Showing posts with label CHARTER SCHOOL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHARTER SCHOOL. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: 99 problems but a budget ain't one

 


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BY LISA KASHINSKY AND KELLY GARRITY

ON TO THE NEXT ONE — There’s nothing like the threat of a delayed summer vacation to get warring Democratic lawmakers to lay down their arms.

A relative, if temporary, peace settled over the State House on Monday as lawmakers made quick work of the month-late state budget accord. The mood was light: House and Senate Ways and Means Chairs Aaron Michlewitz and Michael Rodrigues each quoted Jay-Z in presenting their deal.

By nightfall, legislators had also extended horse racing and simulcasting, directed $180 million in aid toward financially strained hospitals and set aside $20 million for central and western Massachusetts farmers who lost crops in last month's floods.

But the flurry of eleventh-hour activity belies the reality that the clashes between chambers that have dominated Beacon Hill as of late are hardly resolved.

Lawmakers are heading for the exits with millions of dollars in tax breaks for renters and businesses and credits for seniors and families still on the negotiating table for the second straight summer. The larger supplemental spending plans from which horse racing and hospital and farm aid were plucked remain in limbo.

“It’s just the volume of things before us,” Rodrigues told reporters at the State House. “We wanted to get the budget done first. So I’m sure we’ll get tax relief done as soon as possible.”

Top Democrats are also teeing up dueling gun bills for the fall. Senate President Karen Spilka told the Boston Herald that she wants to move forward with her own firearm regulations after the August recess. Such a move would again put the chambers at odds over gun legislation, after Speaker Ron Mariano’s attempt to fast-track the House’s firearms bill got jammed up in procedural drama.

But first, lawmakers will have to deal with any budget amendments or vetoes from Gov. Maura Healey, who now has 10 days to review the fiscal year 2024 spending plan.

“I’m grateful to Senate President Spilka, Speaker Mariano and the Legislature for putting forward a budget that includes investments that are urgently needed to make our state more competitive, affordable and equitable,” Healey said in a statement.

But she also nudged lawmakers to get back to their tax talks. “We also know that the job isn’t done until we pass tax relief to make our state more affordable for families and businesses,” the governor said.

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Just how late is the late state budget accord?

Not late enough to break records. This budget deal is on track to be the second-latest in 22 years, according to the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation . And Massachusetts isn't the only state with a fiscal year 2024 budget still outstanding.

But the drawn-out negotiations add to an already sluggish start to the legislative session. So Playbook asked Rodrigues if he thinks the policies lawmakers packed into the budget bill make up for the relative lack of laws they’ve passed so far this year .

“Yeah, I mean, we have a lot in there,” Rodrigues said. But he also rejected the notion that lawmakers are being lethargic.

“I have not been slow. I've been in here every day, all day,” he said. “So it certainly hasn't been slow in Senate Ways and Means land.

Massachusetts State House

The Massachusetts State House | Lisa Kashinsky/POLITICO

TODAY — Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll have no public events. Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su speaks at the NAACP convention at 11:45 a.m. at the BCEC. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu speaks at a Roxbury park opening at 1 p.m. and attends National Night Out events starting at 3:15 p.m.

Tips? Scoops? August recess book recommendations? Email us: kgarrity@politico.com and lkashinsky@politico.com .

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Lawmakers Tap One-Time State Funds To Fuel Spending Boost,” by Sam Drysdale, Colin Young and Chris Lisinski, State House News Service (paywall): “The Legislature in its new annual budget agreement used about $1 billion from the state's new income surtax to push state spending up by more than $3.5 billion, but also tapped more than $600 million from other state funds and sources to fuel the spending surge.”

— “East-west rail not in state budget, but backers see other funding options,” by Jim Kinney, Springfield Republican: “The projects — $4 million for site selection and preliminary engineering in Palmer and $8.5 million for track work in Pittsfield — were included last month in MassDOT’s 2024-2028 Capital Investment Plan. … But [a Western Massachusetts Passenger Rail Commission] report remains overdue three months after its last meeting, raising fears the train plan is losing steam while there is federal money on the table.”

FROM THE HUB

— “Boston police watchdog agency at crossroads as directors leave, first sustained complaint rejected,” by Sean Cotter, Boston Globe: “Boston’s police watchdog agency broke new ground at its meeting this month: Two years after it was first created and after receiving more than 200 citizen complaints, the Office of Police Accountability and Transparency’s Civilian Review Board sustained an allegation against a police officer. Even then, the finding — which took issue with the department’s practice of publicly identifying children who have been killed — was almost immediately rejected by Boston Police Commissioner Michael Cox.”

— “Boston Mayor Wu bans fossil fuels in new city-owned building construction,” by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald: “In the latest push for her Green New Deal, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu signed an executive order that prohibits city-owned buildings from being constructed or renovated in a way that allows for the use of fossil fuels.”

— “Unionization efforts underway amid overhaul of Boston planning agency,” by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter: “As the Wu administration moves to revamp the Boston Planning and Development Agency (BPDA), two unions — AFSCME Council 93 and SENA Local 9158 — have been seeking out BPDA staff members as part of unionization drives.”

— WATCH: Black voters helped propel Joe Biden and Kamala Harris to the White House. But their support has softened over time. Harris, at the NAACP convention in Boston, told GBH’s Paris Alston and Jim Braude “that tells me that we have more work to do, which we are doing, which is to inform people about what we have achieved and to also thank them.” More from the interview .

— “After 10 hours of discussion, NAACP approves slate of policy priorities,” by Tiana Woodard, Boston Globe.

— “Combating violence in Boston a ‘top issue' for officials, mayor says,” by Mary Markos, NBC10 Boston.

 

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THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

— ENDORSEMENT CORNER: The Environmental League of Massachusetts Action Fund has endorsed Samantha Perlman for mayor of Marlborough. The group also endorsed Henry Santana for Boston at-large city councilor this week.

— “Petition drive to limit New Bedford City Council terms crashes,” by Arthur Hirsch, New Bedford Light.

MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS

 — FEDERAL APPEAL: Cape and Islands District Attorney Robert Galibois is asking federal prosecutors to probe the migrant flights to Martha’s Vineyard orchestrated by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis last September. “My office posits that, due to the interstate transportation of these migrants, this alleged scheme remains available for federal prosecution,” Galibois wrote in a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland on Monday.

— “State opens second welcome center for migrants and families experiencing homelessness,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “State officials on Monday opened the second welcome center for resident and migrant families experiencing homelessness on the campus of Eastern Nazarene College in Quincy. Health and Human Services Secretary Kate Walsh said the center, the first to also accommodate an on-site shelter, is meant to serve the growing number of people seeking refuge in Massachusetts.”

— "Mass. lawmakers ask Biden administration to speed up migrant work permits," by Tal Kopan, Boston Globe: "Bay State lawmakers, led by Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, appealed to the Department of Homeland Security and its sub-agency, US Citizenship and Immigration Services, to expedite the process of issuing work permits so newly arriving immigrants are not stuck for months without sources of income, reliant on state services."

FROM THE 413

— “Easthampton city council expected to override mayor veto of crisis pregnancy center ordinance,” by Juliet Schulman-Hall, MassLive: “Almost a month after Easthampton Mayor Nicole LaChapelle vetoed a controversial ordinance passed by the city council related to crisis pregnancy centers, the city council is meeting again to discuss the ordinance. … Councilor Owen Zaret, who spearheaded the ordinance, said he expects the council to override the veto.”

— More: “Reproductive equity groups urge Easthampton council to override mayor’s veto on pregnancy center ordinance,” by Maddie Fabian, Daily Hampshire Gazette.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Mass. women's colleges are at the forefront of trans admissions dilemma,” by Jenny Hellwig, Boston Business Journal: “Massachusetts is home to five women’s colleges, more than any other state in the U.S. … [O]nly six women’s colleges across the country have written policies accepting applications from transgender men. Three of those are located in Massachusetts: Mount Holyoke, Simmons University, and Bay Path University.”

— “Attorney general files public records lawsuit against Malden charter school,” by Adria Watson, Boston Globe: “Andrea Campbell’s office said the Malden-based charter school received 10 records requests between January and November of last year, but declined to provide the records. In response to the requests, Mystic Valley Regional officials claimed the school was exempt from the state’s public records law.”

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

SPOTTED — Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Frontier Security Strategies’ Ed Cash last night at the Parish Cafe in Back Bay and at Mr. Dooley’s Irish pub.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Boston City Councilor Ruthzee Louijeune, Jehuda Reinharz, Nora Bergman and Asher Perez.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com .

 

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Tuesday, June 27, 2023

POLITICO Nightly: The future of the Voting Rights Act is still in jeopardy

 

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BY ZACH MONTELLARO

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Voting rights activists rally outside the Supreme Court during oral arguments in the Moore v. Harper case. A sign reads "HANDS OFF MY VOTE!"

Voting rights activists rally outside the Supreme Court during oral arguments in the Moore v. Harper case. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

UNEASY ANNIVERSARY — The Voting Rights Act dodged a bullet earlier this month when the Supreme Court passed on the opportunity to further narrow its scope. In a case out of Alabama, the court upheld a key provision which allows minority voters to challenge voting maps that hinder their collective ability to elect their chosen candidates.

And today, the first major domino fell after the Alabama ruling when the Supreme Court restored a lower court’s ruling that Louisiana’s congressional lines also likely diluted the power of Black voters there — a decision that will likely reverberate in other states, including Georgia and Texas.

It’s an unexpected development, given the last decade of jurisprudence on the VRA. Sunday marked the 10-year anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision in Shelby County v. Holder , which kicked off a near-unbroken pattern, until this month, of the high court whittling away at the VRA. A decade later, the future of the landmark piece of legislation remains incredibly uncertain.

The Court’s decision 10 years ago was the first of many blows to the Voting Rights Act. The 5-4 decision, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, effectively eviscerated Section 5 of the VRA, which required states and local municipalities with a history of discriminatory voting practices to get any changes to election laws precleared by either the Department of Justice or a federal court in D.C. The court gutted those protections by tossing out the formula used to determine if a jurisdiction had that history of discrimination. Since there’s no way to determine who has a discriminatory history, the thinking went, there’s no way to apply Section 5 protections. But that was only the beginning.

The court further chipped away at other sections of the Voting Rights Act in subsequent decisions, like one in 2021 adopting five “guideposts” to assess voting rules that activists decried for its sweeping nature . The Shelby County decision and subsequent rulings allowed for what voting rights activists have called a wave of new state election laws that have restricted the vote. The Brennan Center — a liberal think tank — found that there had been at least 29 laws passed in 11 states that were previously subject to preclearance, either in whole or in part, that added some sort of new voting restriction over the last decade.

This pattern seemed like it would continue unabated — until earlier this month, that is. The decision from the Alabama redistricting case shocked most court watchers, who assumed the court would continue on its path of cutting away at the Voting Rights Act. Instead, along with today’s ruling in the Louisiana case, it could lead to another majority Black House seat in both states — and open a path for a boon in minority representation across the South.

That does not mean the future of the Voting Rights Act is secure, however. The Alabama decision in Allen v. Milligan merely affirms the current law that has already been whittled away over the last decade, and does not expand it. And Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who was in the majority in that case, nevertheless channeled Justice Clarence Thomas’ biting dissent by noting in a concurrence that the case did not delve into “the authority to conduct race-based redistricting … indefinitely into the future.”

Also still to be decided is a case in Arkansas, arguing the provision at the core of the Voting Rights Act does not allow for a “private right of action.” If successful, it would represent perhaps the biggest blow to the VRA yet, limiting challenges to just the federal government and closing the door to private groups’ right to sue entirely. The Eighth Circuit heard that case earlier this year , and has yet to issue a decision.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at zmontellaro@politico.com or on Twitter at @ZachMontellaro .

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Supreme Court won’t hear charter school dress code case that promised broader fallout: The Supreme Court today declined to take up a case that could have upended the charter school industry , but a legal fight over the future of the embattled segment of public schools is not over. Justices denied a petition to hear Charter Day School, Inc. v. Peltier after conferring over the case last Thursday. Religious liberty groups, some school choice organizations, plus 10 attorneys general in Republican-led states had asked the justices to intervene after the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down a charter dress code that required girls to wear skirts.

— Freedom Caucus takes key vote on Marjorie Taylor Greene’s future: House Freedom Caucus members took a momentous vote today on Marjorie Taylor Greene’s future with the group , according to three people familiar with the matter — but it’s not yet clear whether she’s been officially ejected. The right-flank group took up Greene’s status amid an internal push, first reported by POLITICO, to consider purging members who are inactive or at odds with the Freedom Caucus. Greene’s close alliance with Speaker Kevin McCarthy, and her accompanying criticism of colleagues in the group, has put her on the opposite side of a bloc that made its name opposing GOP leadership. While her formal status in the conservative group remains in limbo, the 8 a.m. vote — which sources said ended with a consensus against her — points to, at least, continued strong anti-Greene sentiment.

— Study shows federal weather model underplays flooding, putting infrastructure spending at risk: The federal government is relying on an outdated weather model that is putting hundreds of billions of dollars in infrastructure spending at risk , according to a study by climate research firm First Street Foundation. The 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law, H.R. 3684 (117), calls for state and local governments to consult a federal prediction model that First Street says vastly underestimates the likelihood of flooding. That means that many new projects could face flooding threats far earlier than expected, forcing local governments to pay for unanticipated maintenance or potentially wasting funds from the $350 billion the legislation set aside for projects.

 

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NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

STUMBLING BLOCKS — For several months this year, Ron DeSantis seemed poised for a breakthrough in New Hampshire. But in the month since DeSantis formally entered the presidential race, he’s stumbled in the first-in-the-nation primary state , reports POLITICO’s Lisa Kashinsky and Meredith McGraw.

He got dragged into a tit-for-tat endorsement battle with Trump that generated some media attention but little measurable increase in support. His first visit to the state as a presidential candidate drew more headlines for what he didn’t do — take questions from voters — than the retail politicking he did. And that’s on top of polls that had already swung back in Trump’s favor.

There are signs that even inside DeSantis’s orbit, they see New Hampshire as a challenge. The super PAC that’s effectively running his operation has been off the air in New Hampshire since May — temporarily, its founder told POLITICO — while running a new ad in Iowa and South Carolina this week.

BORDER CONTROL — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis moved today to undercut Donald Trump on immigration, reports POLITICO’s Sally Goldenberg, casting the former president as ineffectual on the issue that helped propel him to the White House in 2016 . He depicted President Joe Biden as even worse.

In his first major policy proposal as a presidential candidate, DeSantis called for an end to “catch and release” — a practice of discharging undocumented migrants into their American homes while they await court hearings. He called for asylum seekers along the U.S.-Mexico border to be blocked entry while their claims are processed. And he said, as Trump has previously, that children born in the United States to parents living here illegally should no longer be granted citizenship, a proposal that stands to face significant legal challenges.

TV TIME — Super PACs for the former president and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, the two top-polling candidates in the GOP race so far, are spending millions to get their messages to the primary electorate .

The Wall Street Journal reports that much of the advertising is targeting Republicans in states that launch the nomination process early next year: Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina. Some spots are running nationally, another option used by campaigns to win over supporters in those and other states near the front of the nomination calendar, as many voters are just starting to tune into the race.

The advertising pace is likely to pick up in July as some lesser-known candidates work to meet qualification requirements for the first Republican National Committee debate on Aug. 23.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

Russia's President Vladimir Putin, seen on a laptop screen, addressing the nation in Moscow today.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin, seen on a laptop screen, addressing the nation in Moscow today. Putin said that he gave an order to avoid bloodshed during an armed rebellion over the weekend. | Natalia Kolesnikova/AFP via Getty Images

WHAT NOW? — Vladimir Putin’s strongman mask is slipping — and Ukraine sees opportunity in the chaos, writes Zoya Sheftalovich .

Warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin’s short-lived mutiny over the weekend exposed Putin’s tenuous grip on the levers of power , the disunity within his ranks and the weakness in Russia’s own border defenses. The ease with which Prigozhin’s Wagner mercenaries were able to take control of Russian territory and march to within 200 kilometers of Moscow — and the videos of Russians cheering for them — showed Putin’s regime is far from invincible.

“Today the world saw that Russia’s bosses do not control anything,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his evening address late Saturday. “In one day, they lost several of their million-plus cities and showed all Russian bandits, mercenaries, oligarchs and anyone else how easy it is to capture Russian cities and, probably, weapons arsenals.”

On Sunday, Prigozhin’s mercenaries started pulling out of Russia’s southern Voronezh region, which is situated along a highway that the Wagner Group wanted to use to march on Moscow, and from Rostov-on-Don, the Russian city close to the Ukrainian border seized by Wagner on Saturday.

The question is, where will they go now?

With Prigozhin out of the way during his supposed exile in Belarus, the Wagner mercenaries — 25,000 of them, if Prigozhin is to be believed — will either go back to where they came from, or sign contracts with the Russian defense ministry.

Indeed, Russian military bloggers have speculated that Prigozhin launched his offensive on the country’s military leadership in response to the Kremlin seeking to defang him by integrating his mercenaries into the army. (Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu earlier this month ordered all “volunteer detachments” at the front in the Ukraine war to sign contracts with the ministry by July 1 — which Prigozhin vowed to oppose.)

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

$1.7 billion

The amount that the Department of Transportation is awarding in grants to purchase zero- and low-emission buses across 46 states and territories. The grants will enable transit agencies and state and local governments to buy 1,700 U.S.-built buses, nearly half of which will have zero carbon emissions. Funding for the grants comes from the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure bill.

RADAR SWEEP

SCHOOL TIES — Earlier this month, after years of legal battles that ended at the Texas Supreme Court, the Texas Education Agency took over management of the Houston Independent School District , the state’s largest school system. Nearly every local Houston official is against the takeover, and the state-appointed superintendent for HISD, Mike Miles, could currently be the most hated person in the county, with some residents leveling threats at him. Miles, for his part, plans to totally overhaul three chronically underperforming high schools using a similar model that he implemented while he was in Dallas. Michael Hardy reports for Texas Monthly on Miles, his educational philosophy and the future of the Houston school system.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1963: President John F. Kennedy spoke in front of a crowd of more than 300,000 in the main square in front of Schöneberg City Hall. Kennedy delivered one of the most famous anti-communist speeches of the Cold War, "Ich bin ein Berliner."

On this date in 1963: President John F. Kennedy spoke in front of a crowd of more than 300,000 in the main square in front of Schöneberg City Hall. Kennedy delivered one of the most famous anti-communist speeches of the Cold War, "Ich bin ein Berliner." | AP Photo

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