Progressive Charlestown
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
New hand's-on education program from Wood-Pawcatuck Watershed Association
|
|
|
Local Reps. Tina Spears and Megan Cotter introduce bills to protect kids from online harm
As legislators and moms, representatives offer bills to
protect kids from digital harm
Three Rhode Island representatives — all mothers of children and teens — are taking action to protect kids in an increasingly digital world with a package of legislation aimed at improving online safety for children.
Representatives Tina L. Spears, Justine Caldwell and Megan
L. Cotter have introduced a package of legislation to address growing concerns
around social media use and digital technology use by establishing new
safeguards designed to reduce risks such as exposure to harmful content,
exploitation and adverse mental health impacts among young users.
The legislation holds technology companies accountable for
the products they design and deploy, particularly when their platforms are used
by children. By requiring clear safety standards, transparency and proactive
risk mitigation, these measures ensure tech companies share responsibility for
protecting young users from harm.
The three representatives highlighted the bills at State
House event today to call attention to the necessity of ensuring that laws
protecting kids evolve alongside the ever-changing challenges presented by
technology. They were joined by two of the Senate sponsors of the bills —Sen.
Louis P. DiPalma and Sen. Lori Urso — as well the Office of the Attorney
General, community advocates and a mother who spoke about losing her son to
suicide after he plunged into online activities and communication she was unaware
of.
“As technology evolves, so does our responsibility to
protect children,” said Representative Spears (D-Dist. 36, Charlestown, New
Shoreham, South Kingstown, Westerly). “These bills are about putting
common-sense guardrails in place to ensure kids can engage online more safely.”
Their effort reflects a broader commitment to meeting the
needs of families and communities, while holding technology platforms
accountable for the environments they create.
“These proposals recognize that online spaces are part of
everyday life for kids,” said Representative Cotter (D-Dist. 39, Exeter,
Richmond, Hopkinton). “Our goal is to make those spaces safer, healthier and
more responsible.”
The legislation includes measures to strengthen protections
for minors on social media, gaming and other online platforms as well as on
school-provided devices and applications, and establish safety standards for AI
companions.
Metformin’s long-hidden brain pathway may redefine how diabetes is treated.
Opening new doors for diabetes treatment
Baylor College of Medicine
For over 60 years, metformin has been a first-line treatment for type 2 diabetes, yet scientists have not fully understood how it works. Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, along with international collaborators, have now identified an unexpected factor behind the drug's effects: the brain.
By uncovering a brain-based pathway involved in metformin's
ability to lower blood sugar, the team has opened the door to more targeted and
effective diabetes therapies. The findings were published in Science Advances.
"It's been widely accepted that metformin lowers blood
glucose primarily by reducing glucose output in the liver. Other studies have
found that it acts through the gut," said corresponding author Dr. Makoto
Fukuda, associate professor of pediatrics -- nutrition at Baylor. "We
looked into the brain as it is widely recognized as a key regulator of
whole-body glucose metabolism. We investigated whether and how the brain
contributes to the anti-diabetic effects of metformin."
A recent poll found that 80% of American respondents viewed wealth inequality as a problem
Yes, It’s Time to Tax the Rich
Lawrence Wittner for Common Dreams
With the deadline for paying federal income taxes fast approaching, the thoughts of American taxpayers turn naturally toward the age-old question: Why isn’t there a fairer tax system?
Currently, in fact, campaigns for state tax-the-rich legislation are
flourishing in California, Colorado, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Texas, and Virginia, and have already succeeded in getting such legislation
adopted in Massachusetts and Washington.
Similarly, in Congress, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)
and Rep. Pramila
Jayapal (D-Wash.) have introduced the Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act, while
Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Wash.)
are sponsoring the Make Billionaires Pay Their Fair Share Act. The tax-the-rich
proposals range from increasing the tax rate for the very highest annual income
earners, to instituting an annual wealth tax on the very richest Americans, to
a combination of both.
Although the most affluent Americans, like other Americans,
have always paid taxes to fund public services, the dispute has been over how
much they should pay. Sales taxes and property taxes place a heavy burden on
people of modest means, but a much lighter burden on the wealthy. Therefore,
the wealthy have tended to favor these generators of public revenue and to
oppose a progressive income tax, under which the rich would pay at a higher
rate than the poor. A lengthy political battle for a tax system based upon ability to pay led
to passage of the 16th Amendment to the US Constitution,
which empowered Congress to levy an income tax.
Initially, the new income tax, though progressive, was
rather small-scale. But as the federal government took on new and costly
tasks―particularly funding US participation in two world wars and the Cold
War―the federal income tax grew accordingly. By 1944, the official tax rate for
the highest income earners stood at 94%―although, thanks to deductions, loopholes, and the
rate’s confinement to the top increment of their income, the richest Americans
actually paid at a much lower rate.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Reflections on Cesar Chavez Day 2026
How to change culture (for Dolores and all the others)
The other day I listened to Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds’
1996 recording of “Knoxville Girl,” a traditional ballad about a girl from my
hometown who got pummeled to death with a stick by her lover and dumped into
the Tennessee River. The lyrics are typical of many a handed-down English folk
song in that it features the violent murder of a sweet, young, not-so-innocent
thing.
Scots-Irish and English immigrants (settlers who may have been indentured servants, religious and economic refugees, colonizers, possibly all of the above) brought the seeds of this song to the US and then unto Appalachia. Besides Nick Cave, the Louvin Brothers, Lemon Drops, BR549, Outlaws, and many others have covered “Knoxville Girl.”
I suspect some don’t
even think twice about singing from the point of view of the murderer who is
sitting in jail feeling sorry for himself. Perhaps this song was once meant to
scare young people off from fooling around before wedlock, but it often come
across, at least to me, as more sympathetic to a man grieving for the loss of
his freedom rather than the loss of a young woman’s life. Perspective means
everything. Anyway the words are at the bottom of this post so see for
yourself.
Although I grew up hearing a lot of folk music, I only really learned about the lineage of murder ballads my first year back in the States, when I spent my second semester at Friends World College doing an apprenticeship and self-guided study on urban Appalachians, migration, and culture. My advisor was an ethnomusicologist who supported my investigations of country music on juke boxes in downtown Cincinnati dive bars. Grandma Bonnie Blanton Vance kinda territory. I learned as much from the other patrons’ stories as I did from the lyrics we sang along to over shots and beers.
For part of my apprenticeship at the Urban Appalachian Council, I put to good use skills I had honed organizing punk shows helping out with the musical and storytelling stages of the annual Appalachian Festival. Because I was once again behind the scenes and not in the audience, I got to meet the likes of the Dillards, Dry Branch Fire Squad, Rich Kirby, Sparky and Rhonda Rucker, and Sheila Kay Adams, whose version of “Knoxville Girl” is one of the best I’ve heard, sung in the true ol’ timey way.
I got to work with some
of the godfathers and godmothers of the Cincinnati hillbilly music scene, one
of whom invited me to his house after the festival to confess he had fallen in
love with me, a 22- year-old less than half his age. I went because a group of
us had been meeting there to plan the thing. After that, I withdrew and was
never involved with that group of people again.
A few years later, I went to grad school in Washington DC
and wasted hours that should have been dedicated to writing about the impact of
structural adjustment policies imposed by the International Monetary Fund on
poor people in poor countries, instead browsing the library stacks which held
rare books full of old songs collected by jobless artists dispatched by the
Works Progress Administration to the Third World hollers of Southern
Appalachia.
I formed a band and found my voice while working out harmonies and writing lyrics that were basically revenge fantasies in which the fair maiden gets revenge on the man who led her down the proverbial path in the woods to a muddy, soon bloody riverbank.
My songs weren’t nearly as good as Hazel Dickens and Alice Gerrard’s recordings of feminist folk songs from the 1960s and 70s, but can be seen as stemming from that tradition, with the addition of the electric guitars and distortion pedals of 1980s punk and 1990s shoegaze. Changing culture takes decades of work over many generations.
I’ve often thought that by getting me out of Knoxville when
I was a jaded and angry 15-year-old punk, my parents steered me off a bad
trajectory. I was able to get a much better education and came to understand
the world in ways that I simply could not had I stayed in my hometown. I gained
perspectives that East Tennessee preachers and some of my schoolteachers tried
to shield me from, because such knowledge liberates one from the narrow
cultural, political, and religious grips in which they wanted to keep me and
the other Knoxville girls.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Cheryl and I have been friends for 30 years, meeting early on in her organizing career and staying in touch through the years. What Cheryl doesn't mention is her deep family ties to Rhode Island and that she has moved back to Rhode Island after a long organizing stint in California. - Will Collette
Rhode Island Republicans introduce legislation to wipe out renewable energy programs
The Rhode Island GOP's anti-green agenda
By Rob Smith / ecoRI News staff
There’s a debate in the General Assembly this year on how best to tackle electricity prices.
It’s no secret energy prices in Rhode Island have been high
for years; state officials have little power over the price of natural gas used
to run power plants and heat homes.
But a conservative faction within the General Assembly has
been arguing that it’s time to roll back the state’s climate and renewable
energy programs, which are funded via charges collected every month on
residents’ electricity bills.
House Minority Leader Rep. Michael Chippendale, R-Foster,
has introduced a package of legislation designed to eliminate many of the
state-mandated charges on utility bills to deliver relief to ratepayers. He
denied the legislation was meant to end renewable energy programs in Rhode
Island.
“Each of these may have been created with good intentions,”
Chippendale said during a House Corporation Committee bill hearing Thursday.
“But each and every legislator in this building is hearing from our
constituents that they cannot afford to pay their increasing electricity bills
with good intentions. It requires money, and a lot of it.”
Smith Hill Republicans aren’t the only elected officials
backing rollbacks to renewable energy and climate programs. Gov. Dan McKee
proposed rollbacks to the programs as part of his budget, although the most
optimistic savings Rhode Island households can expect is $15 a month, according
to estimates from the state Office of Management and Budget.
McKee proposed capping the state’s energy efficiency
programs to $75 million per year, capping net
metering program costs, and pushing back the deadlines for Renewable Energy Standard requirements out to 2050.
The governor in his budget announcement said it would save ratepayers $1
billion over five years.
Here’s a breakdown of rollback legislation:
H7139 would require all changes to the Renewable Energy Growth Program (sometimes referred to
as RE Growth) be approved by the General Assembly, instead of the Public
Utilities Commission.
H7174 would repeal the energy efficiency charge, which
funds the program that allows Rhode Island Energy to offer rebates, free
weatherization services, and other initiatives that help ratepayers use less
energy, in its entirety.
H7176 would
repeal the Renewable Energy Growth Program entirely.
H7177 would end the net metering program, used to
finance solar arrays, and prohibit any state subsidies for consumer heat pump
purchases.
H7523 would place a five-year moratorium on the
Renewable Energy Growth and energy efficiency program charges.
Influencers promoting prescription drugs on social media pose public health risks
Don't listen to medical advice from internet idiots
By Sanjukta Mondal,
Medical Xpress
Edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed by Robert Egan
In today's world, attention is increasingly focused on social media and its influencers, a shift reflected in the industry's rapid growth and a global market projected to surpass $32 billion. The marketing teams of pharmaceutical companies regularly partner with influencers who are guaranteed to grab the attention of hundreds of thousands, sometimes even millions, to promote their medications—even prescription drugs. Researchers in a JAMA Network Open study warn that such advertisements might put public health at risk.
The researchers conducted a systematic scoping review, sifting through existing
studies on influencers promoting prescription drugs to pinpoint the risks,
evaluate current regulations, and explore how this fast-growing trend can be
better managed.
They uncovered a worrying pattern. Influencer promotions
carried a high
risk of misinformation, as many shared health advice beyond their
expertise, often exaggerating a drug's benefits while leaving out important
side effects.
There's little people can do to prevent this, as current regulations, such as those from the FDA and FTC, are often vague and difficult to enforce on social media. On top of that, these promotions are written in so cleverly that they blur the line between a genuine personal story and a paid advertisement, making it hard for a regular person to tell the difference.
Demoralized CDC Workforce Reels From Year of Firings, Funding Cuts, and a Shooting
Once the world's greatest public health agency, gutted by Trump, Musk and Bobby Jr.
On the coffee table at her home in Atlanta, Sarah Boim has a pile of documents from her old job at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They are printouts of her employment records.
Boim lost her job in the first big wave of CDC firings — more than 1,000 people were suddenly let go last February.
“This is the termination letter. I also printed off my performance review from 2024,” she said. “I knew I wouldn’t have access to it, and everything was so chaotic that I needed proof of what was happening.”
Boim worked in the National Center for Environmental Health/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, handling communications about radon, substances known as forever chemicals, lead poisoning, and other health threats.
Rereading her termination letter, she still can’t believe what it says.
“The agency finds you are not fit for continued employment because your ability, knowledge, and skills do not fit the agency’s current needs, and your performance has not been adequate to justify further employment at the agency,” the emailed letter reads.
“And that floored me,” Boim said, “because my performance was rated outstanding, and I even got a raise. It was just deeply insulting. So I was more upset than I think I was prepared to be.”
The Trump administration later brought back some of the workers who were fired in the first round, but it has also cut more staff and funding.
The CDC has been without a permanent director for more than six months. Recently the Trump administration made Jay Bhattacharya the CDC’s interim director, while he also runs the National Institutes of Health.
The leadership uncertainty comes amid a year of disruption and dismissals at the Atlanta-based institution, from which more than 3,000 public health workers are now gone. That includes staffers the Trump administration terminated and workers who accepted early retirement.
Ripple effects of the turmoil are still hitting the Atlanta region.
By the end of 2025, the CDC had lost roughly a quarter of its workforce.
Monday, March 30, 2026
UPDATED: Legal problems could block Stefan Pryor's return to Rhode Island government
Secretary in name only?
By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current
UPDATE: Despite the issues detailed below, Pryor was confirmed by the Rhode Island Senate on April 1. Not an April Fool's Joke even though Pryor's several prior appointments didn't do much to improve life in Rhode Island. - Will Collette
But the Rhode Island Senate has not yet confirmed Pryor as state commerce secretary, more than seven months after Gov. Dan McKee’s nomination. And questions linger over the legality of Pryor’s authority to act without legislative approval, including by the Senate’s own legal counsel.
“We don’t believe the statutory authority exists,” Greg Paré, a spokesperson for Senate President Valarie Lawson, said in an interview Wednesday.
John Marion, executive director for Common Cause Rhode Island, a nonpartisan watchdog group, voiced similar doubts during an initial confirmation hearing for Pryor before the Senate Committee on Commerce Tuesday night.
“Many department directors can serve on an interim basis, but commerce is not one of them,” Marion told the panel.
Marion referenced the state statute empowering the governor to fill cabinet-level vacancies on an interim basis until Senate confirmation. It lists 11 director roles as eligible for interim appointments, but not commerce secretary. And, it expressly prohibits anyone beyond the 11 named department directors from taking on the job on an interim basis.
The law doesn’t lay out consequences for interim directors who take the job before Senate confirmation. In Pryor’s case, the Senate is expected to give its blessing next week following the commerce committee’s vote Tuesday to advance the nomination.
Paré said the initial confirmation hearing was delayed due to scheduling issues, noting the commerce committee has only met once before this year, on March 10.
Concerns over Pryor’s ability to serve in the $238,597-a-year job before Senate confirmation surfaced in August, as first reported by Providence Business News. McKee’s office insisted, and still does, that the appointment was legitimate, pointing to past precedent and the governor’s constitutional authority.
What can dogs tell us about how robots can locate objects?
Gestures may be as important as words
Brown University
Whether in the kitchen or on a workshop floor, robot assistants that can fetch items for people could be extremely useful. Now, a team of Brown University researchers has developed a way of making robots better at figuring out exactly which items a user might want them to retrieve.
The new approach enables robots to use inputs from both
human language and gesture as they reason about how to locate and retrieve
target objects. In a study that
will be presented on Tuesday, March 17, during the International Conference on
Human-Robot Interaction in Edinburgh, Scotland, the researchers show
that the approach had an 89% success rate in finding the correct object in
complex environments, outperforming other object retrieval approaches.
“Searching for things requires a robot to navigate large environments,” said Ivy He, a graduate student at Brown and the study’s lead author. “With current technology, robots are pretty good at identifying objects, but when the environment is cluttered, things are moving around or things are hidden by other objects, that makes things much more difficult. So this work is about using both language and gesture to help in that search task.”
The research makes use of an approach to robot planning
called a POMDP (partially observable Markov decision process), a mathematical
framework that allows a robot to reason under uncertainty. In the real world,
robots rarely have a perfect understanding of the world. Different types of
objects can look similar. There may be more than one of a particular object in
a room. Items might be partially or completely hidden from view.



.webp)
.webp)



.webp)






.webp)