"This administration is hanging Americans out to dry"

“When the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is actively preventing Americans from receiving justice, we have a problem,” said Attorney General Neronha.
a fresh, sharp look at news, life and politics in Charlestown, Rhode Island
"This administration is hanging Americans out to dry"

“When the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is actively preventing Americans from receiving justice, we have a problem,” said Attorney General Neronha.
Fluoride and fear
By Justin Jackson, Medical Xpress
edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed
by Robert Egan
Children exposed to recommended levels of fluoride in
drinking water show modest cognitive advantages in secondary school, with no
clear evidence of harm to cognitive functioning around age 60, according to
researchers at the Institute for Social Research and Data Innovation at the
University of Minnesota and multiple collaborating institutions..webp)
Don't need no stinking fluoride!
Water fluoridation in the United States began after decades
of research linked naturally high levels of fluoride in water sources to lower
community tooth decay. The evidence was convincing enough for the city of Grand
Rapids, Michigan, to become the first in the world to supplement its municipal
water with fluoride in 1945.
While scientific consensus and public policy have considered
fluoridation a fundamentally positive public health intervention, discussion,
doubt, and conspiratorial fears have persisted in some public circles.
Some of the concerns revolve around safety for developing
children, specifically regarding whether fluoride exposure reduces childhood
IQ, with some selective scientific backing.
70% of US Public Opposes Military Attack on Venezuela
Jake Johnson for Common Dreams

The CBS News/YouGov survey, published on Sunday, found that 70% of
Americans—including 91% of Democrats and 42% of Republicans—are against the “US
taking military action in Venezuela,” and a majority don’t believe a direct
attack on Venezuela would even achieve the Trump administration’s stated goal
of reducing the flow of drugs to the United States.
Van Slyke must answer for CCA’s glaring financial blunders that she helped to create
By Will Collette
![]() |
| Loving animals and nature is not this election's key issue, but money management is |
Her two opponents, Democrat Jill Fonnemann and Republican
Laura Rom, also believe in protecting our environment – clean water, healthy
ponds and streams, dark skies, and all our critters and birds. Jill is
especially strong on animal protection. The candidates differ on how to achieve
our goals, but don’t differ on the goals themselves.
So let’s stipulate that all the candidates love our town and
its beautiful environs. And dogs.
The real difference between Van Slyke and her rivals comes into
sharp relief when you look at her record on how to manage the taxpayers’ money.
Van Slyke makes two “promises” that are belied by her actions and omissions.
Van Slyke pledges “to provide open, honest, responsible
leadership” and commits to “manage our town’s administration and budgets
effectively” which she failed to do during her previous time on the Town Council.
Bonnie B. left the Town Council in 2022 at the height of
Charlestown’s worst financial scandal in a generation, a crisis where she was
one of the key architects and led the cover-up and misinformation campaign.
And in her own writings for this special election, she still
is.
In 2022, Charlestown learned that under the total control of
the Charlestown Citizens Alliance, Charlestown had not only achieved the dubious
distinction of having the highest administrative costs in the state but
that this CCA-controlled administration had “lost” (they say “misallocated”) $3
million for two years. The “$3
million oopsie.”
Van Slyke was the CCA’s principal spokesperson leading the
cover-up and disinformation campaign to deny there was a problem and, failing
that, blame someone else while refusing
reasonable requests for an outside, impartial review.
Van Slyke pushed – and still pushes – pumping
up the town’s surplus (“Unassigned fund balance”) beyond any reasonable need.
The $3 million oopsie grew out of the accumulated pockets of cash the CCA had
squirreled away in the town budget often used to finance Planning Commissar
Ruth Platner’s shady land deals.
Van Slyke praised and defended ex-Town Administrator Mark
Stankiewicz even though he failed at his #1 job which was to take care of the
money. Instead, he presided over ending legal public access to records about
the town’s finances and shady land deals and allowed the $3 million to get lost.
Then Stanky and ex-Budget Commission Chair Dick Sartor did their own self-audit
and of course found themselves blameless.
Van Slyke consistently obstructed every effort by then
minority Council member Deb Carney to bring in an outside forensic auditor to
find out what really happened and to fix it.
And did I mention that according to the RI Public
Expenditure Council, Charlestown’s administrative costs
peaked as the worst in the state per capita during the final year of CCA's reign? We're right there at the very bottom of the chart. Here's what RIPEC found (and note that the CCA NEVER even acknowledged this data, never mind acted on it):
| Stonewall Stanky, Charlestown's cover-up king |
The facts showed that Stanky’s
only talent was his loyalty to the CCA, but even that turned out to be phony. It turns out Stanky
had already lined up a new job in Berkley, MA even before the 2022 election
which the CCA was expected to win.
While clueless Van Slyke and the CCA were campaigning to
save his job in 2023, Stanky was already out the door and was simply trying to
get the biggest severance package he could. Incidentally, Stanky
only lasted six weeks at the Berkley job before moving on to mess up
Pawtucket’s finances.
Then in 2025, Van Slyke and the CCA repeated the process when
the CRU decided not to confirm CCA-aligned Budget
Commission chair Dick Sartor – a central figure in the CCA fiscal meltdown
– to another term on the Commission. Sartor failed at his job to provide
oversight over Charlestown’s finances and teamed with Stankiewicz to run the
cover-up of the $3 million oopsie.
The CRU wanted him out but naturally, Van Slyke wanted him
retained. Ever the champion of incompetence.
Since the CCA was booted out of office, the CRU-led Town Council has done a great job of cleaning up the mess the CCA left. And to see exactly what the CRU did, see what the state's chief auditor found.
According to the Rhode Island Auditor General, in their first year in office, the CRU-led Council improved
Charlestown’s financial management in the following ways:
Raised more revenue.
Under the CCA, revenue was $28 million. Under the CRU, this
increased to $30 million.
Lowered expenses.
RIPEC flagged Charlestown’s highest in the state expenses
which were $31.2 million, more than the revenue collected. Under the CRU,
expenses dropped to $29.8 million.
Increased the town’s savings.
This is the unassigned fund balance (UFB) that the CCA
criticized the CRU for failing to increase. In fact, according to the Auditor
General, the CRU raised the UFB by 17% from the CCA’s $5.3 million to $6.2
million.
Improved pension funding.
Funding to cover future pension costs rose from the CCA’s
$8.3 million level to $8.8 million under the CRU.
Reduced Charlestown’s debt by a LOT.
Under the CCA, Charlestown’s debt was $7.9 million. Under
the CRU, debt dropped to $6 million, almost 25% less.
Erased the deficit the CCA left behind.
According to the Auditor General, the CCA left behind a
DEFICIT of $3,266,029. The CRU erased that deficit and ended FY23
with a SURPLUS of $157,666.
This table on page 16 of the Auditor
General’s report gives the detail:
Not once has the CCA acknowledged these hard facts, sticking instead to Bonnita Van Slyke's false narrative that the CCA was infallible. Oh, she also loves her dog.
Election started today (November 12)
Early, in-person voting has started at Town Hall. If you plan to vote by mail, ask our Town Clerk Amy Weinreich for a mail ballot application. If you've already applied, your ballot should be on the way.
Generally, special elections like this draw almost exclusively from those who pay attention to politics. Turn out is usually very low, maybe a thousand if we're lucky. A three-way race like this is especially hard to predict.
The CCA will spend from its huge treasury built on non-resident cash to send you fancy mailers telling you Charlestown needs to go back to the good old days when they ran things. The financial facts shown above tell a very different story.
Democrat Jill Fonnemann is pledged to support the CRU’s sound financial management for a better, more prosperous Charlestown. Let's move FORWARD, not backwards.
This is the guy who has the nuclear launch codes.
Jainey Bavishi will explore how local leadership and civic collaboration are reshaping climate action
Jainey Bavishi, former deputy administrator of NOAA and
former director of New York City’s Office of Climate Resiliency, will discuss
“From the Ground Up: Communities Leading the Next Chapter of Climate
Resilience” for the Charles
and Marie Fish Lecture hosted by the URI Graduate School of
Oceanography. 
Costly repairs to the Charlestown Breachway are
an example of the price of climate change.
Photo by Will Collette
The event, scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 6 p.m., will be presented in-person at the URI Narragansett Bay Campus, Corless Auditorium, 215 South Ferry Road in Narragansett. The lecture is free and open to the public, but registration is requested.
As climate impacts accelerate and uncertainty grows, communities across the country are redefining what it means to be resilient. In a fireside chat, Bavishi will explore how equity, local leadership and civic collaboration form the backbone of effective climate action, even as traditional systems face strain.
Waning Immunity and Falling Vaccination Rates Fuel Pertussis Outbreaks
Rates of pertussis, also known as whooping cough, are surging in Texas, Florida, California, Oregon, and other states and localities across the country.
The outbreaks are fueled by falling vaccination rates, fading immunity, and delays in public health tracking systems, according to interviews with state and federal health officials. Babies too young to be fully vaccinated are most at risk.
“Pertussis cases increase in a cyclical fashion driven by waning immunity, but the size of the outbreak and the potential for severe outcomes in children who cannot be vaccinated can be mitigated by high coverage and good communication to folks at risk,” said Demetre Daskalakis, a former head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s immunization program, who resigned in August.
Before the first pertussis vaccine became available in the early 1900s, whooping cough was one of the most common childhood diseases and a major cause of childhood death in the United States. Today, children get a series of DTaP shots (full-dose version) starting at 2 months old, and teens and adults receive a Tdap booster (lower-dose version) every 10 years. (Both vaccines target diphtheria and tetanus in addition to pertussis.)
Until recently, 8 in 10 toddlers had received four doses of the DTaP vaccine by age 2, and case rates were controlled. But vaccine coverage has declined since the covid pandemic and increases in state nonmedical exemptions have widened immunity gaps, which is when the proportion of individuals who are immune falls below the level needed to contain spread.
Texas logged 1,928 pertussis cases in 2024. By October 2025, the state had exceeded 3,500. National numbers are just as stark: In the first three months of 2025, the U.S. tallied 6,600 cases — four times last year’s pace and 25 times 2023’s. Several states are posting their highest case totals in a decade, and outbreaks from Louisiana to South Dakota to Idaho make clear this surge isn’t regional. It’s everywhere.
It's a toss-up for consumers
By now, Americans know the strange math of minting: Each penny costs about 4 cents to make. Chances are you have some in a jar, or scattered among pockets, purses and car ashtrays.
The Charlestown Citizens Alliance features
rusty pennies in its budget postings
As small as it is, the penny punches above its weight culturally. If it ever disappeared, so too might the simple kindness of “take a penny, leave a penny,” alongside timeless classics like penny loafers and the tradition of tossing a penny in a fountain.
But the penny’s days are indeed numbered. The U.S. Mint pressed the last 1-cent coin on Nov. 12, 2025, following a directive from the White House. While pennies will remain legal tender, old ones will gradually be taken out of circulation.
The impact of this change will reach beyond coin jars. Its ripples will be felt as small, cash-reliant Main Street merchants face another test of adaptability in a system that increasingly favors scale, technology and plastic. It will also be felt by people who rely on cash – often people without bank accounts who have the least room to absorb even tiny shifts in price.
My interest comes from my former lives as the chief financial officer of a large credit union and as a small-business owner. Now, I bridge theory and practice as a professor – or “prac-ademic,” as I like to say – studying the challenges facing Main Street businesses.
When the penny goes away, some will win, some will lose – and for some, it’ll be a coin toss.
McKee's only hope seems to be the 42% of Democratic voters who remain undecided
By Alexander Castro, Rhode Island Current
Nearly half of likely Democratic voters still aren’t sure who they’d choose in Rhode Island’s 2026 gubernatorial primary, according to the latest Ocean State Poll conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.
A sizable 42% of Democratic primary voters considered themselves “undecided” in the survey released Monday. But former CVS executive Helena Buonanno Foulkes holds a slight, early lead in a hypothetical Democratic primary with Rhode Island House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi and incumbent Gov. Dan McKee.
Of the 359 respondents who are likely to hit the polls in the Democratic primary slated for September 2026, 29% said they would back Foulkes.
Shekarchi, who has not publicly committed to a run but has expressed interest in media interviews, secured 13% of support from the surveyed respondents.
Limping along with slightly lower polling numbers is McKee with support from only 11% of primary voters — his latest dismal showing in a string of polls, especially in concert with the poll’s other numbers for McKee, which demonstrate a broad and more diffuse dissatisfaction with his leadership both within and across party lines.
Rhode Island Energy proposes increases in customer electric and gas service charges
By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current
More bad news for Rhode Islanders struggling to pay their energy bills: Hikes are coming.
Rhode Island Energy unveiled its long-anticipated request to increase service charges for gas and electric customers in a press release the day before the Thanksgiving holiday. An application spanning thousands of pages across 21 separate documents was simultaneously submitted to the Rhode Island Public Utilities Commission for review.
If approved, the increases would take effect in September 2026.
For the first year, the average residential electric customer would see their monthly bills rise $7.78, or 4.83%, while a typical residential gas customer would pay $343.53 more, a 20.6% increase, according to Rhode Island Energy’s proposal. Charges would rise again in the second year, with another $1.56 added to monthly electric bills, on average, and $89.43 more tacked on to annual gas bills.
Anticipating the fury coming its way, Rhode Island Energy President Greg Cornett had already attempted to justify the proposal by highlighting the benefits for customers.
Microplastics may be silently fueling heart disease by damaging the very cells that keep arteries healthy.
University of California - Riverside

A research team at the University of California, Riverside
has found that routine exposure to microplastics -- tiny pieces released from
packaging, fabrics, and common consumer plastics -- may speed up the formation
of atherosclerosis, the artery-narrowing condition associated with heart
attacks and strokes. The effect appeared only in male mice, offering new
insight into how microplastics may influence cardiovascular health in people.
"Our findings fit into a broader pattern seen in
cardiovascular research, where males and females often respond
differently," said lead researcher Changcheng Zhou, a professor of
biomedical sciences in the UCR School of Medicine. "Although the precise
mechanism isn't yet known, factors like sex chromosomes and hormones,
particularly the protective effects of estrogen, may play a role."
Farmers – long Trump backers – bear the costs of new tariffs, restricted immigration and slashed renewable energy subsidies

But Trump’s second term may be different.
A new round of administration policies now cuts deeper into farmers’ livelihoods – not just squeezing profits but reshaping how farms survive – through renewed tariffs on agricultural products, visa restrictions on farm workers, reduced farm subsidies and open favoritism toward South American agricultural competitors.
In the past, farmers’ loyalty to Trump has overridden economics. In our study of the 2018–19 trade war between the U.S. and China, we found that farmers in Trump-voting counties kept planting soybeans even though the trade war’s effects were clear: Their costs would rise and their profits would fall. Farmers in Democratic-leaning counties, by contrast, shifted acreage toward alternatives such as corn or wheat that were likely to be more profitable. For many pro-Trump farmers, political belief outweighed market logic – at least in the short term.
Today, the economic effects of policies affecting farmers are broader and deeper – and the resolve that carried farmers’ support for Trump through the first trade war may no longer be enough.
The revived U.S.-China trade conflict has again placed soybeans at its center. In March 2025, Beijing suspended import licenses for several major U.S. soybean exporters following new U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods. Trump countered with a new round of reciprocal tariffs, broadening the list of Chinese imports hit and raising rates on already targeted goods.
An October 2025 deal promised China would buy 25 million metric tons of U.S. soybeans a year, but relief has proved mostly symbolic.
Before the 2018-19 trade war, China regularly imported 30 million to 36 million metric tons of U.S. soybeans annually — more than one-third of all American soybean exports. Now, Beijing has signed long-term contracts with Brazil and Argentina, leaving U.S. producers with shrinking overseas demand for their crops.