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Monday, May 18, 2026

News from the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee

 

C-Town Dems News

May 2026

Save the Dates

Monday, June 1st
Charlestown Budget Referendum

 

Vote for the proposed budget from 8 AM – 8 PM. Details here.

Wednesday, June 3rd
Meet the candidates

 

CDTC meeting
Charlestown Police Station, 6 PM

 

As part of our ongoing efforts to bring statewide candidates to South County, we'll be hosting Newport City Councilor Xay Khamsyvoravong, who is running for Lieutenant Governor (xayforri.com) and State Rep. Joe Solomon who is running for Attorney General (joeforri.com/what-we-do). 

Saturday, June 6th

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

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, send us a note. to info@charlestowndemocrats.org. 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.

Neronha sues country club that refuses to obey CRMC order

RI AG sues Quidnessett over rock wall built without permission

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

A man fishes along the shoreline immediately north of the rock wall built without permission by the Quidnessett Country Club in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. The attorney general’s office sued the country club over the wall on Tuesday, May 12, 2026. (Photo courtesy of Save the Bay)

The state’s top prosecutor is stepping in to try to force Quidnessett Country Club to remove a rock wall built without permission along its shoreline more than three years ago.

The complaint filed Tuesday by Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha’s office comes after years of unsuccessful efforts by state coastal regulators to negotiate with the country club owners and later, pursue legal action against them for the rock wall built in defiance of state coastal regulations.

The 600-foot stone wall was built along the shoreline of the North Kingstown country club in early 2023 — though not flagged by regulators until that summer — to protect the 14th hole of its signature golf course from coastal erosion. But state coastal regulations restrict development along sensitive and species-rich waters like the section of waterfront in question, a violation the Rhode Island Coastal Resource Management Council (CRMC) has sought to have corrected.

Yet the wall remains, each day worsening the delicate ecosystem that surrounds it and inhibiting the state’s constitutionally enshrined public access to the shore, the AG’s complaint states. The 28-page complaint filed in Providence County Superior Court asks a state judge to issue a preliminary injunction forcing the club owners to remove the seawall and restore the shoreline, including vegetation, to its natural state awaiting a jury trial.

Cotter proposes sales tax holiday weeks for restaurants

Gives customers and restaurants a welcome break

Rep. Megan L. Cotter has introduced legislation to create two tax-free weeks each year for restaurants in the state.

“This is a bill to help boost small businesses,” said Representative Cotter (D-Dist. 39, Exeter, Richmond, Hopkinton). “Mom-and-pop businesses make up a substantial portion of the restaurant industry. A tax-free week is a great way to encourage people to visit a restaurant they’ve never tried, hopefully one they’ll want to visit more often. This will put more money directly into the hands of servers and small business owners alike and encourage Rhode Islanders to enjoy the many fantastic restaurants we are fortunate to have all over the state.”

The legislation (2026-H 8512), which Representative Cotter introduced May 1, would establish one sales tax-free week in the summer and one in the winter for restaurants statewide. The specific dates would be determined by the General Assembly.

The tax holiday weeks could essentially create statewide “Restaurant Weeks” which several communities in Rhode Island currently organize. Such weeks usually include special menus and deals to entice customers who might not otherwise visit.

The legislation is supported by the Rhode Island Hospitality Association.

Controlled burn at Great Swamp today

Trump appeals decision protecting trans kids at Rhode Island Hospital

Leave trans kids ALONE!

By Alexander Castro, Rhode Island Current

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed notice blocking a federal attempt to secure transgender youths’ medical records.

The federal appeal is the latest volley in a back-and-forth court saga with a cache of sensitive medical records at its core, namely six years of patient information from minors prescribed puberty blockers or hormone therapy via Rhode Island Hospital providers. 

The court fight — whose genesis lies in DOJ’s July 2025 maneuvering to obtain these records via an administrative subpoena — has now spanned two U.S. District Courts and two Courts of Appeals. 

The DOJ filed its notice of appeal with the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston, aiming to undo U.S. District Court Judge Mary McElroy’s decision in the case first brought to her court on May 4 by Rhode Island’s Office of Child Advocate. 

Child Advocate Katelyn Medeiros is tasked with legal representation and advocacy for children in state care, an unspecified number of whom would be affected by the desired records’ disclosure. Her office moved to have Rhode Island’s own federal court nullify the DOJ subpoena that would have forced the hospital to turn over medical records by Thursday — a deadline set per the order of a judge in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, where the DOJ sought, and obtained, an order to enforce the subpoena on April 30.

McElroy granted the child advocate’s petition and impugned the federal prosecutors for their conduct during an in-person hearing on Tuesday and their claims made in court documents. McElroy wrote that DOJ “has misrepresented and withheld information” to not only her court, but to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas.

Sunday, May 17, 2026

MAGA Supreme Court Okays G.O.P. Overthrow of American Democracy

Disenfranchising 40% of a state’s citizens cannot be reconciled with representative democracy

Mitchell Zimmerman

The Supreme Court gave a “two-fer” to white supremacists and proponents of Republican autocracy: First, six right-wing justices completed the erasure of the crowning achievement of the 1960s Civil Rights Movement, the Voting Rights Act. Second, in the same case, Louisiana v. Callais, the right-winger judges approved of states shaping legislative districts that deny the opposing party any role in government.

In essence, the Supreme Court okayed the destruction of Congress as an instrument of American democracy.

The Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution was enacted and ratified five years after the Civil War. The Amendment confirmed – in principle – that African-American citizens have the right to vote and to have their votes count.

So said the Constitution. But for almost a century the former Confederate states negated African-Americans’ right to vote.

The Voting Rights Act put an end to the myriad legal schemes Southern white politicians had used to disenfranchise Black Americans

The Fifteenth Amendment also gave Congress the power to enforce its mandate. After years of struggle over civil rights – after peaceful demonstrators in Birmingham confronted snarling police dogs, mass arrests and lethal bombing, after hundreds of nonviolent students worked for freedom in Mississippi in the face of murder, assaults and the burning of Black churches, after peaceful marchers for voting rights returned to Selma after being clubbed by state troopers and ridden down by racist possemen – Congress tackled the white supremacist obstacles to African-American voting.

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 put an end to the myriad legal schemes that Southern white politicians had used to disenfranchise Black Americans and terminated the ploys used to deny African-Americans a fair opportunity to elect representatives of their choice.

Republican conspiracy bingo

Save the dates: planned "Meet the candidates" nights in South County

Rep. Spears honors great-nephew of Ellison ‘Tarzan’ Brown for completion of Boston Marathon

Congratulations Thawn 

The House approved a resolution from Rep. Tina L. Spears honoring the great-nephew of Ellison “Tarzan” Brown for his completion of the Boston Marathon 90 years after Brown’s first Boston Marathon victory.

Thawn Sherenté Harris of Charlestown completed the marathon in an official time of 3 hours, 59 minutes, and 30 seconds, making him the third member of the Narragansett Tribe to complete the race and giving him the second-fastest recorded time among the tribe.

The resolution (2026-H 8539) sponsored by Representative Spears (D-Dist. 36, Charlestown, New Shoreham, South Kingstown, Westerly) declared that “Ellison ‘Tarzan’ Brown rose to national prominence in the 1930s, winning the Boston Marathon in 1936 and again in 1939, and competing in the 1936 Olympic Games, while bringing recognition and pride to the Narragansett people. 

Tarzan Brown’s 1936 victory included his legendary passing of race favorite Johnny Kelley on the hills of Newton, an iconic moment that gave rise to what is now known as ‘Heartbreak Hill.’ In completing the Boston Marathon, Thawn symbolically followed in his great-uncle’s footsteps along that same historic stretch, retracing the site of one of Brown's most celebrated achievements.”

Doctors Are Surprised by What This Vaccine Is Doing to the Heart

New benefits found for getting shingles vaccine

By American College of Cardiology

A new study suggests that people with heart disease who receive a shingles vaccine may face far fewer serious heart problems within a year. The research, presented at the American College of Cardiology’s Annual Scientific Session (ACC.26), found that vaccinated individuals had nearly half the rate of major cardiac events compared with those who did not get the shot.

The analysis included more than 246,822 adults in the United States with atherosclerotic heart disease, a condition caused by plaque buildup in the arteries. The findings add to a growing body of evidence that the shingles vaccine may do more than prevent shingles, with potential benefits that extend to heart health and even conditions like dementia.

“This vaccine has been found over and over again to have cardioprotective effects for reducing heart attack, stroke and death,” said Robert Nguyen, MD, a resident physician at the University of California, Riverside and the study’s lead author. 

“Looking at the highest risk population, those with existing cardiovascular disease, these protective effects might be even greater than among the general public.”

Private Equity Is Taking Over Nursing Homes — And Seniors Are Paying the Price

Vulture capitalists milk Medicare and Medicaid money 

By Scott Doerr 

As Americans age, we deserve the peace of mind that we can find nursing care for our parents or ourselves when we need it. But for private equity firms, that need isn’t a mission to fulfill — it’s an opportunity to profit at our expense.

As private equity takes over more nursing care, studies show higher mortality rates, reduced staffing, and increased costs as a result. But seniors are fighting back.

I live in Lincoln County, Wisconsin. For generations, our public nursing home — Pine Crest — has served our seniors. “Pine Crest is there for us when we need it. It’s worked that way for 70 years,” said retired accountant and Pine Crest Nursing Home volunteer Eileen Guthrie.

Eileen and I were among the concerned locals who tirelessly fought to keep our five-star-rated home in public hands when the county board put it up for sale to the highest bidder. Few wanted to privatize our beloved county-owned institution, which always treated residents with love and respect. Privatizing it would turn us into expendable cogs in the wheel for greater profits.

Despite broad public opposition, the county board sold Pine Crest to a subsidiary of the Ensign Group, a for-profit company. Almost immediately, the harm started. Less than a month after the sale, state regulators cited the nursing home for neglecting a patient’s medication needs, sending that person to the hospital, and reducing the necessary staff.

Since 2016, there have been 125 publicly-owned nursing home sales to private companies in Wisconsin. In nearly half of these, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) quality ratings declined after the sale.

That tracks with what communities have seen nationally.

The Center for Medicare Advocacy has found that “promised cost savings rarely materialized” when communities privatized public nursing homes, “while accountability and public oversight were significantly reduced,” the Daily Yonder reported. And the Kaiser Family Foundation has found that privatized nursing homes nationwide tend to have lower-quality ratings than those that are publicly owned.