Showing posts with label REP. LORI TRAHAN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label REP. LORI TRAHAN. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2024

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Never ending legislating


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By Kelly Garrity



THE PARTY SESSION NEVER ENDS — A steady stream of bills have made it to Gov. Maura Healey’s desk since legislators ended their last formal session this summer with a pile of legislation still stuck in conference committee negotiations.

That could become the new legislative normal. Senate President Karen Spilka and House Speaker Ron Mariano both are open to the idea of scrapping the deadline.

It’s one they’ve already somewhat regularly been blowing by: In 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic threw a wrench in legislating; and in 2022, ballooning state revenues triggered an almost-forgotten tax cap law, sending billions in rebates back to taxpayers and scuttling talks of a tax relief bill.

No global pandemic or mandatory tax rebates shook negotiations this year, but lawmakers still wrapped a marathon session without deals on a slew of closely watched bills.

Still, compromises have since emerged on several of them — including bills dealing with maternal health, liquor licenses in Boston and attacking federal funds to the state — and lawmakers in both chambers adjusted to pave the way for the passage of the hulking economic development bond bill they’re voting on today.

Whether Democratic leaders will decide to officially ditch the deadline, created decades ago to avoid lame-duck lawmaking and free up lawmakers during peak campaign season, is “up for discussion,” Spilka said yesterday after huddling with Mariano and Healey.

"I think our rules are constantly evolving depending upon how the sessions go,” she told reporters.

Mariano concurred: "I think it is time that we sort of reassess the difficulties that we had this year and ways that we can maybe improve and not have a repeat performance that necessitates us going to the end of the year,” he said.

Changing the rules comes with a caveat: House and Senate negotiators would likely need to agree on joint rules, something they still haven’t done with less than two months left until the end of the current two-year session.

That doesn’t mean they couldn’t start giving less weight to the mid-summer cut-off for formal lawmaking — though there’s minor risk involved with trying to push bills through during informal sessions, where a single objection can cause delays.

But both leaders pointed to the work they’ve been able to get done this fall.

“Maybe,” Mariano posited, “July 31 is an arbitrary deadline."

GOOD THURSDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Tips? Scoops? Thoughts on the legislative calendar? Drop me a line: kgarrity@politico.com 

TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey speaks at a Health Policy Commission hearing at 9:30 a.m. in Boston, delivers remarks at a luncheon honoring MOAR Executive Director Maryanne Frangules at 12:15 p.m. at the State House, swears in Justice Amy Blake as the next Chief of the Massachusetts Appeals at 1 p.m. and meets with electeds from Derry and Donegal at 1:30 p.m. in her office. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll speaks at Salem State’s Cyber Range ribbon cutting at 9 a.m. in Salem. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu speaks at the Italian Consulate of Boston’s Festival of Italian Creativity at 6:15 p.m. downtown. State Auditor Diana DiZoglio attends the Merrimack Valley YMCA Annual Meeting at 6 p.m. in Lawrence.

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Beacon Hill’s most powerful Democrats still considering whether to tinker with audit law after election,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald: “The two most powerful Democrats in the Massachusetts Legislature said they are still considering whether to tinker with a voter-approved law that grants more power to the State Auditor’s Office to investigate the inner workings of the House and Senate. House Speaker Ron Mariano and Senate President Karen Spilka again indicated Wednesday they could ask their members to make changes to a successful ballot question that was championed by State Auditor Diana DiZolgio, a former state lawmaker who regularly clashed with leadership.”

FROM THE HUB

— “The Boston City Council demanded a USPS official come testify on mail delays. The Post Office said, nah,” by Niki Griswold, The Boston Globe: “In a letter sent to the Boston City Council on Tuesday, a top USPS lawyer informed the councilors he would not allow Joshua Balcunas, Boston’s postmaster, to testify before the council, defying a rare subpoena the council issued last month to compel him to participate in a hearing on reported mail delivery delays.”

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

FROM THE OPINION PAGES — “Trump, Wu, and Josh Kraft: How last week’s election will shape next year’s race for Boston mayor,” by Shirley Leung, The Boston Globe: “Last week Josh Kraft — the leading prospective challenger to [Boston Mayor Michelle] Wu — was calling around to gauge whether the shifting political landscape would help or hurt his candidacy. As far as I can tell, Kraft — whose father is Robert Kraft, the billionaire owner of the New England Patriots — has yet to decide whether to enter the race. The central questions for any contender: Does Trump’s election create a wider lane for a moderate Democrat to challenge Wu? Or will Boston voters rally around her as a bulwark against Trump? The answer depends on who you ask.”

OR  “Country’s sharp right turn could lead a pathway for Ed Flynn in Boston mayor’s race,” by Joe Battenfeld, Boston Herald: “Donald Trump’s gains across all of the voting wards in Boston – a 5% bump from 2020 that was even bigger in blue-collar districts and in South Boston and Dorchester — make it less daunting for a candidate like the Southie city councilor to take on [Boston Mayor Michelle] Wu.”

— “Methuen mayoral candidates outline positions in debate,” by Teddy Tauscher, The Eagle-Tribune.

 

The lame duck session could reshape major policies before year's end. Get Inside Congress delivered daily to follow the final sprint of dealmaking on defense funding, AI regulation and disaster aid. Subscribe now.

 
 
DAY IN COURT

— “City of Boston sues chef Barbara Lynch for $1.7 million in unpaid taxes,” by Janelle Nanos, The Boston Globe: “In the wake of last month’s announcement that she would close and sell her remaining restaurants, chef Barbara Lynch is now being sued by the City of Boston for nearly $1.7 million in unpaid personal property taxes. According to a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Suffolk Superior Court, the celebrated-but-embattled chef has tallied up a ‘vast unpaid amount of taxes’ across her seven restaurants in Fort Point, the South End, and Beacon Hill that have gone unaddressed for over a decade.”

— “Fight over $1.5 billion power line project lands in Springfield court,” by Jim Kinney, The Springfield Republican: “A seven-year, multistate courtroom and public relations fight between the nation’s top developer of green energy and backers of a proposed $1.5 billion power line through Maine has landed in Springfield. At stake, says New England Clean Energy Connect and parent Avangrid, is access to lower-cost, clean electricity to Massachusetts.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

— “‘We will find someone to run against him’: After trans athletes comment, Salem Democrats vow to challenge Seth Moulton,” by Anjali Huynh, The Boston Globe: “Democrats in Representative Seth Moulton’s hometown are pledging to find a challenger to run against him in the 2026 midterms, following continued backlash against his remarks about how trans athletes and identity politics contributed to Democratic losses last week. Liz Bradt, chair of the Salem Democratic City Committee, endorsed a future election challenge against Moulton on Wednesday, telling the Globe that she had heard from ‘several’ people in the area who were considering running against him in Massachusetts’ Sixth District.”

OFF TO THE LEADERSHIP RACES — Rep. Lori Trahan is seeking reelection as co-chair of the Democratic Policy and Communications Committee, she announced Wednesday morning.

“The threat to our constituents from a Republican trifecta led by President-elect Donald Trump is grave, and we must fast track that learning process so we can reposition ourselves to mitigate the damage and be victorious in 2026,” the Westford Democrat wrote in a letter to her House colleagues.

Trahan won the role last year, after Minnesota Rep. Dean Phillips relinquished it to run for president against President Joe Biden. More on Trahan’s leadership reelection bid from the Eagle-Tribune. 

 

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MARIJUANA IN MASSACHUSETTS

 “Is your cannabis up to snuff? Mass. labs say some testing is dishonest,” by Emilia Wisniewski, MetroWest Daily News: “Several independent laboratories that test cannabis products are calling for more state regulation, saying the current environment encourages dishonesty among testing companies and leads to the approval of sub-par products for dispensary shelves.”

FROM THE 413

— “Amherst regional and town School boards denounce anonymous letter maligning superintendent,” by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “Members of the Amherst Regional, Pelham and Amherst school committees are calling an anonymous, typewritten letter critical of Superintendent E. Xiomara Herman and her administration, accompanied with confidential and personal information about a school district employee, both unacceptable and disappointing, while endorsing the work of the district’s leader."

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Somerville to reaffirm sanctuary status, calls on other Massachusetts cities to do same,” by Lance Reynolds, Boston Herald: “The Somerville City Council is set to reaffirm its commitment as a sanctuary city, with a resolution touting concerns around an ‘increasingly hostile’ political climate and President-elect Trump’s return to the White House. Somerville has been a sanctuary city since 1987, meaning it refuses to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement. Councilors are slated to vote and uphold the status Thursday night.”

— “Minority-owned small businesses raise concerns about a new federal transparency law,” by Trajan Warren, GBH News: “Minority business owners, who already face numerous hurdles, will now have another obstacle in their way. At the beginning of 2025, the new federal Corporate Transparency Act will go into effect, requiring a heightened level of disclosure from small business owners. It may have a heavier impact on minority-owned firms.”

— “Striking teachers allege school officials of possible spying,” by Paul Leighton, The Salem News: “Fines. Unfair labor practice complaints. Charges of possible spying. Those were the latest developments on Wednesday in the increasingly acrimonious Beverly teachers strike. The strike was set to continue into its seventh day on Thursday, with schools closed for the fourth day. And the two sides appeared no closer to a settlement after a contentious day. In a press conference Wednesday night, the Beverly Teachers Association said school officials may have been using a school camera to possibly spy on teachers during negotiations.”

RELATED — “Marblehead students file injunction to resume extracurriculars during strike,” by Caroline Enos, The Salem News.

— “Tax shift results in savings of $15 on $750K home,” by Ethan Forman, Gloucester Daily Times: “After debating about how much to shift a portion of Gloucester’s tax levy between residences and commercial, industrial and personal properties, the City Council voted 6-1 Tuesday night for a 1.03 tax shift, which has been in place for the past several years. This shift factor resulted in an estimated tax rate of $9.73 per $1,000 of assessed value for homes, and $10.04 per for businesses, according to a presentation the Board of Assessors provided at a public hearing.”

 

Policy change is coming—be the pro who saw it first. Access POLITICO Pro’s Issue Analysis series on what the transition means for agriculture, defense, health care, tech, and more. Strengthen your strategy.

 
 
HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

TRANSITIONS — Former Gov. Deval Patrick has been appointed as a senior partner at the Vistria Group. He first joined the firm in January.

—  Nick Schonberger has joined MassDevelopment as a transformative development initiative fellow. He previously was the senior entrepreneurship program manager at CommonWealth Kitchen

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Todd Feathers, a Lowell Sun alum; Tamika Olszewski and New Hampshire Democratic Party Chair Ray Buckley.

 

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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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Friday, October 25, 2024

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Trahan brings Dems’ message to the battlegrounds


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By Kelly Garrity

Presented by 

Johnson & Johnson

TRAHAN ON THE TRAIL — Rep. Lori Trahan isn’t facing any competition for her seat in Massachusetts' Third Congressional District, but the run-up to Election Day has still been a flurry of fundraising and campaigning for the Westford Democrat.

As co-chair of the Democratic Policy and Communications Committee (the panel that controls the caucus’ messaging) Trahan has been traveling across the country to boost House candidates in competitive districts. She was in Nebraska last week with state Sen. Tony Vargas, and swung through California and Nevada this week; on Monday, it’s New Jersey to support Sue Altman, who’s been closing in on GOP Rep. Thomas Kean Jr.; then back to New England to get out the vote in Maine and New Hampshire next weekend.

“We know what's at stake in this election — for workers, for women, for our children,” Trahan told Playbook. “So the last thing I want to do is wake up on Nov. 6 and wonder if there's more that I could have done to help Democrats win in this election, that's why we've been laser-focused in these final weeks before the election, campaigning and fundraising for Democrats who will be key to us retaking the majority.”

Trahan’s also tapped into Boston’s deep-pocketed donor base, hosting fundraisers here with Montana congressional hopeful Monica Tranel and Reps. Susan Wild and Susie Lee. And she’s dug into her own campaign coffers — in addition to the dues that come with the leadership role she won halfway into the term, Trahan has funneled $550,000 to her colleagues and potential colleagues-to-be and helped raise $1.5 million for House Democrats’ campaign arm.

Playbook caught up with Trahan from the campaign trail this week to talk about her travel, what message is resonating most in swing districts, how down-ballot races have changed since Vice President Kamala Harris took over at the top of the ticket and her future in the leadership role. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity. 

What message is resonating most when you’re on the campaign trail?

I think it comes down to reducing costs for working families. There's no question that folks are craving just the opportunity to build a better life for their family and their children. And then restoring the freedom for women to make decisions about her health care and about her body with her doctor. People overwhelmingly do not want politicians to get in the way of decisions on health care for women or IVF treatment for women.

How has your role managing Democrats’ message changed since President Joe Biden stepped aside and Vice President Kamala Harris became the nominee? 

The messaging has certainly evolved. In the beginning of the year, especially with the backdrop of chaos and dysfunction in the Congress, there was a huge focus on what we accomplished when we were in the majority last Congress.

And then clearly the economy is something that people are feeling back home. And I think that's where Vice President Harris has really focused. Certainly Project 2025 this summer was something that I think just scared everybody, and that became the contrast between who Democrats were going to work for and what Republicans were going to do. So I think the DPCC has pivoted and evolved its messaging based on the feelings that we're seeing back home.

There's no question that Vice President Harris has been a shot in the arm for a lot of Democratic candidates across our country.

Are you planning to run again to be DPCC co-chair? Any other roles you’re interested in? 

It's a privilege to be in this role. The most important leadership race right now that I'm thinking about is the one for speaker. I'm doing everything I can between now and Nov. 5 to make sure that when it comes time to select the next speaker of the House, that we're electing Hakeem Jeffries.

It's been an honor to serve in House Democratic leadership for this past year, I’m certainly humble and grateful to my colleagues for the trust that they placed in me to help position us to win, but I'm focused on finishing the job that they elected me to do.

GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. We’re 11 days out from the election. What races are you watching? Drop me a line: kgarrity@politico.com.

TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey has no public events. Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll attends the Museum of Science’s STEM design challenge at 8:30 a.m. in East Boston. Rep. Richard Neal speaks at the Mass. Taxpayers Foundation’s annual tax policy conference at 8 a.m. in Boston. Sen. Ed Markey attend BECMA’s Mass. Black Expo at 5 p.m. in Boston. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu speaks at the ceremonial pinning of the Boston Fire Department’s second cadet recruit class at 11 a.m. in Dorchester.

THIS WEEKEND — Boston Mayor Michelle Wu is on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large” at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Sen. Ed Markey is on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Sunday. Rep. Ayanna Pressley is on NBC10 Boston’s “At Issue” at 11:30 a.m. Sunday.

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

— “Senate goes different law-making route to pass climate bill,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Beacon: “The Senate passed a major climate bill on Thursday after approving an unusual order allowing the chamber to convene in a short-term formal session to deal with that bill and any others that emerge from committees resolving differences between the House and Senate during the rest of the legislative session. The order gained bipartisan support because it allowed a short debate, a recorded vote, and swift passage of the legislation, which makes it easier to site and permit clean energy infrastructure, authorizes procurements of battery storage, and gives regulators the power to rein in spending on natural gas infrastructure.”

FROM THE HUB

— “Boston City Council to hold emergency meeting on Michelle Wu’s business tax hike plan,” by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald: “The Boston City Council will hold a rare emergency special meeting Friday to consider a home rule petition laying out the latest version of the mayor’s bid to raise commercial tax rates, with the clock ticking before rates are set next month. The meeting will be held virtually at 9:30 a.m., for the sole purpose of considering and likely referring the legislation to a Council committee. Mayor Michelle Wu told reporters Thursday that would allow for a hearing early next week and potentially a vote at the regular City Council meeting next Wednesday.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “MBTA estimates 25% of south-side commuter rail fares not being collected,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Beacon: “MBTA officials say fare collection efforts are being stepped up on the commuter rail system, but the loss of revenue remains a problem, with a quarter of fares not being collected on trains operating out of South Station. MBTA General Manager Phillip Eng told the MBTA board of directors on Thursday that Keolis, the T’s commuter rail operator, is prodding conductors to do a better job of verifying that passengers have paid for their rides. He said conductor scans of mTickets, the primary ticket for riding the commuter rail system, rose from 171,669 in September 2023 to 517,864 last month, an increase of more than 200 percent.”

— “Ten MBTA employees on leave amid criminal investigation at Cabot Yard in South Boston, T general manager says,” by Shannon Larson, Sean Cotter and Danny McDonald, The Boston Globe: “The MBTA has placed 10 employees at its Cabot Yard maintenance facility on administrative leave while it conducts a criminal investigation into allegations they were working on private vehicles during work hours, general manager Phil Eng said Thursday.”

— “Healey’s $30M earmark extends fare-free service for regional transit authorities,” by Anthony Cammalleri, Greenfield Recorder. 

YAHD SIGNS AND BUMPAH STICKAHS

ELON MUSK PROMOTES LIES & HATE...SINCE CRYPTO SCAMMER JOHN DEATON IS SIMILAR, NOT SURE THE ENDORSEMENT IS PRAISEWORTHY! 


CARPETBAGGER JOHN DEATON HAS SPEWED LIES, HAS A HOT TEMPER, POSTED IRRATIONAL, RAGE FILLED COMMENTS ABOUT TRUMP, ARRESTED FOR ASSAULT...

Separately, Deaton had a yearslong fight with Barrington officials over his 2017 arrest during an altercation with his girlfriend’s ex-husband. He has since sued the town in federal court, alleging police acted unlawfully.



JOHN DEATON, SURROUNDED BY BRAIN DEAD REPUBLICANS BLAMED ELIZABETH WARREN FOR THE FUNDING FAILURE OF THE CAPE COD BRIDGES - JOHN DEATON LIED & THE BRAIN DEAD REPUBLICANS WHO SUPPORTED THIS BIG LIE DON'T DESERVE TO BE IN OFFICE!

CAPE TRAFFIC GRIDLOCKS THE ENTIRE REGION FROM PROVIDENCE & BOSTON

JOHN DEATON IS A LAZY OPPORTUNIST, TOO LAZY TO INFORM HIMSELF! 

MASSACHUSETTS DOES NOT NEED A LIAR! 

DO YOUR RESEARCH! 

IN AN OPED, JOHN DEATON BLABBERED, BUT INCLUDED THIS COMMENT: 


As a resident of Bolton, I sat for three hours and listened, hoping for any glimmer of a solution. Instead, we received platitudes from those officials who thanked us for coming out but who said their hands are tied.

WHERE DOES HE LIVE? 

RI lawyer John Deaton moves to Mass. to challenge Sen. Warren

excerpt: 
Republican John Deaton, a 56-year-old who is originally from Detroit, launched his campaign on Tuesday. He put his Barrington home on the market this week for $2.5 million, and Politico reports he is now renting a home in Swansea.

State records show Deaton was on the Rhode Island voter rolls as an independent before his registration was cancelled Feb. 14 due to his change of residency. He is listed as having voted only three times since registering in Rhode Island two decades ago, casting ballots in the 2020, 2008 and 2004 general elections.  

Sep 26, 2024$0 in federal income tax, $0 to charity: What GOP Senate candidate John Deaton's tax returns reveal ... Deaton still owns his home in Rhode Island, though he has put it on the market. His law ...BOSTON GLOBE

JOHN DEATON CRYPTO SCAMMER: Warren challenger in bitter battle with ex-partner over $1M from hernia settlement

CRYPTO SCAMMER JOHN DEATON....

FROM CRYPTO SCAMMER JOHN DEATON'S WEB SITE "R" VOTERS: IT'S TIME TO THINK! TRY FACTS!

OMG! 

THE CRYPTO SCAMMER IS JUST A DISTRACTION FROM ISSUES!

CARPETBAGGER JOHN DEATON BLABBERS REPUBLICAN LIES ABOUT 

'MIGRANTS" ! THEY ARE ASYLUM SEEKERS! CHECK THE STATUTES!

HERE WE GO AGAIN! MORE UNINFORMED LIES BECAUSE HE'S TOO LAZY TO RESEARCH FACTS & ISSUES! 

AT ONE POINT, THERE WERE STATISTICS INDICATING THAT HALF OF THOSE SEEKING SHELTER WERE MASSACHUSETTS RESIDENTS. 

SEVERAL YEARS AGO, THE BROCKTON SCHOOL SYSTEM DID A SURVEY 

& DISCOVERED THE 20,000 PUBLIC SCHOOL CHILDREN WERE HOMELESS. 

HOMELESSNESS PRE-DATED ASYLUM SEEKERS!

STEWARD IS IN BANKRUPTCY...ANY PROPOSALS  ARE GOVERNED BY THE BANKRUPTCY COURT...JOHN DEATON IS A CLOWN FOR EVEN SUGGESTING 

SUCH A NONSENSICAL SOLUTION!

The HOSPITAL CLOSURES were approved by the BANKRUPTCY COURT! JOHN DEATON is an 

UNINFORMED CLOWN! 

excerpt: 

I went into this meeting with one point to make: our commonwealth has drained its precious resources accommodating thousands of migrants instead of paying to keep Nashoba Valley Medical Center from closing its doors on August 31st. We have already surpassed $1 billion in spending on an opaque shelter system that supports no-bid contracts and generous benefits like dry cleaning and $150-per-night hotel stays.

MORE INFLAMMATORY PROPAGANDA: 
Some of the migrants enjoying our tax dollars have even committed brutal violent crimes against women caught up in the system, and in some cases instead of arresting them the state simply transports a violent individual to another shelter.


BE IMPRESSED THAT JOHN DEATON ACTUALLY ATTENDED A MEETING! 

BUT HE LACKS THE FACTS! 

JOHN DEATON WROTE: 

Assuming those were divided equally, the cost of keeping Nashoba Valley and Carney open for an additional year would cost $25 million. 

JOHN DEATON, SHOOT FROM THE LIP BLABBER DOESN'T HAVE FACTS! 


CHUCKLES went to a single meeting...that makes him informed?

THE CARPETBAGGER LIVES IN BOLTON? 

Were those "lease contracts" for the LAND? Chuckles ignores that STEWARD is in bankruptcy that limits the states' options.

Before declaring bankruptcy, Steward was committed to lease contracts for its eight hospitals that cost a total of $100 million annually. Assuming those were divided equally, the cost of keeping Nashoba Valley and Carney open for an additional year would cost $25 million. 

Deaton: Elected officials need to find solution to hospital closures


 Lowell Sun

8/22/24
by John Deaton

Last week, residents from across Middlesex and Worcester Counties gathered in Devens to express outrage, frustration, and a pervasive sense of sadness and disappointment because our elected officials have failed to protect Nashoba Valley Medical Center from closing at the end of this month. As a resident of Bolton, I sat for three hours and listened, hoping for any glimmer of a solution. Instead, we received platitudes from those officials who thanked us for coming out but who said their hands are tied.



Elon Musk has regularly talked with  Vladimir Putin — and faced 'implicit threats': report
RAW STORY


— “In race for US Senate, John Deaton is running as an anti-Trump Republican, touting Elon Musk’s support,” by Anjali Huynh, The Boston Globe: “Elon Musk, the tech billionaire supporting Trump’s presidential campaign, on Monday gave Deaton’s long-shot Republican US Senate bid a nod. On Thursday, Deaton, a personal injury attorney and cryptocurrency enthusiast, defended Musk’s support, saying that while he did not ‘lobby’ for his backing, he welcomed the endorsement.”

DAY IN COURT

— “Tracking cookies doesn’t violate wiretap law, SJC rules,” by Jennifer Smith, CommonWealth Beacon: “The Supreme Judicial Court ruled the state’s highly protective wiretap statute doesn’t necessarily apply to businesses using special software to track people browsing websites, but a single justice said the decision clearly runs contrary to what the Legislature intended when it passed the statute.”

FROM THE DELEGATION

— “‘More must be done’ to check flow of illegal guns, Mass. congressional delegation tells ATF,” by Travis Andersen, The Boston Globe: “Members of Massachusetts’ congressional delegation, including Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, are urging federal law enforcement officials to ‘ramp up’ efforts to combat interstate gun trafficking in response to a recent spike in gun violence in Springfield.”

RELATED — “Springfield officials react to plea for feds’ help with gun violence,” By Jeanette DeForge, The Springfield Republican.

 

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MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS

— “Migrants are moving into a Western Mass. town, and straining its schools. Now the welcome mat is fraying,” by Beth Teitell, John Hilliard, and Christopher Huffaker, The Boston Globe.

— “New report says Brazilians, the biggest immigrant group in Mass., shouldn't be forgotten,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “Massachusetts is home to the second largest Brazilian population in the United States, but the community remains relatively unknown, according to a new report. The community is also the state’s largest immigrant population, and has been since 2010.”

FROM THE 413

— “Sean Curran is resigning after 16 months as shared town administrator for Washington and Middlefield,” by  Jane Kaufman, The Berkshire Eagle: “After 16 months on the job, the 50-mile gap between Springfield and Washington has grown too wide for Sean Curran. Curran, who has been serving as shared town administrator of Washington and Middlefield, is resigning effective Nov. 1, potentially before the snow flies and the roads ice over.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “A year after Lewiston, how have gun laws changed in Massachusetts and Maine?” by Sarah Betancourt and Marilyn Schairer, GBH News. 

— “Port of New Bedford cites ‘grave concern’ about new offshore wind area,” by Will Sennott, The New Bedford Light: “The city’s Port Authority published a letter to offshore wind regulators Wednesday, raising ‘grave concerns’ over a 13.4 million acre tract of ocean recently opened to wind farm developers in the Central Atlantic that could put up to $2 billion in commercial fishing revenue at risk.”

— “Without a shot fired: How the long battle to build a Cape Cod machine gun range ended,” by Eve Zuckoff, GBH News: “Military officials wanted to build an eight-lane machine gun range across 5,000 acres of Joint Base Cape Cod (JBCC) that would help cut down on soldier travel time to other machine gun ranges across the Northeast. Potentially negative environmental impacts would be offset, they said, and service members would be better prepared for deployment. But from the moment locals caught wind of it, the proposed range created a divide.”

— “Flanagan: I'll spend $3M to demolish Silvia School, build green space as a 'donation',” by Dan Medeiros, The Herald News: “The decrepit former Frank M. Silvia School and public school administration complex on Hartwell Street could face the wrecking ball and become ‘a donation’ of open space, if the city accepts a proposal from former mayor Will Flanagan. “
excerpt: 

Speaking for himself and not the society’s board, Silva said reusing the building would “open up a lot more possibilities for the city,” with potential tax credits for low-income housing and historic redevelopment available.  

"There’s a lot of potential there. And I don’t know what the value of green space in that particular area would add,” he said. “There are a lot of better areas in the city that could be used for green space that don’t have historic buildings on them.” 

The Silvia School is on Fall River’s List of Significant Structures; therefore, the building has an automatic six-month delay for any demolition plans. It is also listed in the Massachusetts Historical Commission’s database.  

Flanagan said he and architects have not drafted full structural plans for the site — just a vision for now. 

“That building cannot be saved,” Flanagan said. “I walked through there about three or four years ago because we were interested in purchasing it before we purchased the building we’re at now. And my architect team and my engineers were scared to walk through there.” 


HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to former state Rep. Jim Cantwell, who serves as state director to Sen. Ed Markey.

HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — to Sunday birthday-ers Rep. Lori Trahan, Stephanie Knapp and Cara Burke.

 

A message from Johnson & Johnson:

At Johnson & Johnson, we believe health is everything. Our strength in healthcare innovation empowers us to build a world where complex diseases are prevented, treated, and cured; treatments are smarter and less invasive; and solutions are personal. We are uniquely positioned to innovate across the full spectrum, of healthcare solutions today to deliver the breakthroughs of tomorrow. We combine our science and technology with our determination to create a powerful force for care… and profoundly impact health for humanity. Learn more.

 

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