Rhode Island
An ensemble play: R.I. arts organizations join together to call for state support • Rhode Island Current
A production photo from Trinity Repertory Company’s spring 2024 staging of August Wilson’s 1985 play ‘Fences.’ Trinity Rep is one of three organizations that would benefit from a capital improvement bond proposed by Rhode Island House leadership. But the Providence theater says operating costs are still a major concern. (Marisa Lenardson/Courtesy of Trinity Repertory Company)
Big things come in small packages, the cliché goes.
But a proposed funding package for Rhode Island’s arts and culture economy is even smaller than advocates hoped.
The Rhode Island House’s proposed version of the fiscal 2025 budget was released Friday, May 31, and includes a $10 million bond initiative for arts and culture funding. If the bond makes it to the ballot and voters say yes, then the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts (RISCA) and three nonprofits would share the windfall. Newport Contemporary Ballet, Trinity Repertory Company and the Tomaquag Museum would receive $2 million apiece. RISCA would distribute the remaining $4 million through matching grants for arts-related capital improvement projects, like renovations and historic preservation.
But the costs of being creative aren’t just making facilities newer and shinier. Capital improvement does nothing to address arts organizations’ operating expenses in a post-pandemic economy, arts advocates contend.
“None of this operational stuff has been addressed,” said Lynne McCormack, executive director of RISCA. “It seems like there’s just a deaf ear everywhere about it, and it’s really quite concerning.”
The state budget for RISCA has not changed in 10 years, McCormack said, even as overall state spending grew more than 50%. Most recent nourishment to the arts council’s budget, she said, has come from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), like a $1 million grant awarded in April.
McCormack joined the RI Coalition for the Arts — an assembly of the state’s art advocates and industry leaders — on Smith Hill May 28 to rally around the Creative Futures Fund, a separate bill introduced by Providence Democrats Sen. Jake Bissaillon and Rep. Scott Slater in their respective chambers. The bipartite bill puts a higher price tag on the arts: $14.5 million toward 13 nonprofit organizations and another $3.2 million for RISCA grants, with another $300,000 for RISCA administrative fees, for a whopping total of $18 million. Currently, the bills, which would use funding from the state’s share of federal pandemic aid, linger in committee.
McCormack said she’s happy with the proposed cultural facilities bond since it will continue a program that’s run successfully since 2014. “It’s really helped renovate a lot of buildings that nobody else would touch,” she said, but added “It’s definitely not the fix for what the coalition is asking for.”
David Beauchesne, executive director of the Rhode Island Philharmonic and Music School, helped form the coalition. What the coalition wants, he said, is a return to the pandemic’s unusual generosity for the creative sector. Coalition members know how to go about stabilizing their organizations, Beauchesne said. But they need the funds to do it.
“Soon as the shutdown ended, the state government seemed to go back to picking which sectors of the economy mattered and which don’t,” Beauchesne said in a phone interview. “I’m not trying to say this should be arts versus other [sectors of the economy]. That’s not it at all. We just want to be treated equally for the jobs we make and the role that we play.”
The arts and culture economy — which includes performing arts, music and visual art — comprised about 3.3% of Rhode Island’s gross domestic product (GDP) and supported 18,481 jobs, according to 2022 data from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.
“For context,” a RISCA annual report offers, “the construction industries are 3.4% of the state’s GDP.”
Despite its prominence in both the local economy (and, of course, state marketing materials), Beauchesne said operating support for the arts has long been scant both federally and statewide, with investments prioritized for more profitable industries. That all changed with federal pandemic aid.
“It was the first time we were measured for our output,” Beauchesne said. “Our worth wasn’t determined by what sector we were in.”
A different economy a decade ago
Past bond initiatives for arts development have performed well in the Ocean State. The most extensive in recent memory was in 2014, when $30 million to benefit nine organizations received 60% of the vote. A much smaller bond of $7 million for the same purposes was approved in the 2021 special election, once again by 60% of voters.
The 2014 bond may have been a high point of arts funding in Rhode Island, Beauchesne thought. Asked if the state lives up its capital’s moniker of “The Creative Capital,” Beauchesne sighed before answering.
“I would say there are moments where the state has partnered effectively with us,” he said. “The 2014 Cultural Facilities Bond is probably the most significant. But in general, I would say the investment that has generated Rhode Island’s creative capital has largely been private.”
Even when state government does show some love toward the arts, it’s not unconditional. Beauchesne highlighted that the proposed pool of capital grants requires a match, which isn’t viable for all organizations.
Even organizations that can afford to match are still feeling the strain from heavy lifting they did during the pandemic to continue serving audiences. Trinity Rep is one of two organizations represented in both the proposed bond and the Creative Futures fund. Executive Director Kate Liberman said the bond money would support ongoing structural improvements at the theater. That includes a 1,000-square-foot addition and replacing an elevator.
The addition would allow the theater to consolidate all its offices into one building and no longer have to lease space across the street. The Chace Theater would also see “a major renovation, not just a facelift,” Liberman said, one which would impact seating and the stage.
Liberman said the $2 million would cover “just a small portion” of the estimated $35 million project cost.
“There were sort of two asks on the table to our legislators in the State House,” she said. “And, ultimately, clearly, our House leadership chose to go in one direction, but the need is still there.”
While Liberman said she was grateful for the possible bond funds, operating troubles remain. The Providence theater’s subscriber base is still around half of what it was in 2019, when there were 4,688 subscribers. The theatrical season now consists of five plays, rather than eight. And 75% of the staff has been hired in the last three years, including Liberman. Attendance numbers are better, she said, but the budget is “not yet anywhere near” as stable as it was in 2019.
“The travel industry is back to 2019 or better right now. We’ve all been waiting to get on an airplane and go on vacation. But folks have kind of forgotten what had been a habitual theater-going habit,” Liberman said, and said museums and philharmonics have endured the same losses.
People are apparently eager to grumble and huff as they wait in airport lines. But how could art consumption return to prior levels?
Liberman laughed.
“If you can answer that for me, that would be great,” she said.
The future’s not free
Operating costs might be one way to uplift the arts economy beyond brick-and-mortar efforts. What about supporting the people who may lead tomorrow’s creative economy?
That’s apparently an even bigger ask, Kristen Williams, the executive director of Woonsocket’s Riverzedge Arts in Woonsocket, told Rhode Island Current. The nonprofit offers a fusion of arts education and workforce training to local youth. They get paid wages during their training so they can experience what it’s like to be a working (and, yes, tax-paying) creative person while honing the skills to make them employable. The program takes its blueprint from the Boston-based Artists for Humanity.
“We want to make sure that they have supportive first jobs, and that they have sort of wraparound services that they wouldn’t get at something like Dunkin’ Donuts,” she said.
Riverzedge, Williams said, depends on three already underfunded buckets: arts, afterschool programs and workforce development. Learn365, Gov. Dan McKee’s learning initiative, “is not an adequate substitute,” for afterschool programs, Williams said, and workforce development, when available, tends to focus on technical education and trades.
Woonsocket is one of four cities with highly-concentrated youth poverty, according to Rhode Island KIDS COUNT: 31% of youth there live in poverty and 11% live in extreme poverty. For Williams, that only underlines the importance of an organization like Riverzedge. Properly funded, Williams said arts programs like Riverzedge can address economic and racial inequities in access to arts education — a privilege often limited for kids from low-income backgrounds, who may feel the pressure to enter fields traditionally considered more lucrative.
“[Kids] need to be able to creatively solve problems, and not just quit when they run into a wall,” Williams said. “That’s what the arts do. I know because that’s what I did. And now I run an organization with a very difficult funding model, and I make it work.”
Wrestling with limited funding is another learning experience — it’s something visual artists encounter regularly when trying to make a living within the commercial gallery system. While performing artists can recoup an organization’s money via ticket sales, physical artworks depend on a commodity-based market, which hardly guarantees pay.
Small or individual artist grants working outside institutions can be won from RISCA and are valued from $500 to $3,000. These can help subsidize gallery exhibitions for artists. Organizations like the Interlace Grant Fund also help fund individual and small projects. But Rhode Island has yet to see intensive programs like Creative Futures New York, which paid $65,000 with benefits to participating artists.
The undervaluation of fine arts could be one reason why full-time employment is important to Williams. When she joined Riverzedge four years ago, she pushed back against an organizational preference for part-time positions.
“The gig economy: It doesn’t work,” Williams said. “Ten years ago it was like this sexy idea. What it does is keeps artists poor, and it keeps contractors poor.”
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Rhode Island
More complaints against former RI private school coach accused of exploiting underage girl – The Boston Globe
The girl told the state police and Barrington police that Cassidy, who’d been her coach, became fixated on her since the summer of 2025 and won her trust. She told police that Cassidy had given her lingerie and alcohol and requested explicit photos of her under the guise of training her for a “secret section of the FBI” to help children who are sex trafficked.
The small private Christian school fired Cassidy after his arrest on June 1. State police said they expected to bring more charges and asked for other witnesses to come forward.
Since then, Barrington Police Chief Michael E. Correia said, four more students from Barrington Christian Academy and a young woman who encountered Cassidy at the Pawtucket YMCA have made complaints.
“All of their stories are clearly inappropriate behavior from a teacher-coach,” Correia said on Wednesday. “However, we don’t believe [the allegations] at this time amounts to a criminal offense.”
Correia declined to describe the specific accusations. The new reports have been referred to the State Police Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, which is leading the investigation. State Police Major Kenneth Moriarty did not respond to questions on Wednesday.
A 19-year-old woman who attended Barrington Christian Academy in the 2020-2021 school year was the first to come forward. She spoke to Barrington police on June 3, shortly after the state police announced Cassidy’s arrest, and described “inappropriate behavior,” Correia said.
Then, a 12-year-old girl and 15-year-old girl, both of whom are student-athletes at the school, spoke with Barrington police on June 8. A mother brought her 12-year-old daughter, who is also a student, to speak with police on June 9.
A 23-year-old woman contacted the Barrington police on June 17 about Cassidy. She said she encountered him at the Pawtucket YMCA when she was about 14 years old, and she also complained about “inappropriate behavior,” Correia said.
Kate Messier, the vice president of development at the Pawtucket YMCA, confirmed on Wednesday that Cassidy was employed there until 2018. She did not comment on his role at the YMCA or answer questions about whether the organization had received any complaints about Cassidy at the time.
“Child protection is foundational to how the YMCA of Pawtucket operates, and we maintain extensive safeguards that are reviewed and reinforced on an ongoing basis,” Messier said in the statement. “Those safeguards include thorough staff screening and background checks, mandatory child abuse prevention training, program environments structured to maintain supervision and eliminate unsupervised one-on-one situations, and clear procedures for reporting any concern.”
The 14-year-old girl whose allegations led the state police to arrest Cassidy said that she learned that he had allowed juveniles from unstable homes live in his house in Pawtucket while he was working at the YMCA, according to court documents. The girl also told investigators that Cassidy had housed foreign exchange students associated with Barrington Christian Academy.
Correia said that the private school has been “very cooperative” with the Barrington police. The head of school, Michael Skazinski, did not respond to questions from the Globe on Wednesday.
Cassidy’s lawyer, Melissa Larsen, declined comment on Wednesday.
The state police have searched Cassidy’s home in Pawtucket, his pickup truck, and his office at the school, and have seized numerous electronic devices, including iPads, tablets, and thumb drives, according to court records. The affidavits accompanying the search warrants detailed the allegations that the 14-year-old girl made against Cassidy.
He had been coaching her in different sports at the school, and their families became close. She told the state police that she grew to trust Cassidy and would spend time with him and his family at their home. Then, she said, he began telling her stories about how he was special — and so was she.
She said Cassidy told her he was working for a “secret section of the FBI.” She said he claimed that he had “special DNA,” so the FBI and state troopers had him assist in raids to save children from being sex trafficked. She said that Cassidy told her that there were “off-worlders” or aliens that posed as humans on earth, and some of those children being sex trafficked were actually aliens.
She said that Cassidy assigned various “challenges” or “missions” to make her comfortable in uncomfortable situations, according to the affidavits.
“She was also advised to learn to get comfortable with wearing less clothing and ultimately nudity because it would be required later on for ‘missions,’” the affidavits said. “Cassidy claimed that aliens did not believe in the ‘construct of clothes.’”
She said Cassidy emailed her from his personal Gmail account, calling himself “Casper,” the affidavits said. She said he also claimed that two other girls were using his email to talk to her about the “special” training, and she was told to email with a person named “Kevin” on another email address who would talk to her about her feelings, the affidavits said.
She said she was instructed to take explicit photographs of herself and send them to his private email. She came to realize that all of the personas were actually Cassidy.
On May 28, the girl received an email from Cassidy’s personal Gmail account offering her three “flirt options,” all of which involved her taking off her clothes in front of him. She believed she needed to follow through; she told police that Cassidy said “bad things” could happen to her if she failed.
That night, her parents discovered what was going on, and they contacted the Barrington police, who called in the state police.
The State Police are continuing to investigate and ask anyone with information about Cassidy or potential victims to contact the task force at 401-921-1170, or the Barrington Police Department at 401-437-3935.
Amanda Milkovits can be reached at amanda.milkovits@globe.com. Follow her @AmandaMilkovits.
Rhode Island
‘Condom Hut’ Movie Adds Another Big Name
Another famous face is joining the cast of “Rubber Hut” filming throughout Rhode Island.
As we previously reported, Grace Van Patten is starring in the feature film debut for director Hannah Gray Organschi about the infamous “condom hut” business from the early 90s.
The short-lived Fotomat kiosk turned drive-thru condom store garnered local notoriety as well as national attention in 1992 and is now the subject of a movie with several A-list stars attached.
READ MORE: Michael Imperioli, Emmy Rossum Join RI ‘Condom Hut’ Film
Scenes were filmed for several days at a custom-made “condom hut” on West Shore Road in Warwick. On Thursday, June 11, Beach Avenue was closed down to shoot a parade scene. Now, film crews have moved to Meshanticut Valley Parkway in Cranston for scenes along a residential street.
Who Was Behind the Original Condom Hut?
The home is believed to represent the residence of Emanuella DelVecchio, the former flight attendant who had the brilliant idea to open a condom kiosk in response to the AIDS epidemic.
Instead of support, however, DelVecchio received the condemnation of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence and was plagued with vandalism before shuttering her business within a year.
READ MORE: New Bedford’s Gone But Not Forgotten Closed-Down Bars
Who Has Joined the ‘Condom Hut’ Movie Cast So Far
Photos of parade scenes for the film show Michael Imperioli portraying a priest in the movie and now Deadline has reported that stage actor, Will Harrison, is attached to the project as DelVecchio’s husband. Other actors’ specific roles remain unknown.
Filming is expected to continue in Rhode Island until the end of June with a theatrical release likely in 2027.
See the Stars Who Own Homes in Rhode Island
There are plenty of celebrities who once called Rhode Island home, but how many still do? Here’s the list of stars who own homes across the Ocean State.
Gallery Credit: Nancy Hall
20 Stars Who Hail From Rhode Island
Rhode Island may be the smallest state in the nation, but it has been home to many celebrities. Though some have moved here, filmed here or attended school here, only a handful were actually born here. These are those celebrities.
Gallery Credit: Nancy Hall
All The Famous Faces That Have Been to Taylor Swift’s Rhode Island Home
Here are all the celebrities we know have made an appearance at Holiday House over the years.
Gallery Credit: Nancy Hall
Rhode Island
Two Rhode Island residents charged in $6.5 billion healthcare fraud crackdown
Two Rhode Island residents were charged after the Justice Department announced a $6.5 billion healthcare fraud crackdown.
The department said 455 defendants were charged, including 90 doctors and other licensed medical professionals, for their alleged participation in health care fraud and opioid abuse schemes.
Mareli Arias Batista, 57, of Providence, was charged with false representation of a social security number, aggravated identity theft, wire fraud, false statement in application for a passport, use of a false passport and bank fraud in connection with a scheme to obtain benefits using the identity of another person.
Officials said Batista fraudulently obtained approximately $28,236.42 in Rhode Island Medicaid benefits.
Balni Pimental Lara, 59, of Providence, was also charged with false representation of a social security number, aggravated identity theft, wire fraud, and health care fraud, in connection with a scheme to obtain benefits using the identity of another person.
According to officials, Lara fraudulently obtained approximately $24,018.86 in Rhode Island Medicaid benefits.
Bhamin Chhatrapati, 40, of Stoughton, Mass., was charged with conspiracy to commit health care fraud in connection with over $5.1 million fraudulently billed to Medicare, of which over $2.6 million was paid.
Approximately 1,079 medical providers were suspended and billing privileges were revoked for 1,403 providers.
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