion on the U.S. Supreme
Court decision
in Carcieri v.
Salazar on
March 25. This case arose from Charlestown’s battle with the Narragansett
Indian Tribe and the Tribe’s plan to build affordable housing on land owned by
the Tribe. The Tribe wanted to place the land in trust with the US Interior
Department but Charlestown, and ultimately the state, fought that transfer of
jurisdiction.
The Supreme Court issued one of its worst and most bizarre
decisions, ruling against the Tribe on the grounds that Congress did not make
it perfectly clear in 1934 that the major federal legislation governing
US-Tribal relations applies to all tribes and not just those that had federal
recognition before 1934.
The effect of that ruling was to slash the sovereignty rights of
the Narragansetts and over 500 other tribes. Since that court decision,
legislation has been introduced to state the clear intent of Congress to have
federal laws apply equally to all tribes – that’s called the “Carcieri Fix.”
The CCA Party, which has continued Charlestown’s perpetual war on
the Tribe, is unalterably opposed to the “Carcieri Fix” despite the damage it
has done to tribes across the US.
One state where the Carcieri decision is causing the most mischief is
Massachusetts where state and local voters actually want casino development and
where at least one of the planned casinos is supposed to be tribal-owned. The
issue of placing land into trust has come up repeatedly, stalling final
selection of an eastern Massachusetts site.
Noteworthy Business Notes
Washington Trust is in the middle of its 15th Annual
Peanut Butter Drive. They are working with local sports teams, schools and
civic groups to collect peanut butter for distribution to people in need. It’s
pretty smart to pick a non-perishable, easily portable, high-nutrition item.
Hats off to them. Click here for more
information.
A couple of local food purveyors were singled out as “Local Heroes”
by Edible Rhody Magazine. Arcadian Fields Organic Farm in
Hope Valley won in the farmer category and Dave’s Coffee of Charlestown won
in the “beverage artisan” category. Congratulations to them both!
Sons of Liberty
Spirits of South Kingstown once again won honors for its oddly
flavored whiskies. This time, they won the 2015 Best Flavored Whiskey in North
America award from Whisky Magazine (which I only read for the crossword
puzzle). Their pumpkin spice whiskey won last year. This year, it was for their
seasonal hop-flavored whiskey.
John
Sylvan, the guy who invented the Keurig coffee-maker with all those nasty little unrecyclable plastic tubs, says he’s sorry it did it. He doesn’t own one
himself. This is how he described his invention (which he sold for $50,000 to
Keurig) this way to Atlantic
magazine:
“It’s like a cigarette for coffee, a single-serve
delivery mechanism for an addictive substance.”
Tapas
of tapas
I
collect tidbits of information and links to articles that interest me and
perhaps to others. Anyone, I thought you might be interested in:
Here's an
interesting
piece on the current state of secession threats. This is still
a thing despite the Civil War pretty much settling the issue decisively.
Secession talk really cranked up after President Obama won in 2008 and is
fairly widespread – take, for example, our own state Representative Flip
Filippi who thinks “nullification,” the first step toward secession, is a
perfectly good thing.
Much
of the serious secession talk is in the Deep South and especially Texas.
Frankly, if they want to leave, maybe this time we should let them. We would
save a lot of tax money since these states take a lot more federal money than
they contribute. A bunch of free-loading moochers, IMO.
For more cartoons by Pat Bagley, click here |
An
example of what I won’t miss if southern states secede is nonsense like the state of Florida
which has banned state workers from using terms like “climate change” or “global
warming” in official state communications. After all, as far as they’re concerned,
climate change doesn’t exist. Wonder if they’ll keep saying that when Miami is
under water.
All
those folks might find the website, Obama Conspiracy
Theories,
very useful. This is a wonderful piece of very hard work, regularly updated,
that catalogs all the various claims made about the President with links to
data that either debunks or explains the claim. Great fun and very useful.
Finally,
wrapping up this edition of Tapas, have you ever wondered how it’s possible to
get a tick bite (as I have) even when it’s very cold outside? According to
researchers at Yale University, the little f***ers have anti-freeze in
their blood in the form of a protein that protects them from freezing.
These
researchers have discovered that they can isolate this protein and that it
protects mice from frostbite, and I’m sure we all worry about our mice getting
frostbite during harsh winters. I’m not making this up.