Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Tear down this wall!
CRMC finally moves to enforce its own demands
By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current
More than 100 days after state coastal regulators verbally agreed to crack down on Quidnessett Country Club for failing to remove a rock wall from its shoreline, they’re backing up their words with legal action.
The Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC) filed a counterclaim against the North Kingstown country club in Providence County Superior Court Tuesday. It wants a judge to force the country club to remove the 600-foot stone wall built without permission roughly three years ago. The 17-page filing was submitted in response to one of three lawsuits the country club has filed against the coastal panel in the ongoing dispute over how to restore the shoreline of its property — and whether the wall even needs to be taken down.
The country club initially built the buffer to shield the 14th hole of its signature golf course from coastal erosion, defying state coastal rules that prohibit permanent structures in environmentally sensitive areas. After being caught by state regulators in August 2023, the country club initially sought retroactive permission by arguing for less stringent environmental regulations in the area.
The politically appointed coastal panel denied the request in January 2024, setting off a debate over how Quidnessett should remove the wall and return the shoreline to its preexisting conditions. All seven plans submitted by Quidnessett were rejected by CRMC staff because they failed to meet coastal requirements.
During the back-and-forth with coastal regulators, Quidnessett turned to the courts, with a trio of lawsuits alleging procedural violations and challenging the legitimacy of the agency’s shoreline restoration requirements.
The country club’s most recent complaint, filed Oct. 23 in Providence County Superior Court, asked a judge to reverse the CRMC’s enforcement order, contending that the dispute should be referred to an administrative hearing officer under the agency’s own guidelines, while labeling coastal regulators’ conditions for the location and slope of a natural barrier to replace the rock wall as “arbitrary and capricious.”
The agency in its counterclaim denied these allegations, instead pointing to Quidnessett’s defiance despite an escalating series of written and verbal warnings and threats of fines.
Nearly 70% of U.S. adults could now be classified as obese
Mass General Brigham recommends change in how we look at obesity
Mass General Brigham
A newly proposed definition of obesity could significantly increase the number of Americans considered to have the condition. According to researchers at Mass General Brigham, applying updated criteria developed earlier this year by the Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology Commission raises the estimated obesity rate in the United States from about 40 percent to nearly 70 percent.
The study examined data from more than 300,000 people and found
that the increase was especially pronounced among older adults. The findings
also showed that many individuals newly classified under the updated definition
face higher risks of serious health problems. The study was published in JAMA
Network Open.
"We already thought we had an obesity epidemic, but
this is astounding," said co-first author Lindsay Fourman, MD, an
endocrinologist in the Metabolism Unit in the Endocrinology Division of the
Mass General Brigham Department of Medicine. "With potentially 70 percent
of the adult population now considered to have excess fat, we need to better
understand what treatment approaches to prioritize."
Why BMI Alone May Miss Health Risks
For decades, obesity has primarily been defined using body
mass index (BMI), a calculation based on height and weight. While BMI offers a
simple estimate, it does not capture how fat is distributed throughout the
body. Other anthropomorphic measures -- including waist circumference,
waist-to-height ratio, and waist-to-hip ratio -- can provide additional insight
by distinguishing fat mass from muscle and identifying abdominal fat linked to
disease risk.
Under the updated framework, obesity is identified in two main ways. Individuals with a high BMI plus at least one elevated anthropometric measure are classified as having obesity, a category the authors call "BMI-plus-anthropometric obesity." People with a normal BMI can also be classified as having obesity if they have at least two elevated anthropometric measures, referred to as "anthropometric-only obesity."
The guidelines further separate obesity into preclinical and
clinical forms, with clinical obesity defined by obesity-related physical
impairment or organ dysfunction. The new standards have already been endorsed
by at least 76 organizations, including the American Heart Association and The
Obesity Society.
Is New England next in Trump's escalating war on blue states?
ICE plans attack on Maine's Somali community.
Julia Conley for Common Dreams
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| US Border Patrol Chief Gregory Bovino |
Mills said ICE had refused to confirm the reports that its
agents would be in the state and what the basis for the operations would be,
but MS Now reported Wednesday that the administration is
considering sending federal officers to Maine.
Donald
Trump mentioned Maine’s Somali community in a speech at the Detroit
Economic Club; Somali people in Minnesota have been a top target of ICE’s
activities there.
Maine’s Democratic governor said her administration was
“taking proactive steps to prepare.”
Saturday, January 17, 2026
While Trump claims Big Pharma is paying YOU for your prescriptions, drug prices continue to climb
Sick of lies about health care costs?
Brad Reed for Common Dreams
Donald Trump in recent months has made ludicrously false claims about his administration slashing prescription drug prices in the US by as much as 600%, which would entail pharmaceutical companies paying people to use their products.In reality, reported Reuters on Wednesday, drugmakers are planning to raise prices on hundreds of drugs in 2026.
Citing data from healthcare research firm 3 Axis Advisors, Reuters wrote that at least 350 branded medications are set for price hikes next year, including “vaccines against COVID, RSV, and shingles,” as well as the “blockbuster cancer treatment Ibrance.”The total projected number of drugs seeing price increases
next year is significantly higher than in 2025, when 3 Axis Advisors estimated
that pharmaceutical companies raised prices on 250 medications.
The median price increase for drugs next year is projected
at 4%, roughly the same as in 2025.
Reuters also found that some of the companies
raising prices on their drugs are the same ones who struck deals with Trump to
lower the costs of a limited number of prescriptions earlier this year,
including Novartis, Pfizer, Boehringer Ingelheim, and GSK.
But Dr. Benjamin Rome, a health policy researcher at Brigham
and Women’s Hospital in Boston, told Reuters that the
projected savings for Americans under the Trump deals are a drop in the bucket
compared with the continued price hikes on other drugs.
“These deals are being announced as transformative when, in
fact, they really just nibble around the margins in terms of what is really
driving high prices for prescription drugs in the US,” Rome explained.
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| Today, you need a second mortgage to buy insulin |
“Voluntary agreements with drug companies—especially when
key details remain undisclosed—are no substitute for durable, system-wide
reforms,” she said earlier this month. “Patients are overwhelmingly calling on
Congress to do more to lower prescription drug prices by holding Big Pharma accountable
and addressing the root causes of high drug prices, because drugs don’t work if
people can’t afford them.”
Profiting from autism
Private equity firms acquired more than 500 autism centers in past decade, study shows
By Juan Siliezar, Associate Director of Media Relations
and Leadership Communications, School of Public Health,
Private equity firms acquired more than 500 autism therapy centers across the U.S. over the past decade, with nearly 80% of acquisitions occurring over a four-year span.
That’s according to a new study from researchers at Brown
University’s Center for Advancing
Health Policy through Research.
Study author Yashaswini Singh, a health economist at Brown’s
School of Public Health, said the work highlights how financial firms are
rapidly moving into a sensitive area of health care with little public scrutiny
or data on where this is happening or why.
“The big takeaway is that there is yet another segment of
health care that has emerged as potentially profitable to private equity
investors, and it is very distinct from where we have traditionally known
investors to go, so the potential for harm can be a lot more serious,” Singh
said. “We're also dealing with children who are largely insured by Medicaid
programs, so if private equity increases the intensity of care, what we're
looking at are impacts to state Medicaid budgets down the road.”
The Trump Administration’s $3 Meal: ‘A Piece of Chicken, a Piece of Broccoli, Corn Tortilla, and One Other Thing’
Maybe they expect you to add roadkill and lard
The Trump administration was again blasted for grocery prices this week after Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins discussed the new federal dietary guidelines during a NewsNation appearance.“We’ve run over 1,000 simulations,” Rollins said in a clip
shared on social
media by journalist Aaron Rupar on Wednesday. “It can cost around $3 a
meal for a piece of chicken, a piece of broccoli, corn tortilla, and one other
thing.”
“So there is a way to do this that actually will save the
average American consumer money,” Rollins continued, pushing back against host
Connell McShane’s inquiry about whether the new guidelines expect people to
spend more money on food.
The Guardian noted that “data from the consumer price index, as
referenced by McShane, showed that food prices kept rising in December, increasing by 0.7%, the
biggest month-to-month jump since October 2022. Prices for produce rose 0.5%,
coffee increased by 1.9%, and beef went up 1% over the month and 16.4% compared
with a year earlier.”
Responding to the clip, Chasten Glezman Buttigieg, an
author and teacher married to former Democratic Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg,
said, “Private jets and tax breaks for them and their rich friends, and one
piece of broccoli *AND* a tortilla for you!”
Fact check: Here’s what’s really happening with child care fraud in Minnesota
This story was originally reported by Chabeli Carrazana of The 19th. Meet Chabeli and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy.
A viral video posted just after Christmas spurred an avalanche of news coverage, changes from the Trump administration, and congressional hearings that appeared to indicate that a massive trove of child care fraud was just uncovered in Minnesota. 
Are you concerned about child abuse? Start here.
Release the Epstein files. All of them.
Much of it has been misleading.
The video by right-wing YouTuber Nick Shirley posted on December 26 purports to show that various Minneapolis day cares run by Somali Americans are not providing services to children despite receiving public funding.
Although the video has already been debunked by investigators, the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress have seized on it. Vice President JD Vance said Shirley “has done far more useful journalism than any of the winners of the 2024 [Pulitzer Prizes].”
The fallout has been massive. In the past week, the Trump administration has frozen child care payments to five Democratic-run states and ramped up reporting requirements for all states receiving child care funds to cover services for the lowest-income kids. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, has suspended his reelection campaign over it.
But the real story behind child care fraud in Minnesota is far less nefarious.
Here’s what we actually know about child care fraud in Minnesota and elsewhere, and how day cares and families may be impacted by the new changes.
What does Nick Shirley uncover in his video?
Nothing conclusive. The video shows Shirley visiting day cares run by Somali Americans, sometimes under the false pretense of trying to enroll a child. In a couple of instances, workers do open the door but seem immediately suspicious when it’s clear Shirley is recording them and refuse to let him in or give him more information.
Because some of the sites appear closed and Shirley doesn’t see any children, he declares this as proof of fraud at these facilities.
Most child care centers are locked and have obscured doors or windows for children’s safety. Children are also kept in classrooms and would not likely be visible from a reception area. One of the day cares in the video told several news outlets that it did not grant Shirley entrance because he showed up with a handful of masked men, which raised suspicions that the men were agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. At least one of the centers was closed at the time Shirley arrived because it opens later in the day to serve the children of second-shift workers.
Friday, January 16, 2026
When an ICE Agent Shot Two Bullets Into Renee Good Through the Driver’s Side Window, He Was Not Engaged in Self-Defense
Kristi Noel’s Preposterous Lies About the Killing Confirm That ICE Encourages Agent Violence
Three images taken from videos of the slaying of Renee Nicole Good make it clear that she was not trying to run down an ICE agent when he shot her three times and killed her.
Videos taken by different people from various angles
(see CNN, ABC and
the New
York Times) show what happened, including one in
slow motion.
We see ICE agents apparently attempting to force Good out of
her vehicle, Good backing up, then Good trying escape by turning the wheels to
the right and driving forward. And we see ICE agent Jonathan Ross firing a
first shot at Good from near the front of the car, then firing two more shots
from alongside the car.
Common sense tells us that ICE shooter Ross never considered
himself in danger of being run over, since he deliberately stepped in front of
the car.
Consider these two screen captures from seconds 9 and 10 of
the video.
In the first, Ross appears to be in front of the vehicle and he is drawing his gun.
The vehicle had been moving backward just one second
earlier, so the vehicle’s forward movement was still slow. If Ross
thought the car might hit him, he had only to step to his right (our left) to
get out of the car’s path. Instead he draws his gun, aims and fires.
In the second photo we see the puff of vapor that
accompanies the first shot. We also see that both of Ross’s feet are to the
left of the car. Ross is not in the path of the car when he takes his first
shot. He is not saving himself from being run down.
Shots two and three are even more obviously not in
“self-defense.” As shown in the slow
motion video and the screen shot below, the car has moved forward and
the ICE agent is alongside the vehicle when he stretches out
his arm and shoots Renee Good in the head. He fires at point-blank range,
through the driver’s side window.
What you see is not a man being run down. What you see is not self-defense. It’s an execution.
Neither President Trump nor Homeland Security head Kristi
Noem have acknowledged that agent Jonathan Ross should not have taken out his
gun and killed a law-abiding citizen who only sought to escape from aggressive
ICE agents. Neither even said a terrible mistake had been made. They endorsed
and excused the killing.
The execution of Renee Nicole Good was part of a practice of
unnecessary and excessive
force which Trump and Noem approve of and support. ICE agents
have fired
their guns at people in cars at least ten times, and short of murder,
ICE agents routinely attack and brutalize those they seize. Violence
against observers and reporters is an attempt to conceal such lawless
ICE conduct.
The contention that an ICE shooting victim tried to run
them over has become the ICE equivalent of the German Nazi claim that slain
opponents were shot while attempting to escape.
No evidence supports any terrorism claim, but Noem asserted that
Good had been “stalking” ICE. President Trump pointed to a further “wrong”: “At
a very minimum,” said
Trump, “that woman was very, very disrespectful to law enforcement.”
Citizens of a democracy are entitled
to observe ICE agents, to deter them from lawless activity, and citizens of
a democracy are not required to be respectful of law enforcement.
If the Department of Homeland Security can with impunity kill citizens for exercising those rights, America will not long remain a free nation.
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$270K Available for Local Farms & Food Organizations
Grant application deadline is February 28
The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) announced that $270,000 in Specialty Crop Block Grant Program (SCBGP) funds are available for projects that enhance the competitiveness of local specialty crops that are vital to Rhode Islanders’ health and well-being. Specialty crops are fruits and vegetables, dried fruit, tree nuts, horticulture, and nursery crops, including floriculture.
“When I’m at the grocery store or walking through my local farmers’ market, I’m drawn to fruits and vegetables, dried fruits, and nuts, the kinds of foods I rely on to eat healthy,” said DEM Director Terry Gray.
“I know many Rhode Islanders are looking for those same options,
along with local flowers. That’s why DEM is committed to promoting RI Grown crops by
helping local farmers and businesses become more competitive.”
Rhode Island’s USDA-funded SCBGP supports local crops by increasing consumer awareness and demand for RI Grown produce and plants. Since 2016, DEM has awarded more than $1 million through the program. There is no maximum grant award or matching requirement.
Applications are due Feb. 28, 2026. Learn more and apply at https://dem.ri.gov/agriculture/grants/specialty-crop.
Questions should be directed to DEM.SpecialtyCrop@dem.ri.gov or (401) 222-2781.



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