Rep. Jay Kaufman moderates a discussion with former Boston Globe columnist Eileen McNamara and State House News Service managing partner Craig Sandler on the presidential election and the media's role in it, Lexington Depot, 13 Depot Sq., Lexington, 7 p.m.
Today's News |
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‘Get it on, smoke a bong’ |
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As Adam Gaffin at Universal Hub notes, at the crack of midnight, you could indeed get it on and smoke a bong in Massachusetts, now that marijuana possession and limited growth of pot plants is officially legal in the Bay State, as of today. Not that there’s total pot freedom. WBUR has a good Q&A piece on what you can and can’t do under the new voter-approved law. The Globe has its own do’s-and-don’ts story.
Our trivial question of the day: Will they be playing Cypress Hill’s ‘Hits from the Bong’ (YouTube) at the ‘Smoke-Up’ celebration rally at the State House today? Our second not-so-trivial question of the day: What will cops do if they start lighting ‘em up at the ‘Smoke-Up’? There are so many unknowns moving forward.
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State government layoffs averted as 900 take buyout offers |
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Clearly, we were wrong, wrong, wrong to say the Baker administration’s previous silence on the buyout program indicated the cost-cutting effort was turning into a monumental flop. Turns out that 900 employees have taken the buyout, far more than expected, and the administration won’t be seeking government layoffs as a result. Which is very good news. SHNS’s Matt Murphy has all the details.
SHNS (pay wall) |
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Warren gets to burnish her foreign policy credentials |
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U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren has landed a coveted spot on the Senate Armed Services Committee, an assignment that’s important to: A.) The nation. B.) the state’s defense industry. C.) Warren’s own political ambitions, if she chooses one day to run for president, as the Globe’s Victoria McGranereports. Western Massachusetts Politics and Insight’s Matt Szafranski has more on the significance of Warren’s assignment.
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‘I took it too far’ |
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U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren has taken down a controversial Facebook post that unfairly attacked a hedge fund manager who, it turns out, is that rare type of hedge fund manager who actually supports and admires Warren, writes the Globe’s Yvonne Abraham, who interviewed Warren following the senator’s shoot-from-the-hip social-media blast. “I think I took it too far,” said Warren, who called the friendly fire victim, Whitney Tilson, to apologize. “There are many things I agree with Whitney on, and I wish my tone had been less heated.”
Boston Globe |
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‘The shoot-first-and-ask-questions-later mentality’ |
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No, civil liberties attorney Harvey Silverglate is not talking about Elizabeth Warren’s hair-trigger antics on Facebook and Twitter. He’s talking about the hair-trigger moralists at Babson College who, it’s now clear, wrongly denounced two students of going overboard in their pro-Trump celebrations following the election. Silverglate takes special aim at Babson president, and former lieutenant governor, Kerry Healey: “Before accepting the Babson presidency, Healey had a vibrant career in the real world. Her departure from positions of prominence and responsibility into the academic mosh pit is a misfortune sadly demonstrated by what she’s chosen to do there — wrongly impugn the reputations and jeopardize the careers of two young men she happens to disagree with.”
Boston Herald
Minnesota, here they come |
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Senate President Stan Rosenberg and other senators are headed to Minnesota today to learn more about how that state, known for its excellent health-care services and institutions, is approaching the issue of cost containment. The Globe’s Priyanka Dayal McCluskey reports that Bay State lawmakers, not to mention health-care providers and insurers, can learn a thing or two from Minnesota: “Experts say Minnesota has been ahead of the curve in adopting payment models that are designed to reward quality of care over quantity of services provided, and addressing social issues, such as lack of housing, that contribute to poor health. And Minnesota is better than most states at controlling costs — an area where Massachusetts struggles.”
Boston Globe |
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After ditching Cape Wind, Eversource runs off with DONG Energy |
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CommonWealth’s Bruce Mohl writes how Eversource Energy, which ultimately dumped Cape Wind at the loophole alter, has now entered a 50-50 partnership with Europe’s DONG Energy for a massive offshore wind project south of Martha’s Vineyard, assuming the partners get final approvals. With Eversource now on board, the partnership is calling itself Bay State Wind, which is hell of a lot better than calling it the DONG project.
CommonWealth |
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Rep. Provost is no fan of Baker’s approach to funding the Green Line extension |
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Besides wishing for a “12-step program for those of us addicted to the dream of a functioning GLX,” Rep Denise Provost offers up six “simple steps towards building the GLX we need,” which doesn’t include forcing Somerville and other communities along the Green Line extension route to make “payment of ransoms” to fund the project, as the Baker administration is pushing.
Commonwealth |
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Whitey’s pen pal |
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Ah, isn’t this nice. From Scott Croteau at MassLive: “The daughter of Ralph DeMasi, the 80-year-old man charged with murder in the 1991 killing of armored truck guard Edward Morlock, said her father was pen pals with reputed mobster James ‘Whitey’ Bulger. ... ‘Whitey got in touch with my father, sent my dad a letter and I think they've shared some correspondences,’ she said. ‘I think they may be pen pals.’” We’re sure the family of Edward Morlock could give a you-know-what about how the duo’s rocky mobster relationship has blossomed into a pen-pal friendship.
MassLive
Fed rate hike: ‘There’s no reason to panic’ |
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Writing at the BBJ, Robert Rebelein, an associate professor of economics at Vassar College, says that business people freaking out over the Fed’s decision to finally raise interest rates should keep calm and carry on, since the Fed’s action was ultimately a vote of confidence in the economy.
BBJ |
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Tight budget casts shadow on infrastructure talk |
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Speaking of interest rates, Massachusetts lawmakers are considering raising the limit on how much the state can borrow, hoping to raise cash needed for infrastructure projects before borrowing costs become more expensive with higher interest rates, Mike Deehan of WGBH reports. But some lawmakers are also worried about the impact that added borrowing will have on the state’s annual operating budget; just last week saw Gov. Baker made mid-year cuts as tax collections showed signs of weakness.
WGBH |
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City council spikes booze tax, bags bag ban |
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The Boston City Council was busy yesterday, and so was Adam Gaffin at Universal Hub: 1.) The council rejected a proposed 2 percent tax on alcohol in the city and 2.) The council, faced with opposition from Mayor Walsh, punted a vote till next year on a proposal to ban plastic grocery bags in the city.
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Project Plum: The real players |
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It’s been nearly a year since General Electric announced it was moving its headquarters to Boston. In the Globe’s ‘Bostonians of the Year,’ some of the behind-the-scenes players of ‘Project Plum’ – the secret effort by city and state players to lure GE to Massachusetts – are finally getting the recoginition they deserve. They are, writes the Globe’s Shirley Leung, state economic development secretary Jay Ash, Boston economic development chief John Barros, the governor’s chief of staff Steve Kadish, and the mayor’s chief of staff Dan Koh.
Meanwhile, the Globe also recognizes State House lawmakers Patricia Jehlen and Ellen Story for their efforts in getting legislation passed to reduce gender pay discrimination.
Congrats to all for jobs well done.
State issues new rules for swim camps |
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As the region descends into artic-like weather, the Department of Public Health is looking ahead to this summer, finally issuing regulations meant to prevent drownings at day camps, four years after lawmakers approved legislation on the subject, Felice J. Freyer of the Globe reports. Christian’s Law, which was named after a four-year-old Sturbridge boy who drowned at a day camp, has been in effect since 2012.
Boston Globe |
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Environmental Police tweak overtime rules |
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The Massachusetts Environmental Police have tweaked their overtime rules in the wake of a Channel 5 investigation that found officers racking up pay by splitting their regular shifts to work side details, Shira Schoenberg of MassLive reports. Although the EPOs can still take split shifts, which will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis, such requests will no longer be approved to enable officers to perform details for other state agencies.
MassLive |
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Boston’s defense of cocaine tests have cost $1.5 million |
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The city of Boston has spent $1.57 million on legal fees since 2006 to defend the police department’s use of a hair test to detect cocaine use—a test that critics say discriminates against non-whites. Antonio Planas and O’Ryan Johnson of the Herald report that the tab—which the Herald compiled from documents released after a third party filed a records request—is likely to increase with a federal case brought by minority officers.
Boston Herald |
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Pot dogs to pasture? |
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We’ll end today’s MASSterList on the subject we started out with: Pot legalization. Turns out police dogs trained to sniff out marijuana may find themselves facing an early retirement now that the weed has been legalized in the Bay State, Neal Simpson of the Patriot ledger reports. Most K-9s are now trained to detect other drugs, but those that were trained to detect pot can’t unlearn that old trick.
Patriot Ledger |
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