Orientation Offers a Glimpse of Statehouse Culture for New RI Lawmakers

Returning legislators will face a tougher fiscal climate and a big deficit

Rep. Tina Spears briefs new lawmakers, including Richard Fascia of Johnston and Chris Paplauskas of Cranston, on the reality of legislative life.
Rep. Tina Spears briefs new lawmakers, including Richard Fascia of Johnston and Chris Paplauskas of Cranston, on the reality of legislative life.
Share
Rep. Tina Spears briefs new lawmakers, including Richard Fascia of Johnston and Chris Paplauskas of Cranston, on the reality of legislative life.
Rep. Tina Spears briefs new lawmakers, including Richard Fascia of Johnston and Chris Paplauskas of Cranston, on the reality of legislative life.
Orientation Offers a Glimpse of Statehouse Culture for New RI Lawmakers
Copy

Focus, go slow, go small to start off, learn the rules.

That was the advice offered by state Rep. Tina Spears (D-Charlestown) — who joined the Rhode Island House of Representatives as a freshman in 2023 — as she helped orient a group of recently elected state reps.

Spears recounted how she thought she would know what she was doing when she joined the House since she had worked before as a state Senate staffer and visited the Statehouse as an advocate. Boy, was she wrong.

With the heightened profile of a state rep, “You’re going to get asked a lot to participate in everything,” Spears said. Lobbyists, special interest groups and advocates will call them. The new lawmakers will spend time away from their families due to nocturnal committee meetings and the mad rush of legislation at the end of session.

“It will be like drinking from a firehose for things you don’t know,” Spears said, during a morning orientation season in the House chamber on “the freshman experience.”

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

With Ghana’s World Cup team set to arrive Friday, local organizers are planning celebrations that blend soccer, culture, food, music and community pride
Supporters say Rhode Island needs its own voter protections as federal safeguards weaken. Top lawmakers say the bill needs more work and will have to wait until 2027
A daring nighttime raid in Narragansett Bay came before the Boston Tea Party and helped push the colonies toward a united response to Britain
The former congressman, whose district included New Bedford and other South Coast communities, was remembered as brilliant, fearless, funny and deeply committed to public service
In part two of Possibly’s series on the dairy industry, we’re turning our attention to an age-old method used to efficiently store cheese
A $15.2 billion budget approved by the House would raise taxes on millionaires, create a state inspector general’s office and preserve Rhode Island’s 2033 renewable energy target