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Rhode Island School of Design’s (RISD) board of trustees announced last week that it has voted against a proposal to divest from Israel presented by the school’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter (RSJP). The board’s rejection comes in the wake of the group’s three-day occupation of a campus building last May, when it called for the nonprofit college and museum to divest as part of a larger movement across academic institutions in the United States.
Five RSJP representatives met with the board’s Investment Subcommittee and administrators including President Crystal Williams in October, a spokesperson for RSJP told Hyperallergic. During the meeting, the representatives proposed the institution sever its financial ties to companies linked to Israel’s war on Gaza and other anti-Palestinian violence and discrimination, according to a divestment proposal document shared with Hyperallergic.
As of June 2023, RISD’s endowment stood at $396 million. A spokesperson for the school declined to comment on the institution’s endowment or disclose what percentage is invested in companies linked to Israeli interests.
“The reason why we create art and seek to understand it in a thoughtful and complex way is because we collectively believe that it holds a real bearing on global society,” RSJP’s divestment proposal reads.
“If we as an institution do not put into practice our ability to effect influence as global changemakers, we render hollow RISD’s fundamental value of the power of art and design and the power of an art institution to do good in the world,” the proposal continues.
In a statement emailed to RISD community members and posted on the art school’s website, the board of trustees said RSJP’s proposal did not meet the criteria outlined in its Statement on Divestment. Those criteria, adopted in May 2015, stipulate that while its duty is to “achieve the maximum possible return” on investment, “in rare circumstances … the Board of Trustees may also in its sole discretion take political and social considerations into account.”
For divestment to occur under these guidelines, a proposal would need to “implicat[e] an issue of importance to RISD as an institution and to its constituents as a whole, and not solely to a segment of its constituents,” and “would be likely to have a meaningful impact on the resolution of that issue.”
According to the RSJP’s divestment proposal, 800 of the school’s over 2,000 students signed in favor of their demands, including disclosure and divestment, in a petition in fall 2023. The group also called for a third-party student referendum vote. Some universities, including Columbia University and Pomona College, rejected disclosure and divestment demands from students, despite referendum votes indicating that most of them were in favor of such actions.

In May, the SJP chapter of the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) and Faculty for Justice in Palestine were successful in pushing the school to commit to a full disclosure of its investments. The school also vowed to create a student-led Ethical Investment Workgroup that would work with the board of trustees to divest from entities connected to human rights abuses.
During the occupation of the second floor of RISD’s Providence Washington (Prov-Wash) building last May, which RSJP renamed “Fathi Ghaben Place” in honor of the Gazan artist who died after Israeli authorities blocked his travel for medical treatment, students held art-making sessions and teach-ins. The action was disbanded following expulsion warnings.
RISD’s board of trustees has divested before: Nearly a decade ago, the board unanimously voted to withdraw its investments in fossil fuel industries, two years after, students from the group Divest RISD staged a sit-in, the Portland Press Herald reported.
RSJP’s divestment proposal also calls for the institution to back out of any investment in the “exploitation of natural resources,” referencing the Hague Regulations of 1907, which limits an “occupying state” from using the resources of the “occupied population,” according to Amnesty International. The student organization additionally called for RISD’s divestment from weapons manufacturers, military contractors, and companies tied to Israeli settlements in the Occupied West Bank.
In an Instagram post this week, RSJP alleged the administration did not engage with them in good faith, claiming that “several trustees” did not attend on short notice.
“As long as the administration refuses to divest, they are participants in the violence,” RSJP told Hyperallergic. “We will not rest until our demands are met.”
CUMBERLAND, R.I. (WPRI) — Rhode Island State Police are investigating a crash that happened on I-295 North in Cumberland Tuesday night.
The crash happened in the right lane near Exit 22 just before 9 p.m.
It’s unclear exactly what caused the crash or if anyone was injured.
12 News has reached out to Rhode Island State Police for more information but has not heard back.
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Scandals shake up Capitol Hill ahead of midterm elections
Congressional reporter Zachary Schermele dives into the latest scandals on Capitol Hill and how they’re shaking up politics ahead of midterms.
Rhode Island’s Democrat and Republican primary elections will officially be held on Wednesday, Sept. 9 this year, instead of the usual Tuesday election day.
Lawmakers passed the bill at the urging of state and local officials, who were concerned that an election day falling the day after Labor Day would not give them enough time to set up polls for the arrival of voters.
Gov. Dan McKee signed the bill on April 20, officially moving the primary day for 2026.
Which races will be on the ballot? The Republican and Democrat nominees for a swath of local offices – most notably governor but also lieutenant governor and attorney general.
At a hearing on the bill earlier this year, Randy Rossi, executive director of the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns explained the “significant logistical and financial challenges” municipalities otherwise would have faced having an election the day after Labor Day.
“Beyond cost, municipalities face serious logistical challenges accessing and setting up more than 430 polling locations on a major federal holiday, a process that often requires many hours and access to facilities that are typically closed and unstaffed on Labor Day,” he said.
“Compounding these challenges, many municipalities conduct early voting in city or town halls that must also serve as primary day polling locations,” Rossi noted.
Without changes to current law, he said, “municipalities would be required to conduct early voting and primary day polling simultaneously, often in the same limited space and with the same poll workers, requiring additional staffing and facilities.”
By the time this legislative hearing took place in January, other states facing similar issues, including Massachusetts, had already adjusted their primary dates, “and Rhode Island itself has demonstrated that alternative scheduling can be successful, as occurred during the statewide Wednesday primary in 2018,” Rossi said.
EAST GREENWICH, R.I. (WPRI) — If you’re looking to satisfy you’re sweet tooth, look no further than Division Street.
Nothing Bundt Cakes opened its first Rhode Island bakery in East Greenwich earlier this month. The new bakery is situated within East Greenwich Square, which is also home to the Ocean State’s first Crumbl.
The bakery is known for its handcrafted specialty Bundt cakes, as well as smaller “Bundtlets,” and bite-sized “Bundtinis,” that come in a variety of flavors.
“There’s a strong sense of local pride, creativity, and community here that aligns perfectly with our values,” said Jake Williams, who owns the East Greenwich bakery. “We were drawn to the area’s vibrant small business culture and the opportunity to contribute something special.”
Nothing Bundt Cakes is also expected to open another bakery at Chapel View in Cranston later this year.
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