Happy Friday! I'm Dan McGowan, and I really miss going to Blockbuster on Friday nights and renting wrestling tapes. Follow me on X (Twitter) @DanMcGowan, on Bluesky @danmcgowan, or send tips to
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📺 I was a guest on "12 News at 4" with Kim Kalunian to discuss the possibility of Rhode Island lawmakers passing a ban on assault-style weapons. You can watch the segment here.
Peter Wasylyk has built a nice career out of filing class-action lawsuits.
The former state representative from Providence has been the lead attorney on some of the most high-profile class-action suits in the state, including Blue Cross Blue Shield, where he helped clients win a $17.5 million settlement in 2005. He also helped thousands of drivers in Providence secure small refunds on their speed camera tickets in 2018.
Now Wasylyk, who held office from 1985 until he lost a Democratic primary to current Representative Ray Hull in 2010, is at the center of another high-profile class-action lawsuit. He’s working with consumers to sue Deloitte Consulting following the cyberattack on the state’s public benefits system that Governor Dan McKee disclosed last week.
McKee has said hundreds of thousands of Rhode Islanders could have had their personal data exposed.
“A class-action attorney is almost enforcing regulations because it helps the consumer be able to have these larger entities comply with the regulations,” Wasylyk said this week. “It’s a good feeling [to win] for each individual because they couldn’t litigate these small claims themselves.”
In this case of the Deloitte lawsuit, Wasylyk said he was working late last Friday night when he stopped to take a break and turned on the television. He noticed that McKee was having a press conference, and tuned in. He knew immediately that he was going to be working through the weekend on a lawsuit.
“The calls and emails haven’t stopped,” Wasylyk said.
It’s too soon to say how the case will play out, but Wasylyk said he’d like both compensation and long-term credit monitoring for anyone whose data may have been compromised.
If you were wondering, yes, class-action lawsuits can be lucrative for the attorneys, too. Wasylyk said cases can last many years, and he has to pay a lot of costs up front, but the Blue Cross settlement eventually generated millions of dollars for the lawyers involved. He was also part of a major settlement involving 84,000 retirees from Sears in 2001.
But he said it’s most rewarding to deliver for a consumer who might not have the resources to fight big companies themselves.
“It sounds little, but even $25 to some people means a lot,” Wasylyk said.
🤔 So you think you're a Rhode Islander...
What year was Rhode Island Hospital founded? (You can find the answer below.)
Do you have the perfect question for Rhode Map readers? Don't forget to send the answer, too. Shoot me an email today.
The Globe in Rhode Island
⚓ Kevin McNamara has a great piece on former Providence College basketball coach Rick Pitino, who will be back at The AMP tonight coaching St. John's against the Friars. Read here.
⚓ The Department of Justice says CVS unlawfully dispensed opioids and other controlled substances. The staffers who worked there paint a vivid picture of the conditions they say contributed to the problem. Read more.
⚓ Common Cause Rhode Island on Thursday filed a complaint with the secretary of state’s office, claiming former CEO of Chiefs for Change Michael Magee failed to register as a lobbyist. Read more.
⚓ Governor Dan McKee’s administration has agreed to make sweeping changes to address accusations from the US Department of Justice that the state’s child welfare agency allowed children to languish at a psychiatric hospital for months or even years after they were ready to be discharged. Read more.
⚓ State Senator Lou DiPalma says all Rhode Islanders support an overhaul to the Access to Public Records Act, but House Speaker Joe Shekarchi thinks only the media cares about it. Read more.
⚓ The Rhode Island Commerce Corporation has granted Organogenesis, a Massachusetts biotech firm, more than $13 million in tax incentives, to support the company’s opening of a new manufacturing facility in the Ocean State. Read more.
⚓ Health care and social assistance, along with the administrative and waste services sectors, led the way in recruiting in November as they hired 1,000 of the 1,500 new jobs created in Rhode Island, according to the state Department of Labor and Training. Read more.
🎂 Rhode Map readers have sent another round of Happy Birthday wishes to: Sarah Syed (39), Betsy Shimberg, Sister Mary Reilly, Patricia Socarras, Alison Bourgault (40), Jacob Nicolato (17), David Nicolato (48), Kevin McNamara, Yianni Kourakis,Annie Agresti (11), Nancy Krause, John Palumbo, Richard Luchette, state Senator Tiara Mack, Gordon Fox, Walker Rumble (87), Kara Young, Curt Columbus, Jackie Graham Burns, Tim Finbow (45), Suzanne Williams, Lewis Penny Monk, Leigh Anne Stacee, Colleen Leeman LaCroix, Steve Barbato, Victor Capellan, and Clarice LaVerne Thompson.
You can check out all of our coverage at Globe.com/RI
Also in the Globe
⚓ Don't miss this really thoughtful for piece from Katherine Gergen Barnett about her father, former top White House advisor David Gergen, who is suffering with dementia. Read more.
⚓ The town of Seekonk has agreed to settle with its former police chief for abruptly ending his three-year contract, but still faces a lawsuit in Massachusetts Federal District Court in Boston that accuses town officials of damaging his reputation. Read more.
⚓ Are the Drake Maye-Josh Allen comparisons valid? Tara Sullivan writes that the Patriots can only hope so. Read more.
⚠️ If you have questions about the RIBridges security breach, the state has set up a hotline that will run from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. each week day and 11 a.m. until 8 p.m. on weekends. The number is 833-918-6603, and the reference number is B137035.
⚓ Providence men's basketball hosts St. John's at The AMP tonight at 8 p.m.
Rhode Island Hospital was founded in 1863 during the Civil War.
RHODE ISLAND REPORT PODCAST Ed Fitzpatrick talks to RI PBS arts and culture producer Ross Lippman talks about some of the Black trailblazers in Jamestown.
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