Friday, September 24, 2010

R I Taxes -- Taking Responsibility

 As the election season heats up here in Rhode Island and the candidates stake out their positions and false promises, I find it interesting as each competes to become the new Wizard of OZ. They attempt to lull voters into their "vote" trap with the smoke of "political weed."  The smoke is the promises designed to cloud the mind of the voting public and to get their vote.


Of course, the average RI voter will take the promised bait and end up on the hook for the cost, one way or another. However, I think there is one candidate, Lincoln Chafee, who is being honest when he proposes how we might pay for those promises of jobs, etc. through a broader application of the sales tax, while at the same time lowernig the rate to 2%. At least, he has the courage to point out that "the king has no cloths." when it come to the annual budget deficit and is proposing a way to resolve the problem. 


A recent Projo a story, R.I. governor candidates trade promises at series of public forums, illustrates this point.


I have to agree with the Ethnographer's comment  that before you make promises, tell us how you will pay for it. Here is what Ethnographer had to say:
"Caprio will go out and get the money to repair the infrastructure. He is to be praised for focusing on infrastructure. Commerce in Rhode island is made expensive by the lack of good roads and dangerous/closed bridges. Commerce brings jobs. Go Frank.

However, how will he get the money? If there is no tax increase or tax restructuring to provide the money, are we going to borrow more?

Wouldn't the $75 million going to Studio 38 do more good fixing the Route 95 Pawtucket bridge rather than have business reroute their trucks around the bridge? This is a hidden tax on business and a deterrent to business coming into the state.

I'm glad to see Linc Chafee point out that you can't keep making promises and not pay for the promises. Linc is asking Rhode Islanders, all of us, to stop weaning and start thinking about the future of our children. That starts by addressing the problem of paying for our services as we go.

We (adults) made the problem by buying into the Democrat controlled GA mismanagement of the State budget. As responsible adults it is time to take personal responsibility and clean up the mess and not leave it to the next generation.

If taxes are too high, watch them go higher as we let the state's infrastructure rot away on empty promises."

When are Rhode Island voters going to overcome their denial? When are they going to recognize that there is a direct relation between the government services they demand and the taxes they need to pay to get them?


It is time for voters to give serious thought to the basic question: "What is the proper role of government?"  To answer this question they must answer three basic questions. "What do we need from government that we can agree upon? What can we afford? and, What are we willing to pay for (and what are we not willing to pay for) ?"


For example, is it fair to use public money to help the unemployed construction worker, who is a fellow citizens, by rebuilding our failing infrastructure; or is it better to invest $75 million in an outside private company with no product, no local employees and which could not convince private investors to fund it without a guarantee by the tax payers of RI?


Right now it seems Rhode Islanders want both, but Rhode Island can't afford both. The question before the local gubernatorial candidates is not "What can I promise you to get your vote?"


Rhode Island needs candidates who have the courage to explain honestly what choices Rhode Islanders face and what they will cost? Rhode Island needs candidates who are leaders with the courage to say "NO!" to ideas and practices that do not promote the common good. Rhode Island needs leaders who can help educate the public about the problems facing the State and explain what their real options are to solve these problems.


It is up to the voters to take responsibility and ask these questions of their candidates. If the voters don't or don't care, and if the media does not press the candidates for specifics, then Rhode Islanders will continue to get high on the political smoke  bleaching out of these want-a-be Wizards of Oz. And then the day after the election, the voters will wake up to the same old mismanaged reality they went to bed with..


The Rhode Island Voter should be asking themselves:
If I do not take responsibility or hold my elected representatives responsible for their promises, then WHO will?

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

CONGRATULATIONS RHODE ISLAND

 The Providence Journal has just announced the following:

Update: RI among 10 winning 'Race to the Top' millions

ATLANTA (AP) — The U.S. Education Department says Rhode Island, eight other states and the District of Columbia will receive money in the second round of the $4.35 billion "Race to the Top" school reform grant competition. Department spokesman Justin Hamilton says the winners are: Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Rhode Island and Washington, D.C. The amounts of the grants are expected to be announced later.


Superintendent Gist and the superintendents, teachers and parents who have supported the application reflect the hard work and commitment to the welfare of our children. Your hard work has been rewarded. Now we have a chance to improve our educational system into the one we need to prepare them to grow, develop, mature and prepare for life in the 21st century. To those who have opposed the process for short term and regressive ideals about the role of unions and work to rule, it is time to put that behind you and join in building Rhode Island into what it can become, instead of fighting to keep it what it has become.

Again, Congratulations to those who work so hard for it and to the students will benefit from the grant.

But a word of caution, this is only the beginning. Let's make certain that the plan is followed, the results evaluated and the system is really working.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Congratulations-- Bristol, RI One of the Best

A great, hot, sunny July 4th/5th celebration in Bristol RI topped off a wonderful, extended Independence Day weekend. Fireworks and concerts on Sunday, the 4th, was followed by the traditional Independence Day parade. This year marked the 225th 4th of July Celebration's Fourth of July Parade.

Here from You Tube is a kaleidoscopic view of the parade uploaded by  sdlombardi

 But there is more to be proud about in Bristol. Family Circle magazine has named Bristol, RI as one of the10 best towns in America for families.
These communities took top honors in our yearly roundup of perfect places to raise kids.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Another perspective: Teacher and Public Employee Pensions

A major debate has been and continues to go on about the role of public service workers (government employee) pensions and the rebellion by taxpayers exemplified by the position taken by such groups as the Tea Party and RISC (Rhode Island Statewide Coalition). The underfunding (or legislative stealing) of the state and local pension funds by legislative and community governing bodies and poor (or blatant) mismanagement of such funds by the trustees of these funds  (such as West Warwick) has certainly added to the current and future fiscal problems facing the citizens of Rhode Island at all levels. These issues have been discussed here over the past year and more.

At times, the blame game become more the focus for debate, than any substantive discussion of solutions. Ideological battles between Unions verses taxpayers, legislatures vs taxpayers, citizens verses public employees, reactionary conservatives (know nothings) verses reactionary liberals (progressives) generate a lot of entertainment and media noise. But just as the BP oil well in the Gulf of Mexico continues to waste millions of gallons of crude oil and natural gas and pollute the environment, the public treasury is still leaking and the state's fiscal future and public trust is being polluted by incompetent and greedy management.

Despite the debate and rancor at the State and community levels, we need to step back a little. The misbehavior which lead to the problem can be traced back to its source. That source is the general public, you and me, that is US, who through our uncritical support of our local elected officials have created a calcified legislature incapable of making the hard choices the times demand. We condemn the General Assembly but keep our own representatives who, when "they go along to get along," are not acting in our or the state's best interest.

Instead we elect representatives who can only make the easy choices, such as fireworks, cashing in the future earning from the tobacco settlement, approving budgets based on speculation about a federal bailout. The General Assemble has made short sighted and short term decisions over the past two decades that are today having real negative consequences, often unintended self inflicted ones.  Even those who promote such short sighted and selfish behavior are feeling the consequences today.

What are these consequences?

Every once in a while you run across an article, or posting, on the web that is worth sharing, especially in light of the issues confronting Rhode Islanders these days.  An article appearing on the Money and Market Website, entitled  State Pension Woes Only Worsening  by Nilus Mattive describes the significance of the public pension situation on the individual public employee who is, or has been "planning," for his or her retirement and expecting that the government will be able to keep its promise. After describing the sad state of affairs facing this public employee, he concludes with this warning.
I’ll Say It Again: Do NOT Count on Any
Government to Pay for Your Retirement!
As we go into this election year, it will be important that each citizen, each of us, consider the promises we made to state and local public employees through the actions of the legislators, council persons, and board members we elected to represent us. And especially those of you who are public employees, consider what the real consequences of your actions as a union member and as a taxpaying citizen have been. Consider where does your true enlightened self interest  rest. Consider what you have done to plan for your future and what you will do now. Consider what your chances are to retire with those rich pension deals negotiated at another time when we were all in a better place. 

The secret to life is change. The secret to success in life is the ability to change in response to a changing environment. Today, is the first day of the rest of your life, are you prepared to change?


Saturday, July 3, 2010

Students Win: Follow up on the Central Falls High School story

Earlier this spring the Central Falls High School situation dominated local news as the CF School Board sought to implement  the RI Protocol for Intervention, part of the requirements under the federal No Child Left Behind guidelines. The initial impact was the firing of all the teachers in the high school.

Now months later, the heat has gone out the issue. It is off the front pages and out of the local and national media. There has been progress. The teachers, all of who had been fired, will be rehired if they desire this fall. The union has accepted the conditions initially proposed by the Superintendent and School Board.

        In a recent article, Making Decisions Together: The Rebirth of Central Falls High School,,  appearing in EdWeek , Dr. Deborah A. Gist outlines the current situation and the conditions that have been agreed upon by the union and the school district. It is fair to say today that the STUDENTS are going to be the winners. Those of you who have been following this debate,  I strongly  recommend the article.

         Students are winners again as a result of the State coming up with a new funding formula for local schools which places the student ahead of the bureaucracy. State money will follow the students.

         The Rhode Island General Assembly, which is frequently the target of my criticism, deserves credit for their recent passage of a new state funding formula for the state schools districts and charter schools. According to the Providence Journal.
"The new formula links state aid to the current number of students enrolled and adds money for low-income students, many of whom have additional educational needs that the additional aid is intended to address."
         Now if only the GA would recognize that these students will need a place to go after graduation. Technical training for jobs and a more effectively and efficiently funding the State's higher education institutions might help provide them with the options they and we taxpayers deserve.

         From the economic development and employment perspective, this would generate the trained and educated labor force which  will attract industry to the state. And from tax payer perspective it might help to retain the intellectual capital and investment we are making in our schools. More jobs means more opportunity for student. More jobs mean more tax paying citizens. More tax paying citizens should means a lower burdens for everyone while increasing the State's ability to solve its fiscal crisis.

Monday, June 21, 2010

Fireworks and the RI General Assembly -- a Combustable Mixture

Insane, Short sighted, incompetent and forgetful is the only way to describe the RI General Assembly and a Governor who goes along with them.

On June 16th, 2010 the RI General Assemble and The Governor gave approval of the
Fireworks bill


This morning the Projo carried this story about fireworks in a public building,Motel guests evacuated after fireworks set off

On Thursday, February 20, 2003, The Station nightclub fire occurred beginning at 11:07 PM EST. Located in West Warwick, Rhode Island, this is the fourth deadliest nightclub fire in American history, killing 100 people, four of whom died after being admitted to local hospitals. The fire was caused when pyrotechnic sparks ignited flammable sound insulation foam in the walls and ceilings around the stage. This subsequently created a flash fire that engulfed the club in 5½ minutes. Some 230 people were injured and another 132 escaped uninjured. Video footage of the fire depicts its initial growth and the exit blockage which hindered evacuation



At least one person appears to remember and care. I just received the following bulletin from the Providence Journal.
From the Projo 6/21/10 Breaking news.'The state fire marshal on Monday expressed concerns about the newly adopted law that allows the sale of fireworks in Rhode Island, but he stated emphatically that it does not permit the use of gerbs -- the kind of indoor pyrotechnic that set off the Station nightclub fire that killed 100 people in 2003. Jack Chartier, the fire marshal, said that under the new law, only "consumer grade'' fireworks, such as sparklers and poppers, are allowed to be sold to anyone 16 years of age or older. He said these type of fireworks are only permitted outdoors"

It does not take a genius to know what Albert Einstein observed.

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.


I guess our elected officials are as insane as those who elect them.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Central Falls out of the frying pan and into the cauldron

Well it seems that a touch of reality has entered the Central Falls (CF) school crisis. When the union members discovered that there are over 700 - 800 teachers from around the nation willing to apply for the 90 or so opening created by the union leadership, reality struck. It seems that Central Falls is not the center of the universe. It is not isolated from the economic conditions facing the nation and the education profession. The local union can't control supply and demand on a national level.

Oh! Did I say, the union leadership caused the problem? The settlement reached between the teachers and the CF school administration is the same as the leaders refused to offer to their membership back in February. So where was the leadership then and why are they agreeing to it today?

It seems that threatening to sue, another union tactic, was not a viable option. So today, they are working behind closed doors to get their "FRIENDS" in the RI General Assembly to pass a law which
... seeks to prohibit the General Assembly from enacting changes to pensions that “diminish, impair or deprive” vested state employees of “presently existing rights or benefits.

Rhode Island State Senate Majority Whip, Dominick Ruggerio is the lead sponsor of S-2384, the Public Officers and Employees Retirement System Act. The bill will be taken up by the Senate Labor Committee this week ( week of May 16th). Like earlier efforts by these "FRIENDS" to impose binding arbitration on the cities, towns, and school committees, the unions are seeking a poison pill, golden parachute for themselves which is unsustainable.

If they succeed, they will be rewarding their older loyalists members at the expense of their younger members. This is a common union practice conducted every year through the bumping process which places seniority over competency in filling open positions. The future generation of teachers will have to pick up the future bill as tax payers and as dues paying union members.

But for the moment the school crisis seems to be under control. Out of the frying pan.

But according to the Providence Business News and the Providence Journal Central Falls has jumped into the cauldron of potential municipal bankruptcy. This is uncharted territory hundreds of communities and several states around the country are facing.

Receivership is a step away from bankruptcy. If Central Falls goes bankrupt, all contracts will be voided. The city may be required to unincorporate and to merge with a neighboring jurisdiction. These are the lessons we have learned from the failure of the banks, auto industry, among others in the recent national economic crisis.

It is no wonder that the Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and Health Professionals has reversed it position regarding Rhode Island's application for Race to the Top grants. This was a "no started" last week. Now it may be the only hope for some districts, such as Central Falls.

This afternoon the Providence Business News online published the following story, State law bars Central Falls bankruptcy. Because of state law, the GA will be called upon to help resolve the issue. This should be interesting to see how the politicians solve this one.

This is the legacy of years of greed and short term thinking that seems to be a characteristic of Rhode Islanders and the people they elect to public, union, and corporate offices.

Stay tuned while we keep track of the temperature