Menu Bar

Home           Calendar           Topics          Just Charlestown          About Us

Friday, March 20, 2026

Hitting the beach again to improve public access for Rhode Islanders

Sen. Gu, Rep. Cortvriend introduce legislation to strengthen shoreline access

Photo by Will Collette
Rep. Terri Cortvriend and Sen. Victoria Gu have introduced a trio of bills to protect Rhode Islanders’ access to the shoreline.

“Our coasts, rivers, ponds and lakes are precious resources that make Rhode Island special,” said Senator Gu (D-Dist. 38, Westerly, Charlestown, South Kingstown). “These bills provide the tools necessary to preserve historic foot paths and rights of ways so that every Rhode Islander can enjoy them.”

The three bills would make it easier for both the Coastal Resources Management Council and municipalities to preserve traditional footpaths and shoreline rights of way and to educate tenants of shoreline properties about public shoreline access rights.

Rhode Island is suing Trump again, this time over fair housing

Attorney General coalition challenges the Trump Administration’s attack on fair housing laws

Steve Ahlquist

In 1973, Trump and his father Fred were busted by HUD for racial
discrimination in housing under the FHA. Gutting the FHA is
another example of Trump's vengeance over past grievances

From a press release:

Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha joined a coalition of 16 attorneys general filing a lawsuit challenging unlawful actions by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), including threats to withhold funding from state and local fair housing enforcement agencies for abiding by state laws and threats to impose illegal conditions on HUD funding. 

These actions threaten to weaken America’s fair housing enforcement system and undermine states’ ability to ensure equal access to housing.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Number of new CRMC members to come this year: 7. Number of nominees picked by McKee: Zero

Doing nothing is not a solution

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

From SteveAhlquist.news
Heather Low’s application to serve on the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC) opens with a letter crediting her grandfather, a retired Navy veteran and avid boater, and childhood summers spent along the Kickemuit River in Warren, for her lifelong love for fishing and conservation.

Low, 51, of Coventry, has a bachelor’s degree in environmental science. She’s active in the Rhode Island Saltwater Anglers Association, and, since May 2025, has also served on the CRMC’s Fishermen’s Advisory Board, representing recreational anglers in the agency’s negotiations with offshore wind project developers.

Low wants to join the politically appointed full council to share her perspective as a conservationist and angler.

She sent in her application the day before Thanksgiving. Since then?

“I’ve heard nothing,” Low said in an interview Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the March 1 deadline for Gov. Dan McKee to name seven new members for the state coastal resources panel passed without any appointments or even public mention of prospective candidates. 

The flags of MAGA

Get yours' free

Narragansett Tribe interested in acquiring possible burial site

R.I. Pond’s Drawdown Reveals What Could be Native American Burial Ground

By Dan D'Ambrosio / ecoRI News contributor

The drastically reduced water level in Old Killingly Pond has revealed a mystery site that may be a Native American burial ground, described as a rectangular area covered in stones on the Rhode Island side of the pond.

Rhode Island state archaeologist Charlotte Taylor said she has not yet been able to visit the site, which is accessible only from the Connecticut side of the pond. There are many unknowns about the site, according to Taylor, who has seen photos.

“It does not look like a typical Rhode Island Native American past period burial,” Taylor said. “These burials weren’t usually demarcated by rock piles on top in a rectangular way.”

It’s also not clear who owns the site.

“It could be private property; then it is the property of the owner of the land,” Taylor said.

Even if the site turns out to be on private property, it would still be protected by Rhode Island’s law prohibiting disturbing burial grounds, according to Taylor.

“Someone going in and digging up a possible burial would be against the law,” Taylor said.

Connecticut state archaeologist Sarah Sportman first learned of the possible burial ground in January, when she got a call from a reporter for The Day newspaper in New London.

What’s inside the Rhode Island Senate’s 2026 health care bill package

Rhode Island is on its own in fight to improve health care

By Alexander Castro, Rhode Island Current

The Rhode Island Senate on March 12 released its third annual bundle of health care bills for this year’s legislative session, with proposals from ensuring the 988 hotline stays live to guardrails on AI usage in psychotherapy to initial funding for a proposed medical school at the University of Rhode Island (URI).

The 17-bill package is nearly double the size of last year’s collection, which sported nine pieces of legislation.

“These are complex issues we’re facing,” Senate President Valarie Lawson said at a State House event Thursday introducing the package. “And this is a long, long process.”

Lawson said the chamber’s priorities reflect listening to consumers and primary care providers over the last couple of years as well as the work of a special Senate-led commission which determined in January that a medical school at URI would help alleviate the state’s primary care workforce shortage.

Senate Committee Health and Human Services Chair Melissa Murray joined Lawson and bill sponsors in the Senate Lounge to present their lawmaking to-do list, which Murray described as orbiting three major themes:

  • One suite of bills aim to support people in crisis by improving access to behavioral health resources.
  • Another tranche would boost the Ocean State’s health care workforce.
  • The last set seeks to protect patients and providers via initiatives like further regulation of pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) and updated vaccination schedules for children.

“While we know that solving the crisis cannot be accomplished through any single piece of legislation, or any one collection of bills, those being highlighted today build on our past progress and help address the most pressing needs of this moment,” Murray said in a statement. “Achieving our goals will be a long-haul effort, and our chamber remains truly committed to seeing it through.”

Before Thursday, six of the package bills had already been introduced and await hearings in their respective committees. The remaining 11 bills were introduced Thursday and await hearings.

What Rhode Islanders should expect as economic consequences of Trump's Iran war

Cost of Iranian conflict likely to extend beyond energy prices, says URI economy professor

James Bessette

In the dead of night on Feb. 28, United States and Israeli forces conducted a massive surprise attack on Iran, resulting in several top Iranian leaders being killed, including the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei. 

The attacks, which were celebrated by many Iranians around the world in ending an oppressive regime, sparked significant conflict where ongoing missile strikes are occurring in the Middle East. Economically, energy costs—particularly oil and gas—have spiked in the U.S. and abroad. More recently, vessels traveling the Strait of Hormuz—a critical global shipping route—have struck mines reportedly planted by Iran, further affecting commercial activity.

Nina Eichacker, associate economics professor at the University of Rhode Island, says everyone will feel the effects of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East the longer it lasts. And, it’s not just at the pump where society will be hit hard, she says. Instability and civil unrest in the region also has a cost.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Governing on rage and by impulse leads to crazy decisions

Trump’s military excursion, into an abyss

David R. Lurie

Observers have spent two weeks trying to discern the “aims” of Trump’s war on Iran, and therefore what might constitute a victory or defeat. 

His every bizarre utterance about his war “plans” — including wildly conflicting declarations that Iran has surrendered and the war must be expanded to defeat the regime — immediately move markets.

The evident fact, though, is that Trump is completely nuts, and that he’s “governing” the country — and has now taken the US to war — based on his impulses alone, without even the pretense of a strategy or goal.

It’s almost as if Trump felt that, as a would-be dictator, he had to have his own nihilistic war, just like his idol Vlad Putin. But Trump’s “excursion” against Iran is nothing like Putin’s years long “special military operation” against Ukraine — it’s actually more stupid.

Note also that Trump's mother was an
immigrant as were both of his grandparents
Putin’s goals have never been hidden or uncertain — he wants to erase the nation of Ukraine and reincorporate its territory into his neo-Russian Empire. Trump, by contrast — and characteristically — is utterly unable to articulate why he started the largest war the United States has embarked on since the years following 9/11, let alone explain what “victory” might look like.

This is hardly unusual. In fact, it’s the sine qua non of late Trumpism, in which the Strongman of Mar-a-Lago “rules” the country based on pure impulse, rather than even the most misguided of strategy.

“Governance” by impulse

It’s a frightening reality of the Trump regime that, as Trump has descended into utter incoherence and is now nothing more than an assortment of adolescent (and frequently violent) urges, the US government has been remade into a tool for the immediate satisfaction of his wants and desires no matter how absurd or nihilistic they may be.

We’ve seen this dynamic of chaos descend upon various components of our government and society over the past 14 months.

Trump's latest money scheme

NO KINGS rally in Westerly, March 28

Learn about Taylor Swift’s ‘genius’ at March 26 URI humanities festival

In person lecture also will be live-streamed on YouTube

James Bessette 

In a little more than two decades, Taylor Swift rose from being an aspiring young artist to becoming an influential pop culture icon who has made a mark on society well beyond her sold-out live performances. 

Stephanie Burt, a Harvard University professor and poetry expert—and a “Swiftie”—has examined in her course “Taylor Swift and Her World” the award-winning singer’s unique, joyful genius as an artist who has mastered her craft. Burt will further discuss Swift’s artistry and celebrity during the University of Rhode Island’s Humanities and Popular Culture/Counterculture lecture series.

Burt’s talk, titled “The Genius of Taylor Swift: A Crash Course on the Pop Superstar,” will be held Thursday, March 26, at 4 p.m. in the Hope Room of the Robert J. Higgins Welcome Center, 45 Upper College Road on the Kingston Campus.

The yearlong lecture series, hosted by the URI Center for the Humanities, is focusing on topics ranging from women’s basketball to Shakespeare to music and social justice. The series is co-sponsored by the URI College of Arts and Sciences, Division of Research and Economic Development, Department of Gender and Women’s Studies and the Affirming Multivocal Humanities Mellon Grant, and Department of Philosophy.

Burt’s presentation, part of URI’s annual Spring Humanities Festival, will also be livestreamed through the Center for the Humanities’ YouTube channel, and people who register will receive a link. At the March 26 talk, Burt will analyze Swift, her body of work and the community that her art has fostered.

White House autism briefing linked to swift shifts in prescribing patterns, study finds

Misinformation leads to bad medical choices

By Juan Siliezar, Associate Director of Media Relations and Leadership Communications, School of Public Health, Brown University

A White House briefing in September 2025 that raised concerns about acetaminophen use during pregnancy and promoted the drug leucovorin as a potential autism treatment was followed by sharp changes in how doctors prescribed those medications nationwide, according to a new study.

The study shows that after the Sept. 22, 2025, briefing, acetaminophen orders for pregnant women in emergency rooms fell markedly while prescriptions for leucovorin for children dramatically increased.

The study was authored by researchers from Brown University’s School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School and published in the Lancet.

According to the authors, the usage changes for both drugs are notable because they were specific to the drugs mentioned in the announcement and because they occurred despite no new clinical trial data or formal guideline revisions during that period.

R.I. Must Encourage Responsible Housing Development That Protects Drinking Water Supplies

Building consensus for responsible development

By Scott Millar / Land use planner

Here are the Irish "Principles of Sustainable Development"
Rhode Island needs more housing, and I support that goal. But how we get there matters. Growth has limits, and development must respect constraints, especially when it comes to preserving clean drinking water.

The failure to adequately plan a long-term, safe, steady supply of drinking water for new housing can have catastrophic impacts. Watersheds for public surface water and groundwater drinking water supplies are not appropriate for high-density development. Once drinking water is contaminated or overdrawn, it can’t easily be restored and must be protected for both current and future generations.

For these reasons, I strongly support legislation to amend the Rhode Island Low and Moderate Income (LMI) Housing Act. This legislation would eliminate the existing state-mandated housing densities in lands that are used for drinking water supplies. 

Moreover, the current law only requires developers to cite that public water or sewer systems are available. The legislation adds language that the capacity of public water or sewer be documented to support the proposed increase in residential density before a development proposal can be approved. 

The intent of the amendments is to ensure that housing densities for LMI do not exceed the availability of onsite drinking water supplies; do not introduce pollution that would make drinking water unsuitable for use; and stay within the limits of any public water or sewer system.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Charlestown's share of Chariho costs to increase 5.02%

Chariho School Committee votes down proposed budget, then reverses course and passes it

Steve Ahlquist

Pass the budget or violate the law.
Committee decides to flip-flop
In the end, it took a warning from their legal counsel to convince the Chariho School Committee to pass a Fiscal Year ‘27 budget for voter approval.

You can watch the meeting here: 2026-03-10 School Committee Meeting

The budget, as presented and ultimately passed, will require, upon voter approval, each of the three communities that make up the Chariho School District to increase its financial contributions to the schools. Committee Chair Louise Dinsmore opposed the budget because of the increases and, in fact, voted against it - twice. 

“I have said publicly that I will not support passing this Fiscal Year ‘27 budget, especially because Richmond has a significant increase in front of them.” 

Richmond’s increase was 7.82%, Charlestown’s was 5.02%, and Hopkinton’s was 2.1%.