Providence, Cranston, Warwick, Pawtucket, and other Providence County cities require door-to-door commercial solicitors to register with the police department, submit to a BCI background check through RI Attorney General, and carry a visible ID badge. Religious, political, and charitable canvassing are protected and generally exempt.
Commercial door-to-door solicitors in Providence County must obtain a peddler/solicitor license from the municipality where they canvass. Providence regulates under Code Ch. 14 with permits issued by the Board of Licenses; Cranston under Ch. 8.16; Warwick under Ch. 26; Pawtucket, Woonsocket, East Providence, Smithfield, Johnston, and North Providence each maintain separate registration through the town clerk or police department. Background checks through the RI Attorney General's Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) are standard. Permitted hours are typically 9 AM to 7 or 8 PM (some suburbs cut off earlier). Solicitors must display a photo ID badge and carry the permit. First Amendment-protected activity β religious proselytizing, political canvassing, union organizing, and nonprofit advocacy β is exempt from permit requirements per Watchtower Bible & Tract Society v. Stratton (2002), though some cities still request voluntary registration. RIGL Β§11-18 criminalizes fraudulent charitable solicitation.
Soliciting without required permit: $100-$500 citation plus possible criminal trespass charge if refusing to leave. Soliciting after allowed hours: $100-$250. Failure to display ID badge: $50-$200. Fraudulent solicitation: criminal charges under RIGL Β§11-18.
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See how Providence County's solicitor permits rules stack up against other locations.
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