Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Sunday, May 17, 2026
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.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
The High Cost of Climate Change Inaction
We're already paying the price and it's going higher
- The
Trump administration underestimates climate change, leading to significant
economic damage estimated at $10.2 trillion since 1990.
- Climate-related
disasters could shrink U.S. GDP by 10% by 2050, with poorer communities
bearing the brunt of the costs.
- Climate
change has already cost the U.S. economy over $750 billion in the last
five years due to weather disasters.
- The
impact of climate change on households includes rising costs from property
damage, healthcare, and insurance gaps, disproportionately affecting
minority communities.
- A 2023
EPA report highlighted that underserved communities, particularly Black
individuals, face the highest risks and costs associated with climate
change.
From the first day of Donald Trump’s second term, he has made it clear his administration does not take climate change seriously.
That is a very costly mistake, as a recently published study shows. U.S. greenhouse gas emissions since 1990 have caused $10.2 trillion in global economic damage, with U.S. carbon emissions the largest source.
Almost $3 trillion in damage from U.S. emissions
occurred within the U.S.
New method to raise investment funds for projects that restore coastal wetlands for climate adaptation
Conservation takes cash. Lots of it.
By Mike Peña
Key takeawaysPhoto by Will Collette
- Researchers
have launched an innovative process for turning natural flood protection
into a certifiable investment. By quantifying the exact dollar value of
storm protection provided by wetlands, this new methodology creates
“Coastal Resilience Assets” that can be sold to private and public
investors.
- This
tool aims to close the global funding gap for coastal protection. In
addition to the new investment framework, the team released a web-based
calculator to help project developers worldwide estimate the financial
value of mangrove conservation in the face of increasing storm risks.
- The
program shifts how climate adaptation is funded, by moving away from
traditional debt. This standardized approach creates a clear pathway for
businesses and governments to proactively invest in nature-based solutions
that protect property and lives.
The Center for Coastal Climate Resilience (CCCR) at the University of
California, Santa Cruz, has partnered with The Nature Conservancy to develop a
new tool for funding wetland conservation and restoration projects through
verifiable “Coastal Resilience Assets.” The value of these assets are based
on the storm and flood protection benefits that the wetlands provide.
Wetlands play an extremely valuable role in storm
protection. For example, mangroves reduced storm damages from Hurricane Ian
by more
than $4.1 billion; and in San Francisco Bay, the value of some marshes that
serve as flood protection infrastructure exceeds $350,000 per acre.
URI studies drugs in the water
URI Professor Studies Effects of Pharmaceutical Pollution on Wastewater Systems
By Ellie Sennhenn / ecoRI News contributor
Pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) are a diverse group of chemicals that include all
drugs (both prescription and over-the-counter medications) and non-medicinal
consumer chemicals, such as the fragrances in lotions and soaps and the
ultraviolet filters in sunscreens, according to the Environmental Protection
Agency. These compounds are considered contaminants because they are released
into water systems through sewage or agricultural runoff.
Finding out what happens when these drugs enter the
environment is the premise of Thomas Boving’s recent research into PPCPs. These
pollutants occur at low concentrations in soil and groundwater, according to
Boving, chair of the University of Rhode Island Department of Geosciences.
However, seemingly insignificant measurements can accumulate over time,
creating potential adverse health effects, he said.
“These environments become breeding grounds for these
bacteria, and if they spread, then we have a real problem,” Boving said.
One possible effect is antimicrobial resistance, according
to Boving, which occurs when there is an overuse or misuse of antimicrobial
compounds designed to treat or prevent infections, such as antibiotics,
antivirals and antiparasitics.
NOAA Is Still Standing. For Now.
Impact on fisheries especially harsh
By Meg Wilcox
At a seafood expo in Boston last month, Togue Brawn, the founder of the seafood business Downeast Dayboat, spoke up from the audience to ask a panel of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) administrators an urgent question about funding.
What, Brawn wanted to know, is the status of the Saltonstall
Kennedy program? The grant program—which helps fishing communities market
their catch, build capacity, and conduct research to advance their
fisheries—had been on hold for a year. “As someone who works with a lot of
small-boat fishermen, we could use all the help we can get,” she told the
panelists.
But Eugenio Pineiro Soler, assistant administrator of NOAA
Fisheries, could not say when the popular program would restart.
Congress fully
funded NOAA in January, ignoring the
president’s plan to gut the agency. But NOAA has yet to restart many
programs that were put on hold by the Trump administration in 2025, and the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is slow-walking the release of
congressionally approved funding.
Friday, May 15, 2026
Why Trump’s $2 billion buyoff to cancel offshore wind farms is a bad deal for American taxpayers and the US energy supply
Who, other than the fossil fuel industry, benefits from Trump's jihad on offshore wind?
The U.S. is in a bizarre situation in 2026: It’s facing a looming energy shortage, yet the Trump administration is making deals to pay offshore wind developers nearly US$2 billion in taxpayer money to walk away from energy projects.
These politically motivated moves are costing Americans far more than just the buyouts.
Communities have been laying the groundwork for offshore energy projects for years. Offshore wind development brings jobs and economic development that reshape regional economies, with the scale of public and private investment reaching into the hundreds of billions of dollars over years.
East Coast communities have built up ports to support the industry and launched job-training programs to prepare workers. Construction, maintenance and shipping businesses have sprung up, along with secondary businesses that support the industry.
Losing the projects, and the threat of losing other planned wind farms, will also likely mean higher energy prices. And while some offshore wind farms are moving ahead, developers must account for both lost momentum and increased uncertainty from the Trump administration.
As a result, Americans will bear the economic brunt of these decisions for decades ahead.
5 Simple Ways To Remember More and Forget Less
Good to know
By Elva Arulchelvan, Trinity College Dublin
Research suggests that improving memory may be less about ability and more about subtle shifts in daily habits. A handful of science-backed techniques, ranging from reducing distractions to rethinking how we revisit information, can quietly reshape how the brain holds onto what matters. Together, they hint at simple changes that could make remembering feel far more effortless.
As a researcher investigating how electric brain stimulation
can improve people’s powers of recollection, I’m often asked how memory
works—and what we can do to use it more effectively. Happily, decades of
research have given us some clear answers to both questions.
Memory essentially operates in three stages, with
different brain
regions contributing to each one.
Sensory
memory, which can last only milliseconds, registers raw information such as
sights, sounds, and smells. These are first processed by the brain’s five primary sensory
cortices (visual cortex for sights, auditory cortex for sounds, and so
on).
Working
(short-term) memory holds and manipulates a small amount of
information over several seconds or more. Think of this as your brain’s mental
workspace: the system that lets you do mental arithmetic, follow instructions,
and comprehend what you’re reading. So it mainly involves the prefrontal
cortex—the front part of your brain that supports attention, decision-making,
and reasoning.
Finally, long-term memory stores
information more permanently, from minutes to a lifetime. This includes both
“explicit” memories (facts and life events) and “implicit” ones (skills,
habits, and emotional associations).
For long-term memories, the hippocampus and temporal lobes—located
deep within the brain, around the sides of your head near your
temples—contribute largely to memories involving facts or life events, while
the amygdala (near
the hippocampus), cerebellum (at
the back of the brain), and basal ganglia (deep
in the brain) process emotional or procedural memories.
Working memory often acts as a conscious gateway to
long-term memory—but it
has its limits. In 1956, the American psychologist George Miller proposed
that we can only hold about seven “chunks” of
information in our working memory at any time.
While the exact number
is debated to this day, the principle holds: working memory is limited. And
that limitation can shape how effectively we learn and remember things.
But you can also get your memory working more effectively.
Here are five easy steps for improving both your working and long-term memory.
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