Rhode Island
Turnout cracks nearly 10% in a R.I. primary with very few contested races • Rhode Island Current
With very few contested races on the ballot, Rhode Island’s state and local primary races didn’t drive voters to the polls in droves.
Just before polls closed at 8 p.m. there were 77,376 votes cast, representing just over 9.9% of the more than 781,000 total registered voters.
Results are preliminary and unofficial, with final counts including remaining mail ballots and those from overseas and military voters expected by Sept. 18, according to the Rhode Island Board of Elections.
By comparison, turnout was 14.5% during the 2020 primary and 16.9% in 2022 — though the latter also saw a close gubernatorial race and contested primaries for Rhode Island’s 2nd Congressional District.
Tuesday’s low turnout was expected, said Providence College Associate Professor of Political Science Adam Myers.
“In this state we’re so used to not having competitive races that folks just kind of dive into the habit of not voting in primaries,” he told Rhode Island Current. “There’s very little going on — I don’t blame people for not turning out today.”
House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi, a Warwick Democrat, offered a more optimistic take on the quiet polling places in his district.
“I think a lot of people voted early or voted by mail,” Shekarchi said in an interview Tuesday afternoon.
Shekarchi is among the 57 sitting legislators (out of 113 seats) without a primary or general election challenge this year. Only 18 legislative races featured primary contests, all Democratic.
Overshadowing the primary races for many voters — and candidates — was the presidential debate.
Pam Leary, one of three Democrats vying for the open seat in Senate District 25 in Johnston, said in an interview Monday that she planned to host family and friends to her home, not to watch election results, but to catch the debate.
Several political watch parties, including one organized by Shekarchi at Lemongrass restaurant in Warwick, promised double features of election results and the debate. Shekarchi provided reporters with election results while holding a stick of beef teriyaki.
“To me, it means people are satisfied with the status quo,” he said in an interview at his watch party.
Before enjoying the festivities, Shekarchi first had to fit in an appearance at the Warwick Zoning Board of Review on behalf of one his law practice clients.
Myers, meanwhile, said the debate should have had the opposite effect.
“One would hope that would spur people to vote,” he said.
Incumbent Democratic U.S. Reps. Gabe Amo and Seth Magaziner ran unopposed in their respective primaries, as did their Republican challengers — Allen Waters and Steven Corvi.
There was slightly more action in the races for the U.S. Senate, with state Rep. Patricia Morgan of West Warwick besting former Warwick City Administrator Raymond McKay in the Republican primary. U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse easily fended off a challenge from Michael Costa, a former Republican who briefly ran for governor in 2022, in the Democratic race.
“But that was kind of in the bag for Whitehouse,” Myers said. “There was nothing really on that ballot that was going to drive people to the polls.”
The exception: Cranston, which had a very heated Republican mayoral primary, in addition to a pair of a trio of contested state legislative primary races. Unaffiliated voters were forced to choose between casting ballots in the Republican mayoral primary or participating in one or more Democratic legislative matchups, such as House District 14, or 16, and Senate District 28.
Rhode Island’s second largest city led the state in turnout with 10,455 ballots cast by the time polls closed, representing 18.7% of the city’s 56,000 active, registered voters.
Mail ballots rule in Providence
Providence led the mail ballot front, with 2,201 ballots received by Tuesday night, according to data from the Secretary of State’s office.
The prevalence of mail ballots in the capital city was the key strategy for Democratic Rep. Enrique Sanchez in his reelection bid for House District 9 against challengers Anastacia Williams and Santos Javier.
“We were able to flip a lot of voters,” Sanchez told Rhode Island Current while campaigning on Cranston Street in Providence at 10:30 a.m. “I’d go to people’s houses before their ballots were sent out and told people about me and they told me they’d change their votes.”
But the strategy wasn’t without controversy, as complaints by all three candidates accused opponents of alleged mail ballot tampering. Complaints lodged with state and local agencies, including Providence Police and the Rhode Island Board of Elections, remained under investigation as of Tuesday.
More than 11,000 mail ballots statewide were submitted to the Board of Elections — which had processed roughly 90% of those votes as of 3 p.m., said Robert Quinn, who oversees mail ballots and voter registration.
Low turnout didn’t make tabulation easier, though, said Quinn.
“We still have to go through the same steps all the way through,” he said. “It’s still the same carousel here — still the same long two to three weeks.”
The general election will be held on Nov. 5.
Senior Reporter Nancy Lavin contributed to this story.
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Rhode Island
RI police cite crime‑solving wins in plate-reading camera expansion
The story behind RI State Trooper’s distinctive boots
Retired RI state troopers Lt. Kenneth Bowman and Lt. James Beck chat about the history of the RI state police boots at the RI State Police Museum.
The Rhode Island State Police are in the middle of a months-long push to launch a network of 39 license-plate reading camera devices like the ones that helped investigators identify a mass shooter in December.
The project is working to finalize locations for the devices in 22 Rhode Island cities and towns, according to the trooper leading the project, state police Detective Capt. Marc A. Alboum.
While locations for the devices are not finalized, the project anticipates placement of plate-reading cameras on highways and key arteries across the state.
Alboum said most of the local officials have given an initial approval and he awaits feedback from Portsmouth and Bristol.
The second part of the process involves gathering input from police in those cities and towns, which could lead to adjustments to the proposed locations.
Reading license plates in fast-moving traffic
In part, the plans call for the plate-reading devices in certain cities and towns where traffic moves between Rhode Island and other states.
On that front, Alboum said, the current proposal envisions:
- Two devices aimed at traffic in both directions on Interstate 195 in East Providence, which borders Seekonk
- Two devices aimed at Interstate 295 traffic in Cumberland, which borders North Attleboro
- Two devices aimed at Interstate 95 traffic in Pawtucket, which borders Attleboro
- A device aimed at Interstate 95 further to the south in Richmond
The plans also anticipate two camera devices in Cranston, one in East Greenwich, one in Richmond, two in Johnston, where traffic moves between Interstate 295 and Route 5.
State police are pursuing four devices in Providence, including on Route 10, Route 146 and Interstate 95, and at least one device in a more rural location on Route 165 in Exeter.
State police outreach to cities and towns
Alboum said his outreach to town and city officials for approval is in response to guidance from the company that was chosen to supply the license plate-reading system.
That company, Flock Safety, already provides license plate-reading capabilities to many Rhode Island cities and towns.
Alboum said he has initial approvals from 20 cities and towns and as of Jan. 9.
Have any towns denied the request to install Flock cameras?
The Warren Town Council rejected the proposal. Opponents of the systems, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island, have argued that the technology supports excessive surveillance by police and infringes on privacy.
Noting that private surveillance cameras are everywhere already, proponents of license plate reading devices say the systems provide a valuable public safety service that checks on the plates of passing motor vehicles and notifies police when one of those vehicles has been flagged.
For example, a car might be associated with a person wanted on a warrant or someone who is a missing person. Or the vehicle itself might be stolen. In those situations, the resulting Flock “hit” can alert police stop the car and investigate if they move quickly enough.
The plate data that does not trigger a flag resides in the system for 30 days, and access to that data is sufficiently controlled and regulated, supporters say. Only investigators with special clearances can run searches.
How data from plate reading system helped police find mass shooter
After the mass shooting at Brown University in December, when investigators became interested in a Nissan with a Florida plate, they ran searches within Providence’s license plate reading system.
Eventually, they identified a blue Nissan with a Florida plate that a Flock device detected near Whole Foods in Providence.
Information on the car’s plate then helped investigators determine that someone who fit the profile of the suspected mass shooter, Claudio Neves Valente, had rented the vehicle, authorities say.
The vehicle itself had not triggered a Flock hit when it passed through. Investigators had to search for it within the Flock system after they became interested in that type of car.
Plate data that flows into the cameras proposed by state police will be “permanently deleted” after 30 days, according to police.
Are Flock cameras used to give speeding tickets?
The devices do not measure speed, Alboum said.
The plate information and other data, which can include a particular sticker or a roof rack, is protected through encryption before it is transmitted to servers, he said, adding that the devices do not have any public internet protocol (IP) address that would facilitate remote access.
The devices are “aligned with the security protocols established by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Cybersecurity as well as the Cloud Security Alliance’s (CAIQ) framework,” he said.
Alboum said that the project is grant-funded and the state has negotiated a three-year contract with Flock for $597,000.
He estimated that state police are at least three months away from operating the system, emphasizing that the process has gone more slowly than he expected.
The Cranston police, under the leadership of Col. Michael J. Winquist, were the first Rhode Island police agency to test the devices through a pilot program. Cranston, Pawtucket and Woonsocket launched license-plate reading networks in 2021.
The systems have factored in the prompt capture of suspects accused of involvement in violent crimes.
“We’ve had nothing but great success in not only preventing crime but solving crimes after they occur in our city,” said Winquist who was expected to make an appearance before the Bristol Town Council.
Alboum cites a recent situation where state police tracked down a vehicle associated with an armed robbery.
“It’s a priceless tool,” he says. “It really is.”
Rhode Island
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Rhode Island
Where to go for the Patriots game? Try these 12 RI sports bars
WATCH: Head coach Mike Vrabel speaks after Patriots beat Chargers
The Patriots beat LA 16-3 on Sunday, Jan. 11 and advance to face the winner of Monday night’s Pittsburgh Steelers vs. Houston Texans game.
Let’s face it, any restaurant or bar with a seat or stool facing a TV can be the sports bar you need when a big game is on. Combine a cold beverage, pizza, wings or pub food with like-minded fellow fans and you have the happening atmosphere for a football playoff game.
New England Patriots fans have had a drought that left us hungry and thirsty for January football. It’s time to enjoy the ride again when the Pats face the Houston Texans on Sunday.
That means it’s time to dust off the list of our favorite sports bars and to update it with some new spots that have opened, including breweries, since the last Super Bowl win in 2019.
You’ll find good vibes at these 12 spots around Rhode Island.
Go Pats!
Track 15 food hall, 1 Union Station in downtown Providence, serves up big screens and food from seven restaurants for game day.
Sports & Leisure, 219 Main St., East Greenwich, is a fun sports bar with elevated cuisine from their from-scratch kitchen, ranging from pizza to Cubano sandwiches.
Narragansett Brewery, 271 Tockwotton St., Providence, has all the local beer, bites and TVs for a fun time. Bonus: water views.
Newport Craft, 293 JT Connell Highway, Newport, has big screens in their taproom, local beer and Wally’s Wieners food.
J.T. Commons, 1037 Aquidneck Ave., Middletown, has a square bar with plenty of TVs for viewing, pizza (including gluten-free) and wings for a fun game day hang.
Varsity Luxury Sports Bar, 289 Atwells Ave., Providence, offers game day food and drink and promises an event for every game day.
At Bally’s Lincoln, Wicked Good Bar & Grill, 100 Twin River Road, Lincoln, is a great place to watch a game, from the comfortable seating at the bar to the excellent sound system.
Snooker’s, 53 Ashburton St., Providence, has all the TVs, space, plus food and drink for game days.
The GPub, 61 Orange St., Providence, (401) 632-4782, often offers chances to win swag during games while you dine on their gastropub menu.
Moonshine Alley, 52 Pine St., Providence, features a 15-foot screen so you won’t miss a play while enjoying the authentic Nashville vibe.
The Rally Sports Bar & Grille, 1800 Post Road, Warwick, always has the game on and the food and drink ready.
Tickets Restaurant, 15 Aquidneck Ave., Middletown, pledges to be the best place to watch sports on Aquidneck Island.
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