
November 8, 2009
Editorial: Brighter
at the port
A surprising and unforeseen aspect of efforts to preserve
Providence’s industrial waterfront is the degree to
which it has succeeded in promoting the city’s long-overlooked
port, the source of Providence’s original prosperity.
Now it seems that people who may have forgotten that the city
even had a working waterfront are talking up its recently
redredged channel, excellent intermodal rail and Interstate
Highway System connections, generous cargo-handling area and
the advantages of the marine trades in general. Ports have
big economic multiplier effects and they lower some prices
in their areas.
One new fan is Providence’s mayor, David Cicilline,
who recently traveled to Washington, D.C., seeking $39 million
in federal stimulus funds for major upgrades and expansion
at the Port of Providence, that stretch off Allens Avenue
that for years seemed consigned in a literal sense to the
scrap heap of history, since scrap steel is one of the few
commodities handled there.
If the funds come through, and in this effort Mayor Cicilline
has enlisted the Rhode Island congressional delegation, it
will work an impressive transformation on ProvPort. The funds
would pay for two barge-based container/cargo cranes, two
150-to-250-foot wind turbines and solar panels providing electricity
to operate the entire facility (with any extra sold to the
electrical grid), and, says an analysis by Bryant University,
1,000 well-paying jobs.
It would be a green port not only in electricity generation,
but also because it would help keep cargo containers off the
highways, where many are moved today, by facilitating their
shipment from other U.S. ports, such as New York, by barge
— so-called short-sea shipping.
This is exactly what the mayor should be doing, and not for
only ProvPort, but for the entire port, including the threatened
northern section of the waterfront. Hotel and condominium
developers would love to get a hold of that, to the detriment
of several long-established businesses and any future development
of Providence’s venerable and profitable port.
Better longshoremen’s jobs than maid and bus boy jobs!
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