Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Sunday, June 28, 2026
how aging changes the way we walk
We emphasize stability over speed
| Ageing and Gait – credit Maarten Immink with ChatGPT |
Reasons why our walking becomes slower and more tiring with age have been uncovered by new Australian research — with findings showing the body increasingly sacrifices efficiency to stay upright.
The study, led by Flinders University and the University of
Canberra, reveals that as we age, the body adopts a “safety-first” walking
style that prioritizes stability at the cost of speed and energy efficiency,
which helps explain why older adults tire more easily and face a higher risk of
falls.
Analyzing movement data from 107 healthy adults aged 26 to
86, researchers identified subtle but important changes in how the ankle and
surrounding muscles control each step.
Lead author and expert in sport and exercise technology, Dr Cody Lindsay, says the ankle plays a critical role in both balance and forward motion.
“As we get older, the body starts to favor stability over
efficiency,” says Dr Lindsay, from the Flinders Caring
Futures Institute.
“That helps keep us upright, but it also makes walking more
of an effort.”
Melatonin can be a safe and effective sleep aid for all ages – but product inconsistencies and improper dosing lead to real harms
Better Regulation would help
Melatonin – a go-to sleep aid for kids and adults alike in many households in America – continues to create media buzz, with conflicting messages that leave people uncertain about its safety.
Some headlines point to melatonin’s supposed immunity boosting power, while others point to unestablished links between melatonin and heart failure.
I’m a pediatrician and sleep medicine doctor specializing in children, adolescents and adults.
In my experience, many families go through difficulties with sleep for several months and even years before they seek out specialty care, and often they come across information online that isn’t tailored to the right age group or sleep condition. In addition, the Food and Drug Administration hasn’t approved any insomnia medications for children, so pediatricians don’t have many options.
Melatonin is the most widely studied sleep aid in children. Still, I find that many parents feel uncertain about using melatonin, and some even experience guilt if they do, despite some clear benefits with appropriate use.
Adequate, regular and healthy sleep is essential for functioning our best throughout the day, and people deserve to get sleep information that is supported by evidence.
Why many older Americans are losing ground under 80‑year‑old Trump
Cuts to food programs, Meals on Wheels, Medicaid, plus inflation and looming Medicare benefit cuts endanger older Americans
American political leadership skews decidedly older than the population as a whole. President Donald Trump turned 80 years old on June 14, 2026. The median age for senators is nearly 65, and the median age for House of Representatives members is almost 58.
But are those older people in office a sign that the U.S. government is turning into a “gerontocracy” that is giving younger generations short shrift?
No – many older Americans are becoming worse off.
We are experts in elder law who have been following the legal treatment of older Americans for decades. One of us writes a leading elder law casebook, and we are co-authors of a book on aging that will be published in January 2027. Through our research, we have observed a series of federal policy changes that will make life harder for many Americans of modest means as they age.
In our view, those policies show why, more than ever, it is wrong to assume that rich and powerful older people will protect all older adults, including those who aren’t wealthy.
Social Security cuts loom
Perhaps the most publicized of these policy failures is that the federal government hasn’t taken steps to stave off Social Security benefits cuts.
The program will have to cut the benefits it provides by roughly 22% starting in 2032 unless Congress steps up. That would affect a lot of people: Currently, Social Security pays benefits to more than 60 million retired workers, as well as survivor benefits for the spouses of workers who have died and their eligible children.
But instead of taking steps to shore up the program, Congress has sped up that expected moment of reckoning.
A tax break included in the big tax and spending package Trump signed into law in summer 2025 that benefits some older people will actually weaken Social Security for everyone by reducing the tax revenue that funds the program.
Social Security’s revenue is further compromised by the declining number of immigrants in the workforce who contribute to the program through the payroll tax, even though many of them will never be eligible to receive its benefits. More immigrants departed the U.S. than arrived in 2025 due to the Trump administration’s policies, which are supported by funding for immigration enforcement approved by the Republican majority in Congress.
These changes will hit some older adults harder than others. Social Security keeps millions more women than men out of poverty, as well as more Blacks and Latinos than whites.
Saturday, June 27, 2026
AFL-CIO sets ambitious goal of organizing 2 million more workers and two labor experts discuss how this could be done
Big goals call for commitment, planning and organizing
By Don
McIntosh
| Liz Shuler and Fred Redmond were re-elected to lead the AFL-CIO. | Photo courtesy AFL-CIO |
The AFL-CIO held its 30th national convention June 7-10 in Minneapolis. Among the highlights, delegates re-elected incumbent leadership and passed a resolution pledging to bring 2 million more workers into unions by 2032.
The AFL-CIO is a federation of 65 unions that total 9.8 million members in all.
In its latest annual disclosure to the Department of
Labor, the AFL-CIO reported 14.8 million members, but that figure includes just
under 5 million who signed up to be members of Working America, the AFL-CIO’s
22-year-old community and political organizing affiliate; those individuals
aren’t represented by a collective bargaining agreement, aren’t required to pay
dues, and don’t consider themselves union members.....
In the last four years, the AFL-CIO has grown by 2.4 million members thanks mostly to the re-affiliation of 2-million-member Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and the addition of seven smaller unions, most notably of professional athletes. The union share of the U.S. workforce overall has stayed about the same, dropping from 10.1% in 2022 to 10.0% in 2025. It’s estimated there are about 14.7 million union members in the United States in total, and two-thirds of those are in unions affiliated with the AFL-CIO. The AFL-CIO doesn’t organize workers directly but tries to support organizing by affiliated unions.
Besides the officer elections on Day 1, much of the
convention consisted of speeches and panel discussions, but delegates also
ratified without debate a series of resolutions that set official AFL-CIO
policy. Those included:
- Resolution 2, pledging to initiate a mass training
program to provide basic organizing skills, tactics and strategy to
working people who want to organize; and to grow unions by at least 2
million workers by 2032
- Resolution 3, committing to dismantle systemic racial-
and gender-based barriers to employment, prioritize the fight for pay
equity especially for women of color, support access to gender-affirming
health care, and center the voices of Black, Asian American, Native Hawaiian
and Pacific Islander, Latino, LGBTQIA+, indigenous, immigrant and women
workers
- Resolution 4, demanding a pathway to citizenship for
immigrant workers regardless of legal status; and calling on Congress to
rescind funding for mass deportations
- Resolution 25, calling on state and federal regulators
to address anti-competitive mega-mergers between major employers
- Resolution 26, opposing electronic shelf labels and
so-called “surveillance pricing” by grocery retailers
How the US Labor Movement Can Revive Itself and Help Save Democracy
Stephen Lerner and Joseph A. Mccartin from These Times
The US labor movement, like the nation at large, stands at a crossroads. The next few years might well determine whether the United States fully descends into an era of electoral autocracy, where democracy has withered and authoritarianism becomes the political norm. This period is also likely to set the future trajectory of the union movement’s power and influence, as the state of democracy and organized labor have long been deeply intertwined.
For decades, the right-wing forces set on steadily eroding our democracy have worked in tandem with a pro-corporate movement that has increasingly marginalized organized labor, creating a ballooning crisis for the working class. Yet this politically hazardous moment also represents an opportunity to overcome deep-seated institutional inertia, drawing elements of a cautious labor movement out of their defensive crouch, and helping unions devise forms of struggle that might both revive the labor movement and renew American democracy.
Donald Trump’s second term has, in a way, broken a spell. For years, the pre-Trump status quo kept labor locked in a pattern of slow decline even as democracy was increasingly stifled and abridged by voter suppression, gerrymandering, filibusters, and the overweening power of organized money. But the decades-old dysfunctional status quo that gave rise to Trumpism is now crumbling under the weight of the most lawless, antidemocratic, rights-trampling administration this country has seen since the 19th century.
History suggests that fighting to defend and revive democracy in its moment of maximum peril can create a window of opportunity for labor. Past experience—in the United States and other nations—teaches us that, when unions fight to defend democracy and win, they position themselves for periods of explosive growth and increased worker power. It is imperative that the US labor movement grasp this lesson and seize the window of opportunity before it’s too late.
Moving Beyond Magical Thinking
It’s clear that the crisis facing US democracy is deepening. Over the past year, immigrants and the neighbors and coworkers who stood in solidarity with them endured murderous paramilitary occupations in Minneapolis, Chicago, and other cities across the country. The nation has been plunged into war in Iran without prior input from Congress. The president has even suggested the federal government should seize control of the upcoming midterm elections from the states.
I love the smell of death in the morning...
“Morticia’s” bloom draws a crowd to URI
Thousands of visitors
from across southern New England made their way to URI's Horridge Conservatory
in June for a glimpse of Morticia, the University's resident corpse flower.
After watching and waiting
for months, the University of Rhode Island’s Horridge Conservatory was the
busiest site on campus in June, with lines twisting and turning full of
visitors eager to catch a sight–and whiff—of URI’s resident
corpse flower (Titan Arum). More than 4,000 guests from across
southern New England were able to witness the rare and unusual occurrence.
The plant began blooming the night of June 16 with the
conservatory extending its hours to the public on Wednesday, June 17. With
assistance from URI Master
Gardeners and some night-owl helpers from the College of the Environment and Life Sciences,
Greenhouse Manager Ben Robbins and student assistant Daniel Meservey fielded
visitors and inquiries far into the evening, to allow as many people as
possible to experience the unique horticultural happening. The conservatory
stayed open until 2 a.m. with help from Niels-Viggo Hobbs, Linda Forrester,
Rachel Dahl, Amy Santiago M ’26, Kathryn Pagano and Anne Ita Sykes.
Rhode Island man contracts rare tick-borne illness
RIDOH Confirms a Case of Rare Tick-Borne Viral Infection (Powassan)
The Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) is reporting a confirmed case of the tick-borne Powassan virus disease (Powassan) detected in a Rhode Island resident. This resident is a male in his 60s who lives in Providence County. He began experiencing symptoms of Powassan in May. He was hospitalized but is now recovering at home.“With summer now here, we all need to be thinking about tick
prevention measures when outdoors,” said Director of Health Jerry Larkin, MD.
“Repel and reduce your exposure to ticks, check your body for ticks, and be
sure to remove ticks if you find one on yourself, a family member, or a pet.
Ticks are tiny. You may not be able to feel them or spot them right away. The
sooner you find and remove them, the better your chances are at preventing the
serious health issues caused by illnesses like Powassan and Lyme
Disease.”
This is Rhode Island’s first case of Powassan since 2024 and the ninth case overall since it was first reported in Rhode Island in 2016. Powassan is a tick-borne disease that is found mostly in the Northeast and the Great Lakes region of the U.S. and in eastern Canada. Over 397 cases of Powassan have been reported in the United States in the past 10 years (2016-2025).
Trump is fighting the green energy revolution. He'll lose.
Market forces are stronger than MAGA.
Something historic happened in May: For the first time in American history, more electricity was generated in the United States with solar power than with coal.
While natural gas remains our largest electricity source,
the crossing of the lines between solar and coal — one representing the future
and one the past — is something we may look back on as one of the key moments
in the planet’s transition to green energy.
We don’t know whether someone told Donald Trump about this
milestone, but if they did, he wouldn’t have been happy. Since taking office,
he has waged an all-out war against renewable energy, not just making it more
difficult to create and use clean power, but pouring taxpayer money into fossil
fuels.
That’s the bad news. The good news is that though Trump has
done significant damage to America’s green energy industry — and given us more
pollution, higher costs, and more insecurity in the bargain — that industry
continues to grow.
There is a global energy revolution underway, and Trump’s
efforts to slow it down are destined to fall short.
Friday, June 26, 2026
What’s the likely next move after the executive order on childhood vaccines?
Trump and Bobby's continued war on vaccines
Jess Steier, DrPh
If you follow vaccine policy closely, you've probably learned to brace yourself on Friday afternoons. Just as the weekend rolls in, my team has a standing bet on the night's bombshell: guessing what gets pulled, which committee gets gutted, and which stack of evidence gets quietly waved away while the reporters log off. It started as a dark joke but stopped being funny a while ago.The pediatric childhood schedule fight has largely gone
quiet since March, when a court froze the administration's Advisory Committee
on Immunization Practices (ACIP) overhaul, even as the Friday personnel churn
rolled on. Now all the chips seem to be back on the table.
That habit of bracing—of trying to guess what’s coming
next—is one my father would have understood. He was a gambler who also taught
me chess, and two of his lessons have stuck with me. From the card table: Play
the player, not the cards. What someone is holding matters less than who they
are and what they want you to believe. From the chessboard: Think a few moves
ahead, because the move that decides a game is rarely the one that looks like
it’s doing something.
Lipstick on a weak argument
Both have been on my mind since the White House published an executive order on
Friday, May 29, titled “Realigning United States Core Childhood Vaccine
Recommendations with Best Practices from Peer, Developed Countries.”
“Executive order" has come to signal something swift
and unilateral, already in force before you can respond. This one plays on fear
without earning it. Read only the cards, and there's not much here. The order
tells the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and its ACIP to
review a federal “scientific assessment” (a December-ordered report comparing
the US childhood schedule with those of peer nations) and consider updates to
the childhood schedule.
On its own, the order does not change any recommendations,
not to mention there’s no functioning ACIP to act on it right now. It also
makes a point of stating that vaccines across all categories should remain
covered without cost-sharing by private insurance, Medicaid, the Children’s
Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and the Vaccines for Children Program. For
now, the schedule recommended by the CDC and American Academy of Pediatrics as
of 2025 remains in effect.
Journal of the American Medical Association published COVID vaccine study Bobby Jr. tried to kill
Study suggests 2025-26 COVID vaccine cuts emergency, urgent care visits by half
A new study suggests that the 2025-26 COVID-19 vaccine helps protect against serious illness by reducing the risk of hospitalization and emergency department/urgent care (ED/UC) visits, adding protection for a population with significant existing immunity from previous infections and vaccinations.The study, published today in JAMA Network Open,
found that adults who received the updated vaccine were about 50% less likely
to require ED/UC treatment for COVID and 55% less likely to be hospitalized
than those who did not receive the vaccine.
Booster augments previous immunity
For the study, researchers led by a team from the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) analyzed data from more than 111,000
adults across 253 EU/UCs and 179 hospitals in seven states from September
through December 2025. They compared patients who tested positive for COVID
with those who tested negative and identified whether they had received the
2025-26 vaccine.
Overall, vaccine effectiveness (VE) against COVID-related
ED/UC visits was estimated at 50%. Protection against hospitalization was 55%.












