Behind the Story

Ian Donnis on Rhode Island’s infrastructure woes 10 years after RhodeWorks

22 min · 30. Apr. 2026
Episode Ian Donnis on Rhode Island’s infrastructure woes 10 years after RhodeWorks Cover

Beschreibung

Ian Donnis, a longtime political reporter, has been covering the recent failure of a highway ramp in Cranston that disrupted travel for motorists and Amtrak passengers. Last Friday, part of a bridge in poor condition fell onto a railroad track, surprising transportation officials who said there had been no prior signs of trouble. The infrastructure issue comes amid ongoing criticism of the Washington Bridge closure. The westbound span failed in December 2023 and has remained closed to traffic. The Cranston bridge failure comes about 10 years after the state unveiled RhodeWorks, an expensive and controversial infrastructure program designed to upgrade roads and bridges statewide. The law also created the state’s truck toll program, which was tied up in court for years after being challenged by a truckers association. The state ultimately won that legal fight, but resuming toll collection has been delayed, in part because the infrastructure used to collect tolls has become outdated. Donnis examined the program’s balance sheet and found it is currently underwater after a decade in operation. Later in the show, Kim and Eli discussed the “stories we wish we wrote,” including: KIM’S PICK * ‘Scorched-earth’ deed restrictions are making food deserts worse. Woonsocket, R.I., is feeling the impact [https://www.bostonglobe.com/2026/04/29/metro/ri-woonsocket-food-desert-deed-restrictions/] by Jonmaesha Beltran, ecoRI/Boston Globe * 24 purifying hours [https://www.warwickonline.com/news/24-purifying-hours/article_82d1e44f-36f2-4d97-987c-af009c7f064e.html] by Greta Shuster, Warwick Beacon ELI’S PICK * No discipline after Fall River police Facebook warrant investigation [https://www.heraldnews.com/story/news/crime/2026/04/28/fall-river-massachusetts-police-department-hr-review-of-facebook-investigation/89843460007/] by Dan Medeiros, The Fall River Herald News * Site where Benny’s used to be gets OK for re-development [https://www.thewesterlysun.com/daily-news-alerts/site-where-bennys-used-to-be-gets-ok-for-re-development/article_3b483920-b4e3-4f7a-b69d-7335cb8b7a27.html] by Ryan Blessing, The Westerly Sun

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52 Folgen

Episode Tim White, Ted Nesi discuss RI politics, cold-case sentencing Cover

Tim White, Ted Nesi discuss RI politics, cold-case sentencing

Tim White and Ted Nesi, Target 12 investigators and hosts of the political show “Newsmakers,” broke down recent endorsements in the race for Rhode Island governor, including one from Cumberland Democrats who snubbed incumbent Gov. Dan McKee, the town’s former mayor. White also took viewers behind the scenes of the sentencing of Frank Theis, who was convicted of sexually assaulting two teenagers in the 1980s. Forensic evidence tested decades later helped investigators crack the case. Later the show, White, Nesi and Eli discussed the “stories we wish we wrote,” including: TIM’S PICK * Mystery of Marmac: Why a cable-laying barge is docked in Providence [https://www.providencejournal.com/story/news/politics/state/2026/06/17/barge-in-providence-habor-marmac-306-offshore-wind-cables/90576387007/] by Patrick Anderson, The Providence Journal TED’S PICK * America’s Great Dad Divide [https://www.thefp.com/p/america-fatherhood-childless-men] by Brad Wilcox, The Free Press ELI’S PICK * One year after steepest premium increase in a decade, RI health insurers seek double-digit hikes [https://rhodeislandcurrent.com/2026/06/16/one-year-after-steepest-premium-increase-in-a-decade-ri-health-insurers-seek-double-digit-hikes/] by Nancy Lavin, Rhode Island Current

Gestern22 min
Episode ‘Short notice’: Steph Machado explains why Pawtucket is adding school days Cover

‘Short notice’: Steph Machado explains why Pawtucket is adding school days

Steph Machado broke the news [https://www.bostonglobe.com/2026/05/20/metro/pawtucket-school-year-extended-make-up-classroom-time-ri/] that the school district, for an unknown number of years, had been letting students leave school five minutes early. The practice has now come back to haunt the district, with the state’s education department requiring Pawtucket to make up the lost instructional time. The lost time comes on top of four snow days and delayed starts during the winter, which the Rhode Island Department of Education is also requiring the district to make up. Machado said it all adds up to five or six days, meaning the school year will extend into late June. “I heard from a lot of parents that this was the first time they were hearing about this,” Machado said of the reaction to her story. “It’s really short notice to find out that you have almost an extra week of school.” Machado also discussed her coverage [https://www.bostonglobe.com/2026/05/18/metro/ri-hospital-medical-records-transgender-youth-texas-judge/] of an ongoing federal fight over access to records involving transgender children and teenagers. The court battle stems from the U.S. Department of Justice asking a Texas judge to order the release of medical records for underage patients who received gender-affirming care at Rhode Island Hospital. Machado said Rhode Island Hospital has agreed to provide some anonymized records, but the legal battle is far from over, with dueling appeals underway in Rhode Island and Texas. “I don’t know if this will end up at the Supreme Court, but it certainly seems like something that could, based on how many different jurisdictions are now involved,” Machado said. Later in the show, 12 News Politics Editor Ted Nesi joined the program to discuss the latest political poll released by Emerson College Polling and 12 News. Nesi discussed the poll’s 20-point lead for challenger Helena Foulkes over incumbent Gov. Dan McKee in the Democratic primary, along with the wide-open race for attorney general. Nesi also highlighted polling that showed Rhode Islanders across voter groups have little confidence in the Rhode Island Department of Transportation’s ability to maintain the state’s roads and bridges. “Seventy-seven percent of Rhode Island voters say they are not confident in RIDOT to properly manage the state’s roads and bridges,” Nesi said. “Hard not to connect that back to the governor’s struggles in the wake of the Washington Bridge and his decision to stand by RIDOT leadership, notably Peter Alviti, rather than make a change.” The poll results were discussed in place of the “stories we wish we wrote.”

21. Mai 202622 min