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Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Be careful, Charlestown: heat wave!

Most likely accompanied by bad air, fire risk

By Will Collette


For several days, the National Weather Service has been warning of a heat dome effect that will cover much of the northeastern US over the Fourth of July weekend.

It's coming, starting tomorrow, and according to this morning's extended forecast, it will extend through and beyond the 4th without a break at least until Monday. Heat index numbers will likely be alarming.

Usually, with heat like this, our air quality drops due to auto-driven ground level ozone as well as particulate pollution. This morning's forecast shows that air quality tomorrow and Wednesday will be, at best, "moderate," though that could change to "unhealthy."


I predict a high level of summer people this weekend, drawn to Charlestown by our beaches so be especially careful on the roads since, as most residents know, these people can be crazy.

With little rain in the forecast, expect an elevated wildfire risk. According to Gov. McKee, Rhode Island is in a state of drought. Add campfire, outdoor cookouts and illegal fireworks. 

Thank you in advance to our local fire fighters for protecting us. 

Show them some respect and consideration by NOT using illegal fireworks and being extra careful if you are cooking outside.

Besides bad air, be careful of heat stroke and exhaustion. Stay hydrated. 

The UV index will probably be very high, too.

Enjoy the 4th! Just be careful out there.

Will Trump succeed at blocking you from voting by mail?

The Executive Order to Restrict Vote by Mail: Trump is still trying to suppress your vote

Joyce Vance

Republican voters regularly use mail-in voting. Nearly one in five registered Republicans vote by mail. Trump himself uses it. But in his role as president, he has an almost pathological dislike for the practice. One in four Democrats votes by mail.

Data on who votes by mail suggests that many Americans like it and have confidence in it. For instance, States United reports that 40% of voters who are 65 and over vote by mail. And in 2024, 905,343 members of the military and Americans living abroad voted by mail.

Trump has defended casting his own ballots by mail, saying he did it “because I’m president” and “I had a lot of different things” to do. But when others do it, there is cheating. In essence, the attacks on voting by mail have become a convenient, if false, vehicle for keeping the voter fraud narrative Trump loves to push on the front burner.

Trump has been trying to end Americans’ ability to vote by mail. His most recent effort, after several failed ones, started with a new executive order he signed on March 31 of this year: “ENSURING CITIZENSHIP VERIFICATION AND INTEGRITY IN FEDERAL ELECTIONS.” It’s a plot to transfer control over who gets to vote from the states, who have that authority under the Constitution, to the federal government, which does not.

We discussed the EO here when it came out. At the time, I wrote, “The point emerges early on. This is not an EO about ensuring election integrity. It’s an effort to let politicians, namely this president, influence election outcomes instead of letting voter elect their chosen representatives.” The Postal Service responded by promulgating new rules requiring states to turn over their voter rolls to the administration. A failure to comply with that rule would cost states the ability to mail ballots to their voters, because only people appearing on official Trump-approved voter rolls generated after vetting the state rolls will be eligible to have ballots mailed to them. If states don’t turn over their lists, no mail ballots.

It would have been unimaginable for the Carter, Clinton, Obama or Biden administrations to restrict voting like this. Even for the Reagan or Bush administrations. The federal government is going to prevent states from using the U.S. Mail to send out ballots, unless the states let the federal government decide who is eligible to vote—under rules set by each state. It’s rank voter suppression, removing decision making authority from the states and vesting it in the Trump administration, which has repeatedly demonstrated its interest in winning, even if that means keeping Democrats from voting or refusing to count their votes when they do.

Monday, June 29, 2026

Climate Action Rhode Island to General Assembly blasts McKee's veto of Building Benchmarking bill

McKee shows "troubling pattern" of attacking programs to combat the effects of climate change

SteveAhlquist.news

Climate Action Rhode Island (CARI) is deeply disappointed by Governor Daniel McKee’s decision to veto the Building Benchmarking and Reporting Act (S2260/H7183), the only bill vetoed by the Governor this legislative session.

[From a Climate Action Rhode Island press release]

The legislation passed the House by a vote of 48-15 and the Senate by a vote of 33-5. It would require large buildings over 25,000 square feet to report their energy use through automated data-collection software provided by the state in conjunction with Rhode Island Energy.

For years, CARI, legislative leaders, environmental advocates, labor organizations, and business stakeholders have worked to advance policies that will reduce carbon emissions while creating good-paying jobs and lowering energy costs. The Building Benchmarking Act represented a major step in that effort.

CARI is especially grateful to Senator Meghan Kallman (Democrat, District 15, Pawtucket, Providence) and Representative Rebecca Kislak (Democrat, District 4, Providence), who worked tirelessly over multiple legislative sessions to advance this legislation. Their leadership, persistence, and unwavering commitment to addressing climate change helped move this important policy across the finish line in the General Assembly.

July 1 protest for the Fourth of July in Wyoming

As 2026 Election season gets serious, Charlestown Dems announce July events

 

C-Town Dems News

June 2026

July Events

Wednesday, July 1st

Meet the Candidates!

6 PM | Charlestown Police Station

 

Sabina Matos, running for Lieutenant Governor, and Connor Burbridge running for US Senate, will be joining us in Charlestown to speak to residents. Any registered Democrat is welcome to attend.

 

Meeting will take place at 6 PM in the Charlestown Police Station, 4901 Old Post Road

Signatures needed

Candidates need signatures from registered voters to get on the ballot. At this meeting, Charlestown voters will have the opportunity to sign nomination papers for local race candidates.

 

Candidates for Town Council are:

Deb Carney, Cynthia Drummond, Jill Fonnemann

 

Candidates for the Chariho School Board are:
Holly Eaves, Craig Louzon, Linda Lyall.

Saturday, July 8th

Backyard Bash for Sam Wilcox! ðŸŽ‰

 

Join us for an evening of fun, conversation, and community as we continue building momentum for Sam's State Senate campaign. RSVP here, and we will provide the address prior to the event. 

 

Next Canvass Meetup for Sam | June 27

Our next door-knocking meet-up will be June 27 at Crandall Field in Ashaway at 2pm. Whether you're a seasoned volunteer or trying canvassing for the first time, we'd love to have you join us. We'll provide training, campaign materials, and pair you with a buddy. 

Saturday, July 11th


From 10 AM – 12 noon @ Caf Bar in The Venue, 5153 Old Post Road

Join us for Tea with Tina for a community conversation on housing with Tina Spears, Deb Carney and Collin Penney. All are welcome, no RSVP required.

Monday, July 13th
Town Council Meeting

7 PM | Town Hall

 

You're invited to attend these public meetings as a citizen of Charlestown.

 

Meeting will take place starting at 7 PM in the Council Chambers
at 4540 South County Trail, Charlestown

Call for Volunteers

Your Charlestown Democratic Town Committee needs you! We are looking for active participants who want to help support Democratic candidates and causes. If interested, visit charlestowndemocrats.org and click VOLUNTEER. Please consider joining us!

Get our latest updates

The Charlestown Democratic Town Committee manages the affairs of the Democratic Party in the town of Charlestown, RI subject to RI Election Law, State Party rules and its own bylaws. We meet the first Wednesday of every month at 6:00 PM at the Charlestown Police Station. Any Charlestown registered Democrat is welcome to attend.