Saturday, December 13, 2025

Proposed gas bill hikes plus four more stories

 

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Welcome back to the Saturday Send, a weekly digest of stories from CommonWealth Beacon that you may have missed. 

This week, a utility company asks for permission to dramatically raise gas rates, and the MBTA's Phil Eng says he's open to permanently remaining transportation secretary.

Plus: a legislative task force recommends at least a doubling of the share of health care spending on primary care, new data on home insurance in Massachusetts is turning heads across the industry, and the Mass. Municipal Association recommends a gargantuan increase in local aid and reforms to loosen — but not eliminate — Prop 2½.

Check out those stories below, and, as always, thanks for reading.

— The CommonWealth Beacon team

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Liberty Utilities, which services a small southeastern pocket of Massachusetts, filed its rate hike request in June and is asking the Department of Public Utilities for permission to raise gas rates by about 55 percent on average.

 

The Healey administration seems content to have Phil Eng continue to work as both T general manager and interim transportation secretary for the foreseeable future, and Eng himself is warming up to the idea of holding both roles for a longer period of time.

 

Pressure will rise on the Legislature to take action after a panel created to review primary care reforms coalesced around a “fundamental rebalancing” of how the state spends money on health.

 

Massachusetts’s home insurance market, officials and experts stressed, is in a much better place than other parts of the country. Still, signs of change are emerging.

 

The Massachusetts Municipal Association rolled out a suite of requests for Beacon Hill, led by a $351 million increase in unrestricted aid the state pays to cities and towns, as communities navigate an increasingly bleak fiscal picture.

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This week on The Codcast, CommonWealth Beacon reporter Jennifer Smith talks with Greg Maynard, executive director of the Boston Policy Institute, as Boston the city council prepares for a Wednesday vote expected to raise taxes on single-family homes. Maynard says the administration is not moving quickly enough to inform the public about dire revenue forecasts or adopt new measures which could make up the difference.

 
 
 
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