Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Monday, March 2, 2026
March 8, A Conversation with Senator Whitehouse
Sunday, March 8, 2026 • 2:00 PM
South Kingstown High School Auditorium
Wakefield. The quarterly meeting of the South County Social Justice Coalition will take place on Sunday, March 8, 2026, at 2:00 p.m. in the South Kingstown High School Auditorium. The event is free and open to the public.
This meeting is an opportunity to meet with Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, who has represented Rhode Island since 2007. Senator Whitehouse has long been recognized as an international leader on climate change, being the only federal representative who attended the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Brazil in November 2025.
His advocacy has also helped strengthen programs such as Medicare and Social Security, ensuring stability for millions of Americans. Senator Whitehouse places a strong focus on combating corruption in government, pushing for transparency, accountability, and reforms, particularly in the Supreme Court.
Alex Nunes, formerly of The Public’s Radio and now executive editor of The Westerly Sun, will moderate the conversation, followed by an open Q&A session, offering audience members the opportunity to engage directly with Senator Whitehouse on any issue.
The South County Social Justice Coalition is comprised of faith groups, individuals, and helping organizations who address issues of equity, diversity, access and support at any level in South County. The Coalition provides a weekly newsletter of local social justice events and resources. Quarterly meetings are intended to connect neighbors, activists and organizations, plus state leaders and Congressional representatives.
For more information about the South County Social Justice Coalition, please visit https://bit.ly/scsjc_website or email info@scsjcoalition.org.
House Speaker continues to push for more affordable housing in Rhode Island
Speaker Shekarchi announces his sixth package of housing bills
“Our advocacy is working: Rhode Island is becoming a model
for housing policy in other states,” said Speaker Shekarchi. “We’ve passed more
than 60 new housing laws that are having real results. The creation of a new
land-use court calendar reduced the backlog of pending cases by nearly half
within its first year of implementation. It’s no coincidence that reducing red
tape has led to a significant rise in building permits. In 2023, we had a 70%
rise in building permits, the most in a single year since the Great Recession.
“But building takes time, and we are still trying to play
catch-up for all the years that Rhode Island was dead last in the country for
new housing starts. While Rhode Island remains a relatively affordable option
for people moving here from other states, our own residents are too often
priced out of the neighborhoods they grew up in. The sad reality is that there
is a direct correlation between rising housing costs and increased
homelessness. This winter alone, at least four people froze to death because they
were unhoused. That is completely unacceptable. Until all of our neighbors have
a safe place to sleep at night, this work must continue.”
The announced bills are:
- Infill
subdivision for housing: Upon passage, this legislation would
allow property owners in areas with water and sewer capacity to subdivide
property for single-family residential development under certain limited
conditions and requirements.
- Parking
maximums: Upon passage, this legislation would establish maximum
parking requirements for multifamily housing in areas accessible by public
transit. It follows initiatives in other states in reducing parking
requirements.
- Homeless
Bill of Rights: Upon passage, this legislation would add a
requirement to Rhode Island’s existing Homeless Bill of Rights that at
least a 15-day notice be given to individuals/families affected by the
disbanding of an encampment, subject to emergency and safety exceptions.
- SAFE
bill: Upon passage, this legislation would enable
cities and towns to allow Supportive and Functional Emergency units (“SAFE
Units,” such as Pallet shelters) to operate temporarily during an
emergency declaration. This legislation would enable cities and towns to
respond quickly in the event of severe weather and/or natural or
manufactured disasters.
- Single
staircase: Upon passage, this legislation would amend the state
building code to allow single-staircase construction in residential
buildings up to four floors and 16 units, but the construction would
remain subject to all applicable fire code requirements.
- Technical
amendments: This legislation is based on feedback received by the
Land Use Commission and various stakeholders, including local
municipalities, developers, planners, and other advocates. The legislation
seeks to clarify and amend the processes, terms, references, and
requirements outlined in the Zoning Enabling Act, Low- and Moderate-Income
Housing Act, and Subdivision Act.
- Vacant
land/properties: Upon passage, this legislation would allow the
adaptive reuse of state-owned vacant buildings by right. The legislation
would enable the redevelopment/adaptive reuse of vacant municipal
buildings into housing and also amend the redevelopment program to convert
municipal schools.
- Commission
to study and review the Condominium Act: Upon passage, this
legislation would establish a commission to study potential modernization
of and updates to the state’s Condominium Act, which has not been reviewed
or amended in more than a decade.
- Affordable
housing tax assessment and valuation: Upon passage, this
legislation would impose limits on tax rates for new construction of
residential rental units that include certain percentages of affordable
housing in either new construction or adaptive reuse projects.
The legislation has also been influenced by two housing
commissions established by Speaker Shekarchi. Some of the announced legislation
would amend existing housing laws based on feedback from these commissions.
Helena Foulkes, candidate for Governor, rolls out her housing plan for Rhode Island
Proposed Millionaire’s Tax to build 20,000 new Homes and apartments
Housing is too expensive in Rhode Island, and it is holding our state back. One third of Rhode Island households are paying more than one third of their income toward housing costs. We need results-focused leadership to build more homes and apartments that people can afford. Helena Buonanno Foulkes today released her housing plan designed to build more homes of all kinds, lower the cost of owning and renting, and protect tenants from being taken advantage of.
“When I talk to Rhode Islanders, they tell me how much they love living here, but I also hear that the cost of buying or renting is making it harder and harder to stay,” said Helena. “Housing in Rhode Island costs too much because we lack adequate supply, and under this governor we’re 50th in the nation in new home starts. I will be a governor who will get shovels in the ground to build tens of thousands of new homes and apartments that Rhode Islanders can afford.”
Recent reporting found that there is no community in Rhode Island where it is affordable to buy a home. The primary driver of the skyrocketing cost of housing is inadequate supply. Experts project that Rhode Island needs to add tens of thousands of new units for supply to catch up to demand. The General Assembly has done great work on housing in recent years, but what has been missing is executive leadership. Rhode Island still ranks 50th in the country in housing starts. Last year, Rhode Island added fewer than 1,000 new housing units, and the governor’s $120 million bond to address the housing crisis is expected to result in only 600 additional homes.
Given the magnitude of the housing crisis, Helena Buonanno Foulkes is proposing an “all-of-the-above” plan to build thousands of homes and apartments quickly: dedicated funding, smart investments, less red tape, and a governor focused on making Rhode Island more affordable for everyone.
The Rhode Home Program consists of:
A Millionaire’s Tax for Housing
Last summer, Congress passed and President Trump signed a budget that drastically cuts the social safety net in favor of tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans. Every millionaire in Rhode Island benefited from this ill-advised federal tax giveaway. Against this backdrop, Helena is proposing a millionaire’s tax to establish a billion-dollar fund to build 20,000 homes and apartments that Rhode Islanders can afford. Specifically, the plan calls for an additional 3% income tax on incomes of $1 million and above. Within eight years, the fund will have generated over a billion dollars, which will be used to leverage private, federal and philanthropic dollars to construct over 20,000 homes.
Scandals Engulf Labor Secretary as She Guts Worker Protections
The wrong choice from the start
Lori Chavez-DeRemer’s tenure as head of the US Department of Labor was further embroiled in scandal on Thursday after bombshell New York Times reporting revealed that her husband has been banned from the agency’s headquarters over sexual assault allegations leveled by at least two staffers.The reporting landed on the same day that a group of
Senate Democrats launched an investigation into Chavez-DeRemer’s policy
moves at the Labor Department, accusing her agency of showing “disregard for
workers’ lives” by “rolling back protections that keep workers safe and
hobbling the agency that is tasked with overseeing worker safety.”
The sexual assault allegations against the labor secretary’s
husband, Shawn DeRemer, were made by two women “as part of an internal investigation by the department’s inspector
general into alleged misconduct by Ms. Chavez-DeRemer and her senior staff,”
the Times reported Thursday, citing unnamed sources familiar
with the matter and a police report.
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Trump's global war against children
Cutting aid abroad and shredding the social safety net at home ensures more children will suffer and die
James Alwine and Elizabeth Jacobs for Common Dreams

It started with the closing of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), thus removing US humanitarian and development aid to people in the worst situations in the world.
The cruel closure of USAID denied and continues to
deny more than 95 million people access to basic healthcare and
nutrition, leading to an
estimated 1.6 million additional deaths in 2025, many of which were children.
The current administration also significantly
weakened the President’s Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). These
cuts, plus the closing of USAID,
severely limit the international efforts of humanitarian organizations which
work to control mother-to-child transmission of HIV. If funding for HIV
prevention and treatment continues to fall, by 2040, an estimated 3
million children will contract HIV and nearly 1.8 million will die of
AIDS-related causes.
As if that were not enough, the administration pulled out of the vaccine alliance Gavi, an
international organization that has paid for more than 1 billion children to be
vaccinated worldwide. This allows vaccine-preventable diseases to flourish
among unvaccinated and vulnerable children. Many will be permanently disabled
or die.
The administration has directed these closings of
international programs overwhelmingly against Black and brown people who,
according to the president, live in “sh** hole” countries. This is his program of “America
First,” where “those” people don’t matter—where their children don’t matter.
Moral judgement aside, helping those suffering in other
countries is actually in our best interest. Not only would this show some badly
needed humanity and compassion, it is also the best public health approach
to protect all of us from contagious diseases.
Parakeets Reveal a Surprising Rule for Making Friends
Bonding with your 'keet
Forming new relationships can be difficult, even in the animal world. Researchers at the University of Cincinnati discovered that monk parakeets introduced to unfamiliar birds tend to “test the waters” before deciding whether a potential companion is safe.
Instead of approaching
immediately, they move in gradually, becoming comfortable over time before
engaging in interactions that carry a higher risk of conflict or injury.
The work was published in the journal Biology
Letters.
Why Parrots Value Close Social Bonds
“There can be a lot of benefits to being social, but these
friendships have to start somewhere,“ said Claire O’Connell, the study’s lead
author and a doctoral student in UC’s College of Arts and Sciences.
O’Connell conducted the study with UC Associate Professor
Elizabeth Hobson, former UC postdoctoral researcher Annemarie van der Marel,
and Princeton University Associate Professor Gerald Carter. She
explained that many parrot species develop deep connections with one
or two trusted partners. These pairs may spend long periods together, groom
each other, or form reproductive partnerships. According to O’Connell,
maintaining strong bonds such as these is often associated with reduced stress
and higher reproductive success.
Kids and the elderly most at risk from erratic Trump vaccine maneuvers
Here are two articles with the details
From CIDRAP - Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy, University of Minnesota
When confusion replaces clarity about vaccines, children
pay the price
Michael T. Osterholm, PhD, MPH and Sarah Despres
When the US government changes long-standing childhood vaccine recommendations, parents deserve clarity: what changed, why it changed, and what it means for their children’s health. Instead, the recent revamp of the US childhood immunization schedule was announced abruptly by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) with limited explanation and evidence, and little transparency about how decisions were reached or how they are expected to improve health outcomes.![]() |
| Who needs science? |
Much of the public commentary since the announcement has
focused on the remaining policy levers available to HHS to reduce access to
vaccines, such as changes to insurance coverage, liability protections, or
federal programs for under- and uninsured children. Those concerns are real.
But they obscure a more immediate and troubling reality: vaccine uptake is declining,
not because access has disappeared, but because vaccination itself is being
steadily de-normalized through uncertainty, mixed messages, and the spread of
inaccurate information coming from the political appointees at HHS.
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. achieved his intended goal. He created even more confusion about and distrust in the use of vaccines.
$380 Million in Funding Cuts to One of the Most Successful US Public Education Programs
Trump's assault on bilingual education
By Jeff Bryant for
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| You can use the same maps to chart funding cuts |
“First, there were the funding cuts the Trump administration made,” said Morales, referring to the federal government’s decision to withhold more than $4 billion in funds for public education at the start of the 2025-2026 school year. CPS was particularly hit hard by the cuts, with the district losing millions it had counted on to pay for staffing positions and programs.
“Then we had ICE invade,” Morales recounted, noting that the Archer Heights neighborhood, where most of her students come from, was one of the communities targeted by the federal government’s immigration crackdown. The Trump administration’s decision to rescind the protected status that prohibited immigration raids at schools and student gathering places, like bus stops and playgrounds, made her school’s largely Hispanic student population—many of whom are recent immigrants—especially vulnerable.
“And now this,” she concluded. “This” is the December 2025 announcement from Trump’s U.S. Department of Education, signed by Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, to withhold some $380 million in federal funding that was previously granted to schools from the department’s full-service community schools (FSCS) program. The initiative provides support for the planning, implementation, and operation of the community school approach to school improvement. The community school approach transitions traditional schools from being strictly academic institutions into community hubs that provide student and family support services based on resources and voices of the surrounding community. The strategy is showing promise in improving student outcomes nationwide, but that seems irrelevant to current federal officials.
As a result of the funding cut-off to Chicago schools, according to Morales, Curie will lose money it needs to pay for tutors, after-school programs, parent education courses, and academic support for students who struggle with learning. These are programs and services parents specifically asked the school to provide, said Morales.
The loss of funding for in-school and after-school tutors will be especially damaging to the students’ academic achievement, according to educators at Curie.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Making America Vicious and Unwelcoming Whether You Live Here or Not
Don’t come here and don’t stay
Rebecca
Gordon for the TomDispatch
“Between your people and mine,” says the song, “there’s a
dot and a dash. The dash says, ‘No entrance,’ and the dot, ‘The road is
closed.’” Bravo goes on to say that, with all those dots and dashes outlining
the borders of nations, a map looks like a telegram. If you walk through the
actual world, though, what you see are mountains and rivers, forests and
deserts, but no dots or dashes at all.
And she adds, “Because those things aren’t real, they were
created so your hunger and mine would remain separated.”
Two Immigration Stories
Two morning news stories brought that song back into my mind, along with the human reality it expresses. Both appeared in the New York Times (and no doubt elsewhere). The first reported that the “United States population grew last year [between July 1, 2024, and June 30, 2025] at one of the slowest rates in its history.”
Such a reduction in growth was in large part due to the Trump
administration’s immigration policies. In 2025, immigration rates to the United States dropped
by 50% compared to the previous year. Perhaps surprisingly, Trump’s vicious and
deadly deportation efforts accounted for only about 235,000 of the 1.5
million-person net decline in immigration.
Much more significant were the barriers to entry created
under Trump, largely through the influence of Stephen Miller, the
man Steve Bannon has
labelled the president’s “prime minister.” Those include the effective closing
of our southern border to undocumented arrivals. The administration has also
made legal entry to the US much more difficult in a variety of
ways, including:
- Instituting
a $100,000 fee to be paid by employers seeking to
hire professional workers under
an H1-B visa;
- Erecting
barriers to foreign students, leading to a 17% drop in new ones
enrolling in American universities;
- Fully or partially restricting entry by the
citizens (including refugees) of 19
nations: Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial
Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen (full
restrictions) and Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone,
Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela (partial
restrictions);
- Pausing all asylum applications by citizens of
any nation in the world, leaving a backlog of 1.4 million cases;
- Capping all refugee admissions at 7,500 per year,
a reduction of 94% from previous limits (with the
exception, of course, of white South African farmers).

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