Rhode Island
RIer on top of Mt. Washington, Jamestown water, Cobblestones gone: Top stories for the week
The Westerly Bulldog and Dawg Pound Show Support for their Team
The Westerly Bulldog and the Dawg Pound shows their pre-game support for their team before kick-off.
Here are some of The Providence Journal’s most-read stories for the week of Nov. 19, supported by your subscriptions.
- Have you ever wondered why when you go to grocery stores in other states you can often pick up beer or wine on a single trip? In 46 states, grocery and convenience stores can sell beer, wine or all kinds of alcohol. But Rhode Island is one of the four – joined by Alaska, Maryland and Delaware – where people have to go to a package store. Why is this the case? We explored it in a special edition What and Why RI.
- If you’re into birds and you’ve heard about a new effort to rename species now named after historical figures, the good news is that you’ll have to learn new names for only two birds that breed in Rhode Island. The American Ornithological Society announced the renaming project earlier this month in an effort to be more inclusive of people of different races and backgrounds who are interested in birds. Here’s what it means for birds both breeding in the state and those that pass through.
- A Rhode Island high school hockey powerhouse is about to embark for a new playing home. On Tuesday afternoon, Mount St. Charles announced on its website that it will be leaving the RIIL and heading to the NEPSAC beginning in the 2024-25 academic year. Take a look at why the change is being made now.
- The fall high school sports season came to a close with Thanksgiving games, find all the scores and game stories at providencejournal.com/sports.
Here are the week’s top reads on providencejournal.com:
University of Rhode Island graduate Jay Broccolo’s office may offer the best view in New England, but it comes at a high price – temperatures that can plummet to 47 degrees below zero and winds that can gust over 200 mph.
Broccolo, who grew up in Westerly, where the highest point is 249 feet, works as the director of weather operations at the Mount Washington Observatory, on the highest mountain peak in the Northeast, at 6,288 feet.
“We all like to call it the best office view in New England,” Broccolo, 36, said in a recent interview.
To make observations and tend to the equipment, which can ice over quickly, weather observers venture out of their shelter once an hour and spend five or 10 minutes gathering information on factors such as temperature, wind speed, barometric pressure, visibility and precipitation type.
Sometimes the wind is so strong “it will suck the air out of your lungs,” he said, and will “definitely blow you over and continue to blow you over.”
The owner of a Jamestown house whose well ran dry several years ago will now be able to tie into the municipal water supply here, after town leaders – facing multiple lawsuits – agreed to reverse course and allow her to connect to a main located 200 yards south of her house.
The plight of Christina DiMeglio was first detailed in a Hummel Report investigation that published in The Providence Sunday Journal in September 2022. Town leaders acknowledged in 2021 that DiMeglio was in “dire straits” ‒ but denied her request to tie into Jamestown’s water district, saying they were concerned about having enough water to supply future development.
That resulted in DiMeglio’s lawyer, Joelle C. Rocha, pursuing multiple legal avenues including: an appeal to the Rhode Island Supreme Court, a lawsuit in federal court, an appeal to the state’s Water Resources Board and legal action against the town’s tax assessor.
Journal columnist Mark Patinkin’s mom, June Patinkin recently passed away. He shared his remembrance of the family matriarch in a column appearing on Thanksgiving.
From Mark’s words: When I think back to my mom, who at 95 just left us, it’s always a summer day, on our childhood block, and I will tell you what I remember about her most. She was … there. There in our red brick home when we came inside for lunch after doing the things boys do, and at day’s end, there again.
And I was sure, as children always are about their mothers, that of course she forever would be.
Yet I am writing this now because her sun finally set. Our sun, really.
It should be said that it was June Patinkin’s time. And yet, like so many elderly moms and grandmothers, even in infirmity she remained our center, the figure we gathered around. Indeed, in taking her leave, she called us all home, her message clear, to hold on to each other as tightly as she had done with us.
Patrick Crowley first made headlines in Rhode Island by chasing then-Republican U.S. Sen. Lincoln Chafee around in a George W. Bush mask and flight suit.
Later, he exposed then-Gov. Don Carcieri’s failure to pay $12,000 in property taxes on his luxury condominium in Florida.
FWIW: he also had a Donald Duck costume he wore around the State House when lame duck Carcieri went to war against the state’s public employee unions. (His theory: “We can call him all the names we want. We can lawsuit this and grievance that. Let’s just make fun of the guy … That’s how you beat a bully.”)
With George Nee easing back as the president of the state’s AFL-CIO, Crowley – the current secretary-treasurer of the 80,000-member amalgam of labor unions – will be taking the helm for the remainder of Nee’s term when Nee sets a retirement date. His four-year term runs through December 2025.
The intersection of Westminster and Dorrance Street lost a little bit of its charm recently, as bumpy cobblestones were replaced by asphalt paving.
According to Mayor Brett Smiley’s administration, the intersection had to be dug up for necessary utility work, and the city made the decision not to replace the center cobblestone medallion afterward.
The city determined that the cobblestones “were damaged too significantly by the frequent bus traffic on Dorrance Street,” and needed to be removed “to improve traffic safety,” spokesman Josh Estrella said. (RIPTA buses typically travel down Dorrance Street after leaving Kennedy Plaza for destinations in the West Bay.)
The decorative brick crosswalks surrounding the medallion were also ripped up as part of the utility work, but Estrella said that those will be replaced in the spring.
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.
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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.
Rhode Island
Travis Kelce’s watch found in Rhode Island after Kansas City mansion was burglarized of $20K in cash: report
Travis Kelce’s stolen watch was reportedly found in Providence, RI, this week after the NFL star’s mansion in Leawood, Kan., was burglarized last month.
Sources familiar with the investigation told ABC News Friday that a watch taken from Kelce’s residence — and not previously disclosed to the public — was recovered.
Details have yet to be revealed on what type of timepiece was stolen or how much it was worth.
Authorities previously shared that the unidentified criminals stole $20,000 cash from Kelce’s home. They did not specify whether any other items were taken at the time.
Sources told ABC News that they think the athlete’s home was specifically targeted — and thoroughly surveyed — before the Oct. 7 burglary.
Just two days before Kelce’s pad was broken into, burglars also raided the home of his Kansas City Chiefs teammate Patrick Mahomes.
Authorities have theorized the burglars may have targeted the athletes as their public football schedule reveals when they will be away from their residences.
“There is a concern about what happens if the athlete or his/her family members are present,” a security source told the outlet.
The insider shared that the burglars have gained access to Kelce and Mahomes’ houses by “posing as delivery men, maintenance workers or joggers to learn about residences, neighborhoods and security systems.”
Captain Jason Ahring from the Leawood, Kan., Police Department told Page Six that they are not releasing any information pertaining to an open investigation and maintained they will not be commenting.
Meanwhile, a Providence Police Department Public Information Officer told Page Six that they do “not have any record or involvement related to this incident.”
Kelce, 35, has yet to address the crime, but Mahomes, 29, previously expressed how “disappointing” the violation was.
“I can’t get into too many details because the investigation is still ongoing, but it’s obviously something you don’t want to happen to anybody — and obviously yourself,” Mahomes said during a press conference earlier this month.
Meanwhile, a source told Page Six that Kelce’s girlfriend, Taylor Swift, was “thankful that no one was hurt and that neither of them were home during the robberies.”
Kelce’s home was broken into around 7:30 p.m. local time on Oct. 7 – just 15 minutes before his team kicked off against the New Orleans Saints.
Meanwhile, Mahomes’ mansion was burglarized while he was celebrating Kelce’s 35th birthday on Oct. 5.
Rhode Island
Are you owed back wages? Here’s where you can find out.
U.S. Labor Department is encouraging Rhode Islanders to use their online tool to find out if they’re among those owed more than $2.5M in back wages
PROVIDENCE – More than 1,500 Rhode Island workers are owed a total of $2.5 million in back wage, and just in time for Christmas, the U.S. Department of Labor wants to put it in their hands.
The money, $2,576,342, was recovered from employers in Labor Department investigations.
The Labor Department encourages anyone who believes they may be owed back wages or knows someone who may be owed wages use their Workers Owed Wages online tool. Anyone who uses the WOW search tool can simply input their current or former employer’s name to learn if the division is holding wages on their behalf.
“The laws enforced by the Wage and Hour Division provide the foundation for U.S. workers’ rights, including the rights to be paid legally required wages and other important protections,” the Labor Department said in announcing the effort.
The tool is available in both English and Spanish.
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