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Showing posts with label Hagan McEntee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hagan McEntee. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Democratic South County women win passage of lots of good legislation

General Assembly powerhouses

By Will Collette

Thank you Tina and Victoria
In case you haven’t noticed it, most of South County’s General Assembly members are Democratic women. Among the few exceptions are Charlestown-connected Rep. Bob Craven of No. Kingstown, one of the body’s most powerful members, and two Westerly DINOcrats, Sen. Sam Azzinaro and Rep. Brian Patrick Kennedy.

Then there’s MAGA outlier Sen. Elaine Morgan (R) whose contribution this session has consisted of embarrassing MAGA stunts including one where she impersonated a DOGE agent to try to get into a homelessness program in Providence.

The dominance of South County’s Democratic women shows in their remarkable output of significant legislation and, this year in particular, their ability to get these bills passed.

Now that this year’s General Assembly has closed, my inbox is filled with notices of bills passed. Sponsors of these bills include Charlestown’s Senator Victoria Gu and Tina Spears, South Kingstown’s Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee, Sen. Sue Sosnowski, Reps. Teresa Tanzi and Kathy Fogarty, and Sen. Alana DiMario.

Today’s roundup only includes bills passed at the end of the session, not the bills passed earlier. I’ve usually posted notices about those bills as they happened.

Rep. Megan Cotter (Richmond, Hopkinton, Exeter) scored her impressive achievements on bills to protect lives, land and homes in the past few weeks.

The greatest achievements are in the areas of affordable housing, land use and health care.

I congratulate them all. Trying to get anything done in the General Assembly is hard and often disappointing work but they can all take pride in their ability to get things done to benefit South County and the rest of Rhode Island.

Below, I’ve pasted in the reports on the bills that passed at the session’s close.

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Compromises on assault weapons, casino smoking and CRMC reform mark end of 2025 session

You can't always get what you want, but if you try some time, you might not even get what you need

On some key issues, General Assembly opts for baby steps

By Nancy Lavin, Christopher Shea and Alexander Castro, Rhode Island Current

Rep. Teresa Tanzi, a South Kingstown Democrat, speaks in
the House chamber on Friday, June 20, 2025.
(Photo by Nancy Lavin/Rhode Island Current)
Explosive debate over assault-style weapons — what types of guns and owners to restrict, if any — carried through the final day of the 2025 legislative session Friday.

After a series of failed attempts to weaken and strengthen a proposed limit on assault-style weapons, a ban on sales and manufacturing — but not possession —  ultimately prevailed.

True to form, lawmakers found plenty more to debate and discuss over the marathon day that stretched late into the evening. 

As the sun went down, the temperature inside the airless second-floor chambers seemed to rise. On what was the first full day of summer, lawmakers quenched their thirst with Del’s frozen lemonade and an endless carousel of caffeinated beverages.

Senate Majority Leader Frank Ciccone donned shorts in an unusually casual fashion choice, displaying a rarely seen calf tattoo of his late dog, Gunther.

Senate softens state’s aim on assault weapons 

You can still own an assault-style weapon in Rhode Island, but can’t buy or sell it. That’s the gist of the legislation approved by both chambers in an eleventh-hour rework aimed at appeasing at least some of its critics.

The rewrite was led by the Senate, which kicked off its marathon session with an hour-long debate, culminating in a 25-11 vote, to approve the bill banning the manufacture and sale of semi-automatic rifles, shotguns, and handguns with military-style features beginning July 1, 2026. It does not address inheritance of these weapons.

“The expectation over time is the proliferation of assault-style weapons, as specified in the bill, will go down,” Sen. Lou DiPalma, a Middletown Democrat and bill sponsor, said. “We need to get this done today.”

The Senate’s checkmate forced the House, which had already approved a more restrictive version that also banned possession, to reconsider. The lower chamber eventually caved to the Senate’s less stringent counterpart by a 43-28 vote just before 9:30 p.m.

The House’s vote came after a nearly two-hour break likely marked by behind-the-scenes negotiations, and an additional, five-minute recess for representatives to familiarize themselves with the Senate’s changes.

“This bill cuts off the supply of weapons of war for the long haul at the point of sale,” Rep. Jennifer Boylan, a Barrington Democrat and gun safety advocate, said. 

Rep. Jason Knight, a Barrington Democrat, also backed the Senate version, despite its significant changes from the more sweeping ban he had successfully advanced through the House chamber already.

“The two bills in their effect on the ground are closer to each other than you think,” Knight said, noting that the difficulty in procuring a new assault-style weapon even in other states prevents expansion of the “universe” of such weapons in Rhode Island.

Yet, the compromise was met with some dissatisfaction from both sides. The Rhode Island Coalition Against Gun Violence had denounced the “watering down” of what had been a much more sweeping ban on assault-style weapons. 

Sen. Pamela Lauria, a Barrington Democrat, sought to amend DiPalma’s bill to mirror the House version, despite the Senate Committee on Judiciary opting to hold the stronger option for further study on Wednesday. 

“As we look to pass critical legislation regarding assault weapons, we should have taken the opportunity to pass the best version of this bill,” Lauria said.

But after Senate Republicans, along with Ciccone, raised objections, Senate President Valarie Lawson ruled that Lauria was out of order.

Republicans, along with some conservative Democrats, and gun rights groups maintained that no ban at all was the answer. All four Senate Republicans, plus some conservative Democrats, voted against the ban on the manufacture and sale of assault-style weapons.

Across the rotunda, Cranston Rep. Charlene Lima, a conservative Democrat, also denounced the compromise bill for going too far. Her critiques were met with raucous applause from yellow T-shirt-wearing Second Amendment supporters seated in the gallery. House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi issued a stern rebuke, noting the seriousness of the topic before them.

“We will not have interruptions,” Shekarchi told onlookers. “If there is another uproar, I will close the gallery and you can watch on TV.”

Despite the warning, gun rights advocates booed after the House passed the amended bill.

The final version drew support from Everytown for Gun Safety, which maintained the language still covers the majority of the assault-style weapons frequently used in mass shootings. The Rhode Island AFL-CIO, a strong supporter of Lawson, also backed the proposal in a statement Thursday pointing to the union’s February poll that found 64% of residents support “banning the sale and manufacture of military-style assault weapons” in the state. 

Gov. Dan McKee, who had posed the weapons ban as a budget issue earlier in the year, confirmed via social media he will sign the measure into law.

“I’m proud that Rhode Island took an important step forward in protecting our communities from gun violence,” he posted to X at 9:50 p.m.

Clearing the air in R.I.’s two casinos

Bally’s two Rhode Island casinos will be slightly less smoky starting in 2027 — 18 months later than its advocates wanted.

The delayed start combined with a second, late-in-the-session clawback prompted longtime advocate and sponsor Rep. Teresa Tanzi to withdraw her name from her own bill after the opposite chamber added a carveout for smoking bars within casinos. Tanzi was one of four Democratic representatives to vote against the bill she introduced, though it prevailed with 67 supporters in the House Friday.

Tanzi, a South Kingstown Democrat, railed against the revised proposal, declaring it was “nothing like” her original, which had called for the smoking ban to start July 1, 2025, with no exceptions.

Rather than banning smoking in Bally’s Corp.’s Lincoln and Tiverton casinos altogether, the amended legislation adds an exemption for smoking lounges with a new, hazy definition, Tanzi argued.

“This does not prevent Bally’s from expanding cigarette smoking or cigar smoking or vaping or, I don’t know, cannabis,” Tanzi said. “It’s really not clear to me what this new definition is because there’s all of a sudden a brand-new definition about smoking lounges.”

Existing state law defines “smoking bars” as businesses where tobacco sales are greater than 50% of its total revenue. The amended version offers new meaning for a – “pari mutual facility smoking lounge,” defined as any kind of smoking bar with a “proper ventilation system” that will “prevent the migration of smoke to nonsmoking areas.”

In Tanzi’s interpretation, that means any walled-off section of the casino floors could remain a smokers’ paradise.

The Senate already approved the modified smoking ban under a unanimous vote Wednesday. Though Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski sponsored her chamber’s version, Senate Majority Leader Frank Ciccone brokered the compromised legislation after initially seeking to reach an agreement between Bally’s and union leaders to expand existing nonsmoking areas at the Lincoln facility. 

Bally’s Corp. officials had opposed the proposed smoking ban, citing a potential annual revenue loss of $30 million to $60 million. Company spokesperson Patti Doyle thanked legislators for the compromise.

“Confining smoking to an existing smoking lounge at our Lincoln venue and allowing for a delayed transition away from smoking on the gaming floor will hopefully mitigate a portion of that anticipated revenue loss to the state,” Doyle said in a statement late Friday.

Union workers who for years have decried the health consequences of smoke-filled working conditions reluctantly agreed to the compromise version as “the best we could get,” Tanzi said Friday. However, the union wants to revisit the topic when lawmakers reconvene, either in a possible fall session in October or when it starts its next regular session in January, Tanzi said.

“I had a lot more faith in our legislators,” Vanessa Baker, an iGaming manager at Bally’s Twin River Casino in Lincoln, said in a phone interview Friday. “I thought they thought we were people.”

15th time’s a charm on payday lending reform

Cracking down on predatory payday lending practices drew strong support in the Rhode Island Senate Friday. The 27-6 vote came swiftly and with little debate — a stark contrast to the 15-year battle to move the legislation out of committee to the chamber for a vote.

Having already passed in the House with unanimous support Monday, the Senate’s endorsement sets the stage for the long-awaited end to triple digit interest rates on short-term, small-dollar loans — though not as soon as some advocates had hoped. A last-minute revision delayed the start date till January 2027 in an effort to give time to the “deferred deposit providers” like Advance America to wind down operations, and for their employees to find new jobs.

Under existing law, these storefront lenders had been able to take advantage of a loophole in state law to charge an annual percentage rate up to 360%. The legislation caps the annual interest and fees at no more than 36%, mirroring policies already adopted by 22 states and the federal government.

Kicking the can on a bottle bill

Rather than start prescribing specifics of a deposit-refund program for recyclable bottles, glasses and cans, both chambers approved a modified bottle bill Friday that advances only a small component of the original calling for yet another study of the policy

The 53-11 and 36-0 votes in the House and Senate, respectively, came with reluctant support from Democratic backers who blamed opposing retailers and beverage manufacturers for mounting a misinformation-laden opposition campaign.

“There is still a great deal of conflicting data as to the implementation of best practices to address the problems of improving and disposing of our recyclable products, as well as enhancing our anti-littering efforts,” Shekarchi said in a statement earlier this week.

Rep. Carol McEntee, a South Kingstown Democrat and bill sponsor, also expressed disappointment, stating outright that the watered-down version is not a bottle bill at all, calling just for a series of studies.

Instead, the legislation calls for a “statewide implementation analysis” to be conducted by a third-party consultant hired by the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management. The study would now be due no later than Dec. 1, 2026, with an interim status report due April 1, 2026. The state-hired consultant would consider the conclusions drawn by an 18-month legislative study commission, and the original bottle bills.

McEntee, who co-chaired the prior study commission, has already indicated she’s planning to introduce a full-fledged bottle bill again next session, even though the state analysis will not be finished yet.

CRMC membership changes on the horizon

Change is coming to the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council, though not the sweeping reform advocates wanted. Rather than abolishing the politically appointed council and reshaping the agency as an administrative authority, lawmakers in both chambers narrowly agreed to a more modest update.

The bills, approved by 49-19 and 25-10 votes in the House and Senate, respectively, Friday, reduce the size of the council from 10 to seven members, simultaneously shrinking the quorum requirement in a nod to the vacancy issues that have plagued the existing panel. And it adds new professional qualifications for the powerful coastal regulatory body, specifically requiring an engineer, a coastal biologist and an environmental organization representative to sit on the new council. 

The existing council does not have any expertise requirements, though members must represent a variety of municipalities based on size and coastal proximity.

How fast the refresh occurs depends largely on how fast new candidates can be found; the legislation calls for Gov. Dan McKee to name six appointees (the seventh is designated as a DEM representative) no later than March 1, 2026. But the bill also says existing members can continue to serve until their replacements are named.

Progressive Democrats and Republicans joined in opposition, with the former insisting the membership changes fell too far short of more comprehensive reforms needed.

Legislators reprimand McKee with anti-bid rigging bill

McKee just can’t seem to escape the stain left by a 2021 state education contract scandal, with an anti bid-rigging bill included on the legislature’s final calendar of the session.

The Rhode Island Senate’s unanimous approval Friday, following passage in the House two days prior, aims to close a loophole in state procurement law by expressly forbidding public officials and administrators from intentionally interfering with the process by which the state awards competitive contracts to outside vendors. 

The need for specificity was laid bare by an investigation by Attorney General Peter Neronha’s office and Rhode Island State Police into a state education contract awarded to the ILO Group. State investigators ultimately found insufficient evidence to charge McKee for steering the $5.2 million school reopening contract to one of his former adviser’s friends — in part because there was nothing in state law saying that he could not.

The newly approved legislation, however, imposes strict penalties on state officials and vendors who participate in future collusion or bid-rigging activities: a felony charge punishable by up to three years in prison and a $1 million fine (or three times the value of the contract, whichever is greater). Vendors found to have participated in bid-rigging or steering activities are also no longer able to perform work for the state for up to five years.

McKee still needs to sign the legislation for it to become law — uncertain given documented attempts by his aides to dismantle the bill earlier in the session. McKee’s office did not immediately respond to inquiries for comment later Friday.

Opposition couldn’t break levy bill

The General Assembly OK’d Providence Mayor Brett Smiley’s request to exceed the state’s annual 4% tax levy cap, clearing the way for a 7.5% increase in the amount of property taxes the city can collect in fiscal year 2026.

Providence Democrats Rep. Rebecca Kislak and Sen. Sam Zurier introduced the bound-to-be unpopular bill in their respective chambers. 

The House was the first to grant the city’s wish, passing Kislak’s bill in a 56-17 vote on May 27. The Senate passed Zurier’s version 30-7 on Wednesday. On Friday night, each chamber voted to concur with the other’s version of the bill, finalizing its passage out of the State House and toward McKee’s desk.

In the House, Zurier’s bill passed 57-14, with opposition from all 10 Republicans plus four Democrats, including Providence Reps. Enrique Sanchez and David Morales. In the Senate, Kislak’s bill passed 27-7, with Providence Democratic Sens. Sam Bell, Tiara Mack and Ana Quezada expressing disapproval similar to their House colleagues.

The extra revenue from the tweaked levy cap is meant to help resolve a budget shortfall introduced last November by a $15 million settlement between the city and the state’s education department over Providence’s public schools. The mayor, with the Providence City Council’s somewhat reluctant approval, has been counting on the levy measure as the critical piece in the city’s fiscal 2026 budget. While the mayor’s budget technically lowers property tax rates, new property valuations mean many homeowners will still see higher tax bills.   

WPRI-12 reported Wednesday that Smiley has asked McKee to sign the legislation as soon as it arrives on his desk. But even with the General Assembly’s blessing, it’s not clear if the added tax revenue will arrive in time to shore up the city’s fiscal 2026 budget, Smiley told the news station. 

Kratom clears Senate

For the second year in a row, a bill to regulate the psychoactive drug known as kratom arrived at the final night of the legislative session. Unlike last year, when the bill provoked a fierce debate in the Senate, it sailed through the chamber with a 22-9 vote.

The House version encountered more vigorous resistance when it went up for a floor vote on May 29. It passed 40-24, with a mix of Republicans, Democrats and one independent lawmaker decrying easier access to the plant-derived drug, which can be used as an opioid substitute or a stimulant.  

The bill was sponsored by Rep. Brian Patrick Kennedy, a Westerly Democrat, and Sen. Hanna Gallo, a Cranston Democrat, with the intent of bringing kratom — a product already available in gray markets like gas stations or head shops — into the sphere of regulation and taxation. This year’s bill is 25 pages, compared to last year’s six, and it would mandate strict labeling, testing, and age restrictions around kratom commerce, as well as limitations on what products could be sold mixed with kratom.

Last year, McKee vetoed the legislation — an outcome sponsors tried to avoid this year by working with the governor and the state health department to craft a more agreeable bill.

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Rhode Island Current is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Rhode Island Current maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Janine L. Weisman for questions: info@rhodeislandcurrent.com.

Thursday, June 19, 2025

Bad bottle bill news

Bottle bill shelved in favor of another study while CRMC reform effort is set adrift

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

Upon first mention of the phrase “bottle bill” at the State House Tuesday night, Rep. Carol McEntee’s face dropped.

“I am not happy,” the South Kingstown Democrat said.

That’s because 24 hours earlier, House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi and Senate President Valarie Lawson unveiled amended legislation gutting McEntee’s 57-page bill. Gone is the proposed 10-cent fee on recyclable bottles redeemed upon return to designated redemption sites. 

In its place, another study, this time, by a third-party consultant hired by the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM). The compromise aims to find middle ground for environmental advocates and beverage makers and retailers, who failed to reach consensus on a deposit-refund program.

Meanwhile, a separate environmental priority to overhaul the troubled Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC) also appears dead in the water amid hesitation at the corresponding price tag, with a less extreme alternative in its place.

Monday, June 16, 2025

Lawmakers approve outdoor dining change to help Matunuck Oyster Bar after devastating fire

Saves some jobs, gives some breathing room to recover

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

Appreciation for South County’s acclaimed Matunuck Oyster Bar transcends political party, evidenced by the Rhode Island General Assembly’s universal support to change state outdoor dining regulations on the restaurant’s behalf.

Companion bills sponsored by South Kingstown Democrats, Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee and Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski were each approved by their respective chambers in separate, unanimous votes Thursday. 

Each chamber must still give the rubber stamp to the other’s bill — a process known as concurrence — before the legislation heads to Gov. Dan McKee’s desk. McKee has already indicated his support.

The eleventh hour proposal, introduced in the Rhode Island State House one week earlier, offers a temporary solution after a fire permanently closed Matunuck Oyster Bar on May 20.

Perry Raso, restaurant owner and oyster farmer, has cooked up a plan to host diners in a neighboring marina parking lot this summer, which requires a few tweaks to existing state regulations governing al fresco eateries.

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Rep. McEntee, Sen. Sosnowski introduce bill to help Matunuck Oyster Bar ‘Take It Outside’

Sounds like a great idea!

After the devastating fire that ripped through Matunuck Oyster Bar in South Kingstown, Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee and Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski have introduced legislation that would enable the restaurant to reopen on a limited basis.

The legislation would allow the restaurant to serve customers across the street in a parking lot that is owned by Perry Raso, who owns Matunuck Oyster Bar, and keep 50 employees of the restaurant working during the busy summer months.

The House bill (2025-H 6392) is expected to be heard by the House Committee on Small Business on Tuesday.  Representative McEntee chairs the committee. The Senate bill (2025-S 1139) is also expected to be heard by the Senate Committee on Housing and Municipal Government on Tuesday.

“The award-winning Matunuck Oyster Bar is a beloved part of the South Kingstown and Rhode Island community and everyone was devastated when the fire broke out a few weeks ago.  Its success elevates the town and both locals and tourists alike have made this restaurant a true destination in Rhode Island.  This legislation is the least we could do to help weather the difficulties resulting from the fire, including keeping some of the restaurant’s workers employed during the busy summer season.  Perry has been a tremendous partner with the town and state and I am proud to help him and his employees out during this trying time,” said Representative McEntee (D-Dist. 33, South Kingstown, Narragansett).

“Our community was heartbroken by the fire at Matunuck Oyster Bar, and so many people have rallied behind Perry Raso and his employees during this difficult time. The fact that this happened on the cusp of the busy summer season is particularly devastating for Perry, the restaurant’s workers, and our entire community. As this cherished establishment works to rebuild, it’s important we do everything we can to support that process and the many people who rely on the restaurant for their livelihood. Utilizing the successful approach of the ‘Take It Outside’ law is a common-sense step that will help immediately. I am grateful to Perry for his commitment to our community, and to the many people who have stepped forward to lend a hand following the fire,” said Sen. Sosnowski (D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown). 

The General Assembly’s leadership has expressed its strong support for this legislation, and for Matunuck Oyster Bar as it plans to rebuild.

“I met with Perry Raso yesterday and he is deeply committed to keeping his thriving restaurant open and retaining at least some of his dedicated workers during his busiest time of the year.  He is understandably devastated by the fire and I give him tremendous credit from developing this creative approach.  I pledged my strongest support to expedite this process with the House members and I will be working with our partners in the Senate and with the Town of South Kingstown to make this happen quickly,” Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi (D-Dist. 23, Warwick), who is the second co-sponsor of the legislation.

“Matunuck Oyster Bar is nationally recognized for its culinary excellence, and Perry Raso is an outstanding member of Rhode Island’s business community. While the news of the fire was truly devastating, the way Rhode Islanders have responded to support Perry and his employees has been extraordinary. I want to thank Sen. Sosnowski and Rep. McEntee for introducing this important legislation. Along with our partners at the State House and in South Kingstown, we will continue working to support everyone impacted as the restaurant rebuilds,” said Senate President Valarie J. Lawson (D-Dist. 14, East Providence).

The legislation amends the “Take It Outside” law by allowing a food service establishment to provide temporary outdoor dining services any time a building or other structure used as a food service establishment is rendered uninhabitable by virtue of a casualty including, but not limited, to fire or flood for 18 months or the building is fit for occupancy. The act would sunset and expire on June 30, 2027.

The bill requires municipal approval and the South Kingstown Town Council is scheduled to consider a resolution of support at a meeting to be held on Monday. 

The legislation, if approved by the General Assembly, would allow the restaurant to establish a mobile kitchen on the site and serve patrons at outdoor tables.  Other aspects of the business remain open, such as catering and oyster farm tours.

For more information about business operations, please visit https://rhodyoysters.com/.

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

R.I.’s bottle bill faces fierce industry opposition despite commission’s two-year effort

Spending big bucks to block needed legislation

By Christopher Shea, Rhode Island Current

It was supposed to be a compromise between environmental and business interests. Rhode Island’s beverage sale industry representatives agreed to help work on a solution two years ago when a legislative study commission formed to study the best way to craft a deposit-refund program for recyclable bottles and cans.

But at least two of the commission’s 20 members, both of whom work in the industry, remained firmly opposed to two of the “three bottle bills” receiving an initial vetting before the Senate Committee on Environment and Agriculture Wednesday.

Their displeasure was targeted toward a bill sponsored by Sen. Bridget Valverde, a North Kingstown Democrat, and another bill by Sen. Mark McKenney, a Warwick Democrat, calling for a 10-cent fee on individual beverage containers. Consumers could get their money back upon returning the containers to designated redemption sites run by a nonprofit contractor hired by beverage producers.

The point of a redemption program is twofold: to discourage littering and to reduce the waste accumulating in the state’s Central Landfill in Johnston. A report published last month by the commission notes roughly 1,000 tons of microplastic was detected by University of Rhode Island researchers within the sediment of Narragansett Bay — which ultimately end up being consumed by marine species that humans then eat.

Of the six New England states, only Rhode Island and New Hampshire do not have a bottle refund program.

But reaching a compromise with industry leaders was always going to be an uphill battle. Even before the final report was issued in April, five beverage industry members who sat on the commission issued a letter stating they supported none of the recommendations for a proposed bottle deposit program, citing concerns over cost, implementation, and balance issues in the region.

“The intention of this bill is definitely honorable,” Rhode Island Food Dealers Executive Director Scott Bromberg, who served on the commission, told lawmakers Wednesday. “But we beg the question: Is this the right time to propose additional fees to everyday, regular Rhode Islanders?”

He added that businesses would ultimately pass on the 10-cent fee to consumers — at a time when tariffs threaten to drive prices even higher.

“While 10 cents may not seem like a lot on one bottle, $2.40 for a case of $5 bottles of water is significant,” Bromberg said. “This can be recouped, but return is often unpredictable.”

Nicholas Fede Jr., executive director for the Rhode Island Liquor Operators Collaborative, also served on the commission, said the state should instead focus on updating existing curbside infrastructure to better sort out recyclable materials that may end up crushed in the landfill.

“People want to do the easiest thing possible, and that is curbside,” Fede told the committee. “The fact that we’re going to make people take their recyclables to a redemption center is a massive inconvenience.”

McKenney, commission co-chair, sees a bottle bill as an obligation to a cleaner future.

“We can kick the can down the road — it can be our children’s problem, it could be our grandchildren’s problem,” said McKenney, a Warwick Democrat. “But we do have to ask what kind of state we are leaving for them.”

Lack of consensus

Bottle bill supporters and opponents have tried to show the public is on their side. But the results of surveys on the subject favor whoever commissioned the poll.

A survey released Tuesday by a group calling itself Stop the Rhode Island Bottle Tax found that 60% of 600 respondents were opposed to the legislation. The group is backed by the American Beverage Association. EDITOR'S NOTE: I was one of those called for this poll. I said I supported the deposit bill. It was a "push" poll where the questions were designed to give them the answers they wanted, but not with me. - Will Collette

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Study Commission Recommends R.I. Implement Both Bottle Bill and Extended Producer Responsibility Program

Or perhaps we'll get neither

By Rob Smith / ecoRI News staff

Ban nips - reduce roadside litter AND drunk driving
After 18 months of study, more than a dozen meetings, and hundreds of pieces of testimony, evidence, and presentations, Rhode Island’s joint study commission on plastic waste released its report, which revealed, unsurprisingly, that legislation in support of a bottle bill faces steep opposition.

The bottle bill is one of those pieces of environmental legislation that remain stuck in a state of political limbo. Advocates and pro-bottle bill lawmakers every year lobby heavily for the state to adopt a bottle deposit system, where consumers can turn in empty plastic bottles and other containers in exchange for a small refund, but the legislation rarely escapes committee.

It’s popular with environmental groups and residents who say they are sick of finding alcohol nips and other plastic waste littering parking lots, waterways, roadsides, and parks. But the legislation has always been extremely unpopular with the state’s beverage distributors and liquor stores.

The bottle bill commission, led by Rep. Carol McEntee, D-South Kingstown, a longstanding sponsor of such legislation, and Sen. Mark McKenney, D-Warwick, was an attempt to study the issue more thoroughly and hopefully reach some kind of compromise between bottle bill advocates and opponents.

Saturday, April 12, 2025

South Kingstown residents are going to get a Homestead Tax Credit

Will Charlestown be next? First steps this Monday

The General Assembly has approved legislation (2025-H 50302025-S 0044) introduced by Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee and Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski that grants the South Kingstown Town Council with the authority to enact a homestead exemption ordinance, similar to those that have already been adopted in several other communities in the state.

“South Kingstown’s housing market is pricing out our current and future homeowners.  Out-of-state buyers and corporations are driving up the cost of home ownership by buying up properties and turning them into rentals, and our residents are then being squeezed with rising home evaluations.  The year-round residents of South Kingstown have been asking for a homestead exemption for quite some time and this legislation will finally grant our hard-working year-round residents the tax relief that they deserve and that will help keep them in their homes,” said Representative McEntee (D-Dist. 33, South Kingstown, Narragansett).

Friday, March 28, 2025

Local state Reps support South County Hospital reform movement

They decry management's unwillingness to listen 

Save South County Hospital

Below is a letter received today from five local legislators who had the courage to stand up to the entrenched leadership of South County Hospital and its Board of Trustees. Despite these legislators’ good-faith efforts to mediate and drive much-needed change, they were met with resistance and outright dismissal by hospital leadership and trustees.

These lawmakers are now issuing a stark warning. We are deeply grateful for their unwavering support for Save South County Hospital, former Board of Trustees chairs leading change efforts, donors, patients, medical staff, hospital employees, physicians - and every South County resident who deserves better than the hospital leadership and trustees are willing to give.

These lawmakers’ voices, like all of ours collectively, will not be silenced in the face of obstinate and unaccountable leadership. A special thanks to State Rep. Carol McEntee for briefing her colleagues listed below on our current efforts to hold our South County Hospital Healthcare System Endowment Special Member meeting on April 3. It is open to Members and the public, who are encouraged to attend, at 6 p.m. in South Kingstown High School’s auditorium.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

South County legislators host session with RI Energy on March 24

Charlestown's Senator Gu and Representative Spears among co-hosts

State lawmakers representing South and North Kingstown, Charlestown, Westerly, Block Island and Narragansett will hold a public forum with representatives from Rhode Island Energy regarding electrical and natural gas prices on Monday, March 24, at 6 p.m. at the South Kingstown High School Auditorium at 215 Columbia St. in Wakefield. 

They will discuss programs to assist ratepayers who are having trouble paying their bills and address questions and concerns from members of the public.

The hosts, all Democratic women representing South County communities are: 

Sunday, July 21, 2024

Here comes another wave of far-right Chariho attackers

Who are the candidates that signed the Moms for Liberty Pledge in Rhode Island?

STEVE AHLQUIST

This is NOT part of their agenda
The Washington County Chapter of Moms for Liberty has been busy collecting candidates up and down the ballot in Rhode Island, challenging for elected positions on at least one school board, two town councils, Rhode Island’s House of Representatives, and the United States Senate. 

In all likelihood, many other candidates would find themselves aligned with the values of Moms for Liberty, labeled a far-right extremist group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. So far only ten nine Rhode Island candidates have signed onto the Moms for Liberty Pledge.

What are parental rights? Lauren Gambino offers a decent explanation in The Guardian, writing:

Republicans are leaning into the education culture wars, championing policies that they say will give parents more of a say in their children’s education, from the subjects they are taught to the books they read, with hopes of appealing to suburban voters who recoiled from the party during the Trump years. In their telling, Republicans are the defenders of America’s schoolchildren whose education is threatened by a leftwing ideology that promotes activism, racial history, and gender fluidity over academic outcomes.

“But critics and many educators say conservatives are using the term “parents’ rights” as a guise to advance a right-wing education agenda that undermines public schools, whitewashes American history, and marginalizes LGBTQ+ students.

The Washington County Chapter of Moms for Liberty has been vocal against trans rights and supported the banning of books from school libraries. They have also opposed Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives.

The ten nine Rhode Island candidates who have signed the pledge so far are:

Diane Tefft – Candidate for Chariho Regional School District

In a two-way race, Tefft, a Republican, will go head-to-head with Democrat Gregory Avedisian. Tefft’s name is misspelled on the Moms for Liberty website.

Louise Dinsmore – Candidate for Chariho Regional School District

Louise Dinsmore is a co-chair of Chariho Forgotten Taxpayers, a conservative group that hosted Nicole Solas, a Rhode Island anti-trans parents rights activist and a senior fellow with the Independent Women's Forum, created to promote a “conservative alternative to feminist tenets.” “Who am I really?” asked Dinsmore at the Solas event, “I'm a vocal taxpayer and Richmond resident concerned about how my tax dollars are being spent by the town and the school district.” Though Dinsmore plays up her fiscal conservatism, signing the Moms for Liberty Pledge and hosting Nicole Solas shows that she is also interested in the culture war.

Dinsmore’s candidacy for a seat on the Chariho Regional School District is interesting considering that the co-chair of Chariho Forgotten Taxpayers, Clay Johnson, (a #ParentsUnitedRI candidate) was illegally placed on the School District after a resignation, and was only replaced with the rightful winner of the election after a court battle and Rhode Island Supreme Court decision. 

[See: With ties to hate groups, #ParentsUnitedRI offers slate of conservative extremists for local office and Conflicting laws leave contested Chariho School Committee vacancy up to RI Supreme Court]

Anthony D’Ellena – Candidate for Narragansett Town Council

D’Ellena is the 2022 Field Organizer for Rhode Island Republican Party and Vice Chairman of the Narragansett Republican Town Committee. He has testified at the State House in favor of Representative Patricia Morgan’s anti-trans legislation.

D’Ellena’s Twitter is a hotbed of inflammatory right-wing rhetoric.

Catherine Canavan – Candidate for Narragansett Town Council

Canavan is an anti-wind turbine activist spreading the false narrative that wind turbines kill whales.

Helen Sheehan

Though she signed the Moms for Liberty Pledge and currently serves on the Richmond Town Council, Sheehan is not running for re-election.

Jasmin Roy – Candidate for Hopkinton Town Council Town

Roy is the Vice-Chair of the Washington County Chapter of Moms for Liberty and she testified at the State House in strong support of Representative Patricia Morgan’s anti-trans bills.

Jessica Drew-Day – Candidate for State Representative, District 33

Drew-Day is running against Representative Carol Hagen McEntee, a Democrat. She is the recently elected president of the South Kingstown Republican Party. Though she signed the Moms for Liberty Pledge, Drew-Day is on the right side of the Bonnet Shores Fire District issue.

Lisa Marie Leavitt – Candidate for State Representative, District 31

Republican Marie Leavitt is challenging Democratic incumbent Julie Casimiro in District 31.

Examples of Marie Leavitt’s attitude towards the LGBTQ community and book banning can be seen on her Facebook campaign page:

Patricia Morgan – Candidate for United States Senate

Both of the Republican candidates challenging Senator Sheldon Whitehouse for his Senate seat have signed the Moms for Liberty pledge.

Representative Patricia Morgan is the primary sponsor of anti-trans legislation in the Rhode Island House of Representatives. This year she disrupted the committee hearing her bill by loudly talking during public testimony. [See: Representative Morgan disrupted the committee hearing of her bill]

Though she claims that her bills are designed to protect children, during her testimony she said, “I wish we could say it till 26, but I'm at least hoping that we can say till 18 because we shouldn't be allowing it.”

Raymond McKay – Candidate for United States Senate

Both of the Republican candidates challenging Senator Sheldon Whitehouse for his Senate seat have signed the Moms for Liberty pledge.

Though McKay portrays himself as a fiscal conservative with strong views on immigration, signing the Moms for Liberty pledge shows that he is not immune to the allure of being anti-LGBTQ and banning books.

As of this writing, the Washington County Chapter of Moms for Liberty has not officially endorsed any of the above candidates. Instead, these candidates voluntarily signed onto the Moms for Liberty Pledge, signaling their support for the values and goals of the Moms for Liberty organization.

There are parallels and connections here to another right-wing effort to use “parental rights” as a wedge issue in local politics. Two years ago I wrote about #ParentsUnitedRI, a right-wing hate group that stood against LGBTQ rights, opposed the teaching of history through any kind of racial lens, and fought against COVID-19 precautions throughout the pandemic. In that piece, I showed that the group had ties to overt white supremacist hate groups like CORR (Citizens Organized to Restore Rights) and Super Happy Fun America (SHFA).

Some of the same people involved with that effort have signed onto the Moms for Liberty Pledge, including Representative Patrica Morgan, Jessica Drew-Day, and Helen Sheehan. This latest effort is just a recast of the same old idea: conservative operatives tearing a page out of the right-wing playbook and trying to take power through town councils and school committees. It’s important to know who you’re voting for.

STEVE AHLQUIST is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Saturday, June 15, 2024

Assembly approves Rep. McEntee and Sen. DiPalma’s bill to count mobile homes as affordable housing

 Trailers can be counted

The General Assembly today passed Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee and Sen. Louis P. DiPalma’s legislation (2024-H 7984Aaa2024-S 2993aa) that would allow municipalities to count mobile home units as affordable housing.  

The legislation is part of House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi’s (D-Dist. 23, Warwick) 15-bill package of legislation to address Rhode Island’s housing crisis.   

Thursday, June 13, 2024

Assembly OKs bill to help sexual assault victims access fund

The right thing to do

The General Assembly approved legislation sponsored by Sen. Pamela J. Lauria and Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee to help sexual assault victims access the state fund that assists victims of violent crime with the costs they’ve faced as a result.

The legislation (2024-S 2767A2024-H 7449A), which now goes to the governor, would enable victims of sexual assault to submit a medical forensic exam performed within 15 days of the assault by a licensed health care provider in lieu of a police report in order to establish eligibility for funds from the Crime Victim Compensation Program. 

The program reimburses victims for expenses resulting from crimes, such as medical and counseling costs, cleaning, relocation, loss of earnings, funeral expenses and more.

Saturday, June 8, 2024

Eleventh hour bottle bill reignites debate between environmental, business groups

Last minute bills often fail

By Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

Disagreement over a state bottle recycling program is as pervasive as the piles of recyclable bottles and cans littering Rhode Island streets, beaches and waterways.

So it’s no surprise that controversy again clouded the bottle bill conversation Wednesday night. 

Hours of debate unfolded in an airless second-floor State House hearing room as a parade of proponents and critics sat elbow to elbow, waiting to make their case to the House Committee on Environment and Natural Resources. 

Their arguments, punctuated by the staccato of a cell phone alarm signaling the end of each two-minute speaking window, sounded nearly identical to years past. Environmental advocates backed the deposit-refund program as a means to reduce litter and incentivize recycling, while retail store owners and business groups railed against what they perceived as an unwelcome financial and administrative burden.

Yet the latest version of bottle bill legislation, introduced May 24 by Rep. Carol McEntee, a South Kingstown Democrat, is markedly different from prior iterations, leaving many of the most controversial components up to state regulators and beverage producers to decide.

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

House approves Rep. McEntee’s bill to count mobile homes as affordable housing

Bill is part of Speaker Shekarchi’s 2024 legislative package addressing the housing crisis in Rhode Island

The House passed Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee’s legislation (2024-H 7984A) that would allow municipalities to count mobile home units as affordable housing.  The bill is part of House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi’s (D-Dist. 23, Warwick) 15-bill package of legislation to address Rhode Island’s housing crisis.   

“Due to various factors over many years, our cities and towns have been unable to meet the 10 percent affordable housing stock mandate, which in turn hurts our low-income residents and families.  This bill will bring many of our municipalities into compliance with the Low and Moderate Income Housing Act while also providing crucial housing for our state’s residents,” said Representative McEntee (D-Dist. 33, South Kingstown, Narragansett).

The legislation would allow municipalities to count mobile home units as affordable housing if they meet certain requirements, including that they are permanent housing. Mobile homes could be applied toward the goal of 10% of a municipality’s housing stock to be low- and moderate-income housing, with ½ credit per qualifying mobile home.

Monday, May 6, 2024

URI’s Sunshine Menezes named Rhode Island Clean Water Action Award winner

Recognized for lifetime commitment to the environment

URI’s Sunshine Menezes has been named a Rhode Island
Clean Water Action Award winner, recognized for her
commitment to the environment. (Photo / Beau Jones)
The University of Rhode Island’s Sunshine Menezes has worked at the intersection of science communication education, practice, and research for nearly 20 years, and though that’s only two decades, she is already getting recognition in Rhode Island for her work to protect water health for Rhode Islanders.

Menezes is a clinical professor of environmental communication in URI’s Department of Natural Resources Science. In presenting her award, Clean Water Action noted Menezes’ lifelong dedication to advancing environmental communication and empowering communities to safeguard their health, livelihoods and homes.

During Menezes’ 17-year tenure as the executive director of URI’s Metcalf Institute, the institute became an international hub for promoting science communication. 

Thursday, February 15, 2024

Victory for SK legislators on outdoor dining


Chairs McEntee and DiMario’s outdoor dining bill passes General Assembly

Legislation (2024-H 7064A2024-S 2028A) sponsored by Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee and Sen. Alana M. DiMario that establishes standards for municipalities to regulate outdoor dining was approved by the General Assembly.
           
Representative McEntee, chairwoman of the House Small Business Committee, and Senator DiMario, chairwoman of the Senate Environment and Agriculture Committee, have introduced several new laws that allowed outdoor dining since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.
           
“In the dark days of the pandemic, expansion of outdoor dining across the state proved to be a bright spot that brought our communities back together on those warm summer nights to enjoy one of Rhode Island’s finest assets – our culinary and hospitality community. 

Friday, January 26, 2024

R.I. Needs Bottle Bill, Better Recycling Laws to Reduce Waste Problem

Too much trash!

By Rob Smith / ecoRI News staff

Despite Rhode Island bans on polystyrene food containers, plastic straws and — its most recent, effective Jan. 1 — on single-use plastic bags, those efforts are likely to have only a negligible impact on the state’s growing plastic waste problem.

joint report released last year by the state Department of Environmental Management and the Rhode Island Resource Recovery Corporation (RIRRC) revealed that most plastic material in Rhode Island isn’t actually getting recycled, it’s getting buried in the landfill with all of the other trash.

About 73% of all plastic material is getting buried in the landfill, according to the report. That’s more than 26,000 tons of the stuff every year. Meanwhile, only 7,000 tons of plastic are processed via RIRRC’s materials recovery facility into recycling, meaning out of every four pieces of plastic waste produced by residential homes across the state, only one will be recycled.

And the state is feeling the weight of all this plastic. A 2023 study by the University of Rhode Island estimated that the top 2 inches of the Narragansett Bay seafloor contains more than 1,000 tons of microplastics, which accreted over the past two decades.