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New from CommonWealth Beacon |
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LEGISLATIVE AUDIT: Following months of an increasingly bitter feud with Diana DiZoglio, Attorney General Andrea Campbell used a live radio interview to signal a new willingness to find a path forward on the long-stalled legislative audit. What looked like an olive branch, however, was met with a blistering reply from DiZoglio, who accused the state’s top law enforcement officer of violating professional ethics standards by simply calling her cell phone. Chris Lisinski has more. |
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OPINION: Today’s MBTA doesn’t work for residents across Greater Boston, write Charles Lyu, Will Palmer, and Robert Warren, co-leads of the TransitMatters FRAME the Future campaign. We need a long-term vision and plan for a transit system that enables all of us to fulfill our essential needs. The MBTA has launched Focus 2050 to develop its latest long-term planning document. This process will establish priorities over a 25-year timeframe and is scheduled for publication in mid-2027, with community engagement starting this spring. |
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After struggling for months to sustain her child care business at home, Minerva Caba Toribio thought she would have to close due to rent increases and high costs. But now, she’s able to operate out of a classroom located on Granite Street in Worcester at the Guild of St. Agnes, the largest early education and care agency in Central Massachusetts. Caba Toribio has space for 10 children, with five currently enrolled and three others that will soon be joining. |
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“We serve Brazilian families, Latin American families, immigrant families,” she said. “They feel comfortable to see that we can speak the same language and we have the same traditions.” |
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Caba Toribio will be able to use the space rent-free for two years. By saving on rent, utilities, meals, and other expenses, she hopes to restart her home-based child care service once the time is up. |
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It’s all part of a pilot program called the Family Childcare Success Project, formed in partnership by the Guild of St. Agnes – which serves almost 2,000 children across roughly 150 child care establishments — and the Worcester-based Seven Hills Foundation — which provides supportive services to children, adults, and seniors with disabilities and other life challenges. Their new family child care incubator — only the third of its kind in the nation — provides two classroom spaces that were empty due to a lack of staffing to two licensed educators to operate their child care businesses while they prepare to later offer the service in their homes. The program is meant to provide more child care slots in an area where demand is high but supply is low, while also making it easier for family child care entrepreneurs to get their start. |
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“In addition to expanding care to more children and families by using classrooms that were otherwise empty, we are able to share services such as transportation, healthy meals, and business support to the resident educators as they establish their new businesses,” said Sharon MacDonald, president and CEO of the Guild of St. Agnes. |
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The program, which can accommodate up to 20 children, was modeled after another family child care incubator in Boston, which was the first of its kind in the Commonwealth and provides short-term program space, resources, and training for newly licensed family child care entrepreneurs. The other incubator program launched in San Francisco in 2019 and has trained and established more than 100 new child care businesses, creating over 800 new child care slots. |
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“I was thinking about closing my business, so when I heard about the incubator, I thought, ‘That can't be possible. I will have a space where I can keep working with the same families that I had at my home?’” Caba Toribio said. |
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More from CommonWealth Beacon |
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CODCAST: The Healey administration is steering into artificial intelligence, and there’s more at stake than just jobs or economic growth — all sorts of personal data are involved, with some contractual protections in place. Reporter Jennifer Smith hosts Jason Snyder, the state’s technology secretary, for a discussion about the AI embrace on the latest episode of The Codcast. |
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POLITICS: US Sen. Ed Markey and US Reps. Ayanna Pressley and Seth Moulton say President Trump should be removed from office over his threat to annihilate Iran. (WBUR) |
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HEALTH CARE: Massachusetts's only freestanding birth center for low-risk deliveries is in danger of shuttering, a Northampton senator recently alerted the state's top public health official. (State House News Service – paywall) |
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LEGISLATURE: Lawmakers have slashed Gov. Maura Healey’s proposed research funding bill from $400 million to $200 million. The scaled-back version has sat without a scheduled vote since mid-March, even as federal cuts continue to drain money from the state’s universities and biomedical research institutions. (MassLive – paywall) |
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POVERTY: A new report from the Greater Boston Food Bank shows an estimated 40 percent of Massachusetts households experienced food insecurity in 2025. That’s more than double the rate of food insecurity in 2019. (GBH News) |
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HIGHER EDUCATION: A coalition of Harvard University faculty and graduate students lined up outside its main gate Tuesday holding black and white signs to demonstrate against the alleged silencing of Arab, Muslim, and Palestinian voices on the Ivy League campus. (The Boston Globe – paywall) |
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