Tasty bits of news for the sophisticated palate
By
Will Collette
Filippi family continues to battle with Block Island neighbors
The Niantic tribe called Block Island Manisses and controlled the island until attacked by Massachusetts troops in 1637 |
Rep.
Blake “Flip” Filippi’s family continues to charm its Block Island neighbors
with a new battle over noise. Seems that Flip
and his brother Steve have bought the classic Hotel Manisses and Flip wants to
make it into a summertime late-night jazz venue.
The Filippis also own Ballard’s Inn and have been fighting for months with the
town after the
Filippi family decided to block off public access to the beach.
This new fight brought out neighbors in droves who objected to the
plan for outdoor live music during the summer. A number of residents expressed
a general distrust at what the Filippis had planned in general for the
Manisses.
You know, if Flip Filippi wants to further expand his family’s
hotel empire, maybe he ought to step up and buy
the General Stanton Inn here in Charlestown after his
BFFs on the Town Council killed the most recent – and only – offer to buy the
Inn to prevent it from going dark. Some nice jazz music outside the General
Stanton is just what Cross’ Mill needs.
Congratulations
Officer Scott being sworn in by Chief Allen. Screen shot from the original PC article in 2014. |
Charlestown
Police Officer Lawrence Scott was featured in a Providence Journal article in an on-going series on race relations in Rhode Island.
The ProJo noted that Officer Scott is CPD’s first African-American officer and
that his hiring was the result of CPD Chief Jeff Allen’s conscious effort to
diversify the CPD.
We reported his hiring in January 2014.
I thought it was great that he was hired – still do – but in 2015, I wonder why
it took so long.
I also why the ProJo decided to make a fuss about it, treating Officer Scott as if he was the Jackie Robinson of rural Rhode Island policing with a headline, “In Charlestown, black officer working to inspire.”
I also why the ProJo decided to make a fuss about it, treating Officer Scott as if he was the Jackie Robinson of rural Rhode Island policing with a headline, “In Charlestown, black officer working to inspire.”
But still, I commend Chief Allen and wish great success to Officer
Scott.
Congratulations to the Quonset Air Museum. They not only got a
six month reprieve on their eviction notice from the storm-ravaged warehouse
they currently occupy, but an anonymous
major donor has pledged to give whatever it takes
to help them find a safe, permanent home. I’d sure love to see them move to
Ninigret Park.
The Friends of the Charlestown Animal Shelter
just received a $5,520 grant from the Rhode Island
Foundation to offer free spaying or neutering to pets of residents in
Charlestown, Richmond and Hopkinton. You may have received their newsletter in
the mail a few days ago, a good remember that making a tax-deductible donation
to the Shelter in lieu of presents is a fine form of Christmas gift. See more
about the Shelter HERE.
In that same category
is RI-CAN of Charlestown. Their
thrift store which has actually been open for a while, just got a nice
feature in the Westerly Sun. It’s another place to think about as you
decide how to handle your holiday gift giving. And the Jonnycake Center in Westerly, featured here.
The good people at the URI Tick
Center won a $2 million federal grant
to figure out how to come up with tick-resistant clothing. Since I just came in
from working outside and had to immediately pick a tick off myself, I am deeply
and personally pleased they got this money.
Progressive Charlestown has been
featuring the URI
Tick Center on our main page almost since the day we started publishing PC.
The Charlestown
Rathskeller Tavern got a nice
feature piece on WPRI Channel 12 for its simple,
but tasty seared scallops with mushroom risotto.
Once again, Westerly’s Ocean House, as well as the Watch Hill Inn, made the Conde
Naste Travelers Award list for 2015.
On November 20, Ray Mott, co-owner of Mott & Chace here in Charlestown, told
the Providence Journal about the top-priced house he sold in Charlestown
this year. It’s a $4 million beachfront property at 159 Surfside Drive. That’s
in Quonnie (Quonochontaug),
of course where life is a little different than it is for the rest of us.
Best and worst
Charlestown
once again was called out by HousingWorksRI
for having one of the state’s worst records for affordable housing. As most
readers know, the ruling Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA Party) that has
controlled town government since 2008 is adamantly opposed to affordable
housing and has repeatedly tried to get the General Assembly to exempt
Charlestown from the state mandate that 10% of housing stock should be
affordable.
Only
2.1% of Charlestown’s residences are deemed affordable. We are only marginally
better than the Foster and Richmond (both at 2%), West Greenwich (1.4%),
Scituate (0.9%) and Little Compton (0.6%).
Newport
topped the state ranking at 17.1%. Block Island was in the top 10 at 10.3%.
Central
Falls, at 11.8%) also made the Top Ten. Surprisingly, Central Falls was ranked
as the Rhode
Island community that was the most tax-friendly place for retirees.
Charlestown, by contrast, did not rank, meaning they were not in the Top Ten.
That
pretty decisively debunks the CCA Party’s repeated claim that Charlestown is
one of the most tax-friendly municipalities in Rhode Island. It’s not, and it’s
getting worse every year since the CCA Party-controlled Town Council has raised
Charlestown’s property tax rate every single year they’ve reigned in this town.
I
once joked that Charlestown could effectively avoid its affordable housing mandate by annexing Central Falls (calling it North Charlestown) and riding off
their good data. Now here’s a second reason: the CCA needs Central Falls to
cover the bovine excrement they have been spreading about Charlestown’s tax
climate.
Another
rating piece tells us something we already knew about South County (a.k.a.
Washington County). We are very
respectably ranked at #349 out of a total of 3,111 counties in the United
States for “scenery and climate.” While that doesn’t put us in the top 10%,
we’re just outside the mark at 11.2%.
According
to StrongLanguage.org, Rhode Island gets top, or close to top honors for
swearing. Measuring the daily usage of a number of different expletives, we
stand out as champion cussers.
Yahoo Travel published what it calls “The Definitive and Final Ranking of All 50 States” where they claim to have used just about all of the criteria that counts to rank the 50 states in order. The worst state according to this rating is….FLORIDA!. Connecticut comes in at #44. Rhode Island beats them by being ranked #38, just ahead of Idaho and West Virginia. The #1 state, according to Yahoo Travel is Michigan (???), just beating out Maine for top honors.
Somehow, I think Yahoo Travel oversold this listing as the “definitive and final” one.
Moving on, you should make sure you stay out of Providence if the U.S. comes under zombie attack. According to the real estate website Trulia, Providence (real estate listings here) is the worst city in the United States to be in if there is a zombie attack, which we all know is almost certainly going to happen soon. One of the key factors in Trulia’s calculations was the ratio of cemeteries to population. Smart thinking since that’s where zombies come from. As it turns out, Providence’s ratio of 11.5 cemeteries to every 50,000 people is the highest in the nation.
Blowing
in the wind
Vortex Bladeless system, as it would look deployed off-shore |
But that means nothing to a growing green industry where smart people are figuring out ways to deal with some of the unintended consequences that do sometimes occur with standard, three-blade wind turbines.
One promising trend is to develop wind-to-energy that do not use
blades at all. We recently
printed a piece on a local company with a
variation on that approach aimed mainly at eliminating noise. A more elaborate
version, the Vortex Bladeless, was recently
featured as promising for large-scale use.
The issue of practicality – i.e. can wind produce on a scale where
it is economical and can really replace fossil fuels – has been answered by
Denmark’s recent milestone – its wind turbines are now producing at a rate of 140% of the country’s needs. Yes, 140% meaning the whole country is powered by wind
with 40% excess capacity it can sell to its neighbors.
As you think about the international push toward green energy –
and Charlestown’s conspicuous indifference under the CCA – consider that the Associated
Press just reported on the first confirmed case
of cancer to a worker caused by the 2011 Fukushima nuclear plant meltdown that
occurred as a result of Japan’s terrible earthquake.
JOBS
South County
Community Action, Inc.
is looking for a Head Start Social Service/ERSEA Coordinator,
and a Head Start Family Advocate
Ocean Community
YMCA
(Westerly, RI) is looking for Wellness
Center Attendants.
Thundermist
Health Center
is looking for a South County Community Outreach and
Engagement Specialist to work out of Wakefield.
To
find out about public service jobs in and around Rhode Island, subscribe to the
daily e-mail from Rhode Island Community Jobs, a project of the Swearer Center for Public Service at
Brown University, please go to http://listserv.brown.edu/archives/ricomjob.html
and click the link in right-hand column.