logo
Providence Council president reverses course on Excel Academy deal

Providence Council president reverses course on Excel Academy deal

Boston Globe5 days ago
Miller's change of heart before tonight's City Council vote appears to kill the lease arrangement with Excel Academy, although charter school advocates are still lobbying other council members to support the deal.
Reality check:
This is more of a value statement from Miller – one that keeps her closest political allies happy – than it is a nail in the coffin for Excel Academy.
Get Rhode Map
A weekday briefing from veteran Rhode Island reporters, focused on the things that matter most in the Ocean State.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Excel started accepting fifth graders from Providence, North Providence, and Central Falls during the 2022-2023 school year, and it already has the approval from the Rhode Island Department of Education to eventually grow to a K-12 school. The council has no ability to block that expansion.
Advertisement
But Miller has created an obstacle for school leaders because they believed they had negotiated a deal that would be beneficial to everyone involved. Now they'll need to find new space as their school continues to grow.
The bigger picture:
This is a bad look for Miller, and she's smart enough to know that. But opposing charter schools is not going to cost anyone their seat on the Providence City Council (the pro-charter movement is not considered a major player in city elections).
Advertisement
Where Miller's decision could become a problem is with the state takeover of Providence schools.
Providence leaders were unsuccessful in convincing the General Assembly to return the school to local control this year, and Education Commissioner Angélica Infante-Green
already has approval to keep control of the district until October 2027.
One of Infante-Green's primary concerns about Providence is that the local government – the mayor's office, council, and school board – is too dysfunctional to oversee the school district.
Miller's flip-flop doesn't help with that perception.
This story first appeared in Rhode Map, our free newsletter about Rhode Island that also contains information about local events, links to interesting stories, and more. If you'd like to receive it via email Monday through Friday,
.
Dan McGowan can be reached at
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mayor Brandon Johnson weighing corporate head tax, social media ad tax to balance Chicago budget
Mayor Brandon Johnson weighing corporate head tax, social media ad tax to balance Chicago budget

CBS News

time3 hours ago

  • CBS News

Mayor Brandon Johnson weighing corporate head tax, social media ad tax to balance Chicago budget

The city of Chicago has a massive $1.1 billion budget gap to fill for 2026, and with Mayor Brandon Johnson promising not to once again pitch a property tax hike – which the City Council unanimously rejected for 2025 – the mayor said Tuesday he's looking at creative ways to raise tax dollars. "Everything has to be on the table. Everything has to be on the table," Johnson said. The menu on that table appears to target Chicago's ultra-rich. Johnson said he is looking for ways to extract more tax dollars from the 127,000 millionaires who now call Chicago home, as well as the 25 billionaires residing inside the city limits. "There's a reason for us to be able to tap into those individuals and entities with means, so that we can continue to see the positive trend of violence going down in the city of Chicago," he said. "I believe it's to all of our benefit to ensure that we're doing everything in our power to maintain the investments that we've put forward." As for concerns that Chicago's wealthiest residents will leave if they get taxed more, Johnson insisted, "they're not leaving Chicago." "This notion somehow that we're scaring millionaires away, it's just the opposite," he said. "Not that I know a whole bunch of millionaires, but do you know what they talk about when they do engage with me? They talk about community safety. They don't talk about taxes. Their number one issue is community safety, and as we continue to see the trend moving a positive direction, that allows for our economy to grow." Johnson said the number of Chicago millionaires jumped 24% in recent years. As budget season approaches this fall, the mayor said he's weighing reinstating Chicago's corporate head tax. On the books from 1973 through 2014, it taxed companies with more than 50 Chicago-based employees $4 per employee per month. That tax raised $35 million in its final year under Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who phased out the head tax starting in 2012, calling it a job killer. "This is the perfect time for us now to look at progressive means so that we can continue to demonstrate the positive trend here," Johnson said. What message could reinstating head tax send to Chicago employers? "Move your employees outside the city of Chicago," said Samantha Breslow, an attorney specializing in Chicago's corporate tax structure. "I represent companies that say to me, 'Why would I be in the city of Chicago any longer? Why would I have employees here, because I'm being subjected to this tax.'" Breslow said the city needs to focus more on generating tax from additional sales and service receipts. Expanding the city's sales tax to services would require approval from the Illinois General Assembly and Gov. JB Pritzker. Johnson said a new tax on social media advertising is also on the table. "People have made billions of dollars from the digital industry, literally billions of dollars, and that free advertisement happens on a consistent basis. So this is something that I've been looking at since 2018," he said. Chicago would not be the first government body to attempt to tax social media advertising. "I think they need to be very careful with implementing a tax like that. It's been attempted in other states, and there has been substantial challenge to it and not a lot of success," Breslow said. The mayor has working groups assessing which of these and other forms of so-called "progressive revenue" should move forward. Taxpayers will learn which ones might make it into his 2026 budget plan when he presents his budget address this fall. City Council would then have to approve it.

Every Vote Counts in Brooklyn. Even Those Cast by Dead People.
Every Vote Counts in Brooklyn. Even Those Cast by Dead People.

New York Times

time3 hours ago

  • New York Times

Every Vote Counts in Brooklyn. Even Those Cast by Dead People.

In a super-tight Republican primary in Brooklyn, where 16 votes separated winner from loser, Rose J. Chiara's absentee ballot deserves an extra layer of scrutiny. She had last voted 17 years ago, in the 2008 presidential primaries. She was 94 then, and would be 112 today, had it not been for her death in 2013. The recent vote in Ms. Chiara's name in an otherwise obscure City Council primary is one of a number of ballots that appear to be fraudulent, leading to growing calls for a criminal investigation. 'It's a hustle. It's a scheme. It's a subversion of democracy,' Joseph Chiara, 80, Ms. Chiara's son, said after being told of his mother's supposed vote. 'I think it's a horrible crime.' Ms. Chiara is one of at least three dead people who had ballots cast in their names in the contest, according to records and earlier reports. Several other suspicious votes came from people, very much alive, who say they had no idea their ballots had been cast. For whom, no one could say. The number of potentially fraudulent ballots — over two dozen so far — exceeds George Sarantopoulos's margin of victory over Richie Barsamian, chairman of the Kings County Republican Party, in the District 47 race in southern Brooklyn. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Advocate hopes review of N.B. right-to-information law strengthens legislation
Advocate hopes review of N.B. right-to-information law strengthens legislation

Hamilton Spectator

time5 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Advocate hopes review of N.B. right-to-information law strengthens legislation

FREDERICTON - Experts on government transparency are hoping a review of New Brunswick's right-to-information law — ranked as one of the worst in Canada — makes it easier for the public to access documents and records. The Liberal government has asked for public submissions on its election promise to modernize legislation governing the public's right to obtain information from provincial departments and agencies. The Centre for Law and Democracy last year ranked New Brunswick's freedom-to-information system as one of the two worst in Canada, along with Alberta's. Residents who are denied access to a government document or record can appeal to New Brunswick's information commissioner. But Toby Mendel, director of the law and democracy centre, said in an interview Tuesday a key weakness is that the information commissioner can only recommend that a department or agency release information. Citizens are then forced into expensive court proceedings when governments don't comply. Mendel said he hopes New Brunswick will consider an appeal system like Newfoundland and Labrador's, where the onus is on departments and agencies to go to court if they wish to reject the commissioner's recommendations. 'In Newfoundland and Labrador, when the commissioner makes a decision, the public body either has to follow that decision or go to court to contest it … We believe it is a good model for small jurisdictions like New Brunswick,' Mendel said. The Newfoundland and Labrador model is mentioned in New Brunswick's discussion paper on its existing information legislation. The paper provides questions for the Liberal government to consider, including if some of the exemptions that departments can use to refuse document requests need to be dropped or revised. The law and democracy centre says exemptions are too numerous and too broad. 'We see a lot of exceptions (to releasing information) that are on the face of it illegitimate,' Mendel said. New Brunswick's Green Leader David Coon says the province's Right to Information Act has 'degenerated' over the past 15 years. One of the more problematic changes to the law, Coon said, is the restriction that government records that include 'advice' to a minister can no longer be requested by the public. For example, he said, the work that consultants do for government, or reports to departments, can be interpreted as 'advice' to a minister. That change, he said, 'has been used extensively to keep lots of documents … a lot of reports, secret.' Nicole O'Byrne, an associate professor at University of New Brunswick's faculty of law, called the existing access to information system in New Brunswick 'slow and cumbersome,' adding that it can require months to appeal a decision. Government departments and agencies are often swamped by broad requests for information, which can take long to process, she added. She also suggested that departments and agencies be proactive and release more information without the need for the public to make formal requests to access it. O'Byrne commended the provincial government for its review. 'Citizens have every right to demand accountability from their elected representatives. This is a fundamental cornerstone of our democracy.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 29, 2025. — By Michael Tutton in Halifax and Hina Alam in Fredericton. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store