Charlestown
Tapas: for the discerning news reader
By
Will Collette
Richmond claims its Constitutional rights have been violated
The
Town of Richmond finally followed through on its threat to sue Charlestown and
Hopkinton over what Richmond claims is its unconstitutional underrepresentation
on the Chariho School Committee.
Under the Chariho Act, Charlestown and Hopkinton both hold four seats while Richmond has three.
Under the Chariho Act, Charlestown and Hopkinton both hold four seats while Richmond has three.
Originally
passed in 1958, the Chariho Act called for a nine-member committee, apportioned
by population, which at the time meant that each town had three members. The
law was amended in 1970 to increase the committee to eleven members. That
resulted in the town with the lowest population getting one less seat than its
peers. Richmond, by a margin of only 119 people, is the smallest of the three
towns.
Richmond
has been demanding cooperation from the other towns to change the Chariho Act
to restore the size of the school committee to nine members, but the other two
towns – especially Charlestown – have said “nah-uh.” Thus the suit. Read Cynthia
Drummond’s Sun article for more detail.
Ethics complaint could sway special election
Next
Tuesday, May 5, Democrats in House District 33 (South Kingstown and
Narragansett) will vote in a primary to determine the party’s candidate in the
June 9 special election to elect a successor to long-serving Rep. Donald Lally
who abruptly resigned, saying he wanted to spend more time with his family
(something he apparently forgot when he stood for re-election last November).
Cicilline Buonanno on the left and Hagan McEntee on the right |
Specifically,
the complaint says that Cicilline Buonanno used the Cranston School
Department’s e-mail and phone system at the Gladstone Elementary School where
she is school principal to promote her campaign. She also listed her work phone
number on campaign material. The complaint doesn’t say whether Cicilline
Buonanno did this while she was on the clock, but that seems likely.
John Marion of
Common Cause commented that while the act is unseemly, it’s not likely to
lead to punishment since the tangible value of the e-mails and phone use is so
negligible.
Cicilline
Buonanno admitted she made a “mistake” but fired back at complainant Hagopian
by saying “At the end of the day, the Ethics
Commission is not a playground for the political process. It’s absolutely
disgusting to me that it’s being used as a playground for the political
process.”
What
effect, if any, Cicilline Buonnano’s ethical “mistake” will have on Tuesday’s
primary is impossible to determine.
Flip grabs a piece of the PawSox fight
Not
one to miss a publicity opportunity, our Tea and carpet bagger state Rep. Blake
“Flip” Filippi got another 15 minutes of fame by introducing legislation that
would require approval
by state voters before the state does a tax giveaway to the owners of the team
currently called the Pawtucket Red Sox.
My
colleague Linda Felaco and I simultaneously concluded that this is one of those
situations that reminds us of the proverb that “even a broken clock gives the
right time twice a day.” Even though this particular bill has merit, Flip
pretty much ensured that it will never be passed by only getting four other
right-wing Republicans to sign on as co-sponsors.
Meet Flip's idea for the new state bug. Not as tasty as calamari so use lots of hot sauce. |
Just
in….yet
another example of the lengths Flip will go to for media coverage, he went on Channel
10 to announce his legislative proposal for a new state bug, the American
Burying Beetle.
I would have thought he’d go for the tick as a fellow blood-sucker (the Flipper is a lawyer). I mentioned Filippi's state bug idea to one loyal reader who responded "Filippi IS the state insect."
For more than you’d ever want to know about the American Burying Beetle, click here.
I would have thought he’d go for the tick as a fellow blood-sucker (the Flipper is a lawyer). I mentioned Filippi's state bug idea to one loyal reader who responded "Filippi IS the state insect."
For more than you’d ever want to know about the American Burying Beetle, click here.
Filippi client
celebrates anniversary
While
we’re on the subject of broken clocks and Flip Filippi, one of his clients, the
extremist militia group, the Oath Keepers, just celebrated its 6th
anniversary. The Oath Keepers recruit ex-military and ex-police to their cause
of resisting any federal action they consider to be unconstitutional. They
provided gunmen to back up racist rancher Clive Bundy in his stand-off with the
Bureau of Land Management and put snipers on Ferguson, MO rooftops until the
real police ran them off.
Oath
Keepers’ founder Stewart Rhodes’ remarks were published in the magazine
Ammoland
(which I only read for the crossword puzzle) where he talks candidly about the
Oath Keepers’ preparations for armed insurrection within the United States.
Read the whole thing for yourself, but here’s a pretty clear message:
Read the whole thing for yourself, but here’s a pretty clear message:
“We are on the eve of conflict with domestic enemies of liberty who are relentless in their pursuit of power over us. That conflict has only grown clearer in the past six years [since President Obama was elected]….And ask yourself what you are willing to give, and to do, to make sure that all of their suffering and sacrifice is not for nothing….We have an absolute duty to do what we must to preserve the Republic – the liberty – that they gave so much for. Duty is ours. Results are God’s. Let us do our duty.”
Income inequality not a problem in Charlestown?
Our boy Tom Gentz has got our interests covered |
And to my momentary shock and amazement, Charlestown came out as the second most equitable municipality in the state, closely behind Hopkinton. East Greenwich, Jamestown and Providence were deemed to be the “most economically polarized.”
Here
are GoLocal’s stats:
38.
Charlestown
Percent
earning under $14,999: 6.0%
Percent
earning over $150,000: 9.8%
Median
income: $69,349
%
in Median bracket:19.5%
Inequality Score: 0.81
Score Key: Figures above 1 correspond to more inequality. Scores
under 1 mean communities are more equal.
How
is the Charlestown ranking possible when there is such a yawning difference
between the people who live south of Route One and those that live to the
north?
The answer is simple: in Charlestown, our most fabulously wealthy homeowners don’t live here.
They’re non-residents who summer at their quaint cottages on the beach or the pond. In Providence, their upper class are residents and are largely concentrated on the East Side.
The answer is simple: in Charlestown, our most fabulously wealthy homeowners don’t live here.
They’re non-residents who summer at their quaint cottages on the beach or the pond. In Providence, their upper class are residents and are largely concentrated on the East Side.
Here's the real dirt...
The URI
Master Gardeners will be doing pH soil testing on Sat., May 2nd from
10-2 at Home Depot in Westerly and then again on Sat. May 9th on
Rte. 108, Kingston at the East Farm Festival 9-2.
Earth Day survey on Earth-Friendliest counties names Kent County
as one of the best in the US
Popular
real estate website RealtyTrac did an
interesting Earth Day survey
that tried to identify which US counties were the most earth-friendly based on such
factors as the percentage of people who walk to work, housing affordability and
air quality. Neighboring Kent County came out as one of the best in the nation.
When
you look at the factors in the RealtyTrac survey, it’s easy to see how Kent
outpointed South County – most of our towns (especially Charlestown) have terrible affordable housing
records. Our residents generally have to drive to work due to distance and
absence of public transportation. During the summer, we have lots of
unhealthy air quality days due to ozone.
Our
abundant open space was not a factor.
Congratulations to
UConn graduate assistants
The UAW-affiliated UConn Graduate
Employee Union reached an historical
three-year contract deal with the university that would
provide these student workers with a 9% raise over three years, waivers of some
university fees for their classes and subsidized health coverage. The contract
would cover 2,300 graduate students.
It is rare for contingent workers, the broad term covering
everyone from day laborers to adjunct professors, to win union recognition and
far rarer still to win a decent collective bargaining agreement.
McEntee delivers a lecture to Collins
When Sierra Club staff member Abel Collins was elected as president of the South Kingstown Town Council, I think we all expected interesting things from him. He didn’t disappoint, stirring up the town by proposing the town create a new town energy manager position at $100,000 a year.
Collins
foresees a long list of tasks for this proposed energy manager including
scoping out sites for alternative energy projects, figuring out ways to protect
Matunuck residents, coordinating with URI to create a large-scale composting
operation and more. Read here for more details.
He
took flak from fellow Town Councilor Carol Hagan McEntee (who is running in
Tuesday’s Democratic primary for a shot at filling the vacated House District
33 seat – see related article, above).
Here’s
an excerpt from McEntee’s rebuke to Collins:
“I have to say, with the tone of your letter, you not only insulted our town manager, you insulted the other members of the Council. You called us ‘suffering under the illusion,’ and I do take offense to that….You’re new, Abel. You need to sit back and see what we do here….This is a process. We need job descriptions; you don’t just throw somebody on the job and say, ‘now go look for all those projects.’”
While Collins may have taken protocol and thrown it
out the window, I think his idea has some merit.
In similar fashion, I think Charlestown would
benefit from creating something like a town environmental officer with special
emphasis on land and water issues. We have good Town Hall staff who cover
various aspects of environmental protection, but it might make sense to have a
town employee who looks at the big picture of Charlestown’s Number One issue
and priority.
If you like tuna melt sandwiches, watch which brand you buy
Who doesn’t like tuna salad? Yummy! Unless of course there
is more than tuna in your meal. There was a terrible accident at the Bumble Bee Tuna factory near Los
Angeles in October 2012
where 62-year old worker Jose Melena
was accidentally locked into an industrial pressure cooker and was cooked to
death. OSHA is now seeking criminal penalties against the two managers in
charge that could lead to huge fines and prison time.
Here is where the poor guy died, but also consider: this is where they make your canned tuna:
Here is where the poor guy died, but also consider: this is where they make your canned tuna:
Plenty more space to rent |
They’ve just gone through another international shake-up, the result of which is a new name – IGT, standing for “International Game Technology,” a new corporate logo for Governor Raimondo to wear on her lapel and a loss of jobs in Rhode Island, as IGT announced it was shuttering its Coventry manufacturing plant resulting in 44 area workers losing their jobs.
Those jobs are being moved to Reno, Nevada, though
G-Tech or IGT or whatever they call themselves says it is committed to keeping
1,000 jobs in Rhode Island. Right.
Jobs
So, good news for those laid-off G-Tech workers….you can get
part-time, summer jobs with the YMCA! Here are job postings from RI Community
Jobs, a service of the Swearer Center of Brown University. Click
here to sign up for their daily e-mail with new job listings for
non-profit and public service work.
YMCA of Greater Providence has several
jobs in Peacedale:
- Summer Camp Specialist Instructors—Ropes and Archery Programs (training provided)
- Summer Lifeguards and Swim Instructors
- Welcome Center Navigator-Tier III
- Health & Wellness Instructor
The Block
Island Ferry
has a number of $9/hour seasonal ticket taker jobs in Narragansett.
And finally,