Rhode Island
12 News/RWU Poll: Housing costs worry 91% of RI primary voters
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WPRI) – There’s little disagreement amongst Democratic main voters that the price of housing is an enormous concern in Rhode Island, an unique 12 Information/Roger Williams College ballot launched Tuesday reveals.
The survey of 400 doubtless Rhode Island Democratic main voters reveals 91% of respondents stated the price of shopping for or renting a house in Rhode Island is a significant issue, with 60% calling it “very severe.” By comparability, solely about 7% stated the issue was not too severe or not severe in any respect.
“That quantity may be very excessive – greater than I personally anticipated,” stated 12 Information political analyst Joe Fleming, who carried out the ballot. “You possibly can see the costs of housing going up in every single place. You see the rental costs going up on a regular basis, so folks suppose it’s a really severe challenge.”
The cellphone and landline interview ballot was carried out between Could 9 and Could 12 by Fleming & Associates of Cumberland, R.I. The survey has an general margin of sampling error of plus or minus roughly 4.9 share factors. Fleming has been conducting polls for WPRI 12 since 1984.
(Story continues under graphic.)
The difficulty of housing as been on the forefront of public discussions for months in Rhode Island. It has emerged as a high precedence amongst leaders on the State Home, as renters and patrons report having hassle discovering reasonably priced locations to stay throughout revenue brackets.
Restricted housing provide paired with rising prices has spurred sturdy and infrequently costly competitors within the shopping for market, driving up costs much more.
“In the event you personal a house you get richer day by day,” stated Richard Godfrey, govt director of the Cummings Institute for Actual Property at Roger Williams College. “In the event you’re renting otherwise you’re attempting to purchase a house, that barrier to purchasing a house will get additional and additional away.”
On the condo facet, a Goal 12 assessment of knowledge from a half-dozen companies that observe rents discovered all confirmed double-digit will increase within the Windfall metropolitan space. The actual property web site Zillow reveals hire for the standard condo within the area was practically $1,800 in March, up from just below $1,400 three years in the past — a 24% enhance since earlier than the pandemic.
For patrons, the median worth of a single-family house in Rhode Island hit $385,000 in April, up 15% from a 12 months earlier, in accordance with the R.I. Affiliation of Realtors.
Godfrey stated the Federal Reserve’s transfer to lift rates of interest as a part of the battle towards inflation has solely made it tougher for patrons.
“In the event you’re going to purchase a house tomorrow it’ll in all probability price you about twice as a lot per 30 days because it did a 12 months in the past,” he stated. “That’s big.”
The 12 Information/RWU ballot reveals housing prices are a priority amongst Democratic main voters throughout age teams, gender and political affiliation. Girls have been barely extra involved than males and self-identified Democrats narrowly edged out self-identified independents. However hardly ever did fewer than 90% of respondents throughout all teams discover the problem of concern.
The ballot excludes Republican and unbiased voters who stated they deliberate to vote within the GOP main — in addition to voters skipping the Sept. 13 main altogether — so the numbers may look considerably completely different if the query was posed to the whole inhabitants.
Nonetheless, Fleming stated it’s clearly an enormous challenge on the minds of many citizens in the present day. The ballot individually reveals 36% of main voters say the one most necessary challenge for them on this 12 months’s election for governor is the price of residing, which incorporates rising house and condo costs.
“It’s an enormous, severe challenge,” Fleming stated. “Democrats are at all times involved about housing and I believe that’s why the quantity is so excessive.”
When 12 Information and RWU requested an analogous query of all voters 4 years in the past, in 2018, 78% of self-identified Democrats known as the price of housing a really or considerably significant issue on the time. Whereas the outcomes of the 2 surveys should not straight comparable, they counsel frustration has solely grown.
Godfrey stated Rhode Island’s small dimension means state and native leaders must be inventive about the place to construct further housing. For example, he steered on the lookout for alternatives to construct flats in business areas like Route 2 in Warwick or the Quonset Enterprise Park in North Kingstown.
“If we have been to permit two- and three-story building with flats above, the parking could possibly be used for each residents and customers, folks may stroll to buy … if we labored well and stated, ‘OK, let’s unlock the personal sector to handle this challenge,’ we may clear up a number of the issues with out damaging any extra rural or environmentally delicate lands,” he stated.
Lawmakers are at present contemplating a proposal by Gov. Dan McKee to allocate $250 million of Rhode Island’s federal American Rescue Plan Act funding to housing. However Godfrey warned that would simply be a Band-Assist because of the scale of the issue.
“That $250 million — that’s 1 / 4 of a billion {dollars} — will solely present about 1,000 houses,” he stated. “That’s lower than 5% of the necessity.”
“That’s typically authorities’s response,” Godfrey added. “We have to cease throwing cash on the downside and begin altering the best way we do enterprise.”
Eli Sherman (esherman@wpri.com) is a Goal 12 investigative reporter for 12 Information. Join with him on Twitter and on Fb.
Kim Kalunian (kkalunian@wpri.com) is a reporter and anchor for 12 Information. Join along with her on Twitter and on Fb.
Ted Nesi, Tim White and Amanda Pitts contributed to this report.
Rhode Island
Rhode Island FC falls 3-0 to Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC in USL Championship final – What's Up Newp
Rhode Island FC’s historic inaugural season came to an end in the USL Championship Final on Saturday when it fell 3-0 to Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC at Weidner Field. Becoming the first Eastern Conference team in league history to advance to the final match in its first season, the Ocean State club will return to Rhode Island proud after making the farthest run by an expansion side in eight years.
Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC had a golden chance to take the lead less than a minute into the match when Yosuke Hanya was on the receiving end of a central pass as he cut behind the Rhode Island FC defense. Sprinting into a one-on-one opportunity with Koke Vegas, the midfielder dragged his shot just wide of the right post.
Holding just 30 percent of possession throughout the first 15 minutes, RIFC got its first real chance of the match when it won a dangerous free kick at the corner of the 18-yard-box in the 14th minute. JJ Williams stepped up to take the free kick, and curled it narrowly over the bar as the match stayed scoreless.
Colorado Springs eventually broke the deadlock in the 22nd minute when Hanya broke free on the right wing, sending a cross into the six-yard box for Juan Tejada. Making a run into the open space, Tejada side-footed the ball into the back of the net from close range to give the hosts a 1-0 lead.
In the 42nd minute, Colorado Springs doubled its lead with a powerful strike from the top of the box. It happened when Jairo Henriquez tore down the left flank, cut inside and took a shot that was blocked by RIFC. Unfortunately for the Ocean State club, the rebound fell kindly to Haneriquez, who made no mistake on his second effort and picked out the top-left corner to make it 2-0.
The Switchbacks nearly took complete control with a third goal in first-half stoppage time when Quenzi Huerman unleashed yet another shot from distance, but Vegas punched the effort over the bar and took care of the resulting corner to keep the match 2-0 at the break.
Nine minutes into the second half, RIFC nearly cut the deficit in half when Clay Holstad connected on a corner kick from the top of the box. Instead, Colorado Springs blocked the shot and quickly broke out on the counter-attack, where Roaldo Damus finished with a low, one-on-one effort to make it 3-0.
RIFC came within inches of getting one back in the 64th minute when Frank Nodarse headed a corner towards the bottom-right corner, but Colorado Springs goalkeeper Christian Herrera produced a sharp diving save to deny the Ocean State club. Minutes later, Jack Panayotou forced another save out of Herrera, and Morris Duggan couldn’t keep the close-range rebound on frame.
The opportunities were as close as RIFC could get to finding the back of the net in the match as the USL Championship Final ended 3-0.
After the match, the visitors walked over to thank the over 400 Rhode Island FC faithful who made the trip out west. The fanbase’s incredible support during the record-breaking inaugural season fueled the team to a memorable finish. The Ocean club will now look forward to its launch of season two from The Stadium at Tidewater Landing in downtown Pawtucket.
GOAL SCORING RUNDOWN
COS – Juan Tejada (Youke Hanya), 22nd minute: Tejada connects with Hanya’s right-wing cross from inside the six-yard box. COS 1, RI 0
COS – Jairo Henriquez, 42nd minute: Henriquez picks out the top-left corner with a powerful strike from the top of the 18-yard box. COS 2, RI 0
COS – Ronaldo Damus (Matt Real), 53rd minute: Damus finishes a one-on-one counter-attack with a low finish into the bottom corner. COS 3, RI 0
ADDITIONAL NOTES
- Saturday’s match was the first-ever USL Championship Final to air nationally on network television (CBS).
- The opening goal for Colorado Springs in the 22nd minute marked the first time RIFC trailed during the 2024 USL Championship Playoffs.
- The 2-0 halftime deficit marked the first time RIFC has trailed by multiple goals at halftime since April 26.
- RIFC will return to the Ocean State after making the furthest playoff run by any Eastern Conference expansion team in league history, and becoming the first expansion club in eight years to advance to the final.
MAN OF THE MATCH: Clay Holstad
Match stats and information available here.
Rhode Island
An appreciation of Joe Biden; RI’s underpaid doctors | Letters
Thank you, Joe Biden
Trump has learned that if he tells lies often enough and loudly enough, they will be believed. He keeps repeating that Joe Biden has been a terrible president.
In fact, President Biden has accomplished much. He tackled the COVID crisis by helping hospitals get supplies, getting COVID vaccines distributed, making free testing kits available, sending checks to all Americans, and helping people return to work and students return to school.
He revitalized the U.S. participation in NATO and supported Ukraine vs. Putin.
He recognized climate change and rejoined the rest of the world in battling its effects.
He appointed the first Black female Supreme Court justice.
He initiated projects to improve the nation’s crumbling infrastructure.
He oversaw the U.S. economy’s rebound from the pandemic.
The list goes on.
But, best of all, he stopped the daily flow of lies that had been streaming from the White House.
Cindy Kaplan, West Warwick
Better compensation for doctors
What is happening to the health-care system in America? The quality of care seems to be diminishing. One of the reasons is the abysmally poor salaries we pay to our medical residents and fellows, doctors who have already spent years in medical school and are now honing their skills in hospitals throughout the country.
The problem is especially acute in Rhode Island where these young doctors are paid an average of less than $70,000 per year at our hospitals (“Resident doctors make union bid,” News, Nov. 21).
How can these doctors’ patients and hospital management expect them to excel while trying to survive on such meager wages for four to seven years of residency and fellowship, especially with the high cost of housing in Rhode Island and with their average quarter-million-dollar student loan debts?
The only thing that keeps at bay the hounds who are constantly calling for the nationalization of our health-care system is that our country provides the best medical care in the world. Nationalization would destroy our system as it has done in the UK and Canada.
Poor pay and overly arduous working conditions foisted upon residents and fellows in the U.S. will lead to fewer quality doctors entering the profession. Nationalization will eventually follow.
I have opposed unions in the past, but when we pay our young doctors less than what we pay electrical and plumbing apprentices, something is terribly wrong.
If we want our citizens to continue receiving the world’s best medical care, we better start properly compensating residents and fellows and allowing them a bit of time off. Otherwise, they will enter other professions and the quality of medical care in America will deteriorate to that provided by nationalized health systems.
Lonnie Barham, Warwick
Saving RI’s forests
Many environmentalists are concerned about the upcoming administration being filled with individuals who do not take climate change seriously. While, unfortunately, these next four years will probably take us backwards in the fight against climate change, we can still protect the environment here in Rhode Island.
Currently, Rhode Island is the only state in New England with no protected forests on state-owned land. Rare and endangered species are threatened due to their habitats being destroyed by DEM and solar developers through forest clear-cutting.
By joining the Save Rhode Island’s Forests Campaign, you can help in the effort to get legislation passed to create laws to finally protect our state forests and endangered species. In Rhode Island, you can save the environment.
Nathan Cornell, Warwick
The writer is president of the Rhode Island Old Growth Tree Society.
Rhode Island
Police recover watch belonging to Travis Kelce in Rhode Island following break-in of his mansion: report
A watch belonging to Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce was reportedly found over 1,000 miles away from his Kansas mansion that was broken into last month.
The homes of Kelce and teammate Patrick Mahomes were burglarized last month shortly before one of their games — Kelce’s house is in Leawood, Kansas, while Mahomes’ residence is in nearby Belton, Missouri.
The watch was recovered in Providence, Rhode Island, where Kelce’s girlfriend, pop star Taylor Swift, also owns a home.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
NFL players were cautioned by the league to be on high alert after the homes were broken into last month in a wave of burglaries reportedly tied to international organized crime. It was eventually revealed that $20,000 in cash was taken from Kelce’s home.
In a memo obtained by The Associated Press, the NFL issued a security alert to teams and the NFL Players Association, warning that professional athletes in different sports have become “increasingly targeted for burglaries by organized and skilled groups.”
Law enforcement officials say the suspects conduct extensive surveillance on their targets’ homes and have even posed as groundskeepers or joggers. Some have even attempted home deliveries.
49ERS’ BROCK PURDY, NICK BOSA RULED OUT FOR POTENTIAL SEASON-DEFINING GAME VS. PACKERS
The memo urged players to take special precautions, including installing home security systems. They were also encouraged not to post live updates of their comings and goings on social media or showcase their expensive items online.
“Obviously, it’s frustrating, disappointing. I can’t get into too many of the details because the investigation is still ongoing, but, obviously, it’s something that you don’t want to happen to really anybody, but obviously yourself,” Mahomes said last week.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
The Chiefs suffered their first loss of the season on Sunday, falling to the Buffalo Bills after winning their first nine games.
Fox News’ Paulina Dedaj contributed to this report.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
-
Business7 days ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
Science4 days ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Politics6 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Technology5 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Lifestyle6 days ago
Some in the U.S. farm industry are alarmed by Trump's embrace of RFK Jr. and tariffs
-
World6 days ago
Protesters in Slovakia rally against Robert Fico’s populist government
-
News6 days ago
They disagree about a lot, but these singers figure out how to stay in harmony
-
News6 days ago
Gaetz-gate: Navigating the President-elect's most baffling Cabinet pick