Rhode Island
This RI Zoo Just Solved Your Mother’s Day Plans
Mother’s Day is just days away, and one local zoo is offering all moms some free fun.
Free Mother’s Day Admission Details
Roger Williams Park Zoo has announced free admission for all moms, grandmothers, and great-grandmothers on Sunday, May 10, when accompanied by a child.
Which means if you still haven’t made plans with your mom, why not a trip to the zoo?
There’s plenty happening at Roger Williams Park Zoo these days—new animals like the penguins and capybara plus the immersive bug exhibit—and the weather is expected to be pleasant and mild.
READ MORE: Giant Bug Exhibit Now Open at Roger Williams Park Zoo
The annual offering is a favorite way for people to spend the holiday, but it’s not the only upcoming event at Providence’s popular zoo.
Upcoming Events at Roger Williams Park Zoo
On Sunday, May 17, the zoo is hosting a STEM LEGO workshop hosted by Christine “Tacos” Blandino from FOX’s LEGO Masters Season 3. The event, for LEGO fans aged 6+, takes place during several 90-minute windows throughout the day and helps builders grow their LEGO skills.
READ MORE: Remember When Massive Brick-Made Animal Sculptures Filled Capron Park Zoo?
Then Thursday, May 21 sees the 21+ crowd take over the zoo with the return of Whiskey & More For Wildlife from 5:30–7:30 p.m. This annual event offers ticket holders five curated tastings, a Wee Glencairn tasting glass, appetizers, soft drinks, and animal encounters along with access to an exclusive silent auction featuring rare spirits and unique experiences. Proceeds benefit bison care and conservation efforts.
Sounds like May is going to be a can’t-miss month at Roger Williams Park Zoo.
20 Things To See at Roger Williams Park (Other Than the Zoo)
There are over 427 acres of beautiful landscaping, historical buildings and family friendly spaces at Roger Williams Park in Providence. Gifted to the city in 1872 by the last descendant of Roger Williams, Betsey Williams, the park has become primarily known for its amazing zoo. But throughout this historic district listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, there are plenty of other stunning things to see.
Gallery Credit: Nancy Hall
Explore Massive Insect Exhibit at Roger Williams Park Zoo
Roger Williams Park Zoo is bringing larger-than-life insects to Providence with a new Bug’s World experience opening this April.
Get a sneak peak at these insane insects before they open to the public.
Gallery Credit: Nancy Hall
Baby Red Pandas Born At Roger Williams Park Zoo In Providence
Gallery Credit: Michaela Johnson
Rhode Island
Legislation to cut red tape can make solar more affordable in RI | Opinion
Here’s how to submit a letter to the editor to the Providence Journal
Community opinions matter to us and we make sure there’s a space to hear what your neighbors are thinking. Here’s how to submit your own.
Journal Staff
A Rhode Island homeowner who decides to put solar on their roof this spring can end up waiting weeks for the installer to receive a permit on a system that already meets every applicable code. The hardware and the installer are ready to go. The paperwork isn’t.
Those delays are not free. They add thousands of dollars to the cost of a typical installation, a cost that gets passed straight to the homeowner. With energy bills climbing, this is the kind of friction Rhode Island can’t afford and should not accept.
The Solar Cost Reduction Act, introduced to the General Assembly this session by Rep. Jennifer Boylan and Sen. Bridget Valverde, is a practical reform that updates how Rhode Island permits residential solar. It doesn’t change what gets built or weaken any safety standards. It fixes a process that can be slow, inconsistent and unnecessarily expensive.
The solution is straightforward. For routine, code-compliant systems, the state can provide automated tools to check compliance and issue permits quickly. We can set clear timelines for inspections so projects don’t sit idle. And we can make requirements transparent and consistent across municipalities so everyone knows what to expect.
The proof that this works is already in. Projects permitted through SolarAPP+, the automated platform developed by the U.S. Department of Energy, are 37% less likely to failinspection than traditionally permitted projects, and they get installed and inspected 12 days faster.
More than 300 jurisdictions across 17 states are already using automated platforms. And this is not just a blue-state idea. Texas and Florida have both passed legislation universalizing access to instant permitting. Massachusetts and Connecticut are advancing similar bills. There’s no reason Rhode Island should be the place where rooftop solar costs more simply because the paperwork takes longer.
This is also a rare opportunity to make progress without new spending. The bill has no impact on the state budget and no cost to ratepayers. Simply streamlining the process will reduce costs for consumers, save time for local building departments, and help small businesses and nonprofits lower energy bills by going solar for less.
That combination of benefits is why the bill has drawn such broad support, including from the Greater Newport Chamber of Commerce, the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns, the Acadia Center, Climate Action Rhode Island, and others. Business, municipal and environmental voices do not often line up behind the same policy unless it is practical, balanced and worth doing.
At the Ocean State Climate Alliance, we focus on climate solutions informed by the people doing the work to advance practical steps that lower energy costs, support economic growth, and actually get implemented.
Rhode Island doesn’t need to wait for federal funding or weaken its climate goals to make progress. We can move forward by improving the systems we control.
The Solar Cost Reduction Act is a smart place to start.
Michael Kadish is co-founder and executive director of Ocean State Climate Alliance.
Rhode Island
Rhode Island stadium takes unique approach in targeting women’s sports events
One weekend this month, Centreville Bank Stadium in Rhode Island took center stage to make history with the Women’s Lacrosse League kicking off its first season of full-field play.
A week later, the soccer stadium on the banks of the Seekonk River welcomed Boston Legacy FC for the first in a seven-game stint in Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
The back-to-back women’s sports weekends represent an intentional strategy for the year-old venue, one that is creating space for women’s games and events while serving as home to the USL’s Rhode Island FC. Stadium management built it that way from the start, welcoming Women’s Elite Rugby in last May the day after the stadium opened.
“We’ve established ourselves as the place to be,” Paul Byrne, general manager of Centreville Bank Stadium, told me. “We still have some work to do, but we also established ourselves as a stadium that can host really big events.”
The venue’s early run offers a lesson to the market — those big events are women’s sports events.
Boston Legacy FC kicked off its run of games in front of 9,141 fans Saturday.
“One of the things that fans love about football soccer is the intimacy and the intensity of the experience, and you can get that at Centerville Bank Stadium,” Legacy CRO Amina Bulman told me last week.
Paul Rabil, co-founder and president of the WLL and Premier Lacrosse League, said they drew about 7,000 in attendance for five total games (four men’s and one women’s) there earlier this month, with the bulk of that during the women’s game May 16.
It served as a launch point of sorts for the league, which began play with a championship series last year in the sixes format that will be included in LA28. The WLL’s kickoff at Centreville Bank Stadium serves as the first in a 10-city tour this season.
“Rhode Island’s new venue ownership group was very cooperative and very excited about the future of the PLL and the WLL,” Rabil told me.
New England teamwork
While the nation’s smallest state doesn’t have a pro women’s sports team, Rabil said youth clubs in Massachusetts pushed for Rhode Island’s inclusion as a tour stop.
“This was a great opportunity for us to learn about the other side of New England,” he said.
That regional appeal certainly helped Legacy FC, which will play at Centreville Bank Stadium while the FIFA Men’s World Cup takes over its temporary home in Gillette Stadium.
Bulman said having a purpose-built soccer stadium that’s accessible via public transit in Boston made it an obvious fit for the club.
“In many ways, Centerville Bank Stadium is a much closer model for White Stadium, which will be our forever home,” she said.
Gillette Stadium has filled in as the team works with the city on Boston’s White Stadium, which is being renovated as part of a public-private partnership. While the NWSL expansion team set a then-record for an inaugural home opener with 30,207 at Gillette (one that would be quickly surpassed by the Denver Summit’s record 63,004 crowd), Centreville Bank Stadium is a better fit than a cavernous football venue.
Capable of holding 10,500 fans, Centreville Bank is close to what the Legacy will have with White Stadium’s planned 11,000 capacity.
Bulman said stadium leadership has been flexible to accommodate fan and sponsor activations and are working with the Legacy to work on joint social promotion and ticket packages with Rhode Island FC.
“Seeing us be back-to-back right after the WLL, it is very cool to me that they are extending that to women’s teams in particular,” she said. “You notice that as a tenant when a partner wants to go above and beyond, and it creates a good experience for you and your fans.”
That experience is one Byrne and the stadium leadership would love to see include a women’s pro team, and they’d like to work with an investor to bring in one from the Gainbridge Super League.
Until that happens, they’re very happy to continue their strategy of courting women’s sports teams.
“We’ve really hit a niche sweet spot for up-and-coming leagues,” Byrne said. “It is a unique subset that I do feel we’re a template now for future building throughout the country.”
Rhode Island
Boys lacrosse playoffs have arrived and here’s who’s winning titles
Video: La Salle tops Moses Brown in boys lacrosse on May 18
The championship-favorite Rams handled the rival Quakers 13-4 on Monday, May 18, 2026.
The playoffs are here, which means it’s time to try and figure out who is going to win titles.
While there can only be one state champion, three other teams will leave Brown University with division championship trophies. In most years, there’s plenty of drama throughout the postseason, but this year’s brackets seem fairly routine.
Here’s a quick look at who we’re taking to win each game this postseason.
RIIL Boys Lacrosse Playoff Picks
🥍State Championship Predictions
Expect chalk to rule. No. 4 Hendricken has played terrific of late and while No. 5 North Kingstown is talented, let’s push the Hawks into the semifinals. No. 6 Pilgrim plays with an edge and is the most fun team in the state, but No. 3 Barrington is too disciplined to lose this game.
We know how the semifinals are going to go – and we know how the championship game will end.
STATE CHAMPION PREDICTION: La Salle over Moses Brown.
🥍Division II Predictions
The D-II playoffs will only be moderately more dramatic than D-I just because of the semifinal and championship matchup. No. 4 Smithfield is hot coming into the playoffs, with wins in five of its final six games – including a victory over No. 5 Prout. With this game being at home, we’ll give the Sentinels the nod. In the other quarterfinal, it’s No. 3 Portsmouth over No. 6 Middletown.
Top-seeded Westerly should handle business against Smithfield, but the other semifinal might end up being the best game of the playoffs. Portsmouth is a tougher, more physical team than the Avengers and if Jack Colna has a day, the Patriots will be in business. No. 2 East Greenwich has a pretty good goalie of its own in Brendan Darcey and is the most skilled team in D-II. While a Westerly-Portsmouth final would be fun to watch, EG is the pick.
The Bulldogs beat the Avengers in EG. The Avengers beat the Bulldogs in Westerly. What happens at Brown? East Greenwich should win this game, especially after what happened last year. Westerly is the underdog, regardless of seeds, but the Avengers get their win and then get to spend the next four years in D-I.
D-II CHAMPIONSHIP PREDICTION: East Greenwich over Westerly
🥍Division III Predictions
No. 5 North Smithfield travels to play No. 4 Providence Country Day – which also has St. Raphael and East Providence in a co-op that needs a name – in a fun matchup only because the teams didn’t meet in the regular season. The Northmen struggled late, so we’ll give the edge to the Knights in this one. The other quarterfinal sees No. 3 Lincoln hosting No. 6 Burrillville and while the Lions will win, this game is screaming for an upset with how the Broncos finished the season. If Lincoln is too focused on revenge in the semifinals, it might not get there.
Mt. Hope has been the best team in the division and won’t slip up in the semifinals. No. 2 Narragansett knows Lincoln is gunning for it, but the Mariners defense has been too good to not earn a return trip to Brown.
Will the Huskies go back-to-back? Or can Narragansett perform another championship game upset? Either way, this will be the best boys championship game of the weekend.
D-III CHAMPIONSHIP PREDICTION: Mt. Hope over Narragansett
🥍Division IV Predictions
The RIIL owes every team in this division – including Tiverton, Classical, Cranston East and Johnston – an apology for completely botching the season. Bad decision after bad decision leads to a four-team playoff where we all know who’s going to win. If this result is wrong, I’ll resign immediately.
D-IV CHAMPIONSHIP PREDICTION: Scituate over Rogers
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