June 27, 2017

Rep. Marszalkowski at (401) 714-4425 or Sen. Pearson at (401) 276-5568

 

PRESS RELEASE

Rep. Marszalkowski and Sen. Pearson bill to make Cumberland Fire Committee a public office under state election laws goes to governor for signature

 

STATE HOUSE – Rep. Alex D. Marszalkowski (D-Dist. 52, Cumberland) and Sen. Ryan W. Pearson’s (D-Dist. 19, Cumberland, Lincoln) legislation (2017-H 5904 / 2017-S 0478) that would establish that membership on the Cumberland Fire Committee constitutes holding a public office and that the elections of the Fire Committee are governed by state election laws is now heading to Governor Raimondo’s desk for her signature.

"For several years confusion existed on if the Cumberland Fire Committee is a public office due to a board of elections interpretation. Being a public office is an important distinction as the Fire committee has very similar powers to the town council. One of the key reforms of the fire district consolidation was putting the committee up for election just like other offices rather than in small annual meetings. This bill ensures that those elections will occur and according to the same rules as all other elections," said Representative Marszalkowski.

"In addition to compliance with election laws, this clarification of the fire committee as a public office ensures that fire committee members are subject to all laws for public officials. This includes adherence to the code of ethics as well as campaign finance laws. This is critically important to ensure the highest standards of conduct as well as transparency of campaign finances for the fire committee," said Senator Pearson. 

“This was a true team effort from the Cumberland delegation and I am glad that we were able to get this bill passed for the citizens of Cumberland,” said Rep. Mia A. Ackerman (D-Dist. 45, Cumberland, Lincoln), a cosponsor of the legislation.

“I’d like to thank Representative Ackerman and Senator Pearson for their knowledge and guidance on this issue.  Without them, the citizens of Cumberland would not have this important piece of legislation that will benefit our town,” added Representative Marszalkowski.

The legislation amends the law that consolidated the Cumberland, North Cumberland, Cumberland Hill, and Valley Falls Fire Districts into the Cumberland Fire District.  Representative Marszalkowski and Senator Pearson’s legislation makes it clear that membership on the committee is a electable public office and that all elections to the committee are to be governed by state elections laws and overseen by the Rhode Island Board of Elections and the Cumberland Board of Elections. 

-30-

For an electronic version of this and all press releases published by the Legislative Press and Public Information Bureau, please visit our website at www.rilegislature.gov/pressrelease.

 

                                                                                                                 

 

The government shutdown has reached three weeks, tying for the second-longest in U.S. history, with no end in sight. Another Senate vote failed yesterday as Democrats insist on extending health care subsidies for millions under the Affordable Care Act. Meanwhile, about 750-thousand federal workers remain furloughed, and others are on the job without pay.        President Trump now has the green light to deploy National Guard troops in Portland. A federal appeals court ruled the president's decision can't be reviewed by the courts, though one judge called that "absurd" and a threat to states' rights and free speech. In related news, Washington, DC's attorney general says the Guard could stay in the capital through next summer, and Trump is hinting he might use the Insurrection Act to send troops to San Francisco.        The 2025 World Series is set. The Toronto Blue Jays are taking on the Los Angeles Dodgers. Game One of the World Series is Friday night in Toronto.        Amazon Web Services says it has fixed the widespread internet outages that disrupted major websites and apps Monday. Services like Venmo, Microsoft Outlook, Zoom, Snapchat, Lyft, and even Amazon's own Alexa and Ring were affected earlier in the day. AWS confirmed all systems are back to normal, though experts warn the outage could end up costing hundreds of billions of dollars.        A Florida mother won't face charges after her five-year-old daughter fell overboard on a Disney cruise ship. The girl fell about 50 feet through a porthole while sitting on the railing for a photo. Her father jumped in to save her, and both were rescued by the ship's crew. Officials said the mother was negligent but not criminally responsible.        Ticketmaster says it's cracking down on scalpers. The company plans to limit users to one account using Social Security or taxpayer ID verification and will use AI to spot and cancel reseller accounts. The move comes amid an FTC lawsuit accusing Ticketmaster of working with resellers to hike ticket prices, allegations the company denies.