CORRECTION: The salary information contained in this story for employees of the Life Sciences Center has changed. The two employees who were earning $185,000 a year have left, leaving the […]
Life Sciences Center in salary crosshairs
In Worcester, a web site that names names
Matt Amorello, the former head of the Mass. Turnpike Authority and the Big Dig, debuted a transportation column this morning that criticizes what he calls the minimal impact of stimulus […]
Mass. can do better on prescription checks
The US Centers for Disease Control, labeling prescription drug abuse the fastest growing drug problem in the nation, has suggested that “changes in state laws that focus on the prescribing […]
Scott Brown and the 99 percent
US Sen. Scott Brown has jumped feet first into a controversy that complicates his Senate campaign. Last week, the Obama administration back-peddled on a mandate to require institutions and universities […]
GOP touts plan for economic growth, jobs
Criticizing Democrats for inertia on job growth, Republican lawmakers today unveiled a package of proposals geared towards stimulating the economy and creating jobs in Massachusetts. “When we looked at the […]
Cape Wind part of merger deal
NStar and Northeast Utilities have agreed to freeze their rates, rebate $21 million to Massachusetts customers, and buy more than a quarter of Cape Wind’s electricity output to secure the […]
Meditech project really dead
Back in September, medical software developer Meditech pulled the plug on a plan to build a $65 million office complex in Freetown, but South Coast officials mounted an intense effort […]
Election laws need overhaul
The Massachusetts Legislature recently accomplished what few believed was possible. With a singular commitment to broadening democracy in the state, it adopted a fair and comprehensive redistricting plan. For this […]
Federal early ed aid is great but not enough
When Gov. Deval Patrick and more than 150 legislators, early educators, early childhood advocates ,and state education leaders gathered at the State House last month to celebrate the Commonwealth’s newly […]
The value of a vigorous press
On Friday, Boston Globe editor Martin Baron was honored as the 2012 recipient of the Stephen Hamblett First Amendment Award, given by the New England First Amendment Center. Below is […]
Hospital rankings stir controversy
As part of the sweeping 2010 federal health care law, the government is trying to tie Medicare reimbursement rates to the quality of care delivered at hospitals. The idea is […]
What’s yours is the Times’s and what’s the Times’s is the Times’s
The New York Times, like most entertainment, publishing, and media behemoths, is firmly in favor of the stalled efforts in Congress to reel in copyright infringement and outright piracy on […]
Lawyering up on Beacon Hill
Beacon Hill lawmakers are lawyering up as state and federal investigators probe hiring practices at the Massachusetts Probation Department. Campaign finance records indicate a number of lawmakers identified as frequent […]
Schilling’s got game
Curt Schilling, aka the Big Lug, looks like he might be pitching a perfect game. Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning came out this week amid great expectations. Pre-orders of the $60 […]
MBTA Snow Job
Higher gas taxes. New tolls. Charging drivers by the mile. Everyone has an idea of how to fix what ails the MBTA. The latest trial balloon would reallocate $20 million […]
No new taxes, fees, DeLeo tells House
House Speaker Robert DeLeo told his colleagues the chamber’s budget for the coming fiscal year would not include any new taxes or fees, and he didn’t mention whether he has […]
DiMasi moves, Beacon Hill quakes
Last month, the Globe reported that federal prosecutors had “essentially completed their investigation” into rigged hiring at the state’s Probation Department, saying indictments “could be imminent.” Soon after, the Lowell […]
The Real Romney
The Boston Globe reporters Michael Kranish and Scott Helman have provided a genuine service with the publication of The Real Romney. After reading through the book I have only one […]
MBTA deficit solutions too narrow in scope
Discussion about the MBTA’s proposal to implement fare hikes and service cuts to meet a $160 million dollar budget shortfall has, until Boston Mayor Tom Menino’s recent letter to Secretary […]
Boston busing crisis
It was nudged to the corner of yesterday’s Globe Metro front by the all-important history of a decade of worth of wagers between Tom Menino and various mayors over whose […]
Group sets principles on $24b in tax breaks
A state commission today unanimously agreed on a set of basic principles that will guide its members as they evaluate and scale back the $24 billion in tax breaks the […]
Millennium to plug hole
The ugly hole in the ground at Downtown Crossing is finally going to be filled, according to stories in the Boston newspapers. Millennium Partners will take control of the former […]
Mass. consumer confidence rebounds from 2011 lows
Consumer confidence in Massachusetts is on the rise, an indication that the state’s residents are starting to feel the benefits of the economic recovery and that incumbent politicians may have […]
Murray’s poll numbers
Lt. Gov. Tim Murray may not be political road kill after all, according to a new CommonWealth poll conducted by the MassINC Polling Group. Ever since his crash along Interstate […]
