RI Men of the Year - The Doc, The Mensch and The Whistleblower

GoLocalProv News Team

RI Men of the Year - The Doc, The Mensch and The Whistleblower

L-R Dennis "Doc" Littky, Dr. Michael Fine, and James White
This year GoLocal recognizes three men who made an extraordinary impact on the state of Rhode Island in 2020.

We deem them the Doc, the Mensch, and the Whistleblower.

Last week, GoLocal unveiled its Rhode Island Woman of the Year — Dr. Megan Ranney — and today we offer her male counterparts.

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These three men helped to transform Rhode Island. Each battled, did the unexpected and fought fights that others simply were not willing to.

 

Dennis Littky PHOTO: GoLocal
The Doc

Dennis “Doc” Littky has spent a lifetime working to transform education. He is one of the leading innovators in America and arguably the biggest change agent in education in America. He either single-handedly or with others co-founded The Big Picture - a network of high schools across the country, The Met School and now an accredited college — College Unbound.

His work as a principal at Thayer Junior/Senior High School in Winchester, N.H. was featured in an NBC movie, "A Town Torn Apart" based on the book "Doc: The Story of Dennis Littky and His Fight for a Better School."

A decade ago he came up with the idea of creating a new type of college — one the would provide more flexibility and offer education tracks for everyone from veterans to those entering the community after incarceration. He faced opposition from family and friends. Powerful education interests were not interested in another college in the market.

Littky persevered and battled. This year his school College Unbound became fully accredited. Rhode Island has its first college in decades.

 

Dr. Michael Fine
The Mensch

Prior to the pandemic, Dr. Michael Fine was working with Rhode Island's poorest communities and developing strategies to improve health access.

Then, the world changed and the need for health expertise became paramount. Fine, who had served as the Director of the Rhode Island Department of Health had a lifetime of experience and had developed a national reputation for his work. Earlier in his career, Fine practiced for 16 years in urban Pawtucket and rural Scituate, after serving as a National Health Service Corps Scholar in Hancock County Tennessee, then the fifth poorest county in the U.S.  He was a VISTA Volunteer, as a community organizer on 167th Street and 3rd Avenue in the South Bronx, before medical school at Case Western Reserve University and residency at Brown. 

When the pandemic hit he became Rhode Island's most trusted voice on critical issues. Since March 9, he has appeared nearly every weekday on GoLocal LIVE to provide the public with the most up-to-date data and critical insights. In recent days he has been featured on CNN and in the Daily Beast to name just a few national news outlets picking up on his work. 

Mensch is the Yiddish word for "a good person" -- a truly exemplary person of integrity and honor -- and that is Fine.

 

James White
The Whistleblower

Union bosses don't usually leave their lane. They negotiate for their men and women and work to create job opportunities. But James White has become Rhode Island's leading advocate not only for the safety of his workers, but also for people who are being dumped on -- literally.

White is President of the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 57 -- they are the women and men operating backhoes and almost every other piece of heavy machinery on nearly every construction site in the region.   

One of the projects that White's union was working on was the 6/10 project -- a project that cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars and provided his union with plenty of work.

But members of the union detected that questionable materials were being dumped in the Olneyville section of Providence -- materials that were found to be contaminated.

White first brought the issue to the attention of the contractor, Barletta Engineering. Then he was rebuffed when he notified officials at the Rhode Island Department of Transportation. No one would look into the issue. White, who worried about his workers and the neighborhood, hired an independent testing firm that detected contamination in the material. White then contacted the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management's Janet Coit. More nothing. But, White was relentless.

He blew the whistle and notified GoLocal. And a series of more than 20 investigative reports by GoLocal has led to the removal of much of the contaminated soil, and sparked both ongoing federal and state investigations.

This story is not over, but without White, the Providence neighborhood would continue to be the dumping ground for the contractor and RIDOT.


GoLocal's Rhode Island Men of the Year - 2010 to 2023

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