Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Notice of Intent: Expanding Access to Opportunity in the Offshore Wind Workforce

 

Notice of Intent:
Expanding Access to Opportunity in the Offshore Wind Workforce


Comments now due Feb. 12, 2021

The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC) has extended the deadline for submitting comments on the Notice of Intent on Expanding Access to Opportunity in the Offshore Wind Workforce. The new deadline for submitting comments is Friday, February 12, 2021 at 11:59 PM.

About the Notice of Intent

MassCEC has released a Notice of Intent for a solicitation that, if issued, would seek to fund projects that proactively work to increase the participation of underrepresented populations and/or target communities (as further specified in the Notice of Intent) in the developing offshore wind workforce and reduce barriers for individuals interested in pursuing offshore wind job opportunities.  MassCEC invites comments on this Notice of Intent from all interested and affected groups and individuals.

Comments on this Notice of Intent should be submitted to offshorewind@masscec.com on or before Friday, February 12, 2021 at 11:59 PM.  All submitted comments should include: “NOI Response – Expanding Access to Opportunity in OSW Workforce” in the subject heading.
 
PLEASE NOTE:  This is solely a non-binding Notice of Intent to gather input—this Notice of Intent is not a solicitation for proposals, and MassCEC is not accepting applications at this time.


Please contact Kirsten Holland, MassCEC's Offshore Wind Program Manager, at offshorewind@masscec.com with any questions or requests for clarification.
About MassCEC
The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC) is a state economic development agency dedicated to accelerating the growth of the clean energy sector across the Commonwealth to spur job creation, deliver statewide environmental benefits, and secure long-term economic growth for the people of Massachusetts. MassCEC’s Offshore Wind strategy centers around accelerating the responsible development of offshore wind projects and increasing the role of Massachusetts companies, institutions, and workers in the offshore wind industry.
Connect With Us
offshorewind@masscec.com

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Inside the Biden plan to be boring

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY SAM STEIN

Presented by Facebook

With help from Renuka Rayasam and Myah Ward

NEVER TWEET — If President Joe Biden’s first week in office has given off the scent of a highly scripted affair, that’s because it was one. His team has been crafting each day around themes. Today’s was racial equality, with the president issuing executive orders to, among other things, transition the federal government away from the use of private prisons.

Tomorrow will be about climate change. Later in the week will come an offering on immigration. Each day will involve a slate of unilateral actions, a background briefing with reporters and a press appearance by a top aide, or, perhaps, the head honcho himself.

All of this is known because there is a memo circulating around Washington newsrooms that lays out a semi-detailed schedule for Biden’s executive action blitz. No publication has printed it because it reads as incomplete and partially inaccurate: a number of the actions listed on it have already come on different days. But several sources close to the White House confirmed that the document — even though clearly a draft — was authentic.

In total, the memo outlines an ambitious attempt at effecting social change from the Oval Office. But it also shows a White House making a gamble of sorts: that it can apply traditional communication methods to a nontraditional media climate.

Biden could theoretically have released all the executive orders and actions on his first day in office or over a more compressed window. Instead, his team chose to dribble them out over the course of more than a dozen days, with most of those days having separate themes. There is Covid, Economic Relief, Buy America, Equity, Climate, Health Care, Immigration and “Restoring America’s Place in the World” (a project the memo reserves for February).

President Joe Biden signs executives orders related to his racial equity agenda in the State Dining Room of the White House.

President Joe Biden signs executives orders related to his racial equity agenda in the State Dining Room of the White House. | Getty Images

The reason for moving slowly and thematically is simple: They want to program the news coverage of their opening weeks in office.

This is standard operating procedure for any White House. At least, it was for all of the ones in memory other than Donald Trump’s. And that’s precisely what makes this strategy a rather complex one for Biden’s team. They’re coming in right after the most impulsive, id-driven president in history.

Even when it was operating at its most cohesive and organized level, Trump’s White House didn’t program its days. It couldn’t. His Twitter feed did, announcing abrupt firings, new policy initiatives, political fights and media quarrels that completely disrupted any carefully laid plans his team had tried to put together.

In turn, the White House press corps became intoxicated — and, perhaps, overdosed a few times — on his quick-change programming.

The challenge facing Biden’s comms team over the next four years is figuring out not just how to detox the press, but also whether they even can, and whether that actually matters.

To some degree, they are already seeing the perils of the hyper-kinetic national media climate that Trump exploited more than created. Biden allies privately bristle at stories on the president’s Rolex watch and Peloton, as well as what they see as bad-faith coverage over whether he’s instantly achieving his calls for unity.

But their larger conviction is, as Biden’s 2020 candidacy seemingly proved, that these Twittering-class stories are gnats that should best be ignored. And so they’re sticking to an orchestrated plan of thematic days based around executive orders — an approach that seems positively quaint now, but one that veterans say will do them much good.

“Not all news stories are good news stories, and a lot of stories for Trump were dumpster fires,” is how David Axelrod, Barack Obama’s former top comms hand, explained it to me. “What you want to do is just convey a constant sense of action and competence, especially on those things plaguing the country.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out at sstein@politico.com and rrayasam@politico.com, or on Twitter at @samstein and @renurayasam.

 

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FIRST IN NIGHTLY

Nightly graphic of Canadian power matrix

Beatrice Jin

WHO’S STRONG AND FREE IN THE TRUE NORTH — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government needs to get vaccines into arms while accelerating its efforts to rebuild the economy. With multiple players and power brokers in the mix — along with many unknowns — Maura ForrestLauren Gardner, Rachel Browne and Beatrice Jin explain who holds influence in Ottawa during what many expect will be an election year.

 

TRACK THE FIRST 100 DAYS OF THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION: A new president occupies the White House and he is already making changes. What are some of the key moments from Biden's first week in office? Find out in Transition Playbook, our scoop-filled newsletter tracking the appointments, people, and emerging power centers of the first 100 days of the new administration. Subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE NATION

THE RIGHTWARD SWING OF PA’S GOP — Pennsylvania once stocked D.C. with a steady stream of establishment Republicans. Now, in the wake of Trump’s reelection defeat, it’s better known for its GOP hard-liners — among them, Scott Perry, the congressman who recently made headlines for his behind-the-scenes efforts to assist Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia.

The state GOP’s transformation from the party of former Sens. Arlen Specter and John Heinz — and Govs. Dick Thornburgh and Tom Ridge — to a bastion of Trump loyalists has been decades in the making, Holly Otterbein writes. But the shift has perhaps never been so obvious as in the past two months when Republicans here were repeatedly thrust into the spotlight for their role in trying to override Biden’s victory.

“It’s not the party that I belonged to years ago,” said Robert Byer, a former Republican judge and legal counsel for George H.W. Bush’s 1988 presidential campaign in Pennsylvania. “The whole notion that officeholders could impugn the integrity of the election in our commonwealth, it bothers me greatly. It bothers me as a citizen.”

BIDEN’S FIRST SETBACK — A federal judge in Texas today blocked the Biden administration from enforcing a 100-day moratorium on most deportations, delivering an initial blow for Biden on one of his core campaign promises, Sabrina Rodríguez writes.

U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton issued a temporary restraining order that halts the moratorium the Biden administration announced on its first day. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against the federal government last week over the 100-day pause, which was announced in a memorandum from the Department of Homeland Security.

The order represents the first notable setback to Biden’s immigration agenda, which is largely focused on undoing the Trump administration’s immigration policies and securing an overhaul to the U.S. immigration system that Obama failed to do.

NO CLEAR PATH — Biden made some big immigration promises. And he’s already delivered on some of them, signing executive orders to repeal the so-called Muslim travel ban and halt construction of the border wall. But the centerpiece of his plan — a bill providing a pathway to citizenship for millions of immigrants — faces a steep uphill battle in Congress, White House correspondent Laura Barrón-López reports in the latest POLITICO Dispatch.

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THE GLOBAL FIGHT

JOE AND VLAD CHAT — Biden called Russian President Vladimir Putin this afternoon and expressed U.S. objections to a variety of Kremlin actions, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said today.

Biden called intending to raise concern about a suspected Russian SolarWinds hacking campaign that breached Justice Department email accounts, reports of Russian bounties reportedly placed on American troops and interference in the 2020 election, Psaki said. The president also intended to raise his concerns about the poisoning of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and the Kremlin’s recent treatment of peaceful protesters demonstrating in support of him, the press secretary said. Biden also intended to support Ukrainian sovereignty and his goal of extending a nuclear arms treaty for five years with Russia, Psaki said.

Nightly video player of Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin

NO VAX PAX — Europe has three days to decide how tough it will be in a global fight over restricting vaccine exports.

Infuriated that vaccine deliveries from Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca will fall short, European officials are raising the prospect of export restrictions on coronavirus vaccines produced in the EU, with Brussels promising a mechanism “by the end of the week.”

The big question is how far the mechanism will go. That dilemma is now pitting liberal-minded Eurocrats in Brussels against national politicians, who are facing growing public outrage over the EU’s botched vaccine rollout compared with faster deliveries in the U.S., U.K. and Israel.

While political heavyweights like German Health Minister Jens Spahn want EU countries to be able to restrict exports outright, this is anathema to the free-traders who run the EU’s overarching trade policy in Brussels.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

200 million

The number of additional doses of Covid-19 vaccine the Biden administration is planning to purchase , marking a stepped-up effort to vaccinate the vast majority of Americans this year. Federal officials negotiating for the new supply expect to receive 100 million doses each from Moderna and Pfizer, in deals set to boost the nation’s total vaccine capacity to 600 million.

 

GET THE SCOOP ON CONGRESS IN 2021 : Get the inside scoop on the Schumer/McConnell dynamic, the new Senate Bipartisan Group, and what is really happening inside the House Democratic Caucus and Republican Conference. From Schumer to Pelosi, McConnell to McCarthy and everyone in between, our new Huddle author Olivia Beavers brings the latest from Capitol Hill with assists from POLITICO's deeply sourced Congress team. Subscribe to Huddle, the indispensable guide to Congress.

 
 
PARTING WORDS

UNHAPPY DAYS — Renu writes:

At some point last year, after a few months of Covid restrictions, after pandemic fatigue had long set in, it seemed like a vaccine would lift the country out of its national funk. But now two vaccine candidates have been approved with a third on the way, and a different sort of mood has set in, even as millions of people across the country are getting their shots. We’ve gone from fatigue to pessimism or even Covid cynicism. It’s a shift from the realization that there won’t be a quick end to the pandemic, that you may not get a shot for months and that things are likely to get worse before they get better, to a fear that pre-pandemic life will never return.

The pandemic’s nearly yearlong relentlessness has robbed us of our ability to feel chirpy.

“It’s so painful to have those moments of optimism and have them be crushed,” said Karla Vermeulen, deputy director at the Institute for Disaster Mental Health at SUNY New Paltz.

Almost 90 percent — 88 percent, to be precise — of Americans feel very or somewhat dissatisfied, according to a new Gallup poll released today. Only 11 percent of the country is satisfied with the way things are going, compared with 45 percent last February before the Covid restrictions began. The poll was conducted during a span that included the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and before Biden took office.

“People are depleted,” Vermeulen said. Chronic stress has become a background feature of life. “Literally this morning I said to my husband that I have nothing to look forward to,” said Vermeulen, a feeling shared by many across the country.

A grumpy electorate with low expectations could prove to be a major asset to Biden over the long run. The Biden administration promised today there would be enough doses to vaccinate the country by the end of the summer. Maybe once people can safely socialize or walk into a classroom they will feel a relief and euphoria that buoys the Democrats in 2022 and beyond.

But there’s also a chance that the pandemic has left a deep scar that Biden won’t be able to heal.

There’s no real disaster that compares to a pandemic, Vermeulen said. The recovery will last well after the last person gets a shot. People who have been mired in depression or anxiety, lost family or friends, developed substance abuse disorders or new fears like agoraphobia will take even longer to recover. Many disasters are acute with a distinct end phase, but it’s unclear when the pandemic will be over and how we will even know when it ends.

 

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MASSterList: Sitting unused | More sites | Amazon delivers: Today's sponsor - the American Heart Association

 


This email may be cut off by your email provider. To see today's full MASSterList, click "View entire message" at the bottom, or view the online version here.

By Jay Fitzgerald and Keith Regan

01/26/2021

Sitting unused | More sites | Amazon delivers

 

Keller at Large

 
 
The speech Baker should give tonight, but won’t
 

In his latest Keller at Large on MassterList, Jon Keller says Gov. Charlie Baker, in his State of the Commonwealth address tonight, should consider giving an uncharacteristically blunt talk about what a lousy, stinking, no-good year we’ve just been through and if someone thinks they could do better, please specify the nonsensical alternatives or shut up.


Keller at Large
 
 
Happening Today
 
Special election hearing, Baker’s State of Commonwealth address
 

-- Board of Elementary and Secondary Education meets with plans to discuss COVID-19 action steps, college access data for the class of 2021, educator diversity initiatives and education budget matters, 9 a.m.

-- Holyoke Soldiers' Home Coalition holds a press conference to provide data and analysis in support of a new 280-bed facility, 10 a.m.

-- Mass. Lottery Commission meets to hear about last month's sales and to take votes to authorize extensions of various contracts, with Treasurer Deb Goldberg chairing, 10:30 a.m.

-- Boston City Council holds a public hearing to consider changing rules that require a special mayoral election if Boston Mayor Marty Walsh resigns prior to March 5, 3 p.m.

-- Gov. Charlie Baker gives his annual State of the Commonwealth speech, with the speech live-streamed from his office, rather before a joint session of the Legislature, due pandemic precautions, 7 p.m.

For the most comprehensive list of calendar items, check out State House News Service’s Daily Advances (pay wall – free trial subscriptions available), as well as MassterList’s Beacon Hill Town Square below.

 
 
Keller at Large 1/26
 
 
Today's News
 
Reminder to readers: SHNS Coronavirus Tracker available for free
 

A reminder to our readers as the coronavirus crisis unfolds: The paywalled State House News Service, which produces MASSterList, is making its full Coronavirus Tracker available to the community for free on a daily basis each morning via ML. SHNS Coronavirus Tracker.

 
 
The coronavirus numbers: 45 new deaths, 13,889 total deaths, 3,477 new cases
 

WCVB has the latest coronavirus numbers for Massachusetts.

 
 
As hundreds of thousands of vaccine doses sit unused …
 

Lack of supply? Looks more like a lack of coordination. A four-reporter team at the Boston Globe reports that the Baker administration is now acknowledging that, amid a statewide clamor for coronavirus vaccinations, “hundreds of thousands of doses are sitting on freezer shelves in hospitals and the warehouses of pharmacies serving senior care sites.”

Well, at least Dr. Anthony Fauci is defending the administration (sort of), saying there really is a supply-and-demand vaccine imbalance across the nation, as he tells Radio Boston at WBUR. The latest evidence of a supply problem, via Cambridge Day: “Cambridge’s expected weekly share of vaccines cut to one-fifth, with state blaming U.S. supply.”

The Herald’s Joe Battenfeld isn’t defending the governor, that’s for sure, saying he’s been an “out of touch bureaucrat” slow to respond to events. But the governor is defending himself, reports CommonWealth’s Sarah Bettancourt.

Boston Globe
 
 
American Heart Association
 
 
… Baker announces new vaccination sites, 65-plus residents moved up on priority list
 

Catching flak for the slow vaccination rate of residents in Massachusetts, Gov. Charlie Baker yesterday announced that the state is expanding the number of sites where people can get inoculations, reports Eryn Dion at the Telegram.

Meanwhile, GBH’s Mike Deehan reports that residents 75 and older will be eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine after Feb. 1 – and 65-plus residents have been moved up higher on the state’s vaccination priority list. 

 
 
Moderna says its vaccine can handle variants (sort of)
 

The BBJ’s Don Seiffert reports that Cambridge-based Moderna is confident its COVID-19 vaccine can handle the new virus variants out there – or at least the U.K. variant. The South African one is a little more worrisome.

BBJ
 
 
The T’s long list of woes: Employees testing positive, talk of ‘death spiral,’ climate transformation costs
 

First, the good news about the T, via SHNS’s Chris Lisinski (pay wall), who reports the transit agency is managing to sock away some savings, despite revenue woes that have led to service cuts. ... Now for the bad news, also via SHNS’s Chris Lisinski (pay wall): “Virus Cases Among T Employees Hit Highest Recorded Level.” ... They’re talking about a possible T ‘death spiral’ over at GBH, as well as discussing that recent NYT editorial taking digs at Gov. Charlie Baker. ... And, finally, CommonWealth’s Bruce Mohl reports on the daunting costs ahead if the T fully commits to transforming itself amid climate change.

 
 

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The facts on sugary drinks are simple. They pose a real health risk. Kids especially are drinking too many of them. All those sweet drinks contribute to major health problems, like diabetes and heart disease. And with Massachusetts already spending nearly $2 billion per year treating obesity-related diseases, we need to address the problem. Massachusetts should take a page from a growing number of places across the country and adopt a tax on sugary drinks.

Learn how a sugary drink tax would improve the health of Massachusetts.
 
 
This is only a test: State jury trials put on pause again
 

The Globe’s Tonya Alanez reports that court officials are putting jury trials on hold again, but it’s not because anyone has contracted COVID-19. Instead, officials want to assess how recent trials have gone amid all the pandemic safety precautions. It’s sort of like those old Emergency Broadcasting System interruptions -- it’s only a test.

Boston Globe
 
 
Mass. National Guard returning to D.C. ahead of impeachment trial
 

The nation’s capital needs our help again. The Herald’s Erin Tiernan and MassLive’s Jackson Cote report that up to 700 state National Guard troops will be returning to Washington, D.C., this time to help with security around the U.S. Capitol during the impeachment trial of former President Donald Trump.

Fyi, from USA Today: “Feds track plans to attack members of Congress during Trump impeachment.”

 
 
Amazon plans to add 3,000 more jobs in a new Seaport building
 

Remember Amazon HQ2? We didn’t win it. But we still won. The Globe’s Tim Logan reports that Amazon plans to add 3,000 jobs in Boston, via a new office tower in the Seaport District, bringing its tech-focused job count here to 7,000. Not bad for a region that wasn’t very enthusiastic about the HQ2 sweepstakes in the first place.

Boston Globe
 
 
Dark Wire
 
 
Climate bill showdown: Coming this Thursday?
 

SHNS’s Matt Murphy reports that Beacon Hill lawmakers may act as soon as this Thursday on the refiled climate bill, a previous version of which Gov. Charlie Baker vetoed earlier this month. We’ll see if Dems have their act together this time (see post immediately below).

Left unresolved: That $6 billion difference between what the administrations says emission reductions would cost versus what lawmakers say. CommonWealth’s Bruce Mohl and the Globe’s David Abel have more on the $6 billion question.

SHNS (pay wall -- free trial subscription available)
 
 
How Baker turned a supermajority disadvantage into a superminority veto advantage
 

Speaking of legislative action, the Globe’s Matt Stout revisits how Gov. Charlie Baker, a Republican, somehow managed to effectively veto so many bills and provisions even though Democrats hold an alleged veto-proof supermajority on Beacon Hill. Hint: Bad sense of timing.

 
 
Quincy’s Koch: Walsh can take his bridge with him to D.C.
 

Quincy Mayor Thomas Koch sat down with Mary Whitfill at the Patriot Ledger to discuss, among other things, his recovery from the coronavirus and to tout the restart of long-stalled developments. But our favorite line is Koch’s fare-thee-well to outgoing Boston Mayor Marty Walsh, who has clashed with Koch over plans to rebuild the Long Island bridge. “I certainly wish him well and hope he takes the bridge with him.”

Patriot Ledger
 
 

Sponsored

An investigative watchdog exposing corruption through filmmaking and unbiased reporting. Seeking to expose and report on Anti-Semitism and the BDS movement in America today, reversing the tide against hate.

Dark Wire will bring you information and coverage you will not get anywhere else.
 
 
Collecting dust, not data
 

It’s been three years since a sweeping criminal justice reform law was passed, requiring the collection of data on crimes and punishments in Massachusetts, etc. Care to guess how much data has been collected? CommonWealth’s Shira Schoenberg has the non-shocking answer. 

CommonWealth
 
 
Vineyard Wind: It’s on again
 

It’s on. It’s off. It’s on. It’s off. And .. it’s on again. SHNS’s Colin Young (pay wall) and the Globe’s Jon Chesto have the latest on the on-again/off-again Vineyard Wind offshore wind project, now that a more friendly Biden administration is in control in D.C.

 
 
Harvard on ‘no-build’ Allston option: This is what we get for spending hundreds of millions of dollars?
 

CommonWealth’s Bruce Mohl reports that Harvard University, in a recent letter to state officials, is basically saying it’s getting a raw deal if the state proceeds with a “no-build” option for the I-90 Allston project and expects the university to kick in yet more money for a less ambitious plan.

CommonWealth
 
 
SHNS Trial
 
 
‘Pain in the pipeline:’ Report says Amherst should plan for long economic haul back to normal
 

There’s more hurt to come. That’s the message to the town of Amherst from the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission, which says that even if the area’s colleges rebound to full enrollment by this fall, the local economy will likely feel the negative effects of the coronavirus pandemic for some time.

Gazette
 
 
Challenge accepted: Attleboro apparently has mayoral race developing
 

An Attleboro man who has twice run unsuccessfully for a seat on the city council has announced he will seek the mayor’s office this year, George Rhodes at the Sun Chronicle reports. Jim Poore, 49, says he’ll run on a platform of seeking unity in what he says is currently a divided city. Mayor Paul Heroux has indicated he’ll seek a third term. 

Sun Chronicle
 
 
That’s a wrap: Judge orders massage parlor video of Kraft destroyed
 

And, finally, he didn’t just win the case. He obliterated the case and its evidence. The AP at WCVB reports that a judge in Florida has ordered the destruction of video that allegedly shows New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft paying for massage parlor sex at at the Orchids of Asia, saying police obtained the video unlawfully.

WCVB
 
 
Advertise
 
 
Today's Headlines
 
Metro
 

Cambridge, Somerville could join Silver Line - Cambridge Day

Amazon plans to add 3,000 more jobs in new Seaport building - Boston Globe

 
Massachusetts
 

Former San Juan mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz takes post at Mount Holyoke College - Daily Hampshire Gazette

Local LGBTQ advocates celebrate reversal of military ban - Berkshire Eagle

‘Slow decline’ in patient numbers at DCU Center field hospital - Telegram & Gazette

 
Nation
 

McConnell drops filibuster demand, letting Democrats assume full power - New York Times

Wall Street shrugs at Washington’s debt pileup - Politico

 
Reportal Jan 25
 
 
Jobs
 

Reach MASSterList's 22,000 Beacon Hill connected and policy-minded subscribers with your job postings. Have friends interested in one of these positions? Forward the newsletter to them! Contact David Art at dart@massterlist.com or call 860-576-1886 for more information.

 
Recent postings to the MASSterList Job Board:
 

Assistant Director, Human Resources, City of Brockton

Assistant City Solicitor, City of Brockton

Executive Director, Right Question Institute

Regional Director, Office of Congressman Seth Moulton

Director of Programs, The Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy

Deputy Director, Local Initiatives Support Corporation

Data Strategist, Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization Central Transportation Planning Staff

Executive Director, The Massachusetts Association of Community Colleges (MACC)

State Contracting Policy Analysis Consultant, The Collaborative

UTEC Policy Director, UTEC

AIM Engagement Director- Central/Western MA, Associated Industries of Massachusetts

Legislative Liaison, Department of Family and Medical Leave

Director of Communications, Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition (MIRA)

Workforce Development Director, The Massachusetts Association of Community Colleges (MACC)

Deputy Political Director, SEIU Local 509

Executive Director, Asian American Commission (AAC)

 

To view more events or post an event listing on Beacon Hill Town Square, please visit events.massterlist.com.

Beacon Hill Town Square
 
Jan. 26, 1 p.m.
Mindful Tuesdays with Josefina Bonilla & Daniel Gutierrez
Hosted by: RIYHT Media
 
How To Incorporate Mindfulness Into Your Life. Daniel Gutierrez, Mindful Leadership Expert/ Owner, Catalina Retreat Center Peru, Speaker. The ROAR Webinar Series on Tuesdays at 1:00 p.m. is inspirational and aspirational. Leaders discuss innovation and leadership, definition of success and the emergency of new leadership in trying times. More Information
 
 
Jan. 26, 1:30 p.m.
Live Chat with fmr Netflix Senior Product Manager
Hosted by: Product School
 
Join in and get all your Product Management questions answered during our online event with Johnny Chang, Product Manager at Netflix. Chang is a Senior Product Lead who focuses on users, bringing leadership and vision and simplifying the chaos and chunk vague problems. He was passionate about computer software from a young age and studied computer science in college and grad school. More Information

 
 
Jan. 26, 5 p.m.
Vaccination Decisions: Rolling Out the Vaccine
Hosted by: Museum of Science
 
Join us in the first in a series of three virtual Town Halls where we discuss the critical decisions our society faces as we begin vaccination rollout. This kick-off conversation will highlight the process of COVID-19 vaccination dissemination and vaccine distribution with experts answering questions. Moderated by Angus Chen, Health & Science Reporter at WBUR. More Information

 
 
Jan. 26, 6 p.m.
Lindsay Peoples Wagner - The Pandemic & Black Lives Matter: How Young People Are Building A New Normal
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
The Boston Public Library welcomes Editor-in-Chief of New York Magazine's The Cut, and former Editor-in-Chief of Teen Vogue, Lindsay Peoples Wagner, for an online conversation moderated by BPL President David Leonard. More Information

 
 
Jan. 27, 12 p.m.
Malcolm Gladwell and the New Normal after COVID-19
Hosted by: Arent Fox LLP
 
Join Arent Fox for a one hour virtual event with Malcolm Gladwell, the celebrated journalist and best-selling author of Tipping Point, Outliers, and Talking to Strangers, who will talk about life after COVID-19. There will also be a Q&A with Arent Fox Partner Anthony V. Lupo.Malcolm Gladwell and the New Normal after COVID-19 JAN 27 2021 12:00 PM Hosted by: Arent Fox LLP Online Event www.eventbrite.com/e/malcolm-gladwell-and-the-new-normal-after-covid-19-tickets-132113604347?aff=ebdssbonlinesearch Join Arent Fox for a one hour virtual event with Malcolm Gladwell, the celebrated journalist and best-selling author of Tipping Point, Outliers, and Talking to Strangers, who will talk about life after COVID-19. There will also be a Q&A with Arent Fox Partner Anthony V. Lupo. More Information

 
 
Jan. 27, 1 p.m.
ROAR Web Series with Josefina Bonilla and Special Guest Evelyn Brito
Hosted by: RIYHT Media
 
Guest Speaker Evelyn Brito, Founder, Bodega Makeover. Following Your Passion and Dreams. The ROAR Webinar Series is inspirational and aspirational. Join industry leaders as we discuss innovation and leadership, definition of success and the emergence of new leadership styles in trying times More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 11 a.m.
Race, Work, and Leadership: New Perspectives on the Black Experience
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
This seminar will be given by Dr. Laura Morgan Roberts, speaking on her book, "Race, Work, and Leadership: New Perspectives on the Black Experience". It is part of Mossavar-Rahamani Center for Business and Government's webinar series, Registration is required. More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 11 a.m.
Condition of Education in the Commonwealth
Hosted by: The Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy
 
Join the Rennie Center for a conversation on the state of learning in this unprecedented time, including a panel discussion with all three MA education commissioners—Elementary and Secondary Education Commissioner Jeffrey C. Riley, Early Education and Care Commissioner Samantha Aigner-Treworgy, and Higher Education Commissioner Carlos Santiago—and remarks from Secretary of Education James Peyser. More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 2 p.m.
lo T in Sports: Changing the Game
Hosted by: Verizon
 
Join us as we hear from industry experts about the integration of lo T in the world of live sports, how major leagues like the NFL are utilizing wearable technology and connected devices, what features fans can expect from stadiums as they become more connected, and how 5G & MEC are changing the game for years to come. More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 6 p.m.
Dr. Maya Rockeymoore Cummings & James Dale - "We're Better Than This"
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Join the Boston Public Library for an online talk with distinguished political expert, Dr. Maya Rockeymoore Cummings and longtime non-fiction writer James Dale, co-authors of We're Better Than This: My Fight for the Future of our Democracy, primarily authored by the late Elijah Cummings. More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 6 p.m.
Community Read Book Group: An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Let's read together! Join your friends, family and fellow Yearlong Reading Challenge participants at the Boston Public Library as we discuss the January Community Read for adults: An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. The discussion will be moderated by a librarian and will take place on Zoom. More Information

 
 
Jan. 28, 7:30 p.m.
The State of Race: The Housing Gap
Hosted by: GBH, The Boston Globe, NAACP Boston, and WORLD
 
The State of Race: The Housing Gap is a virtual forum co-sponsored by The Boston Globe, NAACP Boston and GBH WORLD that addresses the impact racial disparities have had on key social issues. In January, join GBH host Dan Lothian and a panel of experts including Lisa Rice, President and Chief Executive Officer at National Fair Housing Alliance, Alex Ponte-Capellan a community organizer and housing advocate at City Life/Vida Urbana and Tim Logan, Reporter for The Boston Globe, as they explore the history of structural racism in the US housing system and its long-lasting impact on Massachusetts communities of color. More Information

 
 
Jan. 29, 10 a.m.
Art & Culture in Public Life Symposium
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
The Arts & Culture in Public Life Symposium is hosted by the Arts & Culture in Public Life Caucus, a student organization of Harvard Business School. The event will bring together high profile art leaders and policy makers to discuss the potential of the arts to create meaningful change in the world. Moderator is Ping Wang, MPA 2021 More Information

 
 
Jan. 29, 12 p.m.
Global Mobility and the Threat of Pandemics: Evidence from Three Centuries
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
Researchers at the Center for Global Development test predictions across four global pandemics in three different centuries: the influenza pandemics that began in 1889, 1918, 1957, and 2009. They find that in all cases, even a draconian 50 percent reduction in pre-pandemic international mobility is associated with 1-2 weeks later arrival and no detectable reduction in final mortality. More Information

 
 
Feb. 1, 12 p.m.
Human Rights and the Future World Order
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School and Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
 
Speakers include Hina Jilanni, former United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Human Rights Defenders; Samuel Moyn, Henry R. Luce Professor of Jurisprudence, Yale Law School and Professor of History, Yale University; Zeid Ra'ad, Perry World House Professor of the Practice of Law and Human Rights, University of Pennsylvania. More Information

 
 
Feb. 2, 2 p.m.
Social Media for Government Agencies and the Public Sector: Everything You Need to Know but are Afraid to Ask, a Digital CP
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
Come learn the basics of the Social Media platforms and how you can use them effectively to achieve your goals. Whether you're a Tik Tok influencer or just learned that the symbol # isn't a "pound sign". This workshop is open to all levels. More Information


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