New from CommonWealth Beacon
CODCAST: Should kids be allowed to use social media? That’s the question state policymakers are pondering, and it’s one of the many questions Boston College professor Ana Martínez Alemán and Northeastern University professor John Wihbey tackle in the latest episode of The Codcast.
OPINION: Attorney General Andrea Campbell and Dr. Anna Goldman, the medical director of sustainability at Boston Medical Center, issue an Earth Day call to action opposing the US Environmental Protection Agency’s recent move to rescind a 2009 conclusion that greenhouse gas emissions from motor vehicles threaten public health.
April 22, 2026
By Chris Lisinski
Everyone with a stake in the Cape Cod bridges megaproject agrees the two 91-year-old spans are so far past their useful lives that they ought to be replaced with modern successors. But what happens if federal funding falls short?
That’s a scenario that has Cape Cod business officials and the region’s lawmakers worried. A significant delay in securing money for bridge replacement could set in motion a costly repair project as a short-term stopgap measure, something local leaders say would not only squander limited resources but also create a months-long, maybe years-long traffic bottleneck that would strangle the Cape economy.
The first half of the massive infrastructure effort, focused on the Sagamore Bridge, is fully funded through a mix of state dollars, federal grants, and investments from the US Army Corps of Engineers. But that’s not the case for the Bourne Bridge, the sister span constructed at the same time as the Sagamore about three miles away.
After missing out on a pair of grants last year, Massachusetts leaders are waiting to find out if the state’s latest application for nearly $1.2 billion in federal money toward the Bourne Bridge replacement is successful. If the Trump administration passes over the Bay State, it would leave the Bourne with only a fraction of the money committed toward the roughly $2.3 billion cost — and, concerned locals think, less time in a closing window to figure out a plan.
That’s because the bridges are also due for an extensive repair blitz known as a “major rehabilitation.” The Army Corps deems that treatment necessary about every 45 years, and both spans last underwent such a program in the early 1980s. And to complete such a project, the Bourne Bridge — which the Army Corps once estimated carries an average of more than 45,000 vehicles per day — would need to close entirely for about six months, plus undergo some 16 months of partial lane closures.
Locals are not shy about casting that outcome in dire terms. With that much disruption to the Bourne Bridge, the Cape would “basically lose a third of our economy,” according to Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce CEO Paul Niedzwiecki.
“A [major] rehabilitation of the Bourne Bridge would cause an economic dislocation on Cape Cod that would probably take a generation to recover from,” he said. “We don’t really see that as a workable option.”
Worried about running out of time to avert that worst-case scenario, the region’s senator floated an eye-catching idea: maybe the state should start putting some money aside now to keep construction from being delayed too long.
More from CommonWealth Beacon
SOCIAL MEDIA SHOWDOWN: Proponents of social media restriction bills on Beacon Hill put forward by the House and governor say these are commonsense steps to reduce young people’s time on addictive sites. But opponents warn that, even if well-intentioned, the legislation would lead to more personal information from children and adults alike left in the hands of social media giants. Jennifer Smith explains.
EMMISSIONS MISS: State agencies are not complying with a 2017 regulation – which arose from a landmark ruling on meeting emissions goals – requiring them to track and report on the carbon emissions from the vehicles they own. Jordan Wolman has more.
OPINION: Amherst College professor Austin Sarat says the impending closure of Hampshire College is another blow to outside-the-box institutions that have challenged prevailing norms in higher education ever since philosopher John Dewey introduced the principles that have guided these schools at the turn of the 20th century.
OPINION: It’s time for the Primary Care Task Force the state launched last year and the Legislature to make the patient-centered medical home model a priority, writes Eric Dickson, president and CEO of UMass Memorial Health in Worcester. The task force should spearhead efforts to improve how it operates and adopt payment reforms needed to make it financially feasible to scale this innovative approach to the highest-need patients.
What We’re Reading
GOP: The Republican caucus in the state House of Representatives threw its support behind Auditor Diana DiZoglio’s legal bid to unjam her probe of the Legislature with an amicus brief opposing Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s effort to toss the case. (State House News Service – paywall)
ENERGY: Out in the quietude of rural Warwick in Franklin County, local leaders are working to transition away from oil and gas for transportation and heating amid a sustained stretch of rising energy prices. (WBUR)
SCOTUS: The US Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal from Massachusetts parents, represented by a right-leaning Christian group, who argued their constitutional rights had been violated by Ludlow Public Schools over steps school staff allegedly took to support their child’s LGBTQ identity. (The Hill)
UMASS: A UMass Amherst lecturer sued the school, alleging that he was removed from consideration for a tenure-track position because of his vocal support for Palestinian rights. (The Boston Globe – paywall)
ICE: Seven employees of the Allston Car Wash who were detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement last year filed a federal complaint over what their attorneys described as an “aggressive, militarized, and indiscriminate raid.” (GBH News)
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