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October 12, 2011

Two Headlines, One Question

Marc Comtois

"Raimondo: Politics threaten reform":

State Treasurer Gina M. Raimondo told the Rotary Club of Providence on Tuesday that the biggest potential hurdle to pension reform is “politics, politics, politics: special interests lobbying politicians and telling them, if they pass this reform, they’ll go after them in the next election.”...Look, this is politics. Special interests. You know I briefed the Senate a couple of weeks ago … and there were over a dozen labor union lobbyists in the room. Special interests have money and power, not just in Rhode Island, but in Washington.”

“My job is to balance everyone’s interest. ... My job is to stay strong and not be overly influenced by special interests, and I will do that. But that is why I am saying … they need to hear from you, too, because I guarantee you the special interests have a very loud voice in the State House.”

"Thousands protest cuts in R.I. programs for disabled":
More than 3,500 protesters encircled the State House Tuesday night, waving glow sticks in a “Circle of Hope” to protest $24 million in state cuts that threaten the homes, care, jobs and transportation for people with developmental disabilities.

People in matching neon-green T-shirts started arriving around 4 p.m. They included people with autism, cerebral palsy and other developmental disabilities, along with family, friends and caregivers. The backs of the T-shirts said “Keep the Promise” or “Stop the Cuts.”

“The promise,” said Thomas Campbell, pushing the wheelchair of William Kwiatkoski, both 44 and both of Providence, “was that we would have community living.”

By 5:30, their numbers had grown to an estimated 2,000. At 6 p.m., protesters were advised to snap their glow sticks and stand near the railing. Organizers said that all 3,500 glow sticks had been handed out.

At 6:20, a helicopter approached from the East Side. Protesters cheered and raised their glow sticks, some twirling them by the lanyard. Organizer Doreen McConaghy, director of PAL, an advocacy organization for families and people with disabilities, said the helicopter flight, along with the services of a photographer to capture the “Circle of Hope” from the air, had been donated. She said PAL, which had once been an acronym for the group Parents and Friends for Alternate Living, reached out to other parent-support groups across the state to organize the event in two weeks’ time.

Will anyone listen? I guess it depends on which special interest is speaking.

Comments

If these protesters had any intelligence, they'd be circling the NEA headquarters, and all of the police and fire stations because the ridiculous pay and benefits they get come right from the poor.

Posted by: Mike Cappelli at October 12, 2011 10:48 AM

If these protesters had any intelligence, they'd be circling the NEA headquarters, and all of the police and fire stations because the ridiculous pay and benefits they get come right from the poor.
Posted by Mike Cappelli at October 12, 2011 10:48 AM

Absolutely right. Plus the crony palace that is the JCLS. Plus the public works departments and others.
What I want to know is WHERE is the f****** plan. "Early October" has come and gone.

Posted by: Tommy Cranston at October 12, 2011 11:46 AM

"What I want to know is WHERE is the f****** plan"

Tommy the plan is being hatched as we speak. How can than they tax you more to pay for all this Krap is the plan. That is the only plan. This dog and pony Raimondo thing was a Potemkin Village. Business as usual in RI. The taxpayer gets the "business' while the state goes under.

Posted by: ANTHONY at October 12, 2011 3:00 PM

“My job is to balance everyone’s interest. ... My job is to stay strong and not be overly influenced by special interests, and I will do that. But that is why I am saying … they need to hear from you, too, because I guarantee you the special interests have a very loud voice in the State House.” Gina R

Speaking to the choir-- I mean the rotary club. Who is a bigger special interest? People who go outside to protest and they are the special interest? Stay inside your protected confines for a little one on one with high level actors? No special interest there.

Posted by: David S at October 12, 2011 7:35 PM

"Speaking to the choir-- I mean the rotary club. Who is a bigger special interest? People who go outside to protest and they are the special interest? Stay inside your protected confines for a little one on one with high level actors? No special interest there."

You gotta' love the left. In the face of irrefutable evidence presented by one of their own that the pension system needs reform, they would rather summarily eat their own.

Posted by: Max Diesel at October 12, 2011 11:07 PM