Rhode Island
Endangered stone walls; Matunuck Oyster Bar; clam shack winner: Top stories this week
See the 2025 Gaspee Days parade march through Pawtuxet Village
This video shows the Gaspee Days parade as it went through the village.
Here are some of The Providence Journal’s most-read stories for the week of June 30, supported by your subscriptions.
- The Ocean State is naturally proud of the 21 lighthouses that dot its rocky shores, from its first – the 1749 Beavertail Lighthouse in Jamestown – to the sparkplug-style Plum Beach Lighthouse that graces one of Rhode Island’s specialty license plates. Here’s our guide to all 21, and how you can visit them – including one where you can stay overnight.
- Film fans have been keeping tabs on Rhode Island’s latest brush with Hollywood: the shoots that have been popping up for M. Night Shyamalan’s supernatural romantic thriller “Remain,” starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Phoebe Dynevor and Ashley Walters. Here’s a rundown of where it’s filmed so far, and what we know about the plot.
- Terry Francona’s return to Fenway Park this week has been a wistful reminder of a better Red Sox era, says Journal sportswriter Bill Koch, who looks back at the heady time of curse-busting World Series wins and a fearless front office and asks: Is there hope to regain that winning culture? For that and more sports news, go to providencejournal.com/sports.
Here are the week’s top reads on providencejournal.com:
New England once had 240,000 miles of stone walls, enough to wrap around the Earth 10 times. But these iconic structures, woven into the region’s history, environment and identity, are endangered, according to stone walls expert Robert Thorson, who spoke about them at a special program in Little Compton on July 2.
Thorson, an Earth Science professor at the University of Connecticut, said that stone walls reveal geology, provide habitat for plants and animals, and even have military significance, as New England Colonists used them for cover when fighting the British in the Revolutionary War. Yet they lack legal protections from those who would “strip mine” them for profit.
Read on to find out how Thorson is spreading the word as a “stump evangelist for stone wall conservation” and advising communities on what they can do to protect these threatened landmarks.
Local news: One man’s quiet war to save New England’s oldest landmarks
SOUTH KINGSTOWN – With pomp and politicians, Matunuck Oyster Bar reopened under a tent on June 30, across from the scene of a devastating May fire on Succotash Road.
The new dining space, offers breezes from the water, as it is set on the channel between Point Judith and Potter Pond, in front of owner Perry Raso’s new shellfish hatchery. With a wood floor, tent lighting and service stations, it feels well thought out and more like a restaurant than one would imagine, says Journal food editor Gail Ciampa.
Gail was there for the opening and heard Raso talk publicly for the first time about the May 20 fire that destroyed the restaurant, and his plans for the rebuild, which he hopes will be ready to reopen by May 20, 2026.
Dining: Matunuck Oyster Bar raises a tent as it rises from ashes. Go inside the interim restaurant
The restaurant industry is unlike any other when it comes to navigating razor-thin profit margins, bouncing back from a volatile economy and finding ways to keep people fed.
Restaurant patronage is still below pre-pandemic levels, and restaurants have a new battle to fight as well – inflation.
Since the late 2000s, the cost of dining out has risen faster than supermarket prices. In a recent survey of more than 500 U.S. restaurants, more than half of all respondents ranked food inflation as their top challenge.
We talk to the owners of several Rhode Island restaurants to find out how they’re adapting to keep customers fed and keep the lights on.
Local news: Caught between inflation, tariffs and egg prices, how do RI’s restaurants survive?
What are Rhode Islanders’ favorite places to fly to?
The federal Bureau of Transportation Statistics keeps track of such things, so we checked to see what the 10 favorite nonstop destinations in the United States for flights originating from Rhode Island T.F. Green International Airport (excluding charters).
Read the full story to check out our list of favorite destinations, including a couple that might surprise you.
Travel: Is your favorite place among the Top 10 destinations for flights from T.F. Green?
Voters have spoken.
They overwhelmingly chose Roy Boy’s Clam Shack as the best clam shack in Rhode Island. The vote was 84.92% for Roy Boy’s over Champlin’s Seafood Deck, which received 16.02% of the vote in the final round.
In all, the North Kingstown restaurant bested 15 other clam shacks in The Journal’s bracket voting, which began June 11. Along the way, Roy Boy’s defeated some of Rhode Island’s best clam shacks, chosen for their locations, menus and specialties.
It was a real roller-coaster ride for Roy Boy’s upset win. Read on for more on this relative newcomer, which opened only three years ago.
Seafood: Roy Boy’s Clam Shack wins bragging rights as RI’s best clam shack. How they got there
To read the full stories, go to providencejournal.com. Find out how to subscribe here.
Rhode Island
R.I. leading multi-state lawsuit against Trump administration housing policy – The Boston Globe
Rhode Island and other states had recently won a ruling against HUD’s attempt to overhaul a federal homelessness grant program in fiscal year 2025.
US District Court Judge Mary S. McElroy found that HUD acted arbitrarily and capriciously in imposing illegal conditions on billions of dollars in funding for the Continuum of Care program, through which HUD distributes billions of dollars to state, local, and nonprofit agencies to support housing and services for people facing homelessness.
For more than two decades, HUD had followed a “Housing First” model, which prioritizes rapid placement in permanent housing without requiring people to first meet conditions such as sobriety or a minimum income threshold.
However, on June 1, the Trump administration moved forward with new rules for fiscal year 2026 that seek to re-implement a cap on permanent housing. The new Notices of Funding Opportunity will set aside $1.3 billion for transitional housing and supportive service-only grants — which the coalition of states say will have the effect of capping permanent housing projects at about 68 percent of the funds.
HUD Secretary Scott Turner announced the new terms on June 1, saying the old model didn’t work.
“The ‘housing first’ experiment failed Americans by warehousing the vulnerable without results. This ideology promised to end homelessness. Instead, billions of taxpayer dollars were spent while homelessness increased to record levels,” Turner said in a statement. “Housing alone will not solve a crisis driven by addiction and mental illness. Under President Trump’s leadership, HUD is making necessary reforms to put recovery first.”
HUD said that the new Notice of Funding Opportunity for $4.04 billion through the Continuum of Care homelessness assistance program would support organizations that facilitate treatment and recovery and “prohibit funding the widespread use of illicit drugs and distribution of paraphernalia.”
The lawsuit alleges that the new conditions will mean a large number of permanent housing projects funded by the Continuum of Care program will lose funding, which will lead to people being evicted, placing further strain on state and local governments.
“Instead of investing in programs that help people stay safe and housed, the Trump Administration has embraced policies that risk trapping people in poverty and punishing them for being poor,” the 44-page lawsuit alleges.
The shift threatens housing for at least 97,000 residents of CoC-funded permanent housing across the country according to the National Alliance to End Homelessness.
The states argue that HUD’s actions violate the Administrative Procedure Act for failing to proceed with notice-and-comment rulemaking, and for being arbitrary and capricious. They ask the court to declare that the challenged conditions are illegal and to block HUD from implementing them.
Along with Neronha, attorneys general from all New England states except for New Hampshire have joined the lawsuit. The coalition also includes attorneys general from Arizona, California, Colorado, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia, as well as the governors of Kentucky and Pennsylvania.
Amanda Milkovits can be reached at amanda.milkovits@globe.com. Follow her @AmandaMilkovits.
Rhode Island
Throwback: USS Rhode Island commissioned in Newport
(WJAR) — Thirty-two years ago was the commissioning of a Navy submarine named after the Ocean State.
Maria Stephanos was on board the USS Rhode Island on July 9, 1994.
Rhode Island was the Navy’s 15th Trident class ballistic submarine.
It was commissioned in Newport and was the first to be christened in its namesake state.
Rhode Island
Handshake Initiative instills confidence, motivation in students
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WJAR) — They come from all walks of life, including many professionals in the community, taking time out of their busy days to welcome students to school with enthusiasm and handshakes.
“We learn a lot of new handshakes, too,” Kobi Dennis said. “High-fives. Pounds with an explosion. We get a little bit of everything.”
It’s the Handshake Initiative, the brainchild of now Central Falls Police Chief Anthony Roberson.
Everybody can use some encouragement, and students in Rhode Island get that the minute they head toward the school building.
Initially, the students and parents didn’t know what to think.
“I was confused because I thought it was going to be a normal day,” said one student.
“Their parents were getting out of their cars trying to see what’s going on,” Reservoir Avenue School Principal Cynthia Torres said.
But now, they crave it.
“It makes me feel motivated,” another student said.
Dennis adds in an etiquette component.
“Teaching the kids how to shake hands, look one another in the eyes with a firm grip — girl or guy — firm grip and say ‘hello’ and introduce yourself, that’s part of the initiative as well,” Dennis said.
Providence school superintendent Dr. Javier Montañez said it sends a strong message.
“We hear you, we see you, and we’re here for you,” Montañez said.
Torres strategically uses them on standardized test days.
“They say, ‘I’m going to do really good today,’” she said.
“It makes me feel encouraged to do better in school,” a student said.
They’ve connected with thousands of students across Rhode Island.
“It’s about shaking hands and building relationships, but it’s also about letting young people know that there are professionals in the community cheering for them every single day,” Dennis said.
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