The troubled state of the Boston public schools is Mayor Tom Menino’s Achilles’ heel. The woeful performance of the schools has surfaced over and over during the mayoral campaign, including […]
School facts not friendly to Menino, but that’s not the biggest problem
What Gateway Cities need to do to attract biotech firms
Gateway Cities officials today got a roadmap for attracting biotech companies from an executive of a company that moved to Massachusetts from Connecticut two years ago. Robert Cunningham, vice president of […]
Fact-check: The US Senate debate
By Michael Jonas and Bruce Mohl The four Democratic candidates for US Senate met last night at the John F. Kennedy Library in Dorchester in the first formal debate of […]
Full disclosure
It’s a simple equation: Transparency is only as good as the access available to public documents. But simple doesn’t always mean easy. Despite living in an age when a click […]
Pappas plans to build film studio in Southie
South Boston developer Tim Pappas says he wants to build a movie studio in South Boston that would cater to the production companies coming to Massachusetts to take advantage of the […]
Ed reform erosion
in 1993, the state passed an education reform law with a funding formula that closely followed proposals I developed with the late Jack Rennie and the Massachusetts Business Alliance for […]
Public spaces, private rules
many government agencies are quietly redefining themselves as private, nonprofit businesses. Citizens are learning that, at some agencies, public accountability laws no longer apply, or never existed. Our proven tools […]
This Side of Tax Paradise
A terrific new essay in The American Scholar analyzes F. Scott Fitzgerald's tax returns and is a startling reminder of how much the average American's relationship with the IRS has […]
Last-minute bets in the Boston mayoral race
The Phoenix's David Bernstein notes that Boston Mayor Tom Menino is doing very well among late contributors: I was fascinated to see that Tom Menino just had a banner fortnight […]
Massachusetts not so great this year, say public planners
Massachusetts was shut out of the American Planning Association's annual "Great Places" list, released earlier this month. But city and town planners don't have to go far to find inspiration, […]
Can South Coast Rail qualify for stimulus funding?
Securing funds to offset the some of the costs associated with the $1.9 billion South Coast Rail project would be a significant coup not only for southeastern Massachusetts, but also […]
Study: Older drivers good, but not good enough for 25% discount
New Massachusetts insurance data indicate that drivers over 65 are relatively low risks behind the wheel but probably not deserving of the full 25 percent auto insurance discount they receive […]
Second chances
INTRO TEXT three years ago, Dan Ladd of Lincoln closed up a real estate law practice and went back to school. Faced with a slow business climate and a desire […]
The last man standing
Jeffrey Mullan is out walking his dog in the fading summer twilight. I see him as I drive down a street in Milton and pull over to say hi. It’s […]
Lawmakers cagy on how they use expense stipends
massachusetts lawmakers receive a $600 monthly stipend for expenses, even though nearly all of their needs, including office supplies, stationery, postage, and telephone service, are paid out of other legislative […]
Greenway gets Bloomberg boost
One of the biggest financial supporters of Boston’s newest park, the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway, is a New Yorker. In its recently released annual report, the Greenway Conservancy, the park’s […]
Foreclosure limbo continues for retiree in Dorchester
the good news for Helen Williams is that two years after receiving an initial foreclosure notice, she hasn’t lost her house. The bad news is that she still doesn’t know […]
Carpentry apprentices help nonprofits get real-world training
for david leonhardi, a union’s effort to increase its community service offerings has helped enhance his teaching. Leonhardi is an instructor at the New England Regional Council of Carpenters’ training […]
Towns offer space to keep popular RMV branches open
cities and towns across the Commonwealth are making the state an offer it can’t refuse: Free or low-cost public space for Registry of Motor Vehicles branches. To save $1.7 million […]
Census trends
next year’s us Census promises more drama than usual, thanks to some recent demographic twists resulting from the economic crash of 2008. For example, the latest estimates have the state […]
Graduate gap
by one measure, Massachusetts is easily the most educated state in the United States. Among our residents over 25 years old, 37.9 percent had at least a bachelor’s degree in […]
Municipal workforces
just about every community in the Bay State is trying to make do with less, but there are huge differences in the sizes of their municipal payrolls in relation to […]
