"Private" DEM Meeting with Current, Former Legislators Raises Concerns

Kate Nagle, GoLocalProv News Editor

"Private" DEM Meeting with Current, Former Legislators Raises Concerns

A recent meeting between the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) officials and a current and a former legislator over a constituent wetlands issue is being questioned by a political consultant - and the Senator who organized the meeting is defending the action.
 
Earlier this month, Democratic Senator Lou Raptakis and former Democratic State Representative Lisa Tomasso met with DEM officials concerning Raptakis' current (and Tomasso's former) constituents, who have been the target of a DEM wetland violations complaint. 
 
“This whole situation smacks of typical Rhode Island cronyism, exactly the type of thing that voters are sick and tired of.  I learned that on September 8, Senator Raptakis along with Lisa Tomasso scheduled a private meeting with a high ranking DEM official to discuss a wetlands violation complaint," said Mike Napolitano, a consultant with Precision Political Consulting who had worked for the gubernatorial campaigns of Ken Block and and John Robitaille. "This was completely improper and to DEM’s credit, once the official realized the purpose of the meeting he swiftly showed them the door.” 

Raptakis said that the meeting was nothing out of the ordinary, and was simply an effort to help constituents.

"I've been in contact with them for a few years on this issue. They're elderly," said Raptakis, who represents Coventry, East Greenwich, and West Greenwich.  "Last year, former [Representative] Tomasso had been involved with how to assist them, so that's why she came along. We thought there was a resolution, and then everything fell apart.  The DEM says they're going to knock down their garage, that they spent $100,000 on."

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Former Democratic Rep. Tomasso
Sides Split on Issue

Raptakis was first elected to the Rhode Island House of Representatives in 1992 before being elected to the Senate in 1996.  Tomasso won when she ran for District 29 in the House in 2010 and again in 2012, but was defeated in 2014 by Republican Sherry Roberts.  

Raptakis noted that the constituents in question had "been taken advantage" of in the past on land rights issues, and finally had to get a lawyer to help them.

"I've gone to a lot of state agencies to help them intercede when things get tangled up," said Raptakis. "Who's at fault? You want to hear both sides of the story. We didn't ask [the constituents] to come with us, but they gave us permission.  We wanted to hear DEM's side of the story.  We just want to know if there's some way we can help them"

Napolitano said the appearance of the meeting was cause for concern in his opinion.

“Legislators, and especially former legislators, have no business inserting themselves into executive branch enforcement actions," said Napolitano  "Not only does this hint at a separation of powers violation but, more troubling, suggests that these two individuals thought they could quietly try to strong arm the DEM behind closed doors, exactly the kind of old school Rhode Island know a guy politics that needs to end.”

Larry Berman, spokesman for Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello, provided the following statement on Tuesday, “Of course, legislators and private citizens can and should address the needs of citizens with all government agencies.”


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