Roger Williams - first year for Ioannis Miaoulis
Salve Regina - first year for Kelli J. Armstrong
Providence College - first year for Rev. Kenneth R. Sicard
While RIC and CCRI’s Presidents have been in place for a number of years they must defer to the Governor, the legislature and their board regarding their financial fate.
Only Brown’s Christina Paxson has longevity she was named president in 2012 and had her contract extended in February through to 2025.
A major report by the Wall Street Journal finds typical families at dozens of schools are borrowing almost $100,000 to finance student education, data from the U.S. Education Department show. The figures reveal the amount of debt parents took on through a federal college loan program called Parent Plus. The data “provides a more complete financial picture of how recent graduates have paid for their postsecondary education, especially if their parents took on debt to help them cover some or all of the costs.
Frank Picozzi, Mayor-Elect of Warwick PHOTO: Picozzi Campaign
The new mayor of Warwick is best known for two things pulling off one of the biggest political upsets in Rhode Island history and great Christmas decorations.
For the affable Picozzi, he needs to prove that his victory was more about a new vision for Warwick and less about the dislike of soon to be former Mayor Joe Solomon a man who insulted and offended almost everyone in town.
The former Warwick School Committee has some, but limited experience.
Warwick Democrats on the City Council and in the legislature will be circling like sharks.
Can the plant-based businesswoman hit another home run?
Kim Anderson who owns the popular Plant City in Providence is hedging on a new location in Middletown to be the next great success.
In 2019, GoLocal was first to report on the impending arrival of the vegan food hall Plant City, the brainchild of Matthew Kenney and embraced by Anderson.
And while the first location between South Main and South Water Street in Providence has been a hit with students, residents, and visitors alike, Anderson is now embarking on a new concept.
A vegan drive-though on Aquidneck Island.
Anderson may have capitalized on the rise in popularity of vegan cuisine, but make no mistake about it, she is a true believer in the movement, and sustainable living.
Can the plant-based businesswoman hit another home run?
Kim Anderson who owns the popular Plant City in Providence is hedging on a new location in Middletown to be the next great success.
In 2019, GoLocal was first to report on the impending arrival of the vegan food hall Plant City, the brainchild of Matthew Kenney and embraced by Anderson.
And while the first location between South Main and South Water Street in Providence has been a hit with students, residents, and visitors alike, Anderson is now embarking on a new concept.
A vegan drive-though on Aquidneck Island.
Anderson may have capitalized on the rise in popularity of vegan cuisine, but make no mistake about it, she is a true believer in the movement, and sustainable living.
Superman Building - going on 8 years vacant PHOTO: GoLocal
Rhode Island’s tallest building the Industrial Bank Building or better known as the Superman building enters its eighth year of vacancy in 2021.
In 2019, it was named one of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in its annual list.
“From the National Mall Tidal Basin in Washington, D.C. to one of Chicago’s best examples of Post-Modern architecture to the vast, largely unprotected cultural artifacts in the Ancestral Places of Southeast Utah, this year’s list reflects both the diversity of America’s historic places and the variety of threats they face. As it has over the past three decades, we know that this year’s list will inspire people to speak out for the cherished places in their own communities that define our nation’s past, said Katherine Malone-France, the then chief preservation officer of the organization. GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS H