In a predictable coda to the Mother of All Traffic Jams, Massachusetts Turnpike Executive Director Alan LeBovidge politely told Gov. Deval Patrick to take this job and shove it."Given today’s […]
‘Reform before revenue’ claims another TeamTrans victim
Southern NE, Hawaii have fewest gun victims
The Violence Policy Center yesterday released a ranking of the states by frequency of deaths by firearms. The gun control group concludes states with tougher laws against firearms, such as […]
Galvin sitting on development tax credits
Secretary of State William Galvin is sitting on millions of dollars in tax credits designed to spur the economic development of historic buildings across the state. Despite the severe economic […]
The Commonwealth of Tweet
Marshall McLuhan famously said that the medium is the message, but with social-networking sites the opposite seems to be true. Last night, at a MassINC forum examining the recession’s effect […]
Grist for a higher meals tax?
It's axiomatic that people eat out less often during a recession, but restaurant meals may not be such a bad value in Boston. According to the latest Consumer Price Index, […]
New Bedford heading south again?
Steve Urbon of the Standard-Times has a succinct but awfully bleak assessment of how New Bedford is doing in the current recession. Opening sentence:Unemployment has hung like a dark cloud […]
Fitchburg
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 In Fitchburg, an arts pilot school takes off but may hit turbulence By Gabrielle GurleySpring 2006
Brockton
Requiem for a heavyweight: In Massachusetts city famous for shoes, a loss of soul By Sam Allis Boston Globe, April 26, 2009 Broken homes: The housing bubble was built on […]
Menino happy to debate, have root canal
Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who did all he could to avoid head-to-head sessions with opponents in past races, said today he'll agree to three debates with his challengers, and he acted like […]
Globe pension ‘scoop’ is old news in the pages of CommonWealth
The Boston Globe, which teed up a story on its front-page yesterday on the generous, early pensions being granted to ex-lawmakers who choose to leave office, suggested it has uncovered the latest outrage in series of […]
Nobody wants too many restaurants
It's a familiar pattern in Boston: A neighborhood becomes gentrified (i.e., safe and attractive), raising hopes that stores selling things like books and household necessities will move in. But instead […]
How “sweating the small stuff” adds up big in urban schools
Good manners, perseverance, and a firm handshake aren't enough to put poor children on track to success in high school, college, and beyond. But they seem consistently to be essential ingredients in the small number […]
Innovation at 10
If necessity is indeed the mother of invention, an economic meltdown should spark lots of new ideas – some good, some so-so, some the sort you’re embarrassed to admit you […]
More health coverage doesn’t necessarily mean more doctors
One challenge in extending health care coverage is that there may not be enough primary-care doctors to see new patients, according to Robert Pear in the New York Times. Massachusetts […]
“ArchitectureBoston” covers Gateway Cities
ArchitectureBoston, the quarterly published by the Boston Society of Architects, devotes its Summer 2009 issue to one of MassINC's favorite topics, the 11 Gateway Cities of Massachusetts. As editor Elizabeth […]
What do Bostonians think about their neighbors?
The Boston Public Health Commission has just released Health of Boston 2009, a hefty report on all manner of things affecting the well-being of residents, including environmental conditions, access to […]
MassINC is proud to be your “pure voice of gloom”
"Urban Writer" Jim Miara thinks I may be trying too hard to put a bad spin on the news that fewer people are moving out of Massachusetts: Sometimes the glass […]
Everything you wanted to know about dying in Massachusetts
After our characterization as a “gloom and doom” organization, I hesitate to post this, but last week the state Department of Public Health released its Massachusetts Death 2007 report, and […]
Hard times for moving companies, bubble wrap manufacturers
The US Census Bureau announced yesterday that the percentage of Americans who changed residences last year was the lowest since the feds began keeping records in 1948. Only 11.9 percent […]
FBI sniffing around Sox stadium deal in Florida?
The Boston Red Sox have sealed a sweet deal with Lee County officials in Florida for a publicly funded spring training complex, including a mini-Fenway, that raised a few eyebrows […]
Spring issue of CommonWealth magazine now online
The spring issue of CommonWealth is out today, with eye-opening reports on the state of special education in Massachusetts and the email ineptitude of many government websites. There is also […]
Weighty problems require complex solutions
By Alison LobronStarting next year, Massachusetts schools will calculate students’ Body Mass Index, a small shift in procedure that has attracted considerable attention. The shift is small because schools already […]
Doctor discipline low in Massachusetts, lowest in Minnesota
Massachusetts ranks 38th in the incidence of "serious" disciplinary actions against doctors, according to a report released yesterday by Public Citizen. The public interest group noted that physicians in Alaska, […]
March unemployment rate by Mass. city and town
The state has released town-by-town unemployment rates for March 2009, and southeastern Massachusetts had the worst job picture, as seen on the map below: Unemployment was above 10 percent in […]
