Wednesday, May 19, 2021

LARRY KRASNER PHILADELPHIA VICTORY






Real Justice

A brilliant wave of people power just came together against a racist police union – and WON.

I want you to understand this, ok? Please stick with me for this entire email because I’m going to unpack it, and I NEED you to do something below to help stop these evil, cruel men from coming after our movement even harder. (However, if you’re in a hurry you can give right now at this link.)

The people, and especially Black voters in Philadelphia, just re-elected Larry Krasner, a champion for justice and my personal hero. Allies from across the nation – including a ton of people from this Real Justice community – helped out.

The racist police union – Fraternal Order of Police – hated Larry. Hated this entire movement for justice and civil rights. They literally tried to steal this election from Black voters.

Together, we defeated them in Philadelphia. Many of us poured our hearts and souls out. THANK YOU to everyone who helped.

But do you think those racist police are going to go home and call it quits now? HELL NO.

Racist police groups like the Fraternal Order of Police are going to come back even stronger – with more dirty tricks and millions of dollars to spend against us.

They are going to muster everything up their sleeves to beat us.

To let police get away with taking lives.

To prosecute innocent Black and brown people.

To stop everyone who is demanding an end to police terror.

Listen. I believe we can overcome them. But it is going to be extremely difficult.

We are going to need YOU. And we are going to need enough resources to compete. We’ll make up for the rest with strong organizing and tens of thousands of people across the nation working together – and we need to pivot almost immediately to fights coming up fast in June.

That is why we are launching an URGENT victory fund to help elect 3 more justice champions across the country and confront racist police groups head on. I need you to PLEASE DONATE now, ok?

It took over a million dollars for Larry Krasner’s campaign, mostly in donations under $50, to win this victory in Philadelphia.

As an organization, Real Justice is already gearing up for what’s next:

We are doubling down on upcoming races where we have important chances to completely overhaul racist and corrupt DA offices.

We are preparing to defend our already elected champions against a new phase of attacks.

And we are preparing to organize full-throttle in every way we know how.

But we can’t do it without you. Please just give $5 or whatever you can, ok? It all adds up when tens of thousands of people pitch in together.

Now if you’ve read this far, I know that you’re committed to the cause. Please know that everything you’ve done has made a difference. Our Real Justice community showed up in a HUGE way for this win.

What we’ve already achieved together is amazing. What comes next can be even better.

Thank you from the bottom of my heart,

Shaun


Pol. Adv. Paid for by Real Justice PAC, realjusticepac.org

Not authorized by any federal, state, or local candidate or a committee controlled by a candidate.



MASSterList: Police reforms | Expensive repair | Rejoicing and reservations: Today's sponsor - Mascon Medical


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

05/19/2021

Police reforms | Expensive repair | Rejoicing and reservations

 
Mascon Medical v2

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Happening Today
 
Mail-in voting, animal-abusers bill, and more
 

-- Rep. Tami Gouveia holds a press conference on her bill to establish a statewide COVID-19 rapid testing program, with Chelsea Collaborative executive director Gladys Vega and Dr. Michael Misialek of Newton-Wellesley Hospital among those participating in the Chelsea event, 10:30 a.m.

-- The Joint Committee on Election Laws is holding a public virtual hearing on several bills related to mail-in voting, early voting, and other proposed election reforms, 1 p.m.

-- The Judiciary Committee holds a virtual public hearing on bills affecting ownership of pets by convicted animal abusers, misrepresentation of a service animal, and duck hunting off the shores of Revere, 10 a.m.

-- Health Policy Commission meets to review research findings on health care affordability based on income, 1 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.

 
 

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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: 6 new deaths, 17,419 total deaths, 359 new cases
 

CBS Boston has the latest coronavirus number for Massachusetts.

 
 
Baker’s $273M supplemental budget includes funds for police reforms
 

Thank you, feds. From SHNS’s Matt Murphy: “Gov. Charlie Baker filed a $273 million spending bill on Tuesday that would finance last year's police accountability law and boost funding in key accounts for transitional assistance and early education, but the bill will have only a limited impact on the state budget, according to the administration, as the bulk of the spending would be paid for with federal dollars.”

The Herald’s Erin Tiernan reports the supplemental budget “offers a glimpse at the eye-popping cost of the coronavirus pandemic in Massachusetts.” 

SHNS (pay wall -- free trial subscription available)
 
 
Keller at Large 5/18
 
 

Prefer to enjoy Keller at Large in print rather than audio?

You can access Jon’s most recent columns here:

5/11/21 - Geoff Diehl's Bronco Ride To Nowhere

5/4/21 - Keller's Grim Commencement Speech

4/27/21 - Reading The Tea Leaves In The Boston Mayoral Race

 
 
Boston hires outside lawyers to fight Dennis White case
 

Speaking of police matters, the Herald’s Sean Philip Cotter reports the city of Boston has hired $235-an-hour private lawyers to fight Police Commissioner Dennis White’s attempt to keep his job.

Meanwhile, the Globe’s Milton Valencia and Matt Stout report that, yes, the Dennis White and Patrick Rose controversies have most definitely thrust the BPD onto center stage in the mayoral race. In other mayoral-race news, GBH's Saraya Wintersmith reports former state Rep. Marie St. Fleur has endorsed Andrea Campbell for mayor.

Boston Herald
 
 
MassDOT to spend $75M to repair Turnpike viaduct it plans to replace
 

CommonWealth’s Bruce Mohl report that the Mass. Department of Transportation last evening issued an “unusual press release” announcing that’s it’s going to spend $75 million to shore up the crumbling I-90 Allston viaduct for safety reasons – the same viaduct state officials hope to replace if and when they come up with a consensus design plan for the long-debated project.

Speaking of infrastructure projects, via SHNS’s Colin Young: “Report: Overhaul needed to fix rail travel to South Shore.”

CommonWealth
 
 
House’s solution to high UI rates: Spread payments out over 20 years
 

This is one way to fix a financial problem. The BBJ’s Greg Ryan and SHNS’s Chris Lisinski and Michael Norton report that the House has unveiled, and quickly passed, a plan to provide relief for employers recently hit with huge unemployment-insurance rate hikes. Among other things, the legislation entails spreading out payments over two decades.

 
 
SHNS May 25 v2
 
 
Rejoicing mixed with reservations: the reactions to lifting the COVID restrictions
 

Pandemic-related news hasn’t been this far down on MassterList since late winter 2020 – and that’s good news. And a lot of other people are treating the coming end of pandemic business restriction as good news, with restaurateurs, among others, rejoicing across the state (BBJ). But the Globe reports the general sense of joy and relief is tinged with a little fear – as in fear that the coronavirus is still out there and many people still aren’t vaccinated. And then there’s the issue of masks or no masks, and vaxed or non-vaxed, in work-place settings, as the Globe also reports.

Fyi: The Herald’s Howie Carr is, well, unhappy. There is no vaccine for Baker Derangement Syndrome, after all.  

 
 
Medical examiner: Mikayla Miller’s death a suicide
 

This is certainly not the last word on the controversial death. From Ally Jarmanning and Diana Bell at WBUR: “Mikayla Miller, the Hopkinton 16-year-old whose death last month prompted cries of a coverup and calls for an independent investigation, died by suicide, the state medical examiner ruled. That's according to Miller's death certificate, filed Tuesday. The cause of death was listed as asphyxia by hanging.”

Norman Miller at MetroWest Daily News has more on the ruling – and the intense controversy swirling around the case.

WBUR
 
 
Free for all: Advocates push endowment tax to fund tuition-free state college
 

Call it the Robin Hood solution. Lawmakers on Beacon Hill heard testimony on proposals to make state colleges all but free to students by slapping a 2.5 percent tax on the endowments of the state’s wealthiest private colleges, Christian Wade at the Salem News reports. Meanwhile, SHNS’s Katie Lannan reports that the proposed higher-ed Cherish Act now has 90 sponsors at the State House.

Salem News
 
 
Reportal May 13
 
 
Weld and business leaders: Millionaires tax, ‘Taxachusetts,’ same thing
 

Speaking of proposed tax, former Gov. Bill Weld and the heads of North Shore, South Shore and western Massachusetts business groups say in a Globe opinion piece this morning that state coffers are now overflowing with incoming tax revenues and federal relief funds – and the state simply doesn’t need revenue from a proposed “millionaires tax” backed by “insatiable tax-and-spenders.” 

Fyi: The piece doesn’t mention ‘Taxachusetts,’ but it makes for a good headline, here and at the Globe.

Boston Globe
 
 
Halted: MassDOT cancels Northampton roundabout project where artifacts found
 

Back to the drawing board. The Mass. Department of Transportation will restart the design process for a Northampton intersection where Native American Indian tribes said a planned roundabout would have disturbed the site of an ‘ancient village’ where 10,000-year-old artifacts have been found, Jim Kinney at MassLive reports.

MassLive
 
 
Somerville goes America First on plantings
 

They’re obviously proud of our native species of plants, damn it, and now Somerville has set minimum standards for the percentage of native plantings on city lands, reports the John Laidler at the Globe.

 
 
OperationABLE June 9 event

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Sam Adams ale, lager, IPA and … cannabis beverages?
 

Your cousin from Boston is going to love this. The Boston Beer Company, aka Sam Adams, is creating a subsidiary in Canada to “develop potential nonalcoholic cannabis-based beverages,” reports George Lenker at MassLive. They’re just “experimenting” with the idea.

MassLive
 
 
Former GateHouse honcho takes over at Boston Magazine
 

Kirk Davis, the former head of GateHouse Media before it merged with Gannett, has been tapped as the new president and CEO of Boston Magazine, according to a report at Universal Hub.

Universal Hub
 
 
MTF: Closing racial wealth gap could grow the state’s economy by $25B over five years
 

Besides moral reasons for tackling inequities, there are economic reasons too. From the Globe’s Shirley Leung: “If Massachusetts could close the wealth gap in Black and Latino communities, the state could grow its economy by $25 billion over five years, the equivalent of adding up to 100,000 jobs, according to an analysis by the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation.”

Boston Globe
 
 
Overdose Awareness Plate
 
 
New Bedford and Fall River mayors to state: We need a larger piece of the offshore-wind pie
 

Anastasia Lennon at the Standard Times reports that the mayors of New Bedford and Fall River, as well as local lawmakers and state officials, are unhappy with the bidding process for new offshore wind farms, saying the state is putting too much emphasis on lower energy prices and not enough on economic investment in southeastern Massachusetts.

Standard Times
 
 
For your information: Cape Cod nurses to picket two hospitals
 

For now, they’re just getting the word out. Nurses employed by Cape Cod Healthcare say they’ll stage two informational pickets at hospitals in Hyannis and Falmouth over the next week to bring attention to their efforts to negotiate a new contract with the health care company, Jessica Hill at the Cape Cod Times reports. 

Meanwhile, St. Vincent Hospital, where nurses have been on an actual strike for more than two months, has posted ads for another 50 permanent replacement nurse jobs as talks continue to stall out, Cyrus Moulton at the Telegram reports.

Cape Cod Times
 
 
Best summer ever? Ferry reservations suggest banner season for islands
 

Here we go. The state’s Steamship Authority says reservations for ferries to Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard are up 16 percent over the 2019 pre-pandemic season, setting the stage for one of the busiest tourism seasons in recent memory, George Brennan at the Martha’s Vineyard Times. 

Martha's Vineyard Times
 
 
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Today's Headlines
 
Metro
 

Medford is renaming the Columbus Elementary School: 18 possible names on list - Boston Herald

Lynn Police Captain Appealing Mayor's Decision for Chief - Lynn Item

 
Massachusetts
 

Fire in Clarksburg 90% contained, crews focus on 'mop-up' operation - Berkshire Eagle

Lawrence acting Mayor Vasquez pulls papers for November run - Eagle-Tribune

 
Nation
 

FBI Probes Defense Contractor’s Contributions to Sen. Susan Collins - Wall Street Journal

Hundreds of PPP Loans Went to Fake Farms in Absurd Places - Pro Publica

 
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:
 

Constituent Services Liaison - new!, City of Brockton

Vice President (Labor Communications) - new!, 617MediaGroup

Research Associate - new!, Worcester Regional Research Bureau, Inc.

Director of Planning and Economic Development, City of Everett

Affordable Housing Program Manager, City of Everett

Director of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, City of Everett

Development Director, Save the Harbor / Save the Bay

Member Relations Specialist, Associated Industries of Massachusetts

City Clerk/Clerk of the Council, City of Newton

Legislative Director, Massachusetts Municipal Association (MMA)

Director of Maintenance, Brookline Housing Authority

Regional Advocacy Manager (Northeast), Compassion and Choices

Senior Manager, Program Development, Massachusetts Technology Collaborative

Director of Communications and Marketing, Massachusetts Association of Community Colleges (MACC)

Communications Manager, Group Insurance Commission

Account Director (Digital Strategy), 617MediaGroup

Public Policy & Operations Manager, Massachusetts Business Roundtable

Assistant City Solicitor, City of Brockton

Communications Specialist, Massachusetts Teachers Association

 

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

Beacon Hill Town Square
 
May 19, 2 p.m.
The Venezuelan Enterprise: Current Situation, Challenges and Opportunities
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
What is the status of the Venezuelan business fabric? What are its strengths and weaknesses? And where should the emphasis be put to help the private sector jump-start an economic recovery? To answer these questions, the IDB, together with the IESA, and with the support of more than 30 business chambers in the country, carried out the Enterprise Survey with a sample of almost 300 companies. More Information

 
 
May 20, 12:15 p.m.
Calibrated Resistance: The Political Dynamics of Iran's Nuclear Policymaking under Trump
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
Everyone is welcome to join us via Zoom! Please register before the event. Speakers and Presenters:​Abolghasem Bayyenat, Stanton Nuclear Security Postdoctoral Fellow, International Security Program/Project on Managing the Atom More Information

 
 
May 21, 1 p.m.
Boston Rock City: Explore Wikidata and Learn about Local Music
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
The BPL is partnering with Harvard Library for a guided exploration of Wikidata and local music history. Join us for two days of music and Wikidata editing, no prior experience necessary! Project staff will provide you with everything you need to generate new Wikidata entities. You'll also get to learn about how we can use these new Wikidata entities to synthesize and visualize data. More Information

 
 
May 25, 9:30 a.m.
Book Talk with Tony Saich, Author of "From Rebel to Ruler: One Hundred Years of the Chinese Communist Party"
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
The Ash Center invites you to a book talk with Tony Saich, Daewoo Professor of International Affairs, Ash Center Director, and author of the forthcoming From Rebel to Ruler: One Hundred Years of the Chinese Communist Party (Harvard University Press, 2021). More Information

 
 
May 25, 6:30 p.m.
Skip Finley - Whaling Captains of Color: America's First Meritocracy
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Join the Boston Public Library in partnership with the Museum of African American History (MAAH), the State Library of Massachusetts, and American Ancestors New England Historic Genealogical Society (NEHGS) for an online conversation with Skip Finley, author of Whaling Captains of Color: America's First Meritocracy. More Information

 
 
May 25, 8:30 p.m.
The Role of Industry and Business in Protecting the Environment
Hosted by: EPA
 
For business & industry: New laws overview focusing on the General Environmental Duty, risk management and how EPA is supporting you. More Information

 
 
May 26, 6 p.m.
Battle Green Vietnam: The 1971 March on Concord, Lexington, and Boston
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Join us to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the historic antiwar march and protest on Memorial Day Weekend 1971 and learn more about this key event in Massachusetts history at MassMoments More Information

 
 
May 27, 11:30 a.m.
Words of Wisdom featuring Lovin Spoonfuls
Hosted by: Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce
 
Join us for this discussion where we'll hear from Founder and Executive Director, Ashley Stanley, who will provide insight to the ways her organization has shifted during this pandemic and what ways we can get involved to support community members who may be suffering from food insecurity. Moderated by Afua Ankrah, Business Operations, Global Government Affairs and Policy, Bluebird Bio. More Information

 
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