thank you mister president. thank. you thank you, everybody, for being here. and you want to give a quick shout out to the team that got me into this morning to talk about a budget. i want to thank our staff for their work and what you re gonna hear tonight is a lot of. you know, i m talking about my administration to me. but it was a lot of hard work by a lot of good people. so, thank you so much for that. so, mister speaker and mr. president, distinguished members of the assembly. members of our congressional delegation. general officers, chief justice, and members of our judiciary. municipal leaders, members of my cabinet, and rhode island jurors watching at home. good evening. just two weeks ago, i had the honor of being sworn in in my first full term as governor. governor of a state i love. during a mayan aguero address, i told a story about a family looking to move to a new community. one that was kind, caring, just like that community they were coming from. that story
PAWTUCKET – Rhode Island has some big goals when it comes to cleaning up our state. Fortunately, creative initiatives like the state’s Keep Rhody Litter Free campaign launched by First
Gov. Dan McKee proposed a $13.8 billion state budget Thursday that makes good on campaign-trail tax cut and abortion-funding promises while setting a new high-water mark for state spending.