To the thousands of drivers who crawl through the Sagamore Rotary on summer weekends–nerves fraying as carloads of cranky kids reach the breaking point–the state’s plan for re-engineering the gateway […]
Why we still sit in traffic on the way to the Cape
Same day different numbers
Just as no one would plunk down money on the ponies without checking the odds in the Daily Racing Form, political junkies hunger for those first pre-election polls to see […]
Few parting shots from Bill Nagle
After 27 years commuting from the Pioneer Valley, Bill Nagle left the State House and his position as House majority leader without a word, let alone the traditional farewell speech. […]
Domestic service as upward mobility
There’s been no shortage of talk about the new work skills needed to make it in the 21st century workplace. But who knew the proper care of crystal and stemware […]
Campus activism makes a comeback
Student activist Susan Misra was in a pickle. Thousands of anti-globalization protesters were about to converge on Quebec City to protest the trade agreement being ratified at the Summit of […]
Whats new Democrat
With his White House days winding down, President Bill Clinton journeyed to upstate New York last year to deliver his swan song address to the Democratic Leadership Council, the centrist […]
Brothers Behind Bars
They are 45 of the roughest and toughest inmates at the Hampden County Jail and House of Correction just outside Springfield, the sullen slackers who sleep through the bells and […]
Aspiring principals get onthejob training
It’s just after 11 on a steamy spring morning and principal-in-training Benadette Manning races from a difficult meeting at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School to her office down the hall. […]
The other founding father
John AdamsBy David McCulloughSimon & Schuster, New York, 736 pagesAs the host of the PBS American Experience documentaries, David McCullough is the closest thing America has to a public historian. […]
Home alone
The Connection Gap: Why Americans Feel So AloneBy Laura PappanoRutgers University Press, New Brunswick, NJ, 224 pagesIt’s as American as apple pie to fret over the state of the national […]
Kerrys lean and hungry look
Summer is here, and Democrats in Washington are smiling again. In the bleak days of late winter and early spring, many a dispirited Dem felt overwhelmed by an unexpectedly nimble […]
Hancock defends its civic honor
Pittsfield is often considered the farthest-flung outpost from Boston in the state, but the Berkshire County seat has nothing on its tiny neighbor to the west. Indeed, the only way […]
Roads and Bridges
With nearly half the bridges in the Commonwealth rated as deficient and 42 percent of roads poor or mediocre, it’s not just Massachusetts drivers that make motoring here a challenge. […]
Testing the test
The headlines shocked the public and rocked the education establishment: It was the first time the state ever tested would-be teachers to weed out who did–and did not–belong in front […]
Then and now
All is well in the Commonwealth–or so the state’s political leaders would have everyone believe. Certainly there is a lot to crow about compared to five years ago, when CommonWealth […]
State rules shortchange urban waterfronts
Last December, after much wrangling between state officials, city officials, developers–especially my client, Hyatt Development–and environmentalists, state Environmental Affairs Secretary Robert Durand approved a plan for the development of Boston’s […]
Paul Grogan and Alvaro Lima give Bostons inner city the business
Over its five years of publication, CommonWealth has displayed a consistent interest in city living–specifically, how cities from Boston to Pittsfield can stay or become safe, vibrant, satisfying places for […]
Small cities face big economic challenges
In the shadow of Mount Greylock, high in the rolling Berkshires, Pittsfield opens the commercial gateway to western Massachusetts. . . . Today the city has a prosperous, tranquil look […]
Counterpoints
Sen. Glodis writes that he considers learning English a right of English-language learners–a right they are entitled to have redeemed as quickly and effectively as possible. I fully endorse and […]
Argument
I have filed legislation that will reform bilingual education in Massachusetts because statistic after statistic, fact after fact, clearly demonstrates the inability of our current system to meet the needs […]
Tracking lobbyists online
Picture this: You’re a member of a health care advocacy group and you need to know the status of a new bill on health care reform‹now. So you boot your […]
The Speaker succession well never see
When the state House of Representatives voted in January to scrap the eight-year limit on the Speaker’s position, lawmakers came under blistering attack for summarily jettisoning the one true check […]
Swapping needles
Backed by an arsenal of data and degrees in medicine and public health, Dr. Howard Koh, the state’s public health commissioner, considers needle-exchange programs a proven way to keep intravenous […]
Labor goes gray
The American labor movement, facing a falloff in clout as fewer workers wear the union label, is hoping for a shot in the arm from an unlikely source of vigor: […]
