Latest news with #NewportSt.Patrick'sDayParade
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
McKee's FY 2026 budget underestimated labor costs for R.I. State Police, correctional officers
Members of the Rhode Island State Police march in the Newport St. Patrick's Day Parade on March 15, 2025. (Photo by Janine L. Weisman/Rhode Island Current) You wouldn't suspect any opposition to proposed pay raises for state troopers and correctional officers based on public hearings Friday morning. The requisite meetings on new collective bargaining agreements held just before the holiday weekend concluded in under 10 minutes, with no public feedback on either contract. But legislative leaders are less than thrilled about the salary increases and accompanying benefits for roughly 1,250 state employees, which require $15 million more than what Gov. Dan McKee planned for in his fiscal 2026 budget proposal. Unlike most other state employee unions, the Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers and the Rhode Island Troopers Association had not inked new deals with the administration when McKee unveiled his proposed $14 billion spending plan in January. So McKee put in a $30 million placeholder for the yet-to-be signed contracts. Turns out, the agreements are actually going to cost the state $45 million over the next two years, rather than the $30 million McKee budgeted. Hardly welcome news to the leaders of the Rhode Island General Assembly already grappling with a budget deficit and potentially devastating federal funding cuts just weeks before the end of the 2025 legislative session. A spending plan must be approved by the start of the new fiscal year on July 1. 'Unfortunately, the newly revealed shortfall from the Administration's contract settlements is not the only issue we need to address in the budget,' House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi said in an emailed statement. 'It certainly worsens the situation and is, frankly, beyond frustrating.' Senate President Valarie Lawson also appeared caught off-guard by the unexpected cost hike, which she said she learned about on Wednesday. 'While this is deeply concerning, I will work with the Senate Finance Committee to address this unexpected challenge,' Lawson said in an emailed statement. Laura Hart, a spokesperson for McKee's office, defended the contract costs in an emailed response Friday, noting that the third-quarter revenue report from the state budget office shows an extra $60.9 million expected to flow into state coffers by the end of the fiscal year 2025. 'The Governor encourages the General Assembly to support the contractual increases for public safety personnel using these dollars in the upcoming budget,' Hart said. Both contracts call for annual cost-of-living adjustments starting at 5% in year one, with a 4% second-year bump and a 3% adjustment in the third year — identical to the incremental scale adopted for 4,000 other state employees under contracts finalized last fall. So how did McKee mess up the math? For one, the raises for 255 state troopers start earlier than expected: the 5% pay bump is retroactive to Nov. 1, 2023, rather than the July 1, 2024, start date for other state union workers, including correction officers, said Karen Greco, a spokesperson for the Rhode Island Department of Administration. The tentative agreement, reached on Feb. 28, also features a 'uniform allowance' not accounted for in the governor's budget projections, Greco said. Erik Jensen, president of the state troopers union, acknowledged but did not offer a response to questions about the agreement on Friday. Richard Ferruccio, president of the Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers, remained unsatisfied with the terms of the 1,000-member union's new state contract, which was finalized on May 14 after months of arbitration. 'I don't want to sound ungrateful,' Ferruccio said in an interview Friday. 'But I still feel somewhat frustrated with it.' His main grievance was not with the annual cost-of-living increases, but accompanying benefits that would make the union better able to attract and retain officers. Staffing woes at the Rhode Island Department of Corrections are well-documented, and costly; the 117 open positions as of March 22 is projected to lead to a $42.9 million overtime cost for the full fiscal year 2025, according to a presentation to state lawmakers in April. It certainly worsens the situation and is, frankly, beyond frustrating. – House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi Ferruccio blamed staffing shortages on uncompetitive benefits relative to other local law enforcement officers and neighboring states, where officers can reach the 'top step' of pay in a shorter period of time. 'There are only a handful of people that really want to get involved in any type of law enforcement,' Ferruccio said. 'When you look at other local police departments, they have a significantly better situation with the top step than we do.' He had hoped to lower the seniority requirement for union officers to reach maximum pay from its current 14 years to six years, matching the policy offered for correctional officers in Connecticut. But the compromise struck with the state cuts the length of service to 10 years beginning this June, and eight years starting in June 2026. The agreement also includes a 2.5% pay raise for anyone who stays at least 20 years. The governor's budget did not account for the costs associated with these changes, either, Greco said. But Ferruccio said the final price tag should not have come as a surprise, noting that the changes to top step and retention benefits were longstanding asks by the union. 'I think the governor was given bad information by DOC,' Ferruccio said. He pointed to the grossly underestimated cost to close the state's minimum security facility — initially pegged at $1 million in McKee's budget when a study found it would actually cost $67 million to $71 million — as an example of miscommunication by the corrections department. J.R. Ventura, a spokesperson for the state corrections department, did not immediately respond to inquiries for comment Friday. State worker contract costs are not the only expense McKee underestimated in his fiscal 2026 budget proposal. The state will also have to make up a $24 million shortfall in education aid to local school districts in its fiscal 2025 and 26 budgets due to corrected data on the number of students in poverty. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Yahoo
17-03-2025
- Yahoo
Police arrest 20 for DUI over St. Patrick's Day weekend
NEWPORT, R.I. (WPRI) — A joint enforcement campaign over St. Patrick's Day weekend resulted in 20 arrests for DUI, according to Middletown Police. The campaign involved Rhode Island State Police and officers from the Middletown, Jamestown, Portsmouth and Tiverton departments. LIST: St. Patrick's Day celebrations in Rhode Island and Massachusetts Police said the effort from March 14 to 15 was in conjunction with the annual Newport St. Patrick's Day Parade. There were no reports of any serious or fatal motor vehicle crashes. Download the and apps to get breaking news and weather alerts. Watch or with the new . Follow us on social media: Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
10-03-2025
- Yahoo
Newport nonprofit offering rideshare vouchers for St. Patrick's Day parade
NEWPORT, R.I. (WPRI) —Thousands of revelers are expected to converge Saturday morning for the 69th Annual Newport St. Patrick's Day Parade. The parade will step off from Newport City Hall at 11 a.m. and march through Washington Square, down Thames Street and disperse at St. Augustin's Church. Newport St. Patrick's Day Parade route (Story continues below) The annual celebration will take place rain or shine and is expected to last two hours. Those who intend to spend the day in Newport are not only urged to sport their Irish pride, but also plan ahead. Newport Police Detective John Sullivan said officers will be out in full force making sure that everyone is safe and nothing gets out of hand. 'The primary goal is the safety and security of the parade itself, the participants and the spectators,' Sullivan said. 'The main focus is going to be on impaired driving.' WATCH: Newport police warn against impaired driving (Story continues below) Sullivan said there's no excuse to drive under the influence, and recommended that everyone secure a safe ride home well in advance. 'Throughout the state, officers arrest over 3,000 impaired drivers yearly,' Sullivan. 'It's a very large number and we're trying to combat that number.' For the second year in a row, Newport Bridge will be offering dozens of free rideshare vouchers in an effort to prevent intoxicated revelers from getting behind the wheel. Hakim Coggins, executive director of Newport Bridge, told 12 News nearly every bar in Newport is using coasters with QR codes on them that, once scanned, will provide instructions on how to redeem the rideshare voucher. The rideshare vouchers will only cover trips within 25 miles of downtown Newport. Coggins said the vouchers were paid for with assistance from Newport Firefighters IAFF Local 1080 and Newport Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 8. LIST: St. Patrick's Day celebrations in RI, Mass. Download the and apps to get breaking news and weather alerts. Watch or with the new . Follow us on social media: Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.