Politics
Political Scene: Checks’ll be in the mail: General Assembly deals, tardily, with pothole claims
12:53 AM EDT on Monday, April 16, 2007
Good things come to those who wait.
Checks will soon be in the mail for 14 Rhode Island residents, from Chepachet to Wakefield, who filed claims last year with the state alleging damage for which the state is at fault. (Most of the cases involve cars and potholes on state roads.) The list of payees also includes one Massachusetts resident, Susan Timberlake of Somerset, whose vehicle “struck a roadway defect” on Route 195 in East Providence “on or about June 30, 2005.”
Each year in the closing days of the legislative session, lawmakers pass an omnibus bill of sorts, approving payment for claims filed since the end of the previous year’s session. Each claim is filed by an individual lawmaker on behalf of a constituent. The claims that make it into the final bill — the “joint resolution making an appropriation to pay certain claims” — are researched and verified by legislative staff, according to House spokesman Larry Berman.
But last year, as the legislative session drew to an end in late June, the Senate inadvertently neglected to pass the House version of the bill, Berman said. So the same bill was resubmitted Jan. 16, soon after the start of this year’s session. It was passed by both chambers and became effective without the governor’s signature March 27.
Berman said the claimants have now been sent notices they will be paid and must sign a release promising not to sue the state for the same incident after receiving payment. Checks will go out once the forms come back, within three weeks, Berman said.
The holdup meant that in many cases, people’s checks will be arriving two full years after the incident that prompted the claim. The resolution includes claims filed during the second half of 2005 and the first half of 2006, without regard to when the incidents occurred.
The 15 claims total $8,011.82. The largest of the bunch: $1,931.40 paid to MetLife Auto Insurance on behalf of Warwick resident Iris I. Rodriguez-Jones, whose car “collided with a parking lot curbing, faultily maintained,” near the John J. Moran Medium Security Unit at the Adult Correctional Institutions, in Cranston, “on or about Oct. 5, 2005.”
The smallest: $140.08 paid to Charles F. Pollack Sr. of North Providence for damage to his vehicle when it “struck a roadway defect” at the Route 195-Route 95 interchange in Providence “on or about Feb. 17, 2005.”
Jean P. Christy, of Smithfield, was particularly unlucky. Her name is on the list twice.
Christy says she was driving her Volkswagen convertible near Route 6 and Atwood Avenue in Johnston in June 2004 when a boulder flew from a construction site and shattered her windshield.
A year later, in May 2005, Christy says she was driving near another construction site, at Routes 116 and 101 in Scituate, when construction debris hit her windshield and cracked it, forcing her to replace it again.
Christy — a state employee who works in the financial aid office at the Community College of Rhode Island — says she paid a total of $1,070 for the two new windshields, but the state agreed to pay her only $700. Still, she said, “I’ll be happy to get anything.”
After yet another incident last year in Foster, in which Christy blew two tires when she hit “a pothole so big I almost flew out of my convertible,” Christy unloaded the unlucky Volkswagen, she said. She plans to file a claim for that incident this year.
Rep. Richard W. Singleton, R-Cumberland, has gone national.
The Rhode Island legislator appeared on ABC’s Good Morning America on April 7, the day before Easter, to slam the Tiverton school district’s recent decision to change the name of the Easter Bunny to Peter Rabbit
“This is political correctness gone wild,” Singleton said from a beige oversize chair on the New York set of the program. “Like many Rhode Islanders, I’m quite honestly very frustrated and tired of people trying to change traditions that we’ve held in this country for 150 years like the Easter Bunny.”
The show then flashed to a blue screen with a statement from the Rev. Bernard Healey, spokesman for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, who politely declined to wade into the debate. “As a Christian symbol, I would say [the Easter Bunny] is not one of those that I would go to the barricades to defend,” read Father Healey’s statement.
And although Healey, a man of the cloth, acknowledged the Easter Bunny is a religious symbol, Singleton didn’t agree.
“As a Catholic myself, the Easter Bunny has nothing whatever to do with Christianity,” Singleton said on national television.
Incidentally, Singleton’s bill that would ban municipalities from changing the names of symbols such as the Easter Bunny has yet to be heard by the House Committee on Constituent Services.
Former U.S. Sen. Lincoln D. Chafee’s campaign manager, Ian Lang, and speechwriter, Catherine Taylor, have opened a public affairs and political consulting firm in Providence.
This will be the fourth collaboration between Lang and Taylor. In addition to Chafee’s ’06 reelection campaign, they worked together on the Christy Ferguson for Congress campaign in 2002 and on Chafee’s Providence staff in 2001.
But as they tell it, the relationship between their families goes back almost 100 years, to the Lorraine Mill, in Pawtucket, where Taylor’s husband’s great-grandfather, James R. MacColl, served as the CEO and Lang’s great-grandfather, James Baldwin, headed the cost department.
“A century ago, the cloth woven by our two families helped to sustain an era of unprecedented prosperity in Rhode Island,” said Taylor. “At Lang Taylor, we are continuing in that tradition, this time weaving together strategies for our clients to use to tell their unique and compelling stories of innovation, of reform, of political courage, of a vision for a brighter future.”
Before joining the Chafee reelection drive in 2005, Lang was involved in the launch of First Focus, a national bipartisan child and family advocacy organization based in Alexandria, Va., where, coincidentally, former Chafee press secretary Christopher Spina has landed a spot as director of media relations.
Lang also did a stint as chief of staff at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, where he oversaw the daily policy and management activities for the 3,000-person agency.
Taylor worked on the Senate staffs of Linc Chafee and his late father, John H. Chafee, for 20 years, in Washington and Rhode Island, first as a legislative assistant for defense and foreign policy. She first became a speechwriter during the intensive effort to enact health-care reform in 1993-94.
Lang Taylor is doing work on behalf of a number of clients, including Chafee and the Matthews Castor campaign for Montgomery County, Pa., county commissioner. The new firm has helped Chafee craft speeches and articles, for example, for the New York Times Op-Ed page, the Brown Journal of World Affairs and a recent Arab-American dinner in New Jersey.
Call it a fundaiser. Call it a reunion of his Republican inner circle.
It’s also a 75th birthday party for former Gov. Lincoln C. Almond, with proceeds earmarked for a scholarship fund bearing his name at his alma mater, the University of Rhode Island.
More specifically, onetime aides to the former Rhode Island governor are planning a “Celebrate Governor Almond” event on June 14 from 6 to 8 p.m. at what they hope, by then, will be the newly opened Renaissance Providence Hotel at the site of the restored Masonic Temple across the street from the State House.
Almond was in his last months as governor when his administration inked the deal that after years of false starts brought in Sage Hospitality Resources, a Denver company that specializes in revitalizing derelict downtown buildings, as the new savior of the abandoned and crumbling colossus.
In lieu of gifts, those attending will be encouraged to contribute to a URI endowment named for the former governor, Class of ’61, and his wife, Marilyn, Class of ’58. (As of February, the endowment fund contained $100,137 after splitting $4,500 in scholarships among four students who had demonstrated financial need and merit during this academic year alone.)
“We had always agreed that we, as former staff members, would come together when the Renaissance opened to see the culmination of years of effort on Governor Almond’s part to transform this historic structure from an eyesore to a majestic destination hotel,” said former Almond press secretary Lisa Pelosi.
“A group of us started to brainstorm and a small get-together turned into a five-year reunion for all associated with the Almond administration and a birthday party with contributions to the scholarship fund at URI which the Almonds so heartily endorsed.”
Tickets are $40 in advance, $50 at the door. For more information, e-mail lpelosi@cox.net or madparm@cox.net.
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