A new education report by the Third Way, a Washington, DC-based think tank, found that the nation’s middle class schools aren’t performing up to par. The report found that three […]
Middle class schools called underperformers
Pierce leaving Globe after being disciplined
Boston Globe magazine writer Charlie Pierce, who needs little prompting to offer opinions on everything from sports to politics, is leaving for a job at Esquire magazine after the newspaper […]
The minority voting rights imperative
Dear Governor Patrick: Few Americans are more aware than you of the salient and inherent value of the right to vote and the importance and indispensability of representative democracy. Having […]
Post 9/11 stress syndrome
The nation paused yesterday to reflect on the horrors inflicted a decade ago. The observance was moving, and it was hard not to be touched by it. The day of […]
DiMasi sentenced to eight years
STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE Former House Speaker Salvatore DiMasi, once arguably the most powerful man in Massachusetts, was hit Friday with an eight-year jail sentence for his conviction on charges […]
The middle class candidate
When Elizabeth Warren was asked at one of her invitation-only, listening-tour house parties in Andover whether she was ready for the onslaught of scrutiny a potential US Senate candidacy will […]
9/11 and the arts
The arts have always had a humanizing influence — rising above political differences to celebrate the transformative power of creative expression. I find myself reflecting on that as we observe […]
Patrick consolidates UMass control
Gov. Deval Patrick consolidated his control over the 19-member University of Massachusetts board of trustees by reappointing its controversial chairman and naming six others who are political supporters and Democratic […]
Remembering 9/11
As the United States nears closer to the tenth anniversary of the September 11 attacks, the media has embarked on a collective national memorial in print, broadcast, and online. The […]
FEMA: Rescue me
Be grateful that Hurricane Katia is headed to out to sea rather than toward New England since the Federal Emergency Management Agency appears to be the next agency in line […]
Next DC crisis: The Postal Service is broke
Washington loves a good crisis, and it has had no shortage of them this year, from a near-shutdown of the federal government in April, to the 11th-hour negotiations over the […]
Agents, insurers at odds over credit scores
The state’s automobile insurance companies and the agents who represent many of them are on opposite sides of a hot-button issue: Should the companies be allowed to consider a driver’s […]
Scott Brown’s secret
Two stories tucked inside the metro section of The Boston Globe this morning help explain why US Sen. Scott Brown is going to be hard to beat. The first story […]
Memo to the Gang of Twelve (aka the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction)
For decades economists have chided the American people for spending too much and saving too little. Now we are told we should spend money to make it circulate while we […]
Film tax credit: take two
There’s no denying the excitement when a major motion picture production comes to your neighborhood. Increasingly, in recent years, movie making has moved out of the Hollywood soundstages to our streets […]
Justice sends clear signal to AT&T: No more T’s
The Justice Department’s decision to sue to disconnect the conversation between AT&T and T-Mobile is being hailed by many consumer advocates as a victory for competition even as it comes […]
Special needs misspending found
Auditor Suzanne Bump today released her audit of the embattled Merrimack Special Education Collaborative (MSEC), along with audits of the Southeastern Massachusetts Education Collaborative (SMEC) and READS Collaborative. The audits found serious […]
How do you solve a problem like Uncle Omar?
Jimmy Carter had brother Billy. Barack Obama has Uncle Omar. Carter’s headline-grabbing younger brother produced countless headaches for the White House as his elder brother fought for reelection in 1980. […]
State, local officials prep for ethanol trains
Most of the ethanol that is mixed with gasoline in Massachusetts enters the state by ship or fuel truck, but that will change next year when Global Petroleum Corp. begins […]
Feudin’ Republicans
The weeks leading up to Labor Day are slow ones on the presidential campaign trail. Real news is scarce, with candidates spending most of their time cozying up to well-heeled […]
Blown out of proportion
With the benefit of hindsight, today’s Boston Globe headline gets it about right: “Tired Irene Slaps N.E.” That put a pithy — and accurate — coda on the killer-Hurricane-turned-whimpy-tropical-storm that […]
Here comes Irene
Mother nature is pumping some life into the usually sleepy August news cycle. Earlier this week, an earthquake shook the East Coast and dominated front pages. But there’s nothing like […]
Hurricane reading list
Stuck inside this weekend? Here’s some reading to get you through the hurricane and up to speed on Massachusetts policy and politics. CASINOS Beacon Hill leaders have written legislation that […]
CrazyKhazei like a fox?
CrazyKhazei has been outed and he’s none other than Eric Fehrnstrom, one of the architects of Sen. Scott Brown’s stunning victory last year and a key adviser to Mitt Romney’s […]
