Rhode Island
‘Assault weapon’ ban; Foster DPW lawsuit; celebrity wedding cakes: Top stories this week
RI National Guard’s 42nd Leapfest international competition
Paratrooper from 19 nations compete in the RI National Guard’s 42nd Leapfest competition in Exeter.
Here are some of The Providence Journal’s most-read stories for the week of Aug. 4, supported by your subscriptions.
Here are the week’s top reads on providencejournal.com:
Just endorsing a ban on military-style rifles hasn’t been enough to make one a reality, so Gov. Dan McKee on Tuesday said he plans to propose such a ban in his state budget for next year.
Speaking to reporters about Democratic vice presidential nominee and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz after a State House news conference, McKee said he wants to show that an “assault weapon” ban is a priority and raise the level of attention it gets from lawmakers.
“We’re all in on the … gun issues to make sure that I’m putting it in front of the General Assembly next year, that I get an assault weapon ban. I’m going to roll it right into my budget next year,” McKee said
Politics: McKee says he will include an ‘assault weapon’ ban in next year’s budget
FOSTER – Four employees have filed suit against the Town of Foster, claiming that Department of Public Works Director Gordon E. Rogers has been verbally abusive and that the Town Council has done nothing to address his alleged bullying of them at Town Hall.
Rogers is also a Republican state senator representing Foster, Coventry, Scituate and West Greenwich. First elected in 2018, he is the Senate minority whip.
The lawsuit, filed Monday in Superior Court, paints the picture of a hostile work environment where employees were targeted and/or harassed by Rogers. It also says the employees complained to Human Resources and Town Council members, but that nothing was done.
In an interview with The Hummel Report, Rogers denied the allegations in the lawsuit, calling them “hogwash” and “politics at its highest level,” orchestrated by a faction of people in town trying to have him removed as DPW director.
Courts: Lawsuit accuses Foster DPW director, state senator, of abusive, bullying behavior
In the late 1960s, Sister Ann McKenna taught school in Belize. For two of those years, one of her students was Nellie Cayetano, who years later would become the mother of gymnast Simone Biles, one of the greatest Olympians of all time.
Journal columnist Mark Patinkin talks with Sister Ann, now retired and living in Warwick, about her memories of young Nellie, who grew up in poverty. She speaks to how Nellie’s faith and grit amid her own early challenges likely helped her raise Simone, whose early childhood was spent in foster care.
What happened when Sister Ann reached out to Nellie a year ago to congratulate her on her daughter’s success? Read the column to get the full story.
Mark Patinkin: Watching from RI, a retired nun recalls the small part she played in Simone Biles’ life
In the town of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, chef Mark Soliday of Confectionery Designs is making wedding cakes that are gracing the pages of national magazines.
When Mariah Kennedy-Cuomo married Tellef Lundevall on July 20 in Hyannisport, their dramatic eight-layer wedding cake was inspired by one served at Eunice Kennedy’s wedding to Sargent Shriver back in 1953. Mariah’s cake was made by Confectionery Designs, said the spread in People.
Olivia Culpo married Christian McCaffrey in Watch Hill in June, and there’s the photo in Vogue of their six-tier wedding cake with alternating tiers of vanilla sponge and red velvet cake made by Confectionery Designs.
Non-disclosure agreements prevent Soliday from discussing those cakes, but this 38-year veteran baker can dish about wedding cakes all day long in the most entertaining of ways. Food editor Gail Ciampa has the delicious details.
Food: Meet the baker behind Olivia Culpo and Mariah Kennedy-Cuomo wedding cakes
Cranston is losing two of its food institutions.
Wein-O-Rama has closed its doors at 1009 Oaklawn Ave. The diner had a 62-year run, opening in 1962.
Solitro’s Bakery has announced Aug. 18 is its last day as the family sells the building at 1594 Cranston St. The bakery opened in the 1950s in Knightsville.
Journal food editor Gail Ciampa talks with the owners about why they decided to retire, and whether the bakery might have a second act.
Food and dining: Two longtime Cranston food institutions are closing. What’s behind the decisions
To read the full stories, go to providencejournal.com. Find out how to subscribe here.
Rhode Island
Rhode Island Pride marks 50th year as early marcher recalls Providence’s first parade
(WJAR) — While Rhode Island prepares for its 50th Pride celebration, many are looking back on the history of the event and remembering the people who launched the movement.
“Being in the first parade in 1976, it was the bicentennial year,” said Billy Mencer Ackerly. “It was absolutely very scary and we didn’t know what was going to happen.”
Mencer Ackerly was among a group of between 70 and 100 people who marched in Providence’s first pride parade in June of 1976, at the time of the nation’s bicentennial celebration.
“People on the sidelines were still looking at us like we just came off of a spaceship,” Mencer Ackerly said. “It was almost like they didn’t believe that we would have enough courage to be able to say who we were.”
Billy Mencer Ackerly was among a group of between 70 and 100 people who marched in Providence’s first pride parade in June of 1976, at the time of the nation’s bicentennial celebration. (WJAR)
For some, it was a chance to come out and be seen. For others, like Billy’s family members who took part in the parade, it was an opportunity to show their support.
“My mother was in a car with two other mothers, and it was driven by a gay guy. And on each side of the car it said, ‘I’m proud to say my child is gay,’” Mencer Ackerly said. “It was the best thing my mother ever did for me.”
But the parade itself was almost shut down before it began.
“They were denied the parade by the police chief who said there would be no parade in providence over his dead body,” retired judge and former civil rights attorney Stephen Fortunato said.
First, the bicentennial commission rejected a proposal to include the pride parade in the bicentennial celebrations.
“They can be gay. I have no qualms about their activity or their private habits. We denied endorsement primarily because their activities do not sufficiently relate to the bicentennial,” said Patrick Conley in 1976. He was the Chairman of the Bicentennial Commission at the time.
Stephen Fortunato, who was a civil rights attorney at the time, took on the case.
“This group was ostracized, hated, discriminated against,” Fortunato said. “These civil rights and civil liberties cases depend on the courage of individual people or groups of people like the gay community at the time.”
Billy Mencer Ackerly’s mother, among other mothers, were in a car that read ‘I’m proud to say my child is gay’ during the first parade.
They took the case to federal court and won, paving the way for not just one parade, but five decades of love, acceptance and visibility.
“This movement is based on love,” said Rodney Davis, the current president of Rhode Island Pride. “I want people to come and experience themselves. Their whole selves, who they are.”
This year, organizers are honoring those who came before as well as the tens of thousands of people who show up every year to continue to carry the torch.
“Our theme for this year is ‘We are the people,’ because without everyone America isn’t America,” Davis said.
NBC 10 asked Davis what he hopes to see in the future.
“I want to get to a point where we don’t have to fight to exist,” Davis said. “It’s gotten better, but it’s not there yet.”
Since 1976, Mencer Ackerly has attended Rhode Island’s Pride celebration nearly every year. This coming weekend, he’s once again looking forward to participating.
“When I’m in the parade, I will also be thinking of all those ’76ers that have passed away over the years and about their bravery and their courage,” Mencer Ackerly said. “And I just believe they’ll be clapping up in heaven and celebrating for all of us.”
This year’s PrideFest kicks off Saturday morning at 10:00 a.m. at District Park in Providence.
Rhode Island
Tomaquag Museum preserves Indigenous history and culture in Rhode Island
(WJAR) — Tucked away in the woods of Exeter, a small museum is preserving stories that long predate Rhode Island’s founding, and even the arrival of European settlers in New England.
The Tomaquag Museum is Rhode Island’s only Indigenous-led museum and one of the oldest tribal museums in the United States.
For more than six decades, it has worked to preserve and share the history, culture and resilience of Native peoples across Southern New England.
A historic image from the Tomaquag Museum. (Tomaquag Museum)
“Tomaquag Museum is very unique in that it was founded by women,” said Executive Director Loren Spears.
The museum traces its roots back to 1958, when anthropologist Eva Butler and Narragansett Wampanoag elder Princess Red Wing set out to preserve Indigenous history through an Indigenous lens.
The collection originally began in Tomaquag Valley in Hopkinton, which inspired the museum’s name.
A member of the Narragansett Native American Tribe, Spears said the museum’s mission is to ensure Native voices remain part of the historical narrative.
A painting at the Tomaquag Museum that depicts a harsh scene. (WJAR)
“There is no U.S. history without First Peoples’ history,” she said.
The Narragansett Tribe, based primarily in Charlestown, has a history in the region stretching back more than 30,000 years.
Before English colonization, the Narragansetts were among the most influential Indigenous nations in Southern New England.
A display on historic documents at the Tomaquag Museum. (WJAR)
“We’ve had this interrelationship and this history the whole time and have contributed to the creation and formation of this nation in different kinds of ways,” Spears said.
Today, the museum houses thousands of cultural belongings and hundreds of thousands of archival materials documenting Indigenous communities throughout the region.
Among the artifacts on display is an American flag that flew in Afghanistan in honor of the Narragansett Tribe.
“People are often like, ‘Why is there a flag here?’” Spears said. “It’s here because this exact flag flew in Afghanistan in honor of the Narragansett Tribe.”
A U.S. dollar bill signed by Lynn Malerba, the first female chief of the Mohegan Tribe in modern times and the 45th Treasurer of the United States. (WJAR)
The museum also showcases a U.S. dollar bill signed by Lynn Malerba, the first female chief of the Mohegan Tribe in modern times and the 45th Treasurer of the United States.
“You can’t get any more American than a dollar bill,” Spears said. “To be able to see that an Indigenous woman is the one that signed that as the treasurer, we think is pretty remarkable.”
Visitors can explore the museum’s exhibit, “Revolution to Reclamation: Freedom Through Indigenous Sovereignty,” which includes hands-on activities designed for families and children.
Guests can create corn husk dolls, play traditional games, and learn about Native cultures through interactive displays.
Tomaquag Museum Executive Director Loren Spears and NBC 10’s Abbey Buttacavoli at the museum. (WJAR)
In 2016, the museum received the National Medal for Museum and Library Service, the nation’s highest honor for museums and libraries.
The museum is also preparing for a major new chapter. Within the next few years, Tomaquag plans to relocate to a new facility on the campus of the University of Rhode Island, with hopes of breaking ground by the end of 2026.
“There’s an importance to having Indigenous voice in the room and being part of the story,” Spears said.
Rhode Island
Cumberland Man Charged With DUI After Crash in Lincoln: Cops
Ethan McDermott, 22, was arrested shortly after midnight Friday as a “result of an investigation into a motor vehicle crash on Route 146,” the Rhode Island State Police said in a media release.
McDermott was also charged with reckless driving and other offenses against public safety and refusal to submit to a chemical test, according to the release.
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