In this economy, it’s always nice to have a second income, and many in the Legislature do. A CommonWealth review of financial disclosures filed with the state Ethics Commission found nearly […]
The $100,000 club
Katherine Craven, superstar
When one state official does a superlative job, does anybody notice? Which brings us to the case of Katherine Craven. Craven, the first executive director of the Massachusetts School Building […]
IG sees subculture of corruption
Inspector General Gregory Sullivan, who has a broad mandate to prevent and detect fraud, waste, and abuse in state and local government, sat down recently with CommonWealth to discuss corruption […]
Cape Wind seeks DPU help in selling power
Below is the full text of a letter sent to the Department of Public Utilities by Cape Wind Associates, the developer of the Cape Wind project, requesting that approval of […]
Menino no Wal-Mart greeter
Boston Mayor Tom Menino has made official what he’s been saying for months: There’s no way Wal-Mart is opening a store in his city. What he really means is, there’s […]
Judge sends T dispute over warranty to jury
A federal judge has set a jury trial date for Nov. 7 in the MBTA’s $91.5 million suit against the maker of its faulty concrete ties, saying a “less than […]
Legacy making
THERE ARE TWO ways to look at presidential legacies: what historians arrive at after a period of time or what sticks in the minds of the general public. They come […]
Grossman’s binge fundraising
The sequence was almost as predictable as a September swoon for the Red Sox (how helpful to be able to dust that line off and get it back in circulation!). […]
North Station garage deal on shaky ground?
Members of the MassDOT board of directors are raising questions about the pending sale of the MBTA’s North Station garage, raising the possibility that the struggling transit agency could face […]
Greenway lowers its BID price
The Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy has entered the final stretch of its effort to launch a Business Improvement District to help fund its operations. The conservancy has made concessions to […]
Boston protests: It’s the economy, stupid
Yesterday’s announcement that Bank of America would begin next year charging customers $5 a month for the long-free privilege of using a debit card to make purchases could hardly have […]
Mass. sheriffs: Populist positions or partisan pandering?
How often do you hear about what the state’s county sheriffs are doing, except at election time or in stories about patronage hiring? In Massachusetts, the office has been marginalized […]
Mass lawmakers key in postal fight
Massachusetts lawmakers may play key roles in deciding the fate of the US Postal Service, which is struggling to adapt as the volume of American mail keeps declining. US Rep. […]
ProPublica zeroes in on Fair Districts Mass
A ProPublica investigation found that some independent groups promoting redistricting plans across the country are anything but. It’s probably no surprise that one of the organizations that they probed was […]
The immigrant wedge
If it’s election season, it’s time to ratchet up the rhetoric about immigration, and the fatter the target, the better. That’s why in-state college tuition for the children of illegal […]
Professor says Boston attractive casino site
Casino operators will bid very aggressively for a license to operate in the Boston area if gambling legislation passes, but Massachusetts officials should go slowly in selecting the eventual winner, […]
Arraignment question: Who did O’Brien bribe?
Former Probation Commissioner John J. O’Brien pled not guilty this morning in Suffolk Superior Court to conspiracy and bribery charges but the longest shadow cast over the proceedings was by […]
Firefighters’ folly
It seemed like something from the Onion. But stories about the antics of the Boston firefighters union often have the feeling of parody about them. The union is heading to […]
OH MY GOD!
Yes, that was my reaction when I read the small editorial in this morning’s Boston Globe about a small Catholic university in Pennsylvania rescinding its invitation to syndicated columnist Ellen […]
Student churn hinders progress
Massachusetts education officials are celebrating the dramatic MCAS test improvements posted by the state’s most chronically underperforming schools. These impressive gains are testimony to hard work and a stubborn unwillingness […]
Confronting our dropout crisis
Across the state students are settling into a new school year. Unfortunately, more than 8,000 of their former classmates won’t be joining them—the result of a dropout crisis that affects […]
Feds, in Worcester, investigate probation
CORRECTION: Because of a reporting error, the location of the federal grand jury investigating patronage at the state’s Probation Department was misidentified in the original version of this story. The […]
Voting not to participate
What if they held an election and nobody came? It darn near happened in Brockton this week when only 4.7 percent of voters turned out for the city’s preliminary election. […]
