With so much attention given to the business of selling houses (and, now, losing houses to banks), it may be easy to forget that few Americans actually change residences in […]
Staying put
Second life
Sometime this April, one of New England’s most venerable daily newspapers will cease to be a daily newspaper.The Christian Science Monitor, which marked its 100th anniversary this past November, is […]
Emptied nests
Failed mortgages are almost always more common in lower-income areas, but in the current housing crisis, all of the Bay State’s foreclosure hotspots are in communities with relatively low home […]
A dysfunctional democracy
The election of Barack Obama was a historic moment for America. Faced with a choice between two very different candidates at a perilous time in the nation’s history, voters turned […]
Old Boston may have to feel sorry for that punk city in Arizona
Last summer, the Census Bureau admitted that Boston's population is growing (though not as much as the city claims it is). This week, the Arizona Republic reported on signs that […]
1,000 great places to see before you die – on a budget
Gov. Patrick got into the swing of the recession yesterday, signing a law that costs nothing and will (maybe) make us feel better about not taking the Caribbean vacations we […]
Skirting the grad rate challenge
A recent report highlighting the abysmally low college graduation rates of Boston public school graduates who go on to higher education ought to be a call to arms. Instead, some education […]
Surgeons should adopt “cockpit” checklists
Today's Boston Globe reports that "deaths and complications dropped by an astounding one-third" when doctors and nurses began using a "safety checklist" before surgery, according to a Harvard study. This shouldn't be surprising, […]
Democrats pull a “Finneran” in Tennessee House
Last week Sal DiMasi sailed to another term as Speaker of the Massachusetts House, but there was a far more interesting leadership vote in Nashville yesterday. Republicans outnumber Democrats 50-49 […]
Murray to Beacon Hill: No gas tax, at least not yet
The Massachusetts Senate drew a line in the sand today, vowing not to hike anyone's taxes or tolls until a massive consolidation of the state's transportation network is completed or at […]
Pension perk for lawmakers may finally be curbed, but where’s the wholesale fix?
After disgraced former state senator Jim Marzilli recently sought a special state pension, the Boston Globe ran a follow-up story reporting that more than a dozen former lawmakers have taken advantage of a […]
Jim Aloisi: Eyes wide shut
A friend of Jim Aloisi’s told him that he hoped the new secretary of transportation was going into his new position with his eyes wide open. “I’m better off if […]
NBC: Mass. health care reform aided by light touch of Legislature
NBC has declared the Bay State's health care reform law a success, mainly because the Legislature didn't micro-manage it. Chief science correspondent Robert Bazell explains in an online column that accompanies […]
Greenway Conservancy scaling back
With public funding uncertain, the private group preparing to take over management of the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway is paring back its budget as well as its ambitious plans for the Big […]
State budget numbers are bad
The Patrick administration today lowered its revenue forecast for this fiscal year by a whopping $952 million and concluded there would be little or no budgetary improvement in the coming year. The […]
Politicker dies, “iTunes” for news looms
Politicker MA, a website that covered state politics at a time when Beacon Hill coverage is steadily being reduced in both the broadcast and print media, apparently expired this weekend. (The […]
Winter weather already causing financial sinkholes for cities and towns
Friday, January 9, 2009 Unfortunately, depleted snow removal budgets don't seem to be a harbinger of spring this year. Rather, they're starting to appear well before Martin Luther King Jr. […]
Finneran’s pardon plea
Tom Finneran may have been the original captain of the Straight Talk Express, the guy who told it like it was and didn't hesitate to deliver unpopular news, especially to the special […]
Public colleges still not making the grade
The Boston Globe's James Vanzis reports on the miserable graduation rates among former students of Boston public schools who attend public colleges. (Those who attend private colleges have much higher grad […]
Putting automobile insurers in the driver’s seat
If you felt your automobile insurer ruled you at fault in an accident — a finding that usually leads to a sharp hike in your premium — would you rather file an […]
Green mag touts Plymouth Rock Studios
Plymouth's recently approved movie studio is given the once-over by E magazine — not because of its economic benefits to Massachusetts but because of its "green" qualities: A few weeks […]
Asian longhorned beetles and their effects on Worcester brains
A few days ago I linked to a Boston Globe story suggesting that trees help relieve the mental stress of living in large cities. Unfortunately, the Daily Worcesteria reminds us that the […]
Patrick’s narrow ethics focus
Gov. Deval Patrick's task force on public integrity today unveiled legislation to toughen the state's ethics and lobbying laws, but it shied away from broader, more radical measures to address why corruption always […]
Lather – Rinse – Repeat
Tuesday's fourth and final oversight hearing on transportation finance dysfunction in the Bay State didn’t really offer up anything new. Yet five of the members of the Transportation Finance Commission […]
