Rhode Island
‘I don’t think it’s a stunt:’ Providence may cut all winter and spring school sports to close a budget hole – The Boston Globe
That is unless a bunch of irresponsible, reckless, careless, I’d-love-to-fire-all-of-them-and-then-rehire-them-just-to-fire-them-again adults don’t mess it all up by cutting winter and spring sports for all Providence schools to close a budget hole.
That’s this school year, by the way. Not some time in the future.
Yes, that’s the threat that’s on the table from the Rhode Island Department of Education and Providence Superintendent Javier Montañez, who are asking Mayor Brett Smiley and the City Council to kick in nearly $11 million to help the district avoid catastrophic cash flow issues.
We’re talking can’t-make-payroll problems, not can’t-buy-new-uniform problems, district officials say.
The district projects that cutting winter and spring sports would save $1.7 million. Other cuts on the table include taking away bus passes for high school students who live less than two miles from their school, furloughing administrators, and mid-year layoffs for non-union employees.
But it’s sports that families and students are especially alarmed about right now, especially since thousands of athletes are scheduled to register and try out for winter sports in the next couple of weeks. They could all be left out in the cold.
“I don’t think it’s a stunt,” Classical High School athletic director Robert Palazzo told me on Monday. “I think it’s real.”
Palazzo said he’s hopeful that cooler heads will prevail, but he acknowledges that he’s still haunted by a decision 20 years ago to cut cross country, tennis, and a couple other niche sports to plug budget holes. The sports were eventually restored, but he said it was agonizing to have to pick which sports to cut.
“I swore to myself I would never do that again,” Palazzo said. “So I think it’s all or nothing.”
In a lot of circles around the city right now, the belief is that the district is bluffing. I’ll admit that even I find it difficult to believe that the state would allow the capital city to cut varsity athletics at a time when people like Governor Dan McKee are emphasizing attendance over all else. Besides, would a guy who refers to himself as the “coach” of Rhode Island really allow sports to disappear?
John Kavanagh, who coaches the Classical basketball team, said he’s still preparing as though his team will get to play a full season. His best player, Eliezer Delbrey, is a junior who is likely to surpass 1,000 career points at some point this season, and Kavanagh believes he has a shot to play Division I basketball in college. But this season is crucial for Delbrey because it will likely lead to an opportunity to play for an elite prep school during his senior year.
“If you take away his junior year, what does he do?” Kavanagh asked. “How do we take it away from these kids who are on track?”
Kavanagh said he could see bus trips getting eliminated, or junior varsity and freshman teams seeing cuts, but he doesn’t believe there will be no high school sports in Providence this winter.
“I think it was more of a scare tactic,” Kavanagh said.
It’s embarrassing that coaches, families, and most importantly, student athletes have all been put in the position of having to hope this is all just a game of chicken between the district and the Smiley administration.
This stems from a long-running legal dispute over how much money the city should be contributing to the district, which has been controlled by the state since 2019. As part of the takeover five years ago, the city was required to increase its annual contribution to the school system at the same rate that the state increases aid to all public schools in Rhode Island, but it has repeatedly reneged on that obligation.
In the current school year, Providence is scheduled to kick in $135 million for its schools, but the state and district believes Smiley owes them $164.8 million. The two sides are back in court Tuesday morning because Education Commissioner Angélica Infante-Green has asked state Treasurer James Diossa to withhold $8.5 million in car tax reimbursement payments from the state to the city. Smiley’s office wants a judge to prevent the car tax money from being withheld.
Smiley has said he agrees that Providence needs to provide more money to its school system — the state increased its funding for city schools by $54 million between 2013 and 2019, and the city added just $3.6 million during that same period — but he has been unwilling to say how much he believes the city should be contributing.
The mayor said he’d kick in an extra $1 million to address the current budget shortfall if the state agreed to contribute $3 million and the district allows an outside audit of its finances.
“We have no confidence in their budgeting skills,” Smiley told reporters earlier this month. “The financial gap has moved over time. We don’t exactly know what the gap is.”
Smiley has a reasonable gripe with the district — since the takeover, his office, the City Council, and the school board have no oversight or approval authority over the school budget — but he’s misreading the situation.
No family in Providence cares about who is to blame for this financial mess. And no one wants to wait for a judge to settle it, either. They just want a promise that something as important as sports won’t disappear overnight.
Maybe it’s time for Governor McKee to stop being a spectator and do what a good coach would do: Come up with a game plan.
Dan McGowan can be reached at dan.mcgowan@globe.com. Follow him @danmcgowan.
Rhode Island
Send-off ceremony held for Special Olympics Rhode Island athletes heading to USA Games
WARWICK, R.I. (WJAR) — The local community hosted a send-off celebration for Special Olympics Rhode Island athletes on Friday.
Twenty-four athletes, along with partners, coaches, and medical personnel, are traveling to Minneapolis for the 2026 Special Olympics USA Games.
The local community hosted a send-off celebration for Special Olympics Rhode Island athletes on Friday. (WJAR)
Textron hosted the team in a private jet for travel to the games, officials said.
“The USA Games represent months of dedication, hard work, and perseverance for our athletes,” President and CEO of Special Olympics Rhode Island Ed Pacheco said. “Our athletes, Unified partners, and coaches carry with them the hopes and aspirations of achieving gold while representing the very fabric of our great state. This journey would not be possible without Textron, and we are incredibly grateful for their support in creating a once-in-a-lifetime experience for Team Rhode Island as they travel to compete on the national stage.”
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Officials said the 2026 Special Olympics USA Games will be held from Saturday through next Friday.
Rhode Island
Rhode Island Pride turns 50 this weekend: ‘Queer joy is resistance’ – The Boston Globe
“They were truly the unrelenting voices of their time, and made sure that this was something that happened because they knew it was important,” Jess Motyl-Szary, director of Rhode Island Pride, said in an interview on Thursday.
The 1976 pride march came after local Bicentennial Committee organizers “refused meeting space for the group of community members hosting the Congress of People with Gay Concerns,” according to research by Matthew Lawrence and published on the Providence Public Library’s website.
“Calling themselves Toward a Gayer Bicentennial Committee, the group sued the official Bicentennial Committee and won the right to assemble at the Old State House, where about 30 people met in June 1976 to discuss civil rights concerns,” according to Lawrence.
But the contingent also had to fight to join the Bicentennial Parade after they were initially denied the right to do so by officials who pointed to the state’s anti-sodomy law at the time, according to Motyl-Szary.
The 76ers “knew that being a part of an existing parade meant there was a little bit of safety there, because it was an existing infrastructure,” Motyl-Szary said.
“But it also meant that there was a much higher visibility for them to be able to be out there, be proud, and show other people who might not have been out that there is a safe space for them,” Motyl-Szary said.
With the assistance of the American Civil Liberties Union, they won the right to march, she said.
“It wasn’t safe to be out in the ’70s,” Motyl-Szary said. “Incredibly great people marched. Some had to march with paper bags on their heads because there were no legal protections to protect their jobs, their home, their families, but [it was] still incredibly brave to go out there, create visibility, and create this organization.
“Being here 50 years later, and being a part of their legacy has been so incredible,” she said.
A lot has changed for LGBTQIA+ Rhode Islanders in the decades since, Motyl-Szary said.
“But the closeness of it still feels relevant because we’re seeing these continued attacks in our community, and a very real resurgence of attacks on the LGBTQIA+ community, especially our trans brothers, sisters, and siblings,” Motyl-Szary said.

Since returning to office last year, the Trump Administration has taken aim at transgender rights across the country, especially after President Donald Trump signed an executive order recognizing two sexes, male and female. Among other actions, Trump has often sought to tie adherence to the order with federal funding requirements, and the administration has also attempted to gather private medical records from hospitals that provided gender-affirming care to transgender children and teens.
Reflecting on what pride means to her right now, Motyl-Szary said pride festivities are new to at least somebody every year.
“Someone is coming and getting to feel this embrace, this huge hug of their community for the first time every year,” she said. “And in a time like this, when our community is being told that we are hated by the rest of our community, by the rest of our country, when we are told we should hate ourselves, coming out and celebrating ourselves, loving ourselves, loving each other is so incredibly important. Our community creates the space that we need.”
Motyl-Szary said she also believes that “queer joy is resistance.”
“There is a real need for us to have a space and a celebration of who we are and to remind ourselves that we are worthy of love and that we are worthy of being a part of a community that gathers, celebrates, and fights for ourselves and our rights,” she said.
Rhode Island Pride kicks off on Friday night with the “Golden Anniversary Eve” party from 6 to 8 p.m. at the 195 District Park in Providence, Motyl-Szary said.
Festivities continue at the park on Saturday with yoga at 10 a.m. and PrideFest entertainment beginning at 11 a.m., alongside approximately 260 vendors, she said. A rally at 2 p.m. will focus on “what’s happening, get people motivated to be involved in [the] community to speak up and be an activist in whatever way is right for their path of activism,” Motyl-Szary said.
The Illuminated Night Parade steps off at 7:30 p.m. at Washington and Empire streets before moving through downtown Providence, according to organizers.
Christopher Gavin can be reached at christopher.gavin@globe.com.
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.
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