Breaking Down the Ballot: Should Rhode Islanders Support Capital Improvements at URI and RIC?

Voters are considering whether to approve a $160.5 million bond that would go toward capital improvements at two the state’s higher education facilities

A $73 million bond would renovate Whipple Hall at Rhode Island College, home of the school's Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies.
A $73 million bond would renovate Whipple Hall at Rhode Island College, home of the school’s Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies.
Creative Commons
Share
A $73 million bond would renovate Whipple Hall at Rhode Island College, home of the school's Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies.
A $73 million bond would renovate Whipple Hall at Rhode Island College, home of the school’s Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies.
Creative Commons
Breaking Down the Ballot: Should Rhode Islanders Support Capital Improvements at URI and RIC?
Copy

On Nov. 5, Rhode Island voters will have the opportunity to weigh in on five statewide ballot questions.

Question No. 2 asks voters to approve a $160.5 million bond that would go toward capital improvements at two of the state’s higher education facilities.

Approximately $87.5 million would be used to build a new biomedical sciences building at URI’s Kingston campus, and $73 million would help transform Whipple Hall at Rhode Island College into a home for the school’s fledgling Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies.

Jim Langevin, a former congressman and the Distinguished Chair at the Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies at Rhode Island College, spoke to Luis Hernandez of The Public’s Radio about the measure on the ballot.

Go here to see all five referenda questions on this year’s ballot, and click here for more information on when, where and how to vote in this year’s election.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The school hired former Providence police chief Hugh Clements Jr. to take over on an interim basis
The order applies to Vineyard Wind 1 and Revolution Wind, which are nearly complete and central to Rhode Island and Massachusetts’ transition to renewable energy
Rehoboth rejected a plan that would have complied with a state law meant to encourage more housing, leaving the town as one of the last holdouts.
Mayor Brett Smiley says the man, known only as ‘John,’ deserves the full $50,000 reward
Some felt a sense of relief. Others questioned what had motivated the shooting
The shooting at Brown University leaves the state reeling, and the suspect’s body was found at a storage facility in New Hampshire