PROVIDENCE REPUBLICAN
CITY COMMITTEE

NEWS RELEASE

Release Date 2019-04-04
Subject Warwick Beacon Op-Ed: Keep the water system, fix Providence pensions
Contacts DAVID TALAN < DaveTalan@aol.com >
WILLIAM RICCI < ProvidenceRepublican@gmail.com >

Originally published in the Warwick Beacon on April 4, 2019 (link to article). Full text below.

========

Keep the water system, fix Providence pensions

The Providence Republican Party has come out against Mayor Jorge Elorza's proposal to monetize the Providence water system.

The Mayor's plan is designed to protect the city's pension and health plan for retirees, which is an estimated $2,000,000,000 in debt (or $12,000 for every man, woman & child in the city). The Mayor's plan is also designed to delay the city of Providence going into bankruptcy, until a new Mayor is in office.

We have 3 reasons for opposing the Mayor's plan.

We do agree with Mayor Elorza on one thing. If we do nothing about the unfunded pension & health plans, the city will definitely go bankrupt in the near future, and this would be a very bad thing for Providence residents. The Mayor has demanded that opponents of his plan should offer an alternative. So we offer the following ideas to cut costs, instead of raising taxes and fees.

The Mayor has previously rejected these suggestions. He has said any changes to the union contracts are off the table, due to a consent decree signed by his predecessor. And he has said that if the city goes bankrupt, an overseer might sell the water system anyway.

We have consulted with the top R.I. expert on municipal bankruptcies, Judge Robert Flanders, who managed the bankruptcy in Central Falls, and advised other Towns on restructuring to avoid a bankruptcy. We learned the following. If the city were to go bankrupt, the absolute last thing that an overseer would do is to sell the city's assets. The first thing he would do is to force the unions to renegotiate contracts. The threat of losing everything would be enough to force them to negotiate seriously. When Central Falls went bankrupt, retirees lost up to 60 percent of their pensions. If Providence were to go bankrupt, retirees would probably lose everything. (Changes in law, since the Central Falls bankruptcy, give first preference to bond holders, and retirees can only get what is left, if anything.). This serious threat would be enough to bring them to the table.

We call on Mayor Elorza to abandon his quest to monetize our water system, and to consider instead our serious suggestions on how to reduce the size of our pension debt.

David Talan and William Ricci are the Co-Chairs of the Providence Republican City Committee. They can be reached at or .