Friday, June 25, 2021

Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe opposes machine gun range project at Joint Base Cape Cod

 

Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe opposes machine gun range project at Joint Base Cape Cod


Jessica Hill Cape Cod Time
Published Jun 25, 2021 

MASHPEE — The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe announced Friday its opposition to the proposed machine-gun range at Joint Base Cape Cod. 

“We have to look at the long-range impact the project will have for Mashpee and the Tribe,” David Weeden, Tribal Council member and selectman for the Town of Mashpee, said in the statement. 

The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council voted to oppose the gun range at a tribal council meeting on June 9, according to the statement.

The tribe opposes the project because of the proposed clearcutting of land as well as its location on a watershed protection area.

“Since Joint Base Cape Cod downsized, many areas on the base have slowly allowed needed habitats for wildlife to return,” the tribe statement said. “The proposed gun range will erase the progress made to restore these precious lands.”

David Weeden, Tribal Council member and selectman for the Town of Mashpee

The announcement came just ahead of a planned rally and press conference, sponsored by 350 Cape Cod and allied organizations, to be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Forestdale Elementary School in Sandwich to try to stop the proposed gun range.






Rep. Gosar: The FBI planned the insurrection

 


 
 

 
Arizona Rep. Paul Gosar has spent the last five months defending the insurrectionists who broke into the Capitol on January 6 -- but now he's taking it a step further by suggesting it was actually the FBI who planned the Capitol siege.
 
During a House hearing earlier this week, Gosar filed a Revolver News article into the congressional record that claimed the FBI organized the deadly Capitol riot.
 
Then he demanded that FBI director Cristopher Wray give him the name of the Capitol police officer who fatally shot a rioter during the insurrection, claiming the rioter had been “executed.”
 
Gosar has no respect for the Capitol police officers who protected him and his colleagues on January 6, and he has even less respect for the majority of Americans. Before voting to overturn the election results, he told right-wing militia members of the Oath Keepers that America is in a civil war, “we just haven't started shooting at each other yet.”
 
We all know what happened on January 6. It isn't a “narrative” or a “rally that got out of hand.” It wasn't a stunt orchestrated by the FBI. It was a violent attack on our nation's Capitol, and Republicans opened the door.
 
Gosar has been in Congress for over a decade -- but he's not alone anymore. He has a growing number of right-wing extremists helping him shape legislation in Washington, each one with ties to the extremist groups who planned the insurrection.
  • Arizona Rep. Andy Biggs
  • Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert
  • Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz
  • Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene
We're working to flip these five seats and make sure the GOP never gets control of the House. Because of people like you, we're only $2,308 away from reaching our Insurrectionist Knockout Fund goal and giving Republicans a run for their money. Will you rush us anything you can before midnight to defeat the insurrectionists in Congress?

Gosar's racist claims and conspiracy theories wouldn't concern us if we didn't know that millions of people in this country are listening and acting on them.
 
Thank you for helping us hold the GOP accountable.
 
Let's keep moving,
Progressive Majority




Progressive Majority PAC is leading the fight against Trump's GOP and their dangerous and divisive agenda by supporting elected progressives, helping elect even more progressive Democrats to Congress, and protecting the gains we made in the past election. This movement is powered by progressives like you.
 
 
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POLITICO NIGHTLY: Digging into Biden’s not-dead-yet deal

 



 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY RENUKA RAYASAM

Presented by

Amazon

HERE’S THE DEAL — We know that President Joe Biden and a group of senators agreed to something this week. We also know that the agreement may be on the verge of falling apart . But what’s much less clear is what exactly the president and the senators agreed to do together, however briefly. Nightly turned to transportation editor Kathryn A. Wolfe to break down the details of the infrastructure agreement — if in fact you can still call it that — over Slack today. This conversation has been edited.

Why is it so hard to figure out what’s actually in this bill?

It’s still extremely vague. There are basically giant pots of money for broad areas. For instance, transit is set at $49 billion, electric vehicle infrastructure at $7.5 billion (which is probably things like charging station infrastructure). Roads, highways and what they call “other projects” is the biggest pot at $109 billion.

Then there are other big pots for things like water infrastructure — helping places like Flint with lead issues, or even just fixing up our decrepit water and sewer infrastructure. There’s also $65 billion for building out broadband to places that don’t currently have it.

There are also pots of money for things like the electric grid, which of course we’ve seen experience some major failures and issues in the South and West, and then things like “resiliency” which is hardening our infrastructure against climate change, writ broadly.

Power-lines are shown on June 15, 2021 in Houston.

Powerlines are shown on June 15, 2021 in Houston. | Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Who gets to decide how that money is spent? Congress? Federal agencies? States?

A lot will be further delineated when they write the bill, but some of this is almost certainly going to take the form of grants, which could be handed out to states or cities if they meet certain criteria — similar to how grant programs are run now.

We also have a formula now for how, say, federal money for roads and highways and bridges gets doled out, and it’s possible some could be run through that formula. This is essentially a pass-through or block grant to state DOTs. And the formula is super complicated, depending on a lot of factors like size, population, etc.

How does it all get paid for?

So they have come up with a list of pay-fors, but some of them are a little fantastical. I think most expert observers don’t think it will truly, fully offset what the bill will cost the federal government. Which means the rest will be made up with by deficit spending

There’s also $20 billion for a “financing authority,” which sounds something similar to an infrastructure bank. This concept has been around a long time and never really caught on. But the idea is you seed the bank with initial money, and then it uses it to leverage other capital to finance projects that it thinks are worthy.

Do you think that existing problems with infrastructure, say a bridge collapse, could get lawmakers moving?

There was a bridge collapse here in D.C. right as lawmakers were putting all of this together, but the cause wasn’t that the bridge was decrepit (though it seems like it actually was decrepit) — the cause was that a big truck plowed into it. So that vanished quickly.

Politically speaking, disasters have to be responded to quickly, because otherwise attention fades and with it political will. There was the instance of the bridge collapse in Minnesota in 2007, when the late Jim Oberstar was chairman of T&I, and was working on a surface transportation bill. He told me that he had support for raising the gas tax and was set to go to the floor with it.

Except Congress went on a recess and when they got back, the moment had passed. He was still sad about that even years later. I think he told me that story five times.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas for us at rrayasam@politico.com, or on Twitter at @renurayasam.

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— At the border, Harris says her focus is on ‘root causes’ of migration: Vice President Kamala Harris repeatedly emphasized that her focus is on the “root causes” of immigration during her today visit to the U.S.-Mexico border, an event that came after Republicans continually criticized her for not making the trip earlier in her term. Harris, who was put in charge of diplomatic efforts to stem the flow of migrants arriving on the southern border, visited Guatemala and Mexico earlier this month. The U.S.-Mexico border has recently seen an increase in arrivals, and Harris advised migrants “do not come” during a speech in Guatemala.

— Trudeau: ‘Canadians are horrified and ashamed’: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau apologized to the Cowessess First Nation today after news that 751 unmarked graves had been discovered at the site of the former Marieval Indian Residential School in Saskatchewan. The shocking discovery revealed Thursday was only the latest reminder of Canada’s historic mistreatment of Indigenous people — a deadly history and enduring legacy that a federal inquiry called a genocide in 2019.

— Government report can’t explain UFOs, but offers no evidence of aliens: A new intelligence report sent to Congress today concludes that virtually all of the 144 sightings of unidentified flying objects documented by the military since 2004 are of unknown origin , in an extremely rare public accounting of the U.S. government’s data on UFOs that is likely to fuel further speculation about phenomena the intelligence community has long struggled to understand. The report — the government’s first unclassified assessment in half a century — does not offer any definitive answers on who or what may be operating a variety of aircraft that, in some cases, appear to defy known characteristics of aerodynamics, and that officials believe pose a threat to national security.

— Garland backs legislation to end subpoenas for reporters’ records: Attorney General Merrick Garland has endorsed the idea of legislation to create an enduring ban on federal prosecutors subpoenaing reporters or their phone or email records in federal investigations, but he stopped short of announcing an official endorsement on behalf of the Biden administration. During a press conference at Justice Department headquarters today, Garland reiterated that he is planning both an informal directive and new regulations to implement the policy change he announced last month ending such demands.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO WEST WING PLAYBOOK: Add West Wing Playbook to keep up with the power players, latest policy developments and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing and across the highest levels of the Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
AROUND THE WORLD

EUROPE’S POST-MERKEL ERA BEGINS — Germany’s election is three months away, but in Brussels, the post-Merkel era has begun. And — to absolutely no one’s surprise — it isn’t prettyJacopo Barigazzi and David M. Herszenhorn write.

For Angela Merkel, the German chancellor and longest-serving person around the EU leaders’ table, the summit that ended today almost certainly wasn’t her last European Council — she’ll likely still be a caretaker German leader at EU gatherings in October, as coalition talks back home determine her successor. But the impending retirement of the EU’s middle-ground tone-setter was already palpable this week, as leaders shed their political politesse to implore Viktor Orbán to drop an anti-LGBTQ+ law.

And the main combatants in the room just happened to be the EU’s next longest-serving leaders: the Netherlands’ Mark Rutte and Hungary’s Orbán, who have both been in power since 2010.

Rutte and Orbán clashed fiercely over LGBTQ+ rights Thursday night, with the Dutch premier even going so far as to suggest that Hungary should just leave the EU if it can’t respect fundamental rights and freedoms. And while the argument was ostensibly about the new Hungarian measures, it represented the start of a broader battle over EU values, and who will shape the EU’s voice once Merkel is gone — Rutte, a socially progressive liberal, or Orbán, the self-proclaimed champion of illiberal Christian democracy.

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

22.5

The number of years in prison Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer who murdered George Floyd last year, was sentenced to today . In his ruling, Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill cited the ex-officer’s abuse of a position of trust and authority and particular cruelty to Floyd.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO "THE RECAST" TODAY: Power is shifting in Washington and in communities across the country. More people are demanding a seat at the table, insisting that politics is personal and not all policy is equitable. The Recast is a twice-weekly newsletter that explores the changing power dynamics in Washington and breaks down how race and identity are recasting politics and policy in America. Get fresh insights, scoops and dispatches on this crucial intersection from across the country and hear critical new voices that challenge business as usual. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE . Thank you to our sponsor, Intel.

 
 
PUNCHLINES

CONGRESS’ SUMMER GRIND — The recent longest day of the year gave farmers more time to work their crops, and Matt Wuerker more time to find the best political satire and cartoons for the Weekend Wrap , including on increased airline violence, the various negotiations taking place on the Hill, and the debate around critical race theory.

Nightly video player of Matt Wuerker's Weekend Wrap

PARTING WORDS

EU’S VIEWS ON RUSSIA CONFUSE — French President Emmanuel Macron thinks his fellow leaders from Poland and the Baltics are Russophobic, and that they insist on an unnecessarily tough policy toward Moscow out of misplaced paranoia.

Leaders in Warsaw, Tallinn, Riga and Vilnius, by contrast, see themselves as Russo-realistic and the French president as dangerously deluded in his soft approach to President Vladimir Putin.

In Paris, malign activities like election meddling or extra-territorial assassinations are part of a more complex relationship with Russia , a country that is also the land of ballet and the Hermitage Museum, and the obvious supplier of caviar, the perfect accompaniment to champagne, David M. Herszenhorn writes.

But in Central and Eastern Europe, Russia is the cause of violence that led hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians to emigrate to neighboring countries. Poland lives with heavy militarization in the neighboring Russian region of Kaliningrad, while the Baltics offer shelter to political opposition leaders and journalists who have fled potential persecution, including staff of news sites like Meduza, or allies of the jailed anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny.

These contradictory views came into sharp focus this week as Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pushed for a new Russia policy, only to be brutally rebuffed.

A message from Amazon:

It’s not just Amazon employees who noticed the immediate benefit of increasing their starting wage to at least $15 an hour — a new study from the University of California-Berkeley and Brandeis University found that when Amazon raised its wages, the average hourly wage in the surrounding area rose by 4.7% as other employers followed their lead. Learn more about what else the research found.

 

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MASSterList: Rich debate | | Is it a gimmick? | No federal office: Today's sponsor - AOTNOW

 



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 Chris Van Buskirk and Keith Regan

06/25/2021

Rich debate | | Is it a gimmick? | No federal office

 
AOT Now

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Happening Today
 
COVID-19 cultural impact, Portugal prime minister, and more
 

9 a.m. | Auditor Bump visits the Old Colony YMCA for a tour of its summer camp facilities and a discussion of its spending of federal COVID-19 relief funds.

10 a.m. | COVID-19 Cultural Impact Commission meets virtually to provide organizations in the arts and culture sector an opportunity to provide input prior to the publication of a final report.

11 a.m. | Portugal Prime Minister Antonio Luis Santos da Costa offers keynote remarks at the Massachusetts Portuguese American Legislative Caucus' 37th annual heritage day of Portugal celebration, with Sen. Marc Pacheco presiding over events.

11 a.m. | Special Legislative Early Education and Care Economic Review Commission holds its third public meeting virtually to receive live testimony by invitation only.

For the most comprehensive list of calendar items, check out State House News Service’s Daily Advances (pay wall – free trial subscriptions available).

 
 

Sponsored

Massachusetts is one of just three states not to have adopted an Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) law. AOT is a proven and effective way to treat severe mental illness in an outpatient setting.

Learn more here.
 
 
Today's News
 
The millionaire's tax: A key issue in guv's race
 

It's a topic that has been lingering on Beacon Hill for quite a while. It's a debate that draws impassioned arguments from both sides of the aisle. And it's a question that voters will consider on the 2022 ballot, the same one where they'll pick the next governor of Massachusetts.

The so-called "Fair Share Amendment," aka the 'millionaire's tax' that would slap a 4 percent surtax on incomes above $1 million, is quickly becoming a central talking point among the three Democratic gubernatorial candidates. Supporters say the proposal will generate up to $2 billion in new revenues for education and transportation while opponents see it as a perilous option that will lead to a graduated income tax structure and push high-earning individuals out of the state.

The issue also highlights how some of the contenders in the governor's race are running on similar messages, begging the question of how they'll differentiate from each other when the race truly heats up. Two of the three declared candidates in the race so far have voted in favor of the Constitutional amendment, while a spokesperson for the other confirmed her support.

Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz, who announced her candidacy this week, voted in favor of the surtax during a joint meeting of the House and Senate in early June. Likewise, former Sen. Ben Downing supported the proposal with his vote in 2016, and has attended several rallies in the past week in support.

"If my mom can spend a lifetime helping kids escape poverty, surely, Massachusetts can pass a millionaire's tax to help more children get a better start in life," Chang-Díaz said in her announcement video.

In a statement to MassterList, Downing's Deputy Campaign Manager Christina Gregg said the former senator "believes it is long past time for comprehensive tax reform that requires more from those who have benefited most from our collective economic growth and makes good on the promise of equity and access for all 351 cities and towns."

A spokesperson for Harvard University professor Danielle Allen told MassterList that she "believes that the revenue generated from the Fair Share Amendment will be greatly beneficial to our commonwealth as we will use it to support investments in the diversification of our economy and pathways of economic opportunity for all our communities."

The proposal has drawn a sweeping backlash from legislative Republicans. At the executive level, Gov. Charlie Baker, speaking a day after the current Legislature advanced the amendment to the 2022 ballot, said the state should not raise taxes following the pandemic.

"I said before that I don't think we should be raising taxes," Baker said. "We have, between state and local government, we have $10 billion already in federal funds that we need to find a way to put to work. And I really think our focus ought to be on that."

 
 
Federal funds feud: Act IV
 

The Legislature resoundingly rejected Gov. Charlie Baker's proposal to spend about half of the more than $5 billion in federal aid dollars Massachusetts received from the American Rescue Plan Act immediately and let lawmakers work out how to allocate the rest later, reports the News Service's Katie Lannan.

The House said no to the plan earlier this week and the Senate did so on Thursday in a party-line vote. The spending bill now proposes to leave the governor with $200 million to allocate. 

SHNS
 
 
Is it a 'gimmick'?
 

That's what some Beacon Hill Democrats are calling Gov. Charlie Baker's proposed two-month long sales tax holiday while Republicans are defending the idea as novel, reports MassLive's Steph Solis

More from Solis: "Massachusetts has the money. The Department of Revenue received $32.5 billion in sales and commercial tax revenue during fiscal 2021 — $3.36 billion more than the state expected to get." Critics, however, say surplus tax revenue should head to education, the MBTA, and other areas left underfunded during the pandemic.

Senate President Karen Spilka told SHNS's Sam Doran and Matt Murphy that one weekend of suspending sales tax collection "is sufficient for now." More from SHNS here

MassLive
 
 
Kivvit Mass Prod v3

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At least we know he isn't seeking federal office
 

That's one question we can all check off the Gov. Charlie Baker 'what-ifs' list. Appearing on GBH's "Boston Public Radio," Baker said he has "zero interest" in running for federal office, reports Boston Globe's Martin Finucane. Meanwhile, Baker wouldn't say whether or not he would seek a third term as Governor of Massachusetts. 

Maybe one of these days we'll actually find out Baker's post-pandemic/new normal plans. When exactly that'll be? "When we make a decision," Baker said on the radio show.

 
 
Shots required at three hospital systems
 

And we're not talking the liqour kind of shots. Three major hospital systems in Massachusetts are going to require employees to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, reports the Associated Press' Boston Bureau.

More from the AP: "Leadership at Mass General Brigham, Beth Israel Lahey Health and Wellforce said requiring vaccinations for employees is critical to halt the spread of the coronavirus and save lives."

Associated Press
 
 
Steering clear: Baker unlikely to endorse in Boston mayoral race
 

He’s going to stay in his lane. Gov. Charlie Baker deflected a question about whether he’d endorse one of the candidates -- all Democrats -- seeking to become Boston’s next mayor, telling Gintautas Dumcius of the Dorchester Reporter that he works well with local leaders of all political stripes and suggesting he’ll stay out of the race to lead the Democratic stronghold that Baker nearly claimed in the 2018 election.

Dorchester Reporter
 
 

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If the Massachusetts state legislature changes the film production incentive program, thousands of local film and TV workers could lose their jobs starting Jan. 1.

Click to hear from MA film and TV workers why the program is so important.
 
 
House set to face diversity issue in leadership
 

House Majority Leader Claire Cronin's departure to serve as ambassador to Ireland would make that branches' leadership a bit less diverse if House Speaker Ronald Mariano sticks to his current list of lieutenants, writes GBH's Mike Deehan.

GBH
 
 
Maybe they just wanted a good view ...
 

MassLive's Douglas Hook reports that state police are looking for three men who allegedly broke into a Government Center highrise and climbed up 22 floors to the roof.

MassLive
 
 
'No contest' and open seats in Northampton
 
Daily Hampshire Gazette's Brian Steel reports that only six candidates have pulled nomination papers to run for the nine seats on the Northampton School Committe. The election is set for November.Daily Hampshire Gazette
 
 
Keller at Large June 22

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Worcester defense lawyers acquitted
 

A judge found a pair of Worcester defense lawyers not guilty in a case that involved making a central witness unavailable to testify in a human trafficking trial, writes Brad Petrishen of the Telegram & Gazette.

Telegram & Gazette
 
 
Staying power: After heated debate, Shrewsbury will stick with Colonials nickname
 

He’s staying put -- but getting a makeover. After eight months of study, a divided Shrewsbury school board has voted to retain the high school’s Colonials nickname -- but will update "the presentation” of the mascot to put it in better historical context, Craig Semon and Dave Nordman of the Telegram report.

Telegram & Gazette
 
 
Most local: Quincy councilors slam legislature over voting lines takeover
 

The Quincy City Council has taken a formal stance against a move by state lawmakers to forge ahead with Census-driven redistricting before local communities adjust their own voting precincts, Mary Whitfill of the Patriot Ledger reports. One councilor summed up the argument by saying "government is always best at the lowest, most local level.”

Patriot Ledger
 
 

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

You can access Jon’s most recent columns here:

6/15/21- Lyons & Co.: Enough To Make You Puke

6/8/21 - The Goldilocks Candidate In The Boston Mayoral Race

6/1/21 - Jaylen Brown's Slam-Dunk Analysis

 
 
Hurry up: Amherst’s ranked-choice switch hung up on legislative delay
 

There’s still time to act. That’s the message from elected officials in Amherst to the state legislature about a home-rule petition that would allow the community to use ranked-choice voting in the next local election this fall, Scott Merzbach of the Daily Hampshire Gazette reports. Amherst embraced ranked-choice in a 2018 charter update and had hoped to see the system make its debut in 2021.

Daily Hampshire Gazette
 
 
Sunday public affairs TV: Bill Galvin, Sunny Hostin and more
 

Keller at Large, WBZ-TV Channel 4, 8:30 a.m. This week’s guests: State House News Service’s Katie Lannan and Matt Murphy, who talk with host Jon Keller about Gov. Charlie Baker’s proposed two-month sales tax holiday, the battle over spending control of federal stimulus funds, and the race for governor.

This Week in Business, NECN, 10 a.m. Mass. League of Community Health Centers president discusses the next phase of vaccinating the public and the Boston Globe’s Shirley Leung discusses the top local business stories of the week, including Gov. Charlie Baker’s proposed two-month sales tax holiday.

On The Record, WCVB-TV Channel 5, 11 a.m. This week’s guest is Secretary of State Bill Galvin, who talks with hosts Ed Harding and Janet Wu, followed by a political discussion with analysts Mary Anne Marsh and Rob Gray.

CityLine, WCVB-TV Channel 5, 12 p.m. With host Karen Holmes Ward, this week’s topic: A conversation with Sunny Hostin, co-host of ABC’s ‘The View.’

 
 
Reportal June 21
 
 
Today's Headlines
 
Metro
 

Benjamin Franklin Institute files plans for new Roxbury building - Universal Hub

Neighbors, Quincy councilors concerned about proposed bridge over Blacks Creek - Patriot Ledger

 
Massachusetts
 

Massachusetts Gaming Commission OK’s MGM Springfield sale to real-estate spinoff - MassLive

Salem council meets in person; votes to remain remote - Salem News

JPMorgan Buys Stake in Robert Kraft's Sports-Data Company - Wall Street Journal

 
Nation
 

Pelosi announces a select committee will investigate Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob - Washington Post

Haley praises Trump in Iowa speech laced with 2024 intrigue - Politico

 
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:
 

Contact Center Vendor Manager, Department of Family and Medical Leave

Associate, Health Care Transformation and Innovation, Massachusetts Health Policy Commission

Account Executive, 617MediaGroup

Executive Director, Massachusetts Interest on Lawyers Trust Account Committee (IOLTA Committee)

Program Director of Education, American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Government Affairs Manager, Massachusetts Health Policy Commission

Director of Legislative and Government Affairs, Massachusetts Audubon Society

Financial Analyst and Accountant, Massachusetts Housing Partnership (MHP)

Senior Research Analyst, Massachusetts Housing Partnership (MHP)

Procurement and Contract Coordinator, Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC)

Senior Contract Specialist, Center for Health Information and Analysis (CHIA)

General Counsel, Center for Health Information and Analysis (CHIA)

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

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The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...