Lisa Baldelli-Hunt
Lisa Baldelli-Hunt (born June 13, 1962) is an American politician and Mayor of Woonsocket, Rhode Island.
Lisa Baldelli-Hunt | |
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33rd and 35th Mayor of Woonsocket | |
Assumed office December, 2013[1] | |
Preceded by | Leo T. Fontaine[2] |
Succeeded by | Daniel Gendron (Interim)[3] Herself (Elected)[4] |
Member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives from the 49th[5] district | |
In office January 2007 – December 2013 | |
Preceded by | David E. LaRoche[6] |
Succeeded by | Michael Morin[7] |
Personal details | |
Born | Rhode Island, U.S. | June 13, 1962
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Edward Hunt[8] |
Children | 3[9] |
Education | Bryant University |
Website | Government website |
Background
Baldelli-Hunt lives in Woonsocket, Rhode Island with her husband and family. She went to Bryant College and was involved with the commercial real estate business. Baldelli-Hunt also worked for the United States Postal Service. Baldelli-Hunt is a member of the Democratic Party.[10][11]
Family
Baldelli-Hunt's nephew is the baseball coach and player Rocco Baldelli.[12] Her uncle is former mayor of Woonsocket, Charles C. Baldelli who served from 1985-1989.[13][14]
In 2015, Baldelli-Hunt agreed to pay a $750 civil penalty for violating the state ethics code by hiring her son and teammates on his baseball team for unadvertised summer jobs.[15]
Elections and removal
Baldelli-Hunt was elected to the Rhode Island House of Representatives for District 49 in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, in 2006. She served from 2007–2013. In 2013, Baldelli-Hunt was elected as mayor of Woonsocket, beating incumbent mayor Leo T. Fontaine. She was the second female mayor in the city's history. Baldelli-Hunt served until October 6, 2022, when she was removed from office by the Woonsocket City Council.[16] Council President Daniel Grendon was immediately sworn in as interim mayor.[17] Baldelli-Hunt ran unopposed in the Woonsocket mayoral elections and again won mayorship on November 9, 2022 for a fifth term with 76% of the vote. After winning the election, Baldelli-Hunt stated “It was undemocratic, it was horrific, to think and be so brazen that you feel that you have so much power and authority and you dismiss the vote of the people,” Baldelli-Hunt also stated that she had plans to revise the charter of the city of Woonsocket to prevent the City Council from removing mayors from office.[18]
Career
Sexual Offender Registration And Community Notification Act
In 2011, Lisa Baldelli-Hunt proposed a law that would allow local police to place signs at the homes of people in the sex offender registry. The bill failed to get out of the committee stage. Baldelli-Hunt told GoLocalProv regarding people in the sex offender registry, “I’m not interested in their rights or protecting them. I have no concern for them because they are the worst of the worst.” Baldelli-Hunt proposed the law hoping it would goad registered people into moving out of the state. “It’s not our responsibility to be concerned with how other states handle their sex offenders,” Baldelli-Hunt said.[19]
Gay marriage legislation
In 2013, Baldelli-Hunt voted against a bill allowing same-sex couples to get married in Rhode Island. The Rhode Island House of Representatives approved the measure in a 51-19 vote. Baldelli-Hunt was one of three Woonsocket politicians who opposed the bill, along with Stephen Casey and Robert Phillips.[20]
Teacher contract negotiations
In August 2018, The Woonsocket Teachers’ Guild declined all contract proposals from Baldelli-Hunt’s negotiation team. This prompted a work-to-rule order when the school year began, where teachers only worked during school hours and did not offer after-school activities or tutoring to students. For the next year, teachers followed the order and students were denied access to additional supports. 2018 was the first year in three decades that Woonsocket teachers began the school year without a contract. The Teachers’ Guild claimed Woonsocket teachers were among the lowest paid teachers in Rhode Island. They said in nine years they had only received a 2% raise.[21][22]
In September 2018 teachers, paraprofessionals, and their supporters engaged in a demonstration staged at Baldelli-Hunt’s campaign event. In November 2018, school workers were accused of participating in a sick-out, after 200 educators called out sick, leading to classes being canceled.[23][24][25][26]
In May 2019, a contract was finally approved. The new contract included a “$7.1 million increase in total salaries paid over three years”, according to School Committee Chairman Paul Bourget.[27]
Reaction to Special One-Time Assistance Program
In November 2019, Baldelli-Hunt objected to New York City's Special One-Time Assistance Program, which helped five formerly homeless families relocate back to Rhode Island communities without advanced warning. Baldelli-Hunt cited limited resources as her reasoning for opposing the program, and called on local social service agencies to get involved in blocking the moves.[28][29]
Implementation of curfew

In June 2020, Baldelli-Hunt signed an executive order imposing a temporary 8 p.m. city curfew for Woonsocket, following national protests against the murder of George Floyd. Baldelli-Hunt cited a “potential threat against city property" as her reasoning.[30][31][32]
Dismissal of pride programming
In June of 2021, Baldelli-Hunt was accused of intentionally blocking a pride event from taking place in Woonsocket. Organizers said they attempted to book the celebration at River Island Park, paying an application fee for the event. The item never appeared on the city council docket, and was denied because of alleged construction. In response, organizers planned to move their event to Market Square. Baldelli-Hunt then scheduled a car show in the square, giving only three days notice. Black Lives Matter RI PAC criticized the lack of a Pride Flag Raising Ceremony that year, noting that the Woonsocket City Council had voted unanimously in favor of hosting a ceremony. City officials raised an upside down pride flag and neglected to invite the community to be present.[33][34][35][36]
Censorship lawsuit
In August 2021, the ACLU of Rhode Island filed a federal lawsuit against Baldelli-Hunt for banning and blocking critics from commenting on her Facebook page. In September 2021, both parties reached a settlement. Baldelli-Hunt agreed to unblock previously banned accounts on her Facebook account, to not block anyone going forward “based on First Amendment-protected viewpoints expressed”, and pay $7,000 to the ACLU for legal fees.[37][38][39]
ARPA spending
On November 15, 2021, numerous Woonsocket residents attended a City Council meeting to request that the City Council reconsider their plans for funds received under the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA).[40][41] Baldelli-Hunt responded to residents defensively.[40] An opinion poll undertaken to gauge resident's opinions on the matter[42] found that residents wanted the money to prioritize housing, infrastructure, including paved roads and clean water, mental health and domestic violence services, and community health and wellness.[43] On November 21, 2021, a rally of at least 40 people gathered to protest Baldelli-Hunt’s and the council’s proposed budget. Former Woonsocket City Council member, Alex Kithes, stated, “We’re here today because the first $14 million in our city’s ARPA funds were budgeted by the Mayor last week and passed by the City Council for the first time on Monday and they included nothing that our neighbors [wanted], nothing for housing and health."[40] Participants noted the presence of workers from the Woonsocket Highway Department using leaf blowers and idling trucks in the park until the rally ended.[40]
Resolution opposing harm reduction centers
In 2022, after Rhode Island became the first state to legalize supervised injection sites,[44] Baldelli-Hunt passed a resolution opposing harm reduction centers. According to the Valley Breeze newspaper, the leaders wrote that they “do not support or condone the consumption or use of illicit drugs” and would not place a harm reduction center in the city of Woonsocket.[45] In 2021, Woonsocket firefighters responded to 163 calls for suspected overdoses and recorded 11 overdose deaths.[46]
Recognition of COVID-19 deaths
In August 2022, Baldelli-Hunt had 268 white flags placed on Cumberland Hill Road to honor the lives of 268 Woonsocket residents who died from COVID-19.[47][48]
Death of Susan Menard
In September 2022, the “severely decomposed” bodies of former Woonsocket Mayor Susan Menard and her husband were discovered in Menard’s home. Baldelli-Hunt called the deaths a tragedy and put the Woonsocket city hall flags at half staff in her honor.[49][50]
Demolition of homeless encampment
On January 4, 2023, Baldelli-Hunt ordered the demolition of a Woonsocket homeless encampment where nine people were sheltering by the Blackstone River.[51][52] After police gave a 30-minute notice to the encampment residents,[53] the Department of Public Works bulldozed the tents, and disposed of all belongings from the encampment into a dumpster.[54] One resident, who had lived in a tent at the encampment for years, lost drawings from his children because of the demolition.[53] Michelle Taylor, vice president at CCA,[55] said police claimed there would be a bus that would take campers to an emergency shelter in Providence following eviction, yet a bus never arrived.[53] Woonsocket service providers stated that the city never coordinated with them around supporting clients displaced from the demolition.[53]
State Senator Melissa Murray criticized Baldelli-Hunt's administration for clearing the camps in an opinion letter on behalf of herself and colleagues in the General Assembly, Representatives Jon Brien, Robert Phillips, and Steve Casey,[56] writing, "Bulldozing camps and destroying a person’s only respite from the elements is cruel and does not solve the problem of homelessness."[56] The politicians accused Baldelli-Hunt of pawning off homeless people on other municipalities.[56] Former encampment residents were told by employees of the city to leave Woonsocket and go to Providence or Cranston.[57] Woonsocket has the second highest number of people experiencing homelessness in the state.[58]
Issuance of cease and desist order to methadone clinic
In mid-January 2023, Baldelli-Hunt's administration issued a cease and desist order to CODAC Behavioral Healthcare's mobile methadone clinic demanding they move from the parking lot of the Community Care Alliance in Woonsocket. The clinic provides treatment for opioid use disorder to 40 patients a day. In 2021, Woonsocket had the highest number of overdoses in the state of any municipality.[59][60][61]
Blackstone River lawsuit
In March 2023, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha announced he was suing the city of Woonsocket and its contractors for dumping effluent in the Blackstone River.[62] The lawsuit alleges the city polluted the river multiple times and, in doing so, violated state environmental laws and Rhode Island's Clean Water Act. Baldelli-Hunt claims that other municipalities dump sewage in the Blackstone and Woonsocket is only responsible for 10% of it.[63][64]
References
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- MLB-RI's Rocco Baldelli returns to Fenway for Sox home opener
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