Worcester County Sheriff Lew Evangelidis is sworn into office for his second term, with Lt. Gov. Polito administering the oath of office, St. John's High School, 378 Main St., Shrewsbury, 6 p.m.
Today's News |
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Sheriff to Trump: Let our inmates build Mexican wall |
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Bristol County Sheriff Thomas Hodgson, a Republican and apparently big fan of Donald Trump, has offered up his inmates as a source of low-cost labor should president-elect Trump follow through on his campaign promise to build a wall along the Mexican border, the Globe reports. At his own inauguration last night, Hodgson—flanked by Gov. Charlie Baker, who had just sworn the sheriff in for a fourth term—laid out a plan to transport prisoners to work on the project, saying the wall “has to happen,” Jeannette Barnes reports in the Standard-Times. Hodgson said he pitched the idea to the Trump transition team but hasn’t heard back yet.
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Mass. Trump supporters throw tantrum over inaugural tickets |
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They’re mad as hell and not taking it anymore. And it’s not just about a wall on the Mexican border. The “they” are Bay State Trump supporters who are furious that they have to go to Democrats -- of all people! -- to land tickets to Donald Trump’s inauguration later this month, the Herald’s Matt Stout reports. And it looks like they’re going to take out their frustrations on Mr. Moderate himself, Charlie Baker, reports the Herald’s Joe Battenfeld. We’re not sure if this really represents a threat to Gov. Baker’s re-election bid, as Joe argues, but there’s no argument here about this line: “The Baker and Trump teams are like badly dysfunctional relatives.”
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Despite a conservative challenge, Hughes expects to remain atop state GOP |
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On last item on the mad-as-hell front: Kristen Hughes, the president of the Quincy City Council, says she will seek another four-year term as chair of the state’s Republican party, reports Sean Phillip Cotter of the Patriot Ledger. Although she is facing a challenge from conservative activist Steve Aylward, Hughes says she already has more than the 43 votes she needs to keep the post.
Patriot Ledger |
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Another minor-league Dem eyes a run against Baker |
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As Gov. Baker deals with conservative rabble-rousers within his own Republican party, yet another Democrat, Jay Gonzalez, who worked as a top budget official under former Gov. Deval Patrick, is weighing a run for governor in 2018, reports Gintautas Dumcius at MassLive. Newton Mayor Setti Warren, a Democrat, is also eyeing a run for the Corner Office. Frankly, they’re both minor-league Dems, but they’re the only Dem candidates stepping forward at this point, considering other statewide pols (hint: Maura Healey) are hanging back for the time being. At least Gonzalez and Warren are doing something.
MassLive |
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'No more covering boring crap nobody cares about’ |
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Writing at Media Nation, Dan Kennedy has some thoughts on Boston Globe editor Brian McGrory’s announcement of the latest reinvention plan at the Globe. But we also liked Adam Gaffin’s headline at Universal Hub: “Globe editor: No more covering boring crap nobody cares about.” Check out all the comments at D an’s Facebook site and, of course, at Adam’s Universal Hub.
They can meet, just not talk |
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Gov. Charlie Baker, Attorney General Maura Healey, Senate President Stan Rosenberg and other state pols are asking for a meeting with officials at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission about safety concerns at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in Plymouth. But Christine Legere at the Cape Cod Times reports the NRC appears to be slamming the door on any discussion about an agency investigation, as revealed in a controversial internal NRC email, about safety matters at the plant. So they can meet. Just not talk about what they want to talk about.
Cape Cod Times |
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Declaring ‘Mr. Trump was right,’ Bernie uses a tweet against Trump |
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Talk about turning the tables on someone, or turning a Tweet on someone. On the Senate floor, Bernie Sanders yesterday hauled out a giant printout of a 2015 tweet by Donald Trump bragging about how he was the “only potential GOP candidate to state there will be no cuts to Social Security, Medicare & Medicaid.” And guess what? Republicans are now talking about cutting Social Security, Medicare & Medicaid, as Bernie rightly noted, as the Globe’s Jaclyn Reiss reports. For pure political theater, this one was effective.
Boston Globe |
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Like clockwork: Trump appoints Wall Street insider to SEC, Warren rips away |
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From the Globe’s Jaclyn Reiss: “Senator Elizabeth Warren is railing against President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to head up the Securities and Exchange Commission. Trump earlier on Wednesday said he wanted Wall Street lawyer Jay Clayton to be the SEC’s chairman, calling him ‘a highly talented expert on many aspects of financial and regulatory law.’” Warren begs to differ over whether yet another former Goldman Sachs-tied executive is what the financial system needs. Is it safe to say she has a point?
Boston Globe |
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Brown still dangling, still hopeful on VA post |
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President-elect Donald Trump must be really pumped about appointing former U.S. Sen. Scott Brown as head of the Veterans Administration, so much so that he’s kept Trump dangling now for more than a month. “I am still waiting on the VA,” Brown said, stating the obvious. “I am in the mix very much, but he is taking his time, which I suggested he do.”
Boston Herald |
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Rivals are circling over Tito’s council seat |
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Boston City Councilor Tito Jackson better run for mayor, because it’s increasingly obvious that he may not have a job on the council by the end of the year. First, Rufas Faulk, leader of the Boston TenPoint Coalition, signaled he’s running for Tito’s council seat later this year. Now Kim Janey, a community activist and public education champion, says she’s seriously considering a run for Tito’s seat, the Globe reports. And Charles Clemons Muhammad, a former Boston police officer and perennial candidate for just about anything, has also announced he’s a candidate, too, the Herald reports. It’s almost like they’re circling over poor Tito.
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Deval, we hardly knew ye |
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The Globe’s Joan Vennochi is fine with former Gov. Deval Patrick taking a stand against Donald Trump’s nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions for attorney general. But she wonders why Deval didn’t make a stronger stand against Trump before the election.
Boston Globe
After a marathon session, lawmakers passed a slew of bills late Tuesday |
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From bills promoting the electric-car industry to new massage-parlor hours, lawmakers were busy late Tuesday passing last-minute bills before the end of the 2015-2016 session. State House News Service has a big list of the approved bills that cover such issues as: promotion of the electric-car industry in Massachusetts, massage therapy services on Sundays and holidays, special alcohol licenses for nonprofit charitable corporations, further regulations to the reserve funds of credit unions, establishing a board of registration in naturopathy, creating uniform coastal beach warnings and the serving of wine in private clubs.
SHNS (pay wall) |
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No parking: Drivers could get fined $50 for blocking bike lanes |
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Yet another bill passed in the waning hours of the last session: Drivers would get hit with fines of up to $50 if they stop their cars in designated bike lanes under a bill passed on Tuesday by lawmakers, reports SHNS’s Andy Metzger at the Telegram. The statewide law would be similar to ordinances already in place in Cambridge and Boston. The legislation is now sitting on Gov. Charlie Baker’s desk.
The Telegram |
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Pioneer Institute authors: Maybe, just maybe, Trump’s education pick will let Massachusetts be Massachusetts |
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The Pioneer Institute’s Jim Stergios and Charles Chieppo, in a USA Today op-ed piece, express hope that the incoming secretary of education, Betsy DeVos, might move away from the federal government’s top-down approach toward education and give states the flexibility to innovate. Well, we do know this: Massachusetts, both under Democratic and Republican governors, has been butting heads with the federal government in recent years on a number of issues, including health care and education. So loosening the reins might be welcome at this point, though many conservatives might not like what a progressive Massachusetts might do with that extra leeway.
USA Today |
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Chinese are sending mysterious shrink-wrapped item to Massachusetts |
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It looks like one of those old satellite photos from the Cuban Missile Crisis. But fear not: It’s just a shrink-wrapped mock-up of an Orange Line car that a Chinese company is shipping to Massachusetts before it begins building a new fleet of subway cars for the MBTA, the T reports on Twitter.
MBTA Twitter |
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UMass report: State’s economy approaching ‘full capacity’ |
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From Jim Kinney at MassLive: “The Massachusetts labor market is reaching full capacity, with a lack of skilled and ready workers already pushing up wages in the high-tech manufacturing and construction industries, according to a report from MassBenchmarks, a study of the statewide economy from the University of Massachusetts Donahue Institute.” Most economists believe an economy has hit “full employment” whenever the jobless rate hovers at or below 5 percent. The state’s unemployment rate is now less than 3 percent, so technically we’re now at over capacity.
MassLive |
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Bubble alert? Boston’s housing market value now exceeds last decade’s pre-crash level |
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As unemployment rates have plummeted and workers have more money in their pockets, the combined value of all homes in Greater Boston is now $672.7 billion, higher than it was during the bubble years that began to collapse in 2006, according to Zillow data, as reported by the BBJ’s David Harris. In fact, the total national value of all housing stock grew to a record-high $29.6 trillion last year. But we’re actually not very concerned – for now. The values, as far as we can tell, are not adjusted for inflation and dollar values were bound to increase over a decade, crash or no crash.
BBJ |
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Northampton’s ‘terrible epidemic' |
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Heroin overdoses in Northampton nearly tripled from 2015 to 2016, prompting police to report on their Facebook page that "we are indeed in the midst of a terrible epidemic," writes George Graham at MassLive. In 2016, city police responded to 51 overdose calls, 44 of which involved heroin overdoses, up from 15 heroin overdoses in 2015. Six people died from heroin overdoses last year in Northampton.
MassLive |
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Data breach listings made public |
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In a nod to the state’s updated public records law, the Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation this week made public an online archive of data breach notifications affecting Bay State residents since 2007, Susan Spencer of the Telegram reports. The list includes all breaches reported to the state under a 2007 law requiring businesses and organizations to disclose when private data became public, regardless of how it happened.
The Telegram |
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Berkshire towns to get weed-law tutorial |
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Hoping to ease fears among some of the state’s smallest and most rural communities about the advent of legal weed, the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission plans to bring in a municipal attorney from Wellesley to answer questions about taxation and regulation under the newly passed marijuana law, Larry Parnass of the Berkshire Eagle reports.
Berkshire Eagle |
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Lowell schools to get new HQ after garage-walk brouhaha |
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Less than two weeks after unionized school administrators in Lowell demanded they be paid an extra hour each week in compensation for longer walks to and from downtown parking garages, the city says it is actively searching for new office digs, Grant Welker of the Lowell Sun reports. The School Committee voted to confine the search to the city’s downtown as it begins soliciting proposals.
Lowell Sun
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Nation |
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