06/11/2026
A group of councilors sat by the dim yellow light of Room 305 in Providence City Hall for nearly four hours on April 30. They listened as department heads from across the city rotated on and off the seat at the end of the long conference table, discussing sewers, traffic engineering, decorative lighting, and public parks.
It was the new Committee on Ways and Means’ annual Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) budget meeting. The City of Providence began putting together a yearly CIP budget under former Mayor Jorge Elorza back in 2017; its purpose is to clearly outline all of the proposed public infrastructure projects planned by each city department for the next five years. More than $111 million in CIP projects are planned for fiscal year 2027, and the total five-year projection for the 2027-2031 CIP is over $700 million. Despite CIP money making up a significant portion of the City’s total $638 million budget for 2027, the CIP process can feel shrouded in mystery to the outside spectator.
At the April 30 meeting, one line item stood out among the others: $6.6 million earmarked for the Trinity Square area of South Providence almost a decade ago. The money is under the purview of the City’s Department of Planning and Development. Not only has the money appeared to languish with no significant results on the ground, but $3.4 million of the original $10 million allocation is gone.
Read the full story: https://ppsri.org/10-million-was-set-aside-to-improve-trinity-square-in-2019-3-4-million-has-been-spent-but-not-all-of-it-on-trinity-square/