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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

It's time to boycott CBS

Juneteenth in Wilcox Park

FY27 budget heads to Gov. McKee’s desk after Senate approval

Republicans fail in effort to remove new tax on the rich

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

A $15.2 billion budget — the highest state spending plan on record — heads to Gov. Dan McKee’s desk, following the Rhode Island Senate’s approval Tuesday.

The upper chamber’s 32-6 vote followed more than two hours of debate and a dozen failed amendments, including three Republican-led attempts to strike down or weaken the millionaire’s tax headlining the fiscal 2027 budget. All four chamber Republicans voted against the budget, along with Democrats Sam Bell of Providence and Leo Raptakis of Coventry.

The Senate’s blessing marks the penultimate hurdle for the tax-and-spend plan ahead of the July 1 start date. But where McKee stands remains in question — especially because last year he declined to sign the budget, letting it take effect without his signature. 

The governor’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday.

The budget features a 1% increase in taxes on income over $1 million, followed by 1% increases in the next two years, rather than the 3% hike in one year McKee proposed in January. Lawmakers explained the phased-in approach would strike a balance between revenue generation that offsets federal funding cuts and economic and business development. 

Taxing top earners has dominated debate throughout the legislative session, including across the rotunda on Friday, where the Rhode Island House of Representatives reviewed and ultimately approved a carbon copy of the spending plan, again with opposition from its 10 Republican members.

Local Democratic party leaders endorse Foulkes and Khamsyvoravong over incumbents

In unusual move, city and town chairs reject both McKee and Matos

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

The Democratic challengers for governor and lieutenant governor, Helena Buonanno Foulkes and Xay Khamsyvoravong, won the backing of local party leaders during a closed-door meeting at the Rochambeau Library in Providence Monday night.

The Rhode Island Association of Democratic City and Town Chairs did not disclose vote details from its endorsement meeting, which offers municipal party heads a chance to assert influence in state and federal primary races. 

“We are incredibly fortunate in Rhode Island to have such strong leaders serving our state and so many talented candidates willing to put themselves forward for consideration,” Erich Haslehurst, president of the association, said in a statement. “All of the candidates who sought our endorsement have demonstrated a commitment to public service and are working tirelessly to earn the trust and support of Rhode Islanders.”

The endorsement for Foulkes over Gov. Dan McKee comes as she amasses more donations and support from voters than McKee in recent public polling.

EDITOR'S NOTE: My wife Cathy served on the Association for a number of years and during several election cycles where such endorsements were made. One such event stands out, the 2016 Governor's race that came down to Gina Raimondo, Angel Tavares and Clay Pell. Cathy's insistence on supporting Clay, who had been unanimously endorsed by the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee, caused a deadlock that resulted in no endorsement for anyone for Governor that year. She came under tremendous pressure from other town chairs who had cut deals to switch their votes and wanted her to do the same. She was the only town chair who refused to sell out.   - Will Collette

Scientists warn that current vitamin B12 guidelines may be putting your brain at risk

“Normal” vitamin B12 levels may still leave older adults vulnerable to hidden brain damage and cognitive decline

University of California - San Francisco

Vitamin B12 is best known for helping the body make DNA, red blood cells, and healthy nerve tissue. But research suggests that simply meeting the current minimum standard may not always be enough, especially for older adults.

A UCSF led study found that healthy older people with lower vitamin B12 levels, even when those levels still fell within the accepted normal range, showed signs of subtle neurological and cognitive problems. The findings raise a provocative possibility: some people may be told their B12 status is fine while their brains are already showing early signs of strain.

"Normal" B12 May Not Always Mean Optimal

The study, published in Annals of Neurology, looked at older adults who did not have dementia or mild cognitive impairment. Even in this relatively healthy group, lower levels of active B12 were linked to slower thinking, slower visual processing, and more visible injury in the brain's white matter. White matter is made up of the nerve fibers that allow different parts of the brain to communicate.

Stop & Shop’s Tactics Keep Richmond Grocery Store Vacant for Decades

Arrested Development

By Jonmaesha Beltran / ecoRI News staff

The former supermarket was once an A&P store before Stop & Shop acquired it. The property has sat vacant since 2005, when its only tenant, Cycling Brothers Motor Sports, shut its doors. (Jonmaesha Beltran/ecoRI News)

Julie Harney grew up within the same 41 square miles where she first watched airplanes lift off, developed a passion for horses and now raises her own children.

The 45-year-old, who spends her days answering questions that help develop new medicines, has had one question linger in her mind for most of her adulthood: how do you fill the vacancies in Chariho Plaza? 

The Richmond shopping center has struggled to retain tenants as businesses closed and others outgrew their space, while its ownership changed hands over the years.

Four vacancies remain: a boarded-up gas station, two former retail storefronts and an empty supermarket building. But none has drawn more attention in the town of 8,000 than the vacant grocery store that Stop & Shop has held on to for three decades. 

Grocery chains are known to engage in anti-competitive behavior by implementing restrictions in deeds and leases that prohibit the sale of groceries in certain properties to limit nearby competition. The practice deepens barriers to access to healthy foods and has left buildings and lots vacant for decades in rural and urban communities. 

Researchers have also found another tactic: vacating a property yet continuing to pay the rent.

“It appears that Ahold/Stop & Shop will employ virtually any means available to stifle competition,” University of Connecticut Professor Ronald Cotterill wrote in a 2002 research paper. 

Lt. Gov. Sabina Matos’ staff have searched for restrictive covenants across the state, and some of their findings include examples where Stop & Shop has left commercial property frozen: a demolished Almacs plaza in Coventry and the building in Richmond. 

While property records show the company owns the land in Coventry through a subsidiary, it leases a parcel in Richmond while retaining ownership of the building on top of it. 

Matos has pushed to outlaw restrictive covenants in the grocery sector in Rhode Island, and congressional leaders have called on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate their use as antitrust violations.

As residents watch how those efforts will affect areas where a restrictive covenant doesn’t exist, Richmond residents are looking for ways to bring new life to Chariho Plaza. 

“It’s really disappointing that nothing yet has taken hold to create something better in that location,”  Harney said. 

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

The triple toll of Trump’s terrible tariffs

Ultimately, American workers and consumers suffer three different ways.

Tom Schaller

Following the Supreme Court’s February ruling that Donald Trump’s tariff policy violated Congress’s tax authority, the administration must now refund the $159 billion it collected from its unconstitutional tariffs.

But unfortunately for American workers and consumers, winding down this fiscal fiasco results in a lose-lose-lose situation:

  • First, most Americans will never be reimbursed for what were effectively temporary sales taxes they paid for various imports, nor will they receive the public benefit of having those sums spent on government programs or projects.
  • Second, because it is logistically easier to reimburse the American companies that directly paid the tariffs, some corporations may enjoy windfall refund profits — presuming, that is, those companies did not go bankrupt.
  • Finally, the surviving businesses and the employees who still work for them — hundreds of thousands of workers were laid off because of the tariffs — will for the foreseeable future continue to suffer because foreign countries, companies, and citizens quite rationally retaliated against Trump’s policies.

Let’s work through the three-fold ruin wrought by Trump’s catastrophic policy.

Drink up

BBQ for RI rural Dems, June 14

3 Medical Routines That Older People May Not Need

One benefit of aging

Enough time had passed since the patient’s previous colonoscopy that she met the criteria to undergo another, said Steven Itzkowitz, a gastroenterologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

She was in “reasonably good health,” and the risks of the procedure — bleeding, reaction to anesthesia, perforation of her colon — were fairly low. But she was 85. And she would need to briefly discontinue the blood thinners she took because of the cardiac stents keeping her arteries open; doing so could increase the risks.

Had Itzkowitz and his patient faced this decision five years ago, he might have scheduled the screening “without even thinking about it,” he said. But recent research has shown again that the benefits of a repeat colonoscopy are slim after age 75.

Now, he said, “I’m saying to myself, ‘What are we accomplishing here?’”

He’s not the only doctor — or patient — having second thoughts. The risks and benefits of common screenings, procedures, and drugs add up differently at advanced ages, and research continues to point out fresh examples of some that may become unnecessary.

Recently, investigators have taken on questions about common skin lesions that probably don’t need to be removed, a widely used thyroid medication that many older patients can safely discontinue, and colonoscopies that reduce colon cancer mortality so slightly that the risks may outweigh the benefits.

After delay, Burlingame State Campground Opens for the Season

Opens Friday - Brace for another surge in summer people

The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) announces the completion of three new shower and restroom facilities at Burlingame State Campground in Charlestown. Reservations will open for the 2026 season through Reserve America on Wednesday, June 10, at 9 AM. The first night to make a reservation will be Friday, June 12.

Phase One of the project brings exciting upgrades to the Midpark North, Fish Camp and Mills Camp sections of the campground with the addition of three modern restroom and shower facilities. 

Designed to enhance visitor comfort and accessibility, the new buildings are ADA-compliant and feature new septic systems, indoor/outdoor coin-operated hot water showers, energy-efficient lighting, and durable, water-conserving plumbing fixtures. 

The $18M project is funded primarily through the voter-approved 2021 Beach, Clean Water, and Green Economy Bond, along with $2M federal grant. Construction is expected to be fully completed in April 2027.

How much is Trump's war on Iran costing you?

3 Months of Trump’s Disastrous Iran War Has Cost US Consumers $60 Billion in Extra Energy Costs

Julia Conley for Common Dreams

Americans have made clear since Donald Trump joined Israel in beginning an unprovoked war on Iran that they view the conflict-of-choice as damaging to their financial well-being—and that they blame the president for the higher cost of fuel since the war started in February.

On May 29, Moody’s Analytics put an exact number on the heightened financial anxiety families across the country have been feeling over the past three months as Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz has sent fuel prices soaring: $447.19.

That’s how much the average US household has had to additionally spend on fuel-related expenses since Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyanu launched their attack on February 28, Moody’s told CNBC.

Altogether, Americans have spent a total of nearly $60 billion on gas, airline fares, and other related costs as the strait, a key shipping route for oil, has remained effectively closed.

According to AAA, the average price of a gallon of regular gas stands at $4.39—up close to 50% since early March. Diesel now costs $5.52 per gallon, forcing consumers to pay $20 billion more in additional expenses on groceries and other goods.

Monday, June 8, 2026

Why does the media ignore Trump’s madness?

His Truth Social posts show he's better suited in a mental institution than at a negotiating table.

Stephen Robinson

Donald Trump frequently demonstrates a level of malignancy that still manages to shock. He doesn’t try to hide it, but unfortunately, the mainstream media covers his disordered thinking as a colorful “quirk” — Trump being Trump — rather than a serious, escalating threat to the nation.

This past weekend, Trump’s social media feed was a wellspring of lunacy. He posted more than 50 times on Saturday alone, hurling personal attacks at Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and Rosie O’Donnell — one of whom was never actually president. 

He shared an absurd AI-generated image of himself as a New York Knicks player dunking on Gov. Kathy Hochul. He boasted about defeating “disloyal” Republicans in their primaries. He continued picking fights with the Pope. He attacked the judge who ruled that he couldn’t illegally deface the Kennedy Center with his name.

After even half of Milli Vanilli refused to perform at his America 250 event, Trump posted this gaping wound of narcissistic injury:

I understand Artists are getting ‘the yips’ having to do with their performance on Wednesday, so I am thinking about bringing the Number One Attraction anywhere in the World, the man who gets much larger audiences than Elvis in his prime, and he does so without a guitar, the man who loves our Country more than anyone else, and the man who some say is the Greatest President in History (THE GOAT!), DONALD J. TRUMP, to take the place of these highly paid, Third Rate ‘Artists,’ and give a major speech, rallying the Country forward like I have done ever since being President.

Until an appearance before cameras yesterday in which he seemed extremely tired and nearly comatose, Trump hadn’t been seen in public since May 27 — the day after his most recent trip to Walter Reed — so while these posts were technically “proof of life,” they were hardly a reassuring statement of mental stability.

Yet Trump’s unhinged posts last weekend weren’t the stuff of front-page coverage at the New York Times or Washington Post, even though there’s a direct line between them and the administration’s ongoing disaster in Iran. After all, it doesn’t take a psychoanalyst to determine, based on the president’s online crash out, that the Trump administration is no closer to a resolution of the war.

Of course he did

Cross Mills Library Garden Tour and Art Auction, June 20

2026 Garden Tour Fundraiser

Summer is coming and the gardens are beautiful! On Saturday, June 20, 2026, the Cross’ Mills Public Library will host its biennial garden tour from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.  Rain or shine, the gardens await you.

Tickets are $30 and will be available beginning May 15th. Tickets may be purchased at the Library or online.

To purchase tickets online, please click here. Select Garden Tour under Donation Category. Tickets will be emailed to the address you provide, and are mailed in batches once a week.

Please direct questions to gardentour@crossmills.org

The generosity of local gardeners and residents make this tour possible.  All proceeds benefit the Cross’ Mills Public Library.

Art Auction

Bid on incredible artworks and enjoy a summer evening of Art, Music, Conversation and Refreshments. All proceeds from the auction benefit the Cross’ Mills Public Library.