Politics & Government
Last Week in the General Assembly
Bristol-Warren Rep. Kenneth Marshall joined state and federal officials in recognizing a Bristol-based boat maker.

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Rep. Marshall congratulates C&C Fiberglass Components of Bristol
Rep. Kenneth A. Marshall (D-Dist. 68, Bristol, Warren) applauded C&C Fiberglass Components, a Bristol-based manufacturer of boats and other products, for winning prestigious honors from Sailing World magazine for two of its boats.
C&C Fiberglass, in partnership with Newport companies J/Boats and Bluenose Yacht Sales, was honored as the manufacturer of the magazineās pick for overall Boat of the Year for one boat design and for top honor in the daysailer category for another.
Marshall joined Gov. Lincoln Chafee, U.S. Sen. Jack Reed, House Majority Leader Nicholas A. Mattiello (D-Dist. 15, Cranston) and Rep. Raymond E. Gallison Jr. (D-Dist. 69, Bristol, Portsmouth) at C&Cās Ballou Boulevard headquarters on Feb. 22 to congratulate the manufacturer and its employees for their achievements. Sailing World editor Dave Reed and the magazineās marking director, George Brengle, also came to recognize the three local companies at the event organized by the Rhode Island Marine Trades Association and the magazine.
Sailing Worldās Boat of the Year award recipients are selected by an independent panel of experts that puts new designs launched the previous year through rigorous inspection and sea trials. The J/70 from J/Boats and C&C Fiberglass Components captured overall honors; the Sparkman & Stephens 30 from Bluenose Yacht Sales and C&C Fiberglass Components won the best daysailer category.
āC&C Fiberglass is a fantastic example of a local small business achieving greatness and building truly outstanding products. In a time when many are struggling, C&C has grown from 22 employees a few years ago to more than 50 today. Theyāve proven that through careful, thoughtful design and partnership, manufacturing can excel in Rhode Island. I wish them continued success,ā said Marshall.
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Corporate tax rate cut before House Finance Committee
The House Finance Committee, chaired by Rep. Helio Melo (D-East Providence) has scheduled hearings this week on many elements of the 2014 budget bill (2013-H 5127), including a proposal to lower the corporate tax rate. All hearings will be held in Room 35 on the basement level of the State House and will be televised live by Capitol Television, which can be seen on Channel 15 by Cox and Full Channel subscribers and Channel 34 by Verizon viewers. Find more information about the hearings here.
Find out what's happening in Bristol-Warrenfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Committee hears legislation to ban certain synthetic drugs
The House Judiciary Committee heard legislation to ban the sale, manufacturing and use of certain synthetic drugs in Rhode Island. Introduced in the House by Rep. Joseph M. McNamara (D-Dist. 19, Warwick, Cranston), Rep. Arthur J. Corvese (D-Dist. 55, North Providence) and in the Senate by Sen. Stephen R. Archambault (D-Dist. 22, Smithfield, North Providence, Johnston), the legislation (2013-H 5325, 2013-S 0454) would ban synthetic cannabinoids and synthetic cathinones, available in some stores under names such as āK2,ā āSpice,ā āMonkey Weedā and ābath salts.ā
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House Judiciary Committee hears marijuana legalization bill
The House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on legislation (2013-H 5274) sponsored by its chairwoman, Rep. Edith H. Ajello (D-Dist. 1, Providence), to legalize marijuana possession in Rhode Island for adults age 21 and older, with regulations and taxes similar to those for alcohol.
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Senators introduce legislative package to aid in college attainment
Senate Education Committee Chairwoman Hanna M. Gallo (D-Dist. 27, Cranston, West Warwick), Sen. Michael J. McCaffrey (D-Dist. 29, Warwick) and Sen. Juan M. Pichardo (D-Dist. 2, Providence) introduced legislation designed to potentially help thousands of Rhode Islanders obtain a postsecondary degree. Senator Galloās bill asks the Board of Education to coordinate and expand programs reviewing the public collegesā records of former students and reach out to those students who were near completion at the time they left school. Senator Pichardoās bill directs the Board of Education to promulgate a āreverse transferā policy to help a category of students achieve an associateās degree if they are struggling to complete four-year programs due to enrollment regulations. Senator McCaffreyās bill asks the Board of Education to establish a ādual enrollmentā policy for the state so that high school seniors may take some or all of their senior year classes at the Community College of Rhode Island, earning college credits simultaneously as they complete their senior year.
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Miller submits landmark legislation on health care costs
Sen. Joshua Miller (D-Dist. 28, Cranston, Providence), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Health and Human Services, introduced the next phase of health care reform legislation in Rhode Island. The landmark bill (2013-S 0540) builds on the stateās previous and ongoing efforts to produce long-term health care savings for families and reduce costs for businesses. Reducing the cost of doing business in Rhode Island is a priority identified in the āMoving the Needleā report on increasing the stateās economic competitiveness, as well as improving its rankings in national economic competitiveness surveys.
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Jobs Match program legislation introduced
Legislation to establish an easy-to-use, computer-based program to efficiently identify and address skills gaps among job seekers was introduced by Sen. James C. Sheehan (D-Dist. 36, Narragansett, North Kingstown). The bill (2013-S 0403) is intended to facilitate local employersā access to high quality local jobs seekers. The bill was a recommendation of the āMoving the Needleā report, a joint venture of the Senate and RIPEC on ways to improve the stateās business rankings.
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Kelsey Smith Act introduced in both chambers
Legislation to enact the Kelsey Smith Act in Rhode Island has been introduced by Sen. James E. Doyle II (D-Dist. 8, Pawtucket) and Rep. Raymond H. Johnston Jr. (D-Dist. 61, Pawtucket). The bills (2013-S 0284, 2013-H 5456) provide law enforcement with a way to quickly obtain from telecommunications companies the location of a wireless device if a person has been determined by law enforcement to be at risk of death or serious physical harm due to being kidnapped or missing.
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OāBrien bill calls for sales, property taxes on expensive sailing vessels
Rep. William W. OāBrien (D-Dist. 54, North Providence) has introduced legislation to ease the auto excise tax on Rhode Island motor vehicle owners, setting a $6,000 per vehicle excise tax exemption throughout the state. The bill (2013-H 5361) would also generate tax revenue for the state by setting a 1-percent sales tax and a 1-percent annual property tax on sailing vessels with a value in excess of $100,000.
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Bill allows court to look at prior charges for sex offenders in bail decisions
Rep. James N. McLaughlin (D-Dist. 57, Cumberland, Central Falls) has once again introduced a bill (2013-H 5164) allowing the court to take into account an individualās prior sex offense indictments and arrests when determining whether or not to hold him or her for similar sexual offenses without bail.
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Calamari: RIās āofficialā state appetizer?
Rhode Island has the largest squid-fishing fleet on the East Coast and, with an annual take of 7 million pounds, accounts for about 54 percent of squid landings in the Northeast. Combining that with the fact that āRhode Island-style calamariā is on the menu of restaurants around the country, Rep. Joseph M. McNamara (D-Dist. 19, Warwick, Cranston) has introduced legislation (2013-H 5654) to declare the Rhode Island-style dish the stateās āofficialā appetizer.
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