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City Council Committee on Finance approves two voluntary payment agreements

Full council approval remains necessary for agreements to be implemented

<p>The proposed voluntary payment agreements will now move to the full City Council for a vote, though portions of the memorandum of agreement, which includes multiple property transfers from Providence to Brown, will require additional approvals.</p><p><br/></p>

The proposed voluntary payment agreements will now move to the full City Council for a vote, though portions of the memorandum of agreement, which includes multiple property transfers from Providence to Brown, will require additional approvals.


The Providence City Council Committee on Finance approved the proposed between the city of Providence and four universities 鈥 Brown, Johnson and Wales University, Providence College and the Rhode Island School of Design 鈥 and a between the city and Brown at a meeting Thursday evening.听

The proposed voluntary payment agreements will now move to the full City Council for a vote, though portions of the memorandum of agreement, which includes multiple property transfers from Providence to Brown, will require additional approvals. If approved, the two agreements would generate over $223 million for the city over the next 20 years, with the University paying an average of $8.7 million to Providence each year.

The Thursday vote approved both the MOU and MOA 2-1, with Councilor Miguel Sanchez voting in opposition while Acting Committee Chair James Taylor and Council Sue Anderbois voted for the agreement. Councilor Helen Anthony, the chair of the committee, was not present at the meeting.听

The decision follows a public hearing Tuesday evening in which student activists spoke in opposition to the memoranda, The Herald previously reported. Other Providence community members, such as small business owners, also attended the hearing, with some voicing support for the proposed agreements along with city officials.听

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鈥淚f we try to seek more, these institutions can just walk away,鈥 said Taylor, prior to voting on the MOU.听

Sanchez, who voted against both agreements, said there are remaining 鈥渜uestions that haven鈥檛 been answered鈥 about the proposed MOU.听

Councilwoman Shelly Peterson, who is not a member of the committee, noted that the MOU could prove restrictive: 鈥淚f we move forward with this as-is 鈥 it limits us for 20 years,鈥 she said at the meeting.听

鈥淲e are extremely disappointed by Councilman Taylor and (Councilwoman Anderbois鈥) decision to advance Brown鈥檚 manipulative PILOT agreements,鈥 read a released by Sunrise Brown after the meeting.听

鈥淭hese agreements remain the single greatest opportunity for the City to regulate its most wealthy institutions until 2043,鈥 the Sunrise statement read.听

In a released after the meeting, Anderbois wrote that she 鈥渧oted to allow (the agreement) to go to full council, without recommending passage.鈥澛

Anderbois added that she believes the other city councilors, many of whom have tax exempt institutions in their wards, should have 鈥渁 right to discuss and vote. This vote was about not taking away rights from my colleagues.鈥澛

The proposed agreements were Sept. 6, with the MOU between the city and four private colleges and universities and the MOA between only Brown and Providence, The Herald previously reported.听

The University previously made voluntary payments to the city under two agreements: a and the , which expired in 2023 and 2022, respectively.听聽

Provisions of the new agreements include a dollar-for-dollar match of direct payments with community contributions, a 鈥淨uality of Life鈥 working group, city support of a handful of University property acquisitions and a 鈥淐redits Against Payments Condition鈥 in which the University may reduce its annual voluntary MOA payments if it makes certain investments deemed to serve the public interest or assists certain development projects.

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Negotiations for the new agreements began last winter, and several student demonstrations called for the University to increase its voluntary payments to Providence. This April, the Brown Activist Coalition demanded that Brown pay $15 million annually to Providence.

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Neil Mehta

Neil Mehta is the editor-in-chief and president of the Brown Daily Herald's 134th editorial board. They study public health and statistics at Brown. Outside the office, you can find Neil baking and playing Tetris.


Rhea Rasquinha

Rhea Rasquinha is a Metro Section Editor covering Development and Infrastructure and also serves as Co-Chief of Illustrations. She previously covered the College Hill, Fox Point & the Jewelry District and Brown & Beyond beats. Rhea is a junior from New York studying Biomedical Engineering and loves dark chocolate and penguins.



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