Rhode Island

A woman holds some prescription drugs.

Angry patients spur new state watchdogs to bring down drug prices

BY: - July 16, 2024

Spurred by fed-up consumers, states are trying to curb spiraling prescription drug costs by assembling special public boards to investigate and regulate pricing. The idea is similar to a local utility board: a public group that sets rules or makes recommendations to ensure that what they’re regulating — in this case, prescription medications — is […]

A KFC employee hangs a sign for job openings at a restaurant in Miami.

More states enact salary transparency laws to fight gender, racial pay gaps

BY: - July 10, 2024

To combat gender and racial wage gaps, nearly a dozen states recently have enacted pay transparency laws that require employers to be more open about the wages and benefits they offer. Most of the laws require employers to disclose wages in job postings and some bar them from asking a job candidate about their salary […]

A woman and child at a day care.

For child care workers, state aid for their own kids’ care is ‘life-changing’

BY: - June 17, 2024

SMITHFIELD, R.I. — Child care worker Marci Then, 32, looked over at two 4-year-olds in her care who were tussling over a toy plate in a model kitchen set. “Are we sharing?” she gently asked them. They both let go. Then works at Little Learners Academy child care center near Providence, Rhode Island. Her daughter, […]

A house under construction in Houston.

Housing boom in most of the US could ease shortage, but cost is still a problem

BY: - May 16, 2024

Read more Stateline coverage of how communities across the country are trying to create more affordable housing.  The United States has added almost 5 million housing units since 2020, most heavily in the South and most of them single-family homes, making a housing shortage look conquerable in much of the nation. Still, even more homes need to be built — […]

The bathroom in a model apartment in New York City.

Too many cubicles, too few homes spur incentives to convert offices to housing

BY: - April 17, 2024

Read more Stateline coverage of how communities across the country are trying to create more affordable housing. HERNDON, Va. — Juan Ramirez, watching his dog play in Chandon Park here in suburban Virginia on a Saturday morning, tries to imagine the massive office buildings next to the park becoming apartments and townhouses. “I guess it’s inevitable. People don’t […]

A display of gift cards at a New York CVS.

As consumers lose millions to gift card scams, lawmakers pressure businesses

BY: - April 15, 2024

When Denise Brown peruses the tightly packed gift card display at her local CVS in Harlem, New York, she sees the perfect present for her grandson: a Sony PlayStation gift card. Others, acting in bad faith, see these gift card displays as easy money in one of the country’s costliest and most common consumer scams: […]

Deadly fires from phone, scooter batteries leave lawmakers playing catch-up on safety

BY: - March 27, 2024

For a decade, Illinois state Sen. Sue Rezin has recognized the technological and economic potential of lithium-ion batteries. Rezin, a Republican who serves in a district that is a major chemical and energy industry hub southwest of Chicago, also recognizes the possible dangers. In June 2021, a Morris, Illinois, warehouse in her district with roughly […]

A worker on a high-rise site.

Desperate for affordable housing, some cities sweeten tax breaks for developers

BY: - February 6, 2024

Read more Stateline coverage of how communities across the country are trying to create more affordable housing. Last month, city council members in Fort Worth, Texas, decided developers that received massive tax breaks to build affordable housing would no longer be able to buy their way out of the obligation by paying a $200 annual fee in […]

Nurses picket outside the hospital where they work.

‘Shell game’: When private equity comes to town, hospitals can see cutbacks, closures

BY: - January 18, 2024

Peggy Malone walks the quiet halls of Crozer-Chester Medical Center, the Pennsylvania hospital where she’s worked as a registered nurse for the past 35 years, with the feeling she’s drifting through a ghost town. The sprawling hospital serves the diverse and densely packed Philadelphia suburb of Upland, and a large proportion of its patients earn […]

A man at a bus shelter in Chicago.

As homeless people become more visible, some cities and states take a tougher line

BY: - January 3, 2024

In pushing for a bill of rights for homeless Michiganders, Democratic state Rep. Emily Dievendorf encountered a “cruel irony”: A homeless constituent providing advice on the measure was denied entry to the state Capitol because he didn’t have a photo ID. Under Dievendorf’s bill, homeless people in Michigan would have the right to “move freely” […]

People at a lunch.

More Hispanic families are reaching the middle class

BY: - December 18, 2023

The Hispanic middle class has grown faster than the white or Black middle class in the past decade and has reached near-parity with the white middle class in seven states, according to a new Stateline analysis. Between 2012 and 2022, the percentage of Hispanic households in the country that qualified as middle class grew from […]

A wind turbine off the coast of Rhode Island.

Despite setbacks, states are still counting on offshore wind

BY: - November 21, 2023

In recent months, East Coast states’ plans to install massive new offshore wind farms have been battered by bad economic news, canceled contracts and newfound uncertainty about the projects officials are counting on to reach their clean energy goals. Despite the setbacks, state leaders say they don’t intend to dial back their offshore wind ambitions. […]