RACIAL INEQUITY in Massachusetts is largely attributable to discriminatory housing policies. High levels of segregation keep people of color from experiencing equal access to employment and educational opportunities, clean air […]
A chance to address racial inequity at its roots
As local news withers, we’re losing sense of identity
WHEN RICK HOLMES RETIRED as the opinion editor at the MetroWest Daily News in 2017, he was worried about the decline in journalism and what it would mean for local communities. […]
As local news withers, we’re losing sense of identity
When Rick Holmes retired as the opinion editor at the MetroWest Daily News in 2017, he was worried about the decline in journalism and what it would mean for local […]
Scary headlines
GHOSTING THE NEWS Local Journalism and the Crisis of American Democracy By Margaret Sullivan 105 pages, Columbia Global Reports WHEN THE OWNERS of the Middlesex News acquired the Waltham News-Tribune, […]
Kennedy says Markey vote shows need for change
JOE KENNEDY is fond of saying there is more to being a US senator than filing bills and taking votes, but during a televised debate with Ed Markey Sunday night […]
Despite COVID, families prioritizing college savings
THE ECONOMIC DISRUPTION induced by the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the extreme financial vulnerability that exists in America. The sudden economic crisis revealed what experts have been saying for years: […]
Time for Beacon Hill to pick up the pace
COVID-19 HAS HIGHLIGHTED all of Massachusetts weaknesses; chief among them, our political leadership’s inability to respond with urgency to major challenges. While Massachusetts has responded better than many states, better […]
The eye of a housing hurricane
WITH COVID-19 DEATHS and infections remaining low here, enhanced federal unemployment benefits continuing through July, and the state’s emergency freeze on evictions still in effect, it’s possible to believe that […]
House approves police reform bill on 93-66 vote
STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE AND ON THE third day, after sessions that ran for a collective 35 hours, the Massachusetts House of Representatives passed a sweeping police reform and accountability […]
Anti-Trump ‘Gen Z’ Republicans look for a home
WHEN MIKE BRODO chaired the Massachusetts Teenage Republicans in 2017-2018, he was getting increasingly frustrated by the “Trumpism” dominating the national party. But Brodo said he looked to the more […]
House releases sports betting bill
CONSIDER ITS UNCERTAIN ODDS as falling somewhere between a Hail Mary pass and a slam dunk. With a week left before the scheduled end of the legislative session, the Massachusetts House […]
Telehealth needs to deliver care at a lower cost
WITH MANDATED CLOSURES, significant loss of revenue, and uncertainty impacting Main Street’s bottom line, the COVID-19 pandemic has already imposed unforeseen costs on small businesses struggling to survive. But even […]
Baker called Holyoke Soldiers’ Home families
GOV. CHARLIE BAKER said on Friday that he has called every family who lost a loved one to COVID-19 at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home, and reached about 80 percent of […]
Baker launches tougher ‘honor’ system for travelers
GOV. CHARLIE BAKER on Friday announced tougher-sounding restrictions on nearly all travelers entering the state from outside the region, requiring them to quarantine for 14 days or produce a negative […]
Telehealth is burgeoning, but how to pay for it?
SINCE THE CORONAVIRUS pandemic hit, going to a doctor’s appointment for many people has looked similar to going to work or visiting a parent: Go to a computer, log onto a […]
What about the back rent?
THE EXTENSION THIS week by Gov. Charlie Baker of a statewide eviction moratorium to mid-October provides two more months of breathing room for tenants. The eviction freeze, put in place in April […]
Worcester officials fed up with Charter/Spectrum
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN internet service is a barrier to remote learning? And what happens when resolving the internet access problem is in the hands of a private company, which holds a […]
Worcester officials fed up with Charter/Spectrum
What happens when internet service is a barrier to remote learning? And what happens when resolving the internet access problem is in the hands of a private company, which holds […]
Mass. nursing homes need a permanent fix
I STARTED MY career in long term care as a nursing home social worker on Cape Cod in 1991 and now operate a non-profit system that includes eight skilled nursing […]
Lawsuits seek records on info-sharing with feds
STUDENT ADVOCACY GROUPS filed lawsuits on Thursday against the Boston Public Schools and the Boston Police Department seeking records that would shed light on how the two city agencies share […]
Ex-Holyoke Soldiers’ Home superintendent disputes independent report
AN ATTORNEY REPRESENTING ousted Holyoke Soldiers’ Home superintendent Bennett Walsh on Thursday disputed many of the central claims in an independent investigation that looked at what caused a massive coronavirus […]
Baker not doing enough on environmental justice
ONE EVENING IN 2007, Chelsea, East Boston, Roxbury, and Dorchester residents packed Chelsea High School auditorium with signs that read “Clean Air is a Human Right” and “Got Asthma?” They […]
We need to build on telehealth
THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC has significantly altered the way Massachusetts residents live and work. Our healthcare system also changed nearly overnight as traditional medical groups scrambled to develop capacity to see […]
Private schools, charters moved forward with remote curriculum
WHEN THIRD-GRADER Alisa Paley’s public elementary school in Canton closed for COVID-19, the school gave students laptops and her teacher held optional daily 40-minute Zoom meetings. A month in, the […]
