AG Neronha, RI Foundation Accepting Proposals for Dental Grants

Nonprofits face a September deadline for grants funded by $10 million in settlement money

AG Neronha during a news conference in his office earlier this year.
AG Neronha during a news conference in his office earlier this year.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
Share
AG Neronha during a news conference in his office earlier this year.
AG Neronha during a news conference in his office earlier this year.
Ian Donnis / The Public’s Radio
AG Neronha, RI Foundation Accepting Proposals for Dental Grants
Copy

Attorney General Peter Neronha and the Rhode Island Foundation are accepting proposals for $10 million in grants meant to improve dental care for children in Providence.

The grant deadline for applications is Sept. 10.

Neronha’s 6/10 Children’s Fund was established through a settlement in May when a state contractor, Barletta Heavy Division, admitted using contaminated fill at the 6/10 project site in Providence.

GOP state lawmakers objected, arguing it was illegal for the attorney general to decide how to spend settlement money — regardless of the merit of the spending.

Neronha responded by noting how a judge approved the plan and he said Republicans were free to challenge it in court. That hasn’t happened.

The attorney general has pointed to how a 2024 Providence Journal story outlined how more than 500 children in the capital city need urgent dental care.

“The lack of pediatric dental care for Providence children is an urgent and completely unmet healthcare issue, and my hope is that with this program, we can take immediate action to alleviate this crisis,” Neronha said in a statement announcing the availability of the grants.

Nonprofit groups can apply for the grants through the Rhode Island Foundation.

The Providence City Council is still one vote short of a supermajority that could override Mayor Brett Smiley’s expected veto. The policy would cap annual rent increases at 4% with exceptions for owner-occupants.
Mayor Ken Hopkins says a 7.4% tax increase is necessary to maintain city services and close the existing budget gap
Plus: the Rhode Island Black Film Festival, opening day at the drive-in and more
Rachel Miller says the council is poised to ‘make history’ with final approval Thursday
State Sen. Jessica de la Cruz is proposing a phased 10% income tax cut over five years, arguing the state’s core problem is spending, not revenue
Backed by students, the plan expands school libraries statewide while budget questions loom