Posted inCourts

SJC: $70,000 engagement ring must be returned to giver if wedding called off

“We now join the modern trend adopted by the majority of jurisdictions that have considered the issue and retire the concept of fault in this context; where, as here, the planned wedding does not ensue and the engagement is ended, the engagement ring must be returned to the donor regardless of fault,” Justice Dalila Wendlandt wrote for a unanimous court.

Posted inEnergy

What’s the pending climate bill going to cost us?

Presumably these many billions of dollars will all be paid for by the electricity users of Massachusetts, also known as ratepayers. Increasing electric bills is a highly regressive measure as it hits the poor the hardest, and the claim by the bill’s sponsors that the increase in electricity costs will be offset somewhat by a reduction in natural gas purchases rings hollow.

Posted inPolitics

Cracks form in Mass. Democratic strongholds, led by heavily Latino cities and towns

Vice President Kamala Harris, who carried the state and its 11 electoral votes by 61.3 percent to President-elect Donald Trump’s 36.5 percent, not only won Massachusetts by a smaller margin than her Democratic predecessors. She won almost every single town by less, a sign that the Democratic coalition is weakening even in its strongholds.

Posted inBallot Questions

Voters end MCAS graduation test requirement 

Voters approved a ballot question that will remove a requirement that Massachusetts high school students pass a 10th-grade standardized test in English, math, and science to graduate. 
The vote removes a central pillar of the state’s 1993 education reform law, and makes Massachusetts one of only two states with no statewide-requirements for high school graduation.

Posted inBallot Questions

Voters demand audit of Legislature, hurdles remain 

In a brief interview on Tuesday night, DiZoglio said she is prepared to take on the Legislature either in court or on Beacon Hill. She said she is enlisting the support of supportive lawmakers to block any action in the Legislature that would undermine Tuesday’s vote. If that fails, DiZoglio said, she is urging the governor to side with the state’s voters.

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