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Sunday, April 6, 2014

Another hot plate full of Charlestown Tapas

A dozen tasty tidbits for Charlestown news lovers
By Will Collette

On Tuesday, April 8, vote on the Chariho budget

Ron Areglado & Donna Chambers, CCA Party patronage appointees
to the Chariho School Committee
Voters in Charlestown, Richmond and Hopkinton go to the polls on Tuesday (Town Hall for Charlestown voters) on a new Chariho School District budget that offers a $556,667 reduction in the amount taxpayers from the three towns will pay. The budget cuts jobs and squeezes school expenses

Apparently, this is the price the District is willing to pay to appease budget nihilists and conservatives who led a taxpayer revolt last year that rejected the District’s proposed budget not once, but three times, with the ironic result of having the District operate on the higher FY 2013 budget.

This new budget has drawn praise from the likes of Charlestown’s CCA-appointed School Committee rep Ron Areglado (his cohort Donna Chambers has yet to be heard from), the Richmond Town Council and right-wing Hopkinton Town Councilors Barbara Capalbo and Scott Bill Hirst.

Capalbo said she hasn’t “voted for a Chariho budget in years, but I appreciate that after last year’s fiasco, the Chariho School Committee finally listened to the taxpayers.” Areglado based his support for the budget on the premise that it’s cheaper to send kids to school, rather than send them to prison… While his arithmetic is accurate, I wasn’t aware that these were the only two choices, but hey, Areglado is a lifelong educrat so he must know what he’s talking about, right?

With these types of endorsements, I am skeptical that this is a budget that puts students and quality education first, rather than pandering to right-wing budget-cutters and opponents of public education. As Scott Bill Hirst made a point of noting, “It should be noted that rejecting the proposed Chariho budget, for next fiscal year, actually would increase it, as it would revert to the current operating budget.”

So if you support more funding, not less, for the Chariho School District, perhaps the vote of conscience is to vote “No” against the proposed budget. You get what you pay for.

Circle the wagons, call out the militia

Maybe CCA Party Town Councilor Dan Slattery will get to wear his new militia commander uniform after all, even if we’re not going to war with Hopkinton and Richmond over Chariho. The new thing for the CCA Party to get alarmed about is the introduction of new legislation (S. 2188) in the US Senate by Montana Senator Jon Tester (D) to “fix” the 2009 Supreme Court Carcieri v. Salazar decision that stripped over 500 Indian tribes of many of their sovereignty rights.

Even as he introduced his bill, Tester acknowledged that many of his colleagues, especially powerful Senator Diane Feinstein (D-CA), want to see it changed and Tester said he was willing to accommodate them.

Even before he introduced his bill, Tester also told Indian leaders, “While I believe a clean fix is a solution, many of my colleagues in the Senate don’t agree…Even Indian country is divided on the issue…“At the end of the day, we need the votes to pass the legislation…[W]e need to know how we reach sixty votes. So let’s be realistic. We will not receive the full support of my Democratic colleagues, so the question becomes how we bargain with Republican leaders to make meaningful inroads to solve this issue.”

Despite the sponsor’s own bleak assessment of the prospects for passage, I guarantee we’ll see more hours billed to Charlestown by the town’s Special Counsel for Indian Affairs Joe Larisa and we may yet see Dan Slattery lead the construction of ramparts around the Narragansett lands manned by trusty Charlestown Volunteer Militia.

Arthur "Chuckles" Schopenhauer.
Hint: it WASN'T him.
Who said this?

“Instead of encouraging free and open debate, collectivists strive to discredit and intimidate opponents. They engage in character assassination. (I should know, as the almost daily target of their attacks.) This is the approach that Arthur Schopenhauer described in the 19th century, that Saul Alinsky famously advocated in the 20th, and that so many despots have infamously practiced. Such tactics are the antithesis of what is required for a free society—and a telltale sign that the collectivists do not have good answers.”

A.                 Michael Chambers
B.                  Michelle Bachman
C.                  Rush Limbaugh
D.                  Justin Beeber
E.                 Tom Gentz
F.                  Charles G. Koch

The answer appears at the end of this article.


“This beach is my beach; this beach ain’t your beach”

While Charlestown is looking at removing a public access point to town beaches by selling a strip of land to non-resident beach property owners, a different battle is going on over Misquamicut.

State Attorney General Peter Kilmartin, on behalf of the people of Rhode Island, is suing 16 private beachfront owners over beach access rights. The state’s suit charges the owners with illegally changing their property records to extend their property lines onto the beach and then improperly denying the public access.

The trial has just begun and so far the testimony has been complex and inconclusive.

Attention, Anemomenophobics

The five-turbine pilot project by Deepwater Wind took a major step forward when The Coastal Resources Management Council’s Ocean Special Area Management subcommittee unanimously voted to recommend full CRMC approval. The pieces are rapidly falling into place for the project which would be sited several miles to the east of Block Island. 

Altaeros-Energies-high-altitude-wind-turbine-designboom03
image © altaeros energies
The US is currently generating 61,000 megawatts of wind energy nationwide and another 12,000 megawatts are under construction. This has resulted in a 4.4% drop in greenhouse gases from energy production. Wind power has also achieved another, less appreciated benefit by reducing water consumption by 36.5 billion gallons that fossil fuel and nuclear power plants (such as Millstone in nearby Connecticut) use in mass quantities for cooling.

In October 2011, I wrote a short blurb about a new wind energy technology that combined a wind turbine and a blimp for a device that could float one to two thousand feet up to catch higher velocity winds for more energy. 

That technology, called a “BAT” (buoyant air turbine) apparently was no joke, but being installed for $1.3 million to power remote communities south of Fairbanks, Alaska at about half the price of other forms of off-grid energy. Can you just imagine the reaction if someone decided to float one of these just off the Charlestown coast?

Bill DiLibero gets warm welcome in Texas

William Dilibero.jpgI recently reported in the March 9 Tapas that former Charlestown Town Administrator Bill DiLibero, driven out of town in 2012 by the CCA Party’s “Kill Bill Campaign,” finally found a new gig as City Manager for South Padre Island, Texas.

Like Charlestown, South Padre Island is a sleepy little town in the off-season, but its numbers swell when it receives approximately one million visitors during tourist season.

Click here for a nice feature piece in the local newspaper welcoming Bill to his new position.

Narragansett HS School Nurse loses her license

Lynn Magnusen of Charlestown is on paid leave from Narragansett High School where she worked as school nurse after Charlestown Police busted her for heroin possession when she was found passed out in the parking lot of Rippy’s. Adding to Magnusen’s problems, Rhode Island Health Department Director Dr. Michael Fine has suspended her nursing license pending the outcome of the charges against her. She is due in court on April 25.

Congratulations, Donna, for being “Hot” twice within a month

Donna (left) and Teresa Tanzi both lost committee posts
Our own state Representative Donna Walsh (D) was named to GoLocalProv’s “Who’s Hot?” list for the second time in three weeks. On March 21, she made the list for her bill to try to take politics out of the appointment process for judge magistrates. On April 4, Donna was at the top of the “Who’s Hot?” list on the general principle that she is a leading voice for the environment and for ethics, and that the new House leadership should listen to her.

Speaker Mattiello’s people apparently have listened and didn’t like what they heard. Mattiello stripped Donna of her vice-chair position on the House Environment Committee, but left her on the Committee. She also lost her co-chair position on the Joint Committee on Economic Development and her seat on Judiciary.

Her close colleagues, Rep. Larry Valencia (D-Richmond) and Rep. Teresa Tanzi (D-Peace Dale), also got whacked for their less than enthusiastic reaction to Nick Mattiello’s power blitzkrieg. Larry was kicked off the Finance Committee and Teresa was kicked off Environment. That bodes poorly for the many pieces of good legislation both have proposed, such as Larry’s bid to raise income tax rates for Rhode Island’s top earners and Teresa’s bill to ban cesspools.

Craven does all right

By contrast to Representatives Walsh, Valencia and Tanzi, Rep. Bob Craven (D-No. Kingstown and also Charlestown assistant town solicitor) did just fine in the House leadership shake-up. For about 15 or 20 minute period after the FBI raid on former Speaker Gordon Fox’s office and home, there was a brief “Craven for Speaker” boomlet. When that fizzled, Craven threw his support whole-heartedly behind now Speaker Nick Mattiello. 

That won him appointment as the new chair of the House Municipal Government Committee. It also led to swift and unanimous approval of one of the first bills passed by the House under Mattiello’s leadership, a bill to water down state apprentice training requirements to benefit some companies operating at Quonset Point which is part of Craven’s district.

Craven’s bill was co-sponsored by the odious Tea Party wingnut Rep. Doreen Costa (R-Guns-R-Us).
As my fifth grade nun Sister Mary Discipline used to tell me, “Show me who your friends are and I tell you what you are.”

Real Estate for the rich

While overall home valuations in Charlestown have dropped, according to the town’s recent revaluation, the market for big-ticket properties is booming. According to GoLocalProv, Charlestown is the site of one of the Top Ten Most Expensive Houses for Sale in RI. It’s beach front, of course, at 165 Surfside Avenue in Quonnie. The asking price is $3.3 million.

The home is owned by John and Sara McConnell who live on the East Side of Providence. The Tax Assessor’s website shows their 2013 assessment at $3,402,300 so I guess this one is, as they say, "priced to sell."

And of course, the agent is Charlestown’s top real estate gun, Ray Mott. Business has been so good in the high end market that Ray’s firm, Mott & Chace Sotheby’s International Realty has just opened their second office, this time in Watch Hill. Of course.

Charlestown medical device company receives new patent

Jenesis Surgical LLC and its owner Dr. Jennifer K. White received a new patent from the US Patent Office for a surgical device called a "repositionable endoluminal support structure and its applications." This device can be implanted to improve the results of heart surgery.

It’s nice to see progress for small tech businesses in Charlestown though it seems that some of these businesses operate on the down-low, perhaps to avoid the draconian anti-business attitude of the town under CCA Party leadership. Though Jenesis Surgical is listed as having been in business for four years and is located at 5331 Old Post Road, the company is not on the town’s March 2013 list of active and licensed businesses.

Hi, Neighbor! Have a ‘Gansett!

When I was growing up, we had a saying for Narragansett– “Once a proud tribe, now a shit beer.” But after going away for a long time, the brand was brought back in 2004 by ambitious brewers who wanted to restore its past greatness – not so much for its skunky taste, but for its broad popularity.

They have apparently taken a major step forward by landing on the coveted Brewers Association's Top 50 U.S. Brewing Companies list based on 2013 sales.

Answer to “Who Said This?”

No, it wasn’t Town Council Boss Tom Gentz or CCA Party Pundit and recent Zoning Board appointee Mike Chambers, though they have said very similar things as criticisms of Progressive Charlestown. But without references to Schopenhauer. The answer is fossil fuel oligarch and ultra-conservative money guy Charles G. Koch in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.