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Friday, July 18, 2025

Rhode Island state agencies helped kill open records reform

State Agencies like DEM Claim Public Records Reform a Burden

By Colleen Cronin / ecoRI News staff

When the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA)
ran the town, loopholes in the state open
records law were used to cover up shady deals
For several years, a Rhode Island public records reform bill has been introduced to the General Assembly, and each time it gets a hearing, several public bodies write to oppose the bill or express their concerns.

The Department of Environmental Management is regularly one of those bodies, writing in a May letter that the reforms would create additional burdens for the agency.

“DEM is one of the top recipients of [Access to Public Records Act] requests among state agencies,” director Terry Gray wrote in the letter outlining his concerns. “While we welcome the opportunity to provide more transparency in our work, it is an extremely resource-intensive process to comply even under existing law.”

DEM and nine other state agencies cited increased workload in their letters of concern or opposition to the bill, which would have expanded the definition of public records and tried to tamp down on some of the fees agencies charge, among other reforms.

ecoRI News requested and reviewed information from those departments on their public records requests from the last calendar year and found the volume of requests they receive varies greatly, with DEM coming out on or near the top for requests.

In 2024, DEM received 1,508 requests, most of which involved septic system and site remediation records, according to a list kept by the agency. Those types of documents are frequently requested during property transactions and transfers.

Of the agencies that responded to ecoRI News, either through an APRA or informal request, the Department of Health had the next highest number at 476 requests.

The Department of Public Safety, which wrote to the General Assembly with concerns about the proposed reforms, didn’t respond to ecoRI News requests by press time, but did estimate in its letter that it receives about 2,000 requests annually.

Canary in the coal mine

What was cut

How your data pulls in hundreds of billions of dollars for app and social media companies

The hidden cost of convenience

Screenshot from an android phone with the default opt-in selection radio button filled in
Many apps, including the weather channel app,
send you targeted advertising and sell your
personal data by default.
 Jack WestCC BY-ND
Kassem Fawaz, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Jack West, University of Wisconsin-Madison

You wake up in the morning and, first thing, you open your weather app. You close that pesky ad that opens first and check the forecast. You like your weather app, which shows hourly weather forecasts for your location. And the app is free!

But do you know why it’s free? Look at the app’s privacy settings. You help keep it free by allowing it to collect your information, including:

  • What devices you use and their IP and Media Access Control addresses.
  • Information you provide when signing up, such as your name, email address and home address.
  • App settings, such as whether you choose Celsius or Fahrenheit.
  • Your interactions with the app, including what content you view and what ads you click.
  • Inferences based on your interactions with the app.
  • Your location at a given time, including, depending on your settings, continuous tracking.
  • What websites or apps that you interact with after you use the weather app.
  • Information you give to ad vendors.
  • Information gleaned by analytics vendors that analyze and optimize the app.

This type of data collection is standard fare. The app company can use this to customize ads and content. The more customized and personalized an ad is, the more money it generates for the app owner. The owner might also sell your data to other companies.

You might also check a social media account like Instagram. The subtle price that you pay is, again, your data. Many “free” mobile apps gather information about you as you interact with them.

As an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering and a doctoral student in computer science, we follow the ways software collects information about people. Your data allows companies to learn about your habits and exploit them.

It’s no secret that social media and mobile applications collect information about you. Meta’s business model depends on it. The company, which operates Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, is worth US$1.48 trillion. Just under 98% of its profits come from advertising, which leverages user data from more than 7 billion monthly users.

Following This Diet Can Reduce Your Risk of Alzheimer’s, No Matter Your Age

Improving diet later in life may lower dementia risk, especially in certain ethnic groups

By University of Hawaii at Manoa

A recent study from the University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center found that people who followed the MIND diet were much less likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease or other types of dementia, even if they adopted healthier eating habits later in life.

The MIND diet, which stands for Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay, combines features of both the Mediterranean and DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diets. It focuses on foods known to support brain health, including leafy greens, berries, nuts, and olive oil. The findings are based on data from nearly 93,000 adults in the United States who participated in the Multiethnic Cohort (MEC), a major study co-led by the UH Cancer Center and the University of Southern California.

“Our study findings confirm that healthy dietary patterns in mid to late life and their improvement over time may prevent Alzheimer’s and related dementias,“ said lead author Song-Yi Park, professor in the UH Cancer Center’s Population Sciences in the Pacific Program.

Cold comfort: We're not as bad as Massachusetts

How does R.I. rank on affordable rental housing in new report?

By Christopher Shea, Rhode Island Current

Rhode Islanders making the state’s minimum wage must work at least 12 hours a day, seven days a week, in order to afford a basic two-bedroom apartment, according to a new analysis by the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLICH).

The annual Out of Reach report released Thursday by the Washington D.C.-based organization found Rhode Island renters must earn $31.71 an hour — or $65,954 a year — to afford a typical $1,649 apartment. 

The finding that an 85-hour work week is what it takes a low-wage worker to find housing makes Rhode Island the 18th most expensive place to rent in the country. It ranked fourth overall among the six New England states. 

The situation is far worse in Massachusetts, which ranked as the fourth most expensive state in the nation to find housing and requires renters to make $45.90 per hour to afford the average two-room apartment. Connecticut ranked 11th, followed by New Hampshire at 12th, Vermont at 21st, and Maine at 26th.

California ranked as the most expensive state to live, where the renters need to make $49.61 per hour. West Virginia was the least expensive among states at $18.94 an hour. Only Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory, ranked lower with a required wage of just $11.64 an hour.

While in the top half of unaffordable states, Rhode Island ranked better than it did in last year’s report — where the Ocean State was 12th in the nation. Massachusetts also improved, moving up two ranks after being the second most expensive state for housing last year.

Thursday, July 17, 2025

Now the Second (and Worse) Stage of Trump’s Police State

It’s part of the Big Ugly Bill just signed into law, and it will be evident very soon.

Robert Reich

Friends,

Trump’s Big Ugly Bill delivers $170 billion for border and immigration enforcement.

This is on the scale of supplemental budgets passed by the United States when we enter war.

ICE will add 10,000 agents to the 20,000 already on the streets.

Its annual budget for detentions will skyrocket from $3.4 billion in the current fiscal year to $45 billion until the end of the 2029 fiscal year. That’s a 365 percent increase.

Funding for ICE detentions will exceed funding for the entire federal prison system.

When government capacity is built out this way, there’s always political and bureaucratic pressure to utilize such capacity. Supply creates its own demand.

“They pass that bill, we’re gonna have more money than we ever had to do immigration enforcement,” Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, said recently, adding, “You think we’re arresting people now? You wait till we get the funding to do what we got to do.”

Which means that the number of people detained in ICE facilities — numbering 56,397 as of June 15 — will likely grow dramatically. A four-fold increase in the detention budget could mean a quarter of a million people locked up.

Don’t fall for the Trump regime’s lie that these people are criminals. As of now, 71.7 percent of ICE detainees have no criminal record. Some have been hardworking members of their communities for decades.

Homeland Security posts a bizarre tweet on X

What in the name of dysentery is Kristi Noem talking about?

Daily Kos

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem is so freakin’ weird.

On Monday, the official Department of Homeland Security X account posted an image of a painting, along with the caption, “Remember your Homeland’s Heritage. New Life in a New Land - Morgan Weistling.”

If you grew up playing the video game “Oregon Trail,” you know what this evokes: dysentery. The National Park Service estimates that 30,000 settlers died from it—nearly 10%—on the Oregon Trail alone. That’s 10-15 deaths per mile.

But maybe that’s on brand for today’s conservatives. After all, they’re bizarrely excited to bring back measles, too.

But dysentery was just the beginning. Gun mishaps, hypothermia, wild animals, drowning during river crossings, rightly hostile Indigenous tribes—this was a death gauntlet. It’s just plain weird to romanticize one of the most brutal chapters of American expansionism.

And that baby in the painting? That poor, nameless baby?

In the mid-1800s, one-third of children didn’t make it to their 5th birthday according to this study from Our World in Data. Other estimates suggest that infant mortality was closer to 40-45% during this era and likely even higher on the trail. Parents often waited a full year before naming their children because survival was far from guaranteed, so this little anchor baby likely didn’t have a name yet.

Yes, anchor baby. The Morgan Weistling painting, which was incorrectly labeled by DHS as “New Life in a New Land,” is titled “A Prayer for a New Life.”

Sounds pretty immigration-y, right? But that’s odd, considering that conservatives absolutely hate people looking for a better life somewhere else. Why didn’t these immigrants just stay home?

Meanwhile, Trump’s ancestors hadn’t even made it to America yet. Neither had most of his wives’. It sure ain’t their “homeland heritage.”

And stepping back, what does this painting even have to do with DHS? Are they trying to police vibes now?

It’s just all so weird.

These Trumpists aren’t “tough.” They’re just strange.

July 21 DEM forum on PFAS in water

Rhode Island back in court with Trump, this time over disaster prep funds

Attorney General Neronha suing Trump Administration for unlawfully cutting billions in disaster mitigation funding

RIFuture.news

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha today joined a coalition of 20 states in suing the Trump Administration over its decision to illegally shut down the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) bipartisan Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program, designed to protect communities from natural disasters before they strike.

For the past 30 years, the BRIC program has provided communities across the nation with resources to proactively fortify their infrastructure against natural disasters. By focusing on preparation, the program has protected property, saved money that would have otherwise been spent on post-disaster costs, reduced injuries, and saved lives.

“There’s no denying that Rhode Island is particularly susceptible to the ever-increasing effects of climate change, which is why we need to stay ahead of the curve on mitigating risk,” said Attorney General Neronha. 

Is bird flu gone or just ignored?

If you ignore a problem, does it go away?

By Arjun V.K. Sharma

From the outset of the Trump administration, bird flu, or H5N1 avian influenza, has flown rather conspicuously — and in fact quite mysteriously — under the radar. So much so that this week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced the end of its emergency response to bird flu, citing the lack of reported human cases. Updates, previously issued weekly, will now arrive monthly. But something isn’t adding up.

At the end of 2024, infections in the United States were surging. From Ohio to California, and in a swath of intervening states, diagnoses were being made in growing numbers of farmworkers who came into contact with infected cattle and poultry. Most suffered a mild spectrum of symptoms — low grade fevers, muscle aches, inflammation in their eyes. As cases swelled, an older man in Louisiana fell critically ill. 

He would eventually become the first person in the U.S. to succumb to the virus since initial human cases were reported to the World Health Organization in 1997. We seemed then, for a moment, to be at a tipping point: bound to unleash something both larger and deadlier than we could foreseeably contain, and destined to dust off the cobwebs of a life grimly lived, again, under a pandemic.

And yet, none of that came to pass. Instead, since February, the CDC, which still monitors infections in humans, has not recorded a single new case in the U.S. The count remains the same — stuck firmly at 70.

Rationalizing the lull in infections has been puzzling. Researchers have tied wild birds, the virus’s largest reservoir, and their spring and fall migrations to periods of greater spread of contagion. Cuts to staff who monitored the virus, at the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Center for Veterinary Medicine, might also be playing a role. But these ideas dismiss the deeper and more fundamental problem around our present grasp of bird flu. 

As an infectious diseases physician who works primarily with immigrant populations, my perspective often sits at the nexus between the people a novel disease affects and the apparatuses that exist to control it. Lately, the actions of each arm of that equation, no longer motivated by the ethos of a collective concern, are fractured by individual ambitions and epitomize our faltering response.

Cases, in all likelihood, are being missed, in part because detecting infections is simply challenging.

Emergency preparedness, Trump-style

Trump and Texas Republicans Show How Not to Prepare for the Climate Crisis

Kenny Stancil for the Revolving Door Project


More than 120 people, including dozens of young summer camp attendees, have died in Central Texas from flooding intensified by the fossil fuel-driven climate crisis. With search-and-rescue operations ongoing and active flash flood warnings in the region, the death toll is expected to continue climbing.

Over last weekend, Texas officials quickly tried to blame the carnage on inadequate warnings from the National Weather Service (NWS), which has been gutted by the Trump administration. Donald Trump himself lied about this, too. When asked if he thinks the federal government should rehire recently fired meteorologists, he erroneously claimed that “nobody expected” this flooding and that NWS staff “didn’t see it.”

However, NWS provided accurate forecasts and warnings despite everything that Trump and Elon Musk’s DOGE wrecking crew have been doing to impair the agency.

We sorely need a return to the Rooseveltian ideal of big government that works for working people, including by phasing out the fossil fuel industry and protecting us from increasingly frequent and severe storms, heatwaves, and wildfires.

That’s not to suggest that the Trump administration’s ill-advised cuts to the federal forecasting apparatus couldn’t have contributed to lethal havoc on the ground. Local NWS offices were missing key officials, which may have undermined swift and cohesive coordination between forecasters and local emergency managers.

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Prepare yourself for another episode of the Charlestown Choo-choo

Article in the ProJo may give temporary life to a dead issue

By Will Collette

There’s an article in the July 15 edition of the Providence Journal by Patrick Anderson entitled “Will Amtrak ever improve its Northeast Corridor through Providence? Where it stands.” Judging from the past, there is a pretty good chance we may again see some extreme anxiety in Charlestown over the content of this article. 

Since 2017, the Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA) has used the specter of what was called “the Old Saybrook-Kingston Bypass” to stir panic in Charlestown that Amtrak would destroy the northern half of town by building a new rail line to accommodate high-speed Acela trains.

The current Amtrak line from New Haven to Westerly currently runs dangerously close to the shore. While that makes it a truly spectacular trip through coastal salt marsh, the line is vulnerable to washouts either quickly in a hurricane or slowly through sea level rise.

The Bypass was never a real threat to Charlestown because it was publicly revealed after the 2016 election that led to Donald Trump's first term. Then as now, Trump also had a Republican-controlled Congress. Trump notoriously hates trains (unless they burn coal) and the Republican Congress was as reluctant then to fund Amtrak as it is now, never mind a new rail line through Charlestown.

Indeed, the only apparent interest in rail policy by either the Trump regime or the current Congress is to sell Amtrak to some oligarch. Ironically, such a sale may be the only scenario that could actually revive any rail modernization or expansion as I suggested in THIS ARTICLE.

But Anderson’s ProJo piece contains this section that may lead Ruth Platner and the CCA to press the red Charlestown Choo-choo panic button:

And the Transit Costs Project plan revives the proposed "Kenyon Bypass" through southwest Rhode Island and southeast Connecticut that engendered fierce local opposition a decade ago.

In fact, the new plan would extend the bypass – which starts near Kingston Station and mostly follows the path of Interstate 95 – all the way to New Haven instead of returning to the current alignment at Old Saybrook, Connecticut like the version studied a decade ago in the Federal Railroad Administration's NEC Future planning.

To alleviate some of the opposition that helped scuttle the bypass in 2017, the Transit Costs Project plan would move new tracks north of I-95 through Old Lyme to reduce disruptions to that Connecticut town. 

The bypass is estimated to cost $5 billion and save 32 minutes of travel time, while alleviating concerns about flooding of the current low-lying coastal alignment. Upgrading the Providence and Stoughton lines is estimated to cost $250 million to $300 million.

But before Charlestown residents once again succumb to CCA-induced panic, take a closer look. First, remember these facts:

·       🚂The actual Amtrak Northeast Corridor plan is “at least two years from being completed,” according to Anderson and, in my opinion, will probably be abandoned by the Trump regime.

·       🚂The $17 billion Northeast Corridor plan has no funding. In fact, Congress cut total Amtrak funding for Northeast Corridor operations from a total of $1.14 billion to only $850 million in the Big Beautiful Boondoggle Bill.

·       🚂The latest version of the bypass, laid out in a recent report by The Transit Costs Project, proposes new track be laid well north of the original Old Saybrook-Kingston bypass. It would skip over Lyme, CT, Westerly and possibly even Kingston.

·       🚂Further, Charlestown Town Council President Deb Carney has stayed in regular contact with the RI Department of Transportation to closely monitor any new developments and none have been forthcoming. She has reached out to RIDOT specifically about Anderson’s article but, as we go to press, she has not heard back.

Let’s take a look at the actual map in the Transit Costs report that spurred Anderson to say the Kenyon Bypass has been "revived":


The dotted line shows the present rail line. The solid line labelled “New Haven Bypass” and “Connecticut Bypass” is the route offered for consideration by the Transit Costs report. Note that it is well to the north of Westerly and Charlestown, though that may not be seen as good news in Hopkinton and Richmond. That is, unless the entire plan is scrapped by Trump as I believe is likely.

Facts have never prevented Charlestown Planning Commissar Ruth Platner and the CCA from trying to use an Amtrak panic to their political advantage. In 2017, the CCA tried to compensate for their earlier failure to take note of the potential new track that was in a report no one at Town Hall apparently read. Said CCA leader and Town Council President Tom Gentz, “Who’s got time to read this stuff?

Exuberant protests led to a legally-binding Record of Decision ruling out the bypass. But that didn’t stop Platner from trying to gin up more anxiety with a 2021 claim that “They’re Back!” She tried to stir the pot again in 2022. She made an especially weird move in 2024 attempting to use AI to simulate what a new rail line would look like.

If Ruth follows her past practice, we should expect to see a new attempt to get Charlestown residents once again worked up. And, of course, you can count on Ruth (or her spokes-troll Bonnita Van Slyke) to make the claim that only the CCA can save us from this deadly albeit imaginary peril.

True story: Trump Justice Dept. notifies Rhode Island it will investigate state's voter files

Trump official says ICE cops can engage in racial profiling