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Showing posts with label BOSTON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BOSTON. Show all posts

Saturday, December 25, 2021

After The Big Dig: 5 Projects For Boston's Future 2018

 

After The Big Dig: 5 Projects For Boston's Future 


A MBTA Green Line train leaving Science Park Station en route to Lechmere. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
A MBTA Green Line train leaving Science Park Station en route to Lechmere. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
This article is more than 3 years old.

The Big Dig was a 20-year building binge that gave Bostonians an infrastructure hangover.

Suffering from construction fatigue, frugal New Englanders un-invited the Summer Olympics. (Opponents of the games didn't want to pay for new stadiums, or over-burden an already overburdened T or sit in even more traffic on Storrow Drive.) But when General Electric asked if they could call Boston home, we said, “Yes.”  Now, with HQ2 in the balance, what will Amazon decide? The digital behemoth is already investing in Boston: It's delivering 900 new jobs to the Seaport, in addition to potentially taking another million square feet in a new Seaport office building.

Take a deep breath and block out the HQ2 Hunger Games for a moment. Boston is home to world-class institutions and top-notch talent. But we are what we build, or what we don’t. Regardless of whether or not we land HQ2, Boston has been saying “no” to infrastructure for too long. Our future depends on these five infrastructure projects — and our chances of landing Amazon would’ve been higher had we slept off our infrastructure hangover years ago.

  1. GLX Project: aka the Green Line Extension is the most famous thing Boston never built. Plans for its construction go back to the 1990s. The project consists of: 4.3-miles steel rails, six new stations, one rebuilt station, a maintenance facility, bike and pedestrians trails. The work is to be restarted in 2018 after its original start a few years ago was canceled because of a billion-dollar cost overrun. Building new rail lines, next to old rail lines, in an existing right-of-way should’ve been finished for less. Today it’s a more than $2 billion burden. GLX officials are hoping the lines will be open for service in 2021, just in time to celebrate its 30th year as a good idea.
  2. Blue Line/Red Line Connector: connects transit challenged East Boston (Amazon’s potential site at Suffolk Downs) to the Red Line at MGH. The Blue Line is the only line not connected to the Red Line, the system’s mainline. In the early 1990s, as payback for enduring decades of upcoming construction from the Big Dig, East Boston was promised a direct connection between the Blue and Red lines, which would’ve extended the tracks 1,500 feet from Bowdoin Station at Boston’s City Hall, to Charles/MGH Station. Gov. Mitt Romney quashed hopes for building the Blue Line/Red Line Connector in the early 2000s.
  3. Northern Avenue Bridge: In 1908, the Northern Avenue Bridge began swinging over Fort Point Channel. One of the last swinging bridges in the country, it was closed to vehicle traffic in 1997, and to pedestrians and bicycles in 2014. It’s a shame. By now, residents and tourists could’ve experienced Boston’s answer to New York City’s High-Line. Restoring the bridge for traffic, rebuilding the five-story fireboat station (built in 1912) into a wooden boat center and bringing back the bridge tender’s house by turning it into a restaurant would offer access to the water. The bridge’s maintenance could be paid with tourist dollars from cold craft beers and delicious lobsters.
  4. Downtown Silver Line Tunnel: Roxbury residents were punished in 1987 when its most important link to downtown, an elevated rapid transit line running along Washington Street, was torn down. Had the promised tunnel been built, the egregious situation would’ve been mitigated. Instead, it took more than a decade to deliver the rapid transit Silver Line buses as a replacement. And worse, the Silver Line buses failed from the start to meet the definition of “rapid transit.” (To this day, Roxbury’s Dudley Square remains a rapid transit desert.) The never constructed Silver Line tunnel would’ve allowed buses to travel unobstructed between Chinatown and the Seaport District, by way of South Station. Roxbury residents and employees would’ve had a single seat ride between Dudley Square and Logan Airport — most of it in tunnels.
  5. North/South Rail Link (NSRL): Philadelphia, London and many cities older than Boston have improved the quality of life in their cities by building the equivalents to our long debated NSRL. The big idea: Build one station to replace two. North Station is a dead-end known in railroad speak as a terminal. Amtrak’s Downeaster, out of Portland, Maine, and commuter rail trains from the north, end their journeys at North Station. South Station is a dead-end, too. Amtrak and commuter rail trains screech to a halt coming up from Washington, D.C., and points south and west. For roughly the same cost as the GLX project, the NSRL would unite our divided commuter rail system by bringing nine lines and Amtrak through Boston, while increasing the flow of commerce up and down the New England coast. Housing would be more affordable and travel times to and from Boston would improve.

A few decades ago, Boston was known for its dirty water. Today, we’re known for our shiny Innovation District on new-and-improved Boston Harbor waters. Building a better subway system, tunnels to-and-from the Seaport and inspiring public works is vital to keep Boston moving forward. If Amazon comes, we’ll have to build these projects to handle the rush of new firms that relocate here in order to be near Amazon. If the disruptive giant passes on us, we’ll need to build the projects — and others — in order to attract more innovators.

Infrastructure is how we remain one of the world’s great cities.


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Tuesday, October 12, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Draft day for the Legislature

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by USA-IT

DRUMROLL PLEASE — Lawmakers are expected to unveil draft House and Senate redistricting maps today, giving the public a first glimpse at the documents that will chart the course for legislative representation over the next decade.

The redistricting committee chairs will release their draft maps and discuss the upcoming public comment period on the redraw during a virtual hearing at 1 p.m.

Here are some things to keep an eye on as you peruse the new maps:

DEPARTURES — Reading between the map lines can offer clues as to which sitting lawmakers are making other plans.

Redistricting will likely lead to retirement for some veterans if their districts are redrawn to their political disadvantage. At the same time, pre-planned retirements can help mapmakers as they plot new district lines.

The recent and pending departures of some legislators — House Majority Leader Claire Cronin, who represents Easton and Brockton, and Framingham state Rep. Maria Robinson are both awaiting confirmation to Biden administration posts — could also affect how lines are redrawn.

Keep an eye on the Berkshires, where the number of representatives is expected to shrink from four to three, per the Berkshire Eagle’s Danny Jin , and where Rep. Paul Mark (D-Peru) is eyeing the state Senate seat that Adam Hinds is expected to vacate to run for lieutenant governor.

MAJORITY-MINORITY DISTRICTS — The House currently has 20 majority-minority districts. The Senate has three.

Advocates from Drawing Democracy, a coalition of voter-rights groups, are calling for lawmakers to increase that to 29 majority-minority House districts and seven majority-minority Senate districts. Among their asks: An incumbent-free majority-minority district in Chelsea, and an incumbent-free majority-Black Senate district in Boston. Advocates are also hoping to see a majority-Latino Senate seat anchored in Lawrence, per the Boston Globe’s Emma Platoff.

Lawmakers have said they’re aiming to maximize the number of majority-minority districts. Assistant House Majority Leader Mike Moran, the House chair of the joint redistricting committee, previously said the Drawing Democracy advocates would see “their fingerprints on our maps.”

But elected leaders in Haverhill are urging lawmakers not to split their city into two Senate districts just to achieve that goal. The Eagle-Tribune’s Christian M. Wade has more on that.

LEGAL CHALLENGES — Lawmakers and Secretary of State Bill Galvin pride themselves for not drawing any legal challenges over their 2011 maps.

We’ll see if that holds in 2021. State Rep. Dan Hunt has already threatened legal action over potential changes to a Dorchester voting ward that could take some Ward 16 precincts out of their current Boston-based Senate district and place them into a suburban district currently represented by Milton state Sen. Walter Timilty, according to the Dorchester Reporter’s Gintautas Dumcius.

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. There’s nothing like the thrill of the Boston Marathon. But let’s get back to the other big race in town.

Mayoral hopeful Michelle Wu is out with a new ad this morning.

“This is a moment for change,” Wu says in the 30-second spot. “You want a mayor who will deliver big, bold solutions that’ll address the high cost of living and open the doors of opportunity for everyone.”

“The Wu Way” is the city councilor’s first new ad of the general election, dropping on the eve of the first debate. It’ll air on broadcast, cable and digital as part of a roughly $100,000 buy. There will be a Spanish version as well.

City Councilor Annissa Essaibi George has been running a 30-second ad called “Doing the Work.” That’s also a $100,000 buy, per her campaign.

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito and administration officials tour affordable housing properties in Bridgewater at 10:15 a.m., Brockton at 11:45 a.m. and 12:45 p.m., and Randolph at 2:15 p.m. State Sen. Eric Lesser and state Rep. Josh Cutler co-chair the fourth Future of Work Commission meeting, 11 a.m. in PlymouthWu holds a rally for transit equity and receives endorsements from transit leaders at 11 a.m. at Hyde Park’s Readville Station.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Secretary of state pushes for three days to count votes in November election,” by Jeremy C. Fox, Boston Globe: “After a long delay in counting Boston’s mail-in ballots for September’s municipal election, Secretary of State William F. Galvin is urging lawmakers to allow three days to count ballots that are submitted or postmarked by the 8 p.m. deadline for the Nov. 2 election, but the Legislature may not be able to act in time.

– “Business groups push lawmakers to act on unemployment claim debt,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “Industry groups accused Beacon Hill lawmakers of ‘not grasping’ the scope of the unemployment hit on business owners, noting as at least 30 states have already moved to relieve the debt racked up amid the pandemic.

– “Margaret Scarsdale announces run for 1st Middlesex District,” by Jacob Vitali, Lowell Sun: “Margaret Scarsdale is hoping to go from Select Board to the State House. Scarsdale is running as a Democrat for the 1st Middlesex District seat currently held by incumbent Republican state Rep. Sheila Harrington of Groton.

– “716 psych patients are stuck in emergency rooms waiting for care, Mass. report shows,” by Martha Bebinger, WBUR: “That’s 174 children and 542 adults who showed up at an emergency room in distress and are still there because the treatment programs they need are full.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “So far this year, schools report far higher rates of COVID-19 in students, staff,” by Max Larkin, WBUR: “After four weeks of classes, the state tallies 8,502 total cases — 7,388 among students and 1,114 among staff — compared to just 578 in the same period of the 2020-21 school year. While increases in the number of students learning in-person and in school-based testing account for part of that disparity, some public health experts and local officials take it as a sign that the state can’t yet let its guard down when it comes to controlling the virus’s spread.

 “More than 90% of COVID clusters in Massachusetts are happening at home; Data shows where you’re most likely to catch virus,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive.com.

– “Study says 140,000 children lost a caregiver to COVID,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine.

FROM THE HUB

 “12 hours at Mass. and Cass,” by Danny McDonald and Craig F. Walker, Boston Globe: “Despair is a 24/7 business in this part of town. Every now and then, a person exits a tent with a bucket of human waste and dumps it onto the side of the street. Anecdotes of street violence and prostitution are commonplace. Theft is seemingly a way of life. People don’t have to search very long for hard drugs; in this marketplace of dependencies, drugs find them.

– “1,000-plus Boston employees face suspension this week over coronavirus vaccine mandate,” by Sean Philip Cotter and Alexi Cohan, Boston Herald: “The Janey administration is scrambling to deal with what could be more than 1,000 city workers suspended at this start of this coming work week as City Hall begins to crack down on people out of compliance with coronavirus vaccine mandates.

– “Information scarce on sexual misconduct at Boston schools,” by Colman M. Herman, CommonWealth Magazine: “It’s hard to tell whether the type of sexual behavior that resulted in a recent $650,000 legal settlement at a Boston public school is an aberration or just the tip of the iceberg because the school system releases so little data on sexual misconduct.

– "Boston police arrested a Black man having a stroke. After $1.3 million payout, it's unclear if anything's changed," by Ally Jarmanning, WBUR.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “Candidate for ‘Mayah’ Proudly Leans Into Her Boston Sound,” by Ellen Barry, New York Times: “As [City Councilor Annissa Essaibi George] built toward the climax of her speech, a pledge to be ‘the teacher, the mother and the mayor’ the city needs, her accent unfurled like a banner. … In that catch phrase, which she also featured in two television advertisements, Ms. Essaibi George makes several things clear: that though she identifies as Arab American, she was born and bred in the heart of Irish American Boston. That amid an influx of affluent professionals, she would stand up for Boston’s working class — not just police officers and firefighters, but electricians and construction workers. That her neighborhood, Dorchester, is stamped on her DNA.

– “From Puerto Rico to Hawaii, out-of-state donors flock to Michelle Wu’s mayoral campaign,” by Elizabeth Koh, Boston Globe: “Wu has raised more than four times as much money from out-of-state donors as Annissa Essaibi George with less than a month until Election Day. Of the nearly $1.8 million Wu logged in individuals’ contributions from Jan. 1 through Sept. 30, almost 20 percent, or more than $350,000, came from outside the state.

– “Activist groups endorse Wu,” by Yawu Miller, Bay State Banner: “Members of the groups – Right to the City Vote, Chinese Progressive Political Action and Mijente – said [City Councilor Michelle] Wu aligned with their policy goals, which include bringing rent control back in Boston, improving the city’s schools and backing immigrant rights.

– “Boston Teachers' Union, Which Has Yet To Endorse A Mayoral Candidate, Sets Up A Super Pac,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Local 103, the IBEW Boston chapter, endorsed Essaibi George's last month. The BTU, however, has not endorsed a mayoral candidate. Establishing a super PAC could suggest they are preparing to.

– “Asian pols near breakthrough moment in mayor’s races,” by Marissa Martinez, POLITICO: “Three major cities could elect their first mayors of Asian descent this fall, in what would be part of a significant leap for Asian American and Pacific Islander political representation.

– Some FIRST IN PLAYBOOK endorsements: SEIU 1199 and the Ward 12 Democratic Committee have endorsed Boston City Councilor At-large Julia Mejia in her reelection bid. She was also endorsed by the Greater Boston Labor Council.

– Boston City Council District 6 candidate Kendra Hicks has been endorsed by four former school committee members — Miren Uriarte, Marchelle Raynor, Sue Naimark and Claudio Martinez — per her campaign.

– Winnie Eke, the third-place finisher in the Boston City Council District 6 preliminary election, has endorsed former Boston School Committee member Mary Tamer for the seat, per Tamer's campaign.

– “In Boston at-large council race, state GOP backed boxer who pushed anti-Asian posts,” by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter: “Massachusetts GOP officials spent thousands of dollars to help a Boston City Council at-large candidate who has taken to social media with anti-Asian posts, falsely claimed the 2020 election was stolen, and lashed out about vaccine requirements. Donnie Palmer, a professional boxer who hails from Dorchester, was among the 17 candidates to run for City Council at-large in the Sept. 14 preliminary election."

 

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TRUMPACHUSETTS

– TRUMP’S NEW DIEHL: Donald Trump thinks GOP Gov. Charlie Baker’s a “phony.” But the former president believes former Republican state Rep. Geoff Diehl “will be the real deal.”

That’s what Trump said when he called into The Howie Carr Show yesterday.

“I can’t stand Baker. He’s a phony. He comes to the White House and says ‘oh you’re doing such a great job’ … then you’d see him on television saying the opposite,” Trump said, adding that with Baker “you might as well have a Democrat in" office.

Trump might come to Massachusetts to campaign for Diehl, who he said he endorsed for governor last week after a recommendation from MassGOP Chair Jim Lyons.

TODAY'S SPECIAL (ELECTION)

– “Columbus Day Conflict Challenges Democrats Running In State Senate Special Election,” by Mike Deehan, GBH News: “The two Democratic candidates vying for a senate seat representing one of the largest populations of Italian Americans in Massachusetts agree the City of Boston shouldn't have unilaterally renamed Columbus Day. But neither has a clear solution for how to solve a conflict that could become a headache for the next senator representing the North End, East Boston, Revere and surrounding towns.

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– “Springfield city councilor rectifies $5K in ‘erroneous' campaign expenses,” by Stephanie Barry, MassLive: “City Councilor Justin Hurst ran afoul of state law by charging more than $5,000 for car repairs, liquor, home improvements, seafood and other personal expenses to his campaign account in August and September, according to public records. Hurst, a former council president and an attorney from a politically connected family, said he charged around 20 items without realizing he was using his campaign debit card, rather than his own.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “Officials upset as delays plague Milton, Mattapan trolley line overhaul,” by Joe Difazio, Patriot Ledger: “The MBTA project to overhaul the Mattapan Line, upgrading the old trolley cars to make them last about 10 more years is more than two years behind schedule. … MBTA spokesman Joe Pesaturo said that unforeseen issues and the pandemic has slowed the trolley car rehabilitation.

– ICYMI: “Baker appoints new MBTA board,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine.

DAY IN COURT

– “Jurors convict two parents charged in connection with the Varsity Blues college admissions bribery scandal,” by Shelley Murphy and Travis Andersen, Boston Globe: “Jurors, who after a four-week trial deliberated for more than 10 hours over two days, convicted John B. Wilson, 62, of Lynnfield, a real estate and private equity investor, and Gamal Abdelaziz, 64, of Las Vegas, a former Wynn Resorts executive, on all charges for participating in the bribery scheme orchestrated by a California college admissions consultant.

FROM THE 413

– “Hampden DA notifying 8,000 criminal defendants of police misconduct,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Last year, the [Springfield police] department was the subject of a scathing report by the US Department of Justice, which documented a pattern of use of excessive force by officers. Now that report, which also called into question police credibility, has become the basis for the Hampden County district attorney notifying 8,000 criminal defendants that a Springfield police officer connected to their case has also been involved with police misconduct.

– “Holyoke School Receiver responds to student walkout related to handling of sexual assault allegations,” by Dennis Hohenberger, Springfield Republican: “The students protested the handling of allegations a 14-year-old girl was sexually assaulted on campus."

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Activists protest Kyrsten Sinema at Marathon; senator sits out race, recovering from broken foot,” by Nick Stoico, Boston Globe: “Senator Kyrsten Sinema sat out the Boston Marathon on Monday while she continued to recover from a broken foot, her office said, as activists traveled from her home state to Massachusetts to confront the Arizona Democrat about her refusal to support the Biden administration’s Build Back Better plan."

– The Globe rounds up the notables who ran the marathon, including Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski and Marblehead native Shalane Flanagan. WBUR’s Rupa Shenoy reports on how some saw “huge symbolism” in rescheduling the marathon on Indigenous Peoples’ Day.

– It was a big sports day in Boston. The Red Sox are going to the ALCSreports the Herald.

– “A year after a bruising primary defeat, progressive Alex Morse finds peace in governing a town of fewer than 4,000 people,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “As mayor of Holyoke, Alex Morse answered to 40,000 residents. Now, he reports to just five people: The Provincetown Select Board. And he’s more than OK with that change. … The new job has allowed him to focus on public service without worrying about ‘doing political things,’ such as raising money or running a campaign.

– “Some Dana-Farber Cancer Institute trustees stood to profit from their philanthropic role,” by Liz Kowalczyk, Sarah L. Ryley and Patricia Wen, Boston Globe: “Dana-Farber has long supported its trustees who decide to invest in its research ... But it is a practice by trustees that is prohibited at two of the nation’s major cancer centers and that raises ethical questions about the appropriate role for leaders of a nonprofit hospital. And on Wednesday, after the Boston Globe Spotlight Team had been questioning hospital leaders on its investigative findings, Dana-Farber abruptly reversed course and two longtime trustees resigned.

– “A ‘last chance’: From assaults to drinking and driving, some Worcester cops were accused of serious crimes and got to keep their jobs,” by Melissa Hanson and Scott Croteau, MassLive: “[A] 2014 crash put [Worcester Police Officer James D’Andrea], who joined the department in 2013, under the scope of an internal investigation. Ultimately, he signed what’s known as a last chance agreement, a settlement agreement between the city, the officer and the officer’s union following misconduct, disciplinary matters or charges resulting from an internal affairs investigation. The agreement allows an officer to keep his or her job but can make the process of firing that officer easier if any conditions within the agreement are violated."

– “Mass. scrambles to provide housing, medical care as Haitian refugees arrive from Mexico border,” by John Hilliard, Boston Globe.

– “'No shenanigans': As Jasiel Correia heads to prison, Coogan overhauls the pot-shop process,” by Jo C. Goode, Herald News.

– IN MEMORIAM: “‘Says You!’ panelist Arnie Reisman, a Boston media mainstay, dies at 79,” by Bryan Marquard, Boston Globe.

– IN MEMORIAM: “Table Talk Pies 'matriarch' Mary Cocaine remembered for devotion to family, Worcester,” by Henry Schwan, Worcester Telegram & Gazette.

CONGRATS – to Brookline Select Board Vice Chair Raul Fernandez and Christina Kovach, who were married over the weekend. Boston mayoral hopeful and City Councilor Michelle Wu officiated. Guests included Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), New York Assemblywoman Jessica González-Rojas, state Rep. Andy Vargas, Waltham City Councilor Jonathan Paz, Marlborough City Councilor Samanthn Perlman, Everett City Councilor Stephanie Martins and Brookline Select Board Member Miriam Aschkenasy. Pic … pic … another pic

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Mary Campbell and Mass Cultural Council Public Affairs Director Bethann Steiner. Happy belated to Monica Hinojos-Capes, who celebrated Saturday.

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.

 

A message from USA-IT:

Illegal trade is a $464-billion-a-year business, and it’s growing. Criminals get rich from illegal trade by peddling fake and stolen goods, ultimately robbing governments of much-needed revenue to provide essential services to Americans. Instead of helping taxpayers, that money is pocketed by crooks who traffic in illegal narcotics, apparel, counterfeit medications, tobacco, weapons, wildlife, and even people. That’s why we’re bringing together experts from the private and public sectors, academia, as well as government & law enforcement agencies, combining our collective expertise to curb illegal trade for the benefit of our Massachusetts communities. Learn more.

 
 

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Monday, August 9, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: GIG ECONOMY fight ESCALATES — EARLY SALVOS in AUDITOR race — DEBATES RAGE on vaccine, mask mandates

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

GIG-ECONOMY BATTLE ESCALATES — The coalition mobilizing against a proposed ballot initiative to classify drivers for companies like Uber, Lyft and DoorDash as independent contractors plans to file a complaint today asking state campaign finance regulators to investigate whether proponents of the measure violated the law.

In the letter being sent to the state Office of Campaign and Political Finance, the Coalition to Protect Workers’ Rights accuses the Massachusetts Coalition for Independent Work of lying about its expenditures on paperwork submitted to OCPF last week to form its ballot question committee, according to a draft of the letter reviewed by POLITICO.

The “Flexibility and Benefits for Massachusetts Drivers” committee checked a box on its filing paperwork that said “no money had been raised or spent prior to the organization of the ballot question committee with OCPF.” That paperwork was received by OCPF shortly before noon on Aug. 3.

But the Coalition to Protect Workers’ Rights argues that’s a “false claim.” Pointing to a section of state law that requires the disclosure of “all expenditures” to promote or oppose a ballot question, including “certain expenditures made in anticipation that a question will appear on a ballot,” the coalition alleges that its rivals spent money on consultants to gear up for its ballot-question campaign launch; on signs and stickers for an Aug. 3 press conference; and on digital advertisements in certain publications starting that same day. (The Massachusetts Coalition for Independent Work sponsored Massachusetts Playbook last week, from Aug. 4-6).

“These out-of-state Big Tech companies are currently in violation of Massachusetts labor, civil rights, and consumer protection laws,” workers’ rights coalition director Mike Firestone wrote of his group’s industry-backed rival in the letter to OCPF. “Given the industry’s record of unprecedented corporate spending on misleading advertisements, more than $220 million in 2020 alone, we ask that OCPF hold them accountable to the transparency requirements under our statute.”

The call for a campaign finance investigation is another early salvo in a brewing ballot battle that seems destined to grow ugly and costly — not unlike the similar effort to classify gig-economy drivers as independent contractors that proved successful in California last year — should the question clear the state attorney general’s office.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS . State auditor candidate Chris Dempsey was ostensibly discussing outgoing Auditor Suzanne Bump’s legacy when asked on WCVB’s “On the Record” Sunday how he’d do things differently.

But he set up a clear contrast with his current rival in the auditor’s race, state Sen. Diana DiZoglio.

“I’ll arrive as auditor as someone who understands how Beacon Hill works but is not part of Beacon Hill,” Dempsey said. “I’ve never been a member of the Legislature. I’ve never been an elected official. For me, this is not about a stepping stone to the next point in someone’s career. This is about me wanting to dig in to every corner of the executive branch.”

Dempsey, who co-chaired No Boston Olympics and was most recently director of Transportation for Massachusetts, is positioning himself as an outsider against a lawmaker who’s often considered an outsider on Beacon Hill.

DiZoglio is now in her second term as a state senator after six years in the state House. She’s built a reputation for bucking the establishment and needling leadership over transparency issues, and is now leading the push to raise staffers’ pay.

“What’s worse than his ignorance of her well-known record of challenging the establishment is his attempt to discredit a hard-working member of the Senate," DiZoglio spokesperson Chris Keohan said in a statement.

As the auditor’s race gets underway, DiZoglio is rolling out an endorsement from Worcester’s Teamsters Union Local 170 today, per her campaign. The Methuen Democrat has more money in the bank than Dempsey, but he’s raised more money than her over the past two months, per their OCPF filings.

TODAY — Boston mayoral candidate and City Councilor Michelle Wu hosts a press availability at 10 a.m. outside City Hall to discuss the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report. Wu joins environmentalist Bill McKibben for a Facebook Live at 7 p.m. followed by an event with Dominican leaders at Boston’s Mozart Park. Boston Acting Mayor Kim Janey takes her Neighborhood Coffee Hour Series to Langone Park in the North End at 10:30 a.m. The Boston City Council hosts a hearing on the creation of a “Boston-Cambridge Tourism Marketing District” at 1 p.m. Rep. Lori Trahan joins Middlesex Community College leaders for a roundtable on ARPA funding at 1 p.m. Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Angus King (I-Maine) host a press call to announce revenue legislation to include in the upcoming reconciliation package at 3:30 p.m. Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) hosts a reelection fundraiser at Wellfleet Preservation Hall at 5 p.m.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: lkashinsky@politico.com.

THE LATEST NUMBERS

— “Six Massachusetts counties deemed high risk for COVID transmission; majority of state designated as substantial risk,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive.com: “Only Hampshire County is listed at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s ‘moderate’ level of transmission; the rest are described as at ‘substantial’ or ‘high’ risk, with Berkshire, Hampden, Bristol, Suffolk, Dukes and Nantucket counties at the highest risk level based on rising case totals among the population.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

— GALVIN (BRIEFLY) IN CHARGE: Both Gov. Charlie Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito were out of the state over the weekend, leaving Secretary of State Bill Galvin as acting governor, per State House News Service’s Michael P. NortonPolito returned Sunday.

— “Massachusetts needs advance planning if it wants to capitalize on Biden infrastructure plan, economists say,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “President Biden’s $550 billion infrastructure bill to boost spending on highways, ports, broadband and green initiatives could be a boost to states, but economists warn Massachusetts could squander its potential windfall if it doesn’t line up ‘shovel-worthy’ projects. … ‘This is the biggest chance for an East-West rail probably ever,’ said Sen. Eric Lesser, D-Longmeadow.

— “Beacon Hill weighs ban on childlike sex dolls,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Eagle-Tribune: “Lawmakers want to ban sex dolls that look like children, which victims advocates say are used by pedophiles to simulate child abuse and rape.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

— “‘This is not political’: Boston restaurateurs devise their own public health measures amid absence of mandates,” by Kara Baskin, Boston Globe: “This is in sharp contrast to New York City, where officials announced that patrons will need to show proof of vaccination if they want to eat indoors. But on the same day that New York City authorities announced those rules, Boston’s Acting Mayor Kim Janey said she doesn’t support such a measure here. So some local restaurants are taking matters into their own hands. At The Quiet Few in East Boston, owner Josh Weinstein is done taking chances. Guests must show proof of vaccination before stepping inside, and unvaccinated guests can eat on the patio. He said he made the decision after the restaurant had to shutter recently because of a COVID case.

— “In Boston, CDC Director And U.S. Education Secretary Press For Masks In Schools,” by Max Larkin, WBUR: “[CDC Director Rochelle Walensky] reiterated that while the CDC cannot dictate policy at the state or local level, their current guidance is that ‘anybody who is entering the school — students, staff, teachers, visitors — be masked at all times in the school.’ Several Massachusetts school districts, including Boston, Springfield and Cambridge, plan to require students and staff wear masks indoors when classes resume in a few weeks.

— More: “Spilka joins calls for school mask mandate,” by Lily Robinson, CommonWealth Magazine.

— “COVID Testing Spikes Statewide As Delta Fears Grow,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “State testing numbers show the number of tests administered statewide nearly doubled from the first Wednesday in July to the first Wednesday in August.

— “Quincy woman sues UMass-Boston over school's vaccine mandate,” by Wheeler Cowperthwaite, Patriot Ledger: “Cora Cluett, a senior at the school and a real estate agent with Blue Marble Group in Hingham, filed the federal lawsuit along with University of Massachusetts-Lowell junior Hunter Harris, of Medway, last week. The pair are asking a federal judge to issue an injunction against the schools to allow them to go to in-person classes without being vaccinated.

— “Massachusetts coronavirus breakthrough deaths: 73% had underlying conditions, median age was 82.5,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “There have been 100 breakthrough case deaths in the Bay State, which is 0.002% of all fully vaccinated individuals, or about two for every 100,000 residents who got their shots. ... Of the 100 breakthrough case deaths, 73% of these cases were reported to have underlying conditions that made them more likely to have severe disease. 

FROM THE HUB

— “‘If they don’t pay their rent, I’m gonna be homeless’: Small landlords struggle as eviction moratorium is extended,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “While the extension of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s federal eviction moratorium allowed renters to breathe a sigh of relief, landlords across Massachusetts are still worried about how they’ll keep a roof over their own heads. ‘There’s all kinds of articles about the tenants who are about to be homeless. You know, if they don’t pay their rent, I’m gonna be homeless,’ said Paulette Houston, 67, who rents out a three-bedroom apartment in her two-family Roxbury home she inherited from her mother.

 “A group of doctors, medical students seeks to prohibit Boston’s hospital chiefs from working on corporate boards,” by Liz Kowalczyk, Boston Globe: “Dozens of physicians from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, and other Harvard-affiliated medical centers have signed a petition calling for stronger ethics rules to prohibit top executives from working on corporate boards, outside jobs that can earn them millions of dollars but create conflicts of interest. … Its text references findings from a Globe Spotlight Team report in April showing that Boston is an outlier among major cities in the large number of hospital chiefs who accept lucrative outside board work, mostly for drug makers and other health care companies. 

— “From back alleys to backyards, rats descend on Boston neighborhoods,” by Kate Lusignan, Boston Globe: “When restaurants closed at the start of the pandemic and people began eating more at home, rodents abandoned downtown and migrated to more residential areas, pest control experts said. With a smorgasbord of kitchen scraps and bird seed laid out before them, the rats have made themselves at home, much to people’s chagrin.

 

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THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

— “Young, Black, and energized: These voters could play a pivotal role in the Boston mayoral race,” by Tiana Woodard, Boston Globe: “Some will be casting their first ballot. Some are community organizers. Others are new to the city. Some are all of the above. But they have one thing in common: They’re an important voting bloc. Across the country, young Black people are becoming more engaged in the political process than in years past, according to national polls, emboldened by a racial reckoning and an increase in candidates of color competing in municipal elections.

— “Boston Black Activist Group, Hoping To Unite Black Vote, Endorses Janey For Mayor,” by Sarah Betancourt, GBH News: “A group of Black Bostonians working to marshal the city’s Black voters behind a single African-American candidate for mayor endorsed acting Mayor Kim Janey Saturday. WAKANDA II members said they went through six months of weekly meetings, forums, surveys from 200 locals, and almost a hundred pages of returned questionnaires from mayoral candidates before deciding they would back Janey.

— “Janey Rivals Demand City Release Records For Boston Police Accused Of Misconduct,” by Ally Jarmanning, WBUR: “Three of the four major candidates running against acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey blasted her administration for withholding records on police officers accused of domestic violence or sexual assault. WBUR reported Thursday that Boston police found 13 officers committed domestic violence over the past decade. But the city refuses to provide any information about the cases, including the names of the officers and whether they remain on the force.

— “Kim Janey: The Boston.com interview,” by Christopher Gavin, Nik DeCosta-Klipa, and Zipporah Osei, Boston.com: “Kim Janey has three words for how she approaches her work in City Hall: equity, justice, and love.

— “Michelle Wu: Mandating Vaccines For City Workers — And Others — 'Is Urgent',” by Zoe Mathews, GBH News: “Acting Mayor Kim Janey said she is ‘leaning towards’ a mandate for city workers, but has not yet done so. [City Councilor Michelle] Wu said she supports mandating vaccines for all city workers, including school employees. … Wu said she also supports mandating vaccinations for places like gyms and restaurants, but with the help of city resources to move the burden of enforcement away from businesses and workers. 

— FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: United Auto Workers Region 9A is endorsing Alex Gray for Boston City Council at-large, per his campaign. “Alex’s past work on affordable housing, transportation, and education position him well to tackle these issues city-wide,” UAW Region 9A regional director Beverley Brakeman said in a statement. “Alex’s lived experience with blindness has prepared him to be an exceptional advocate, skills that he can now employ in fighting for an equitable Boston.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “Speeding shot up amid the pandemic and continues to outpace 2019, data show,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “In Massachusetts, a spike in speeding citations that emerged last year amid the pandemic has largely carried into 2021 — but to a smaller degree, MassDOT data show.

DATELINE D.C.

— “Biden extends freeze on student loans as progressives push to cancel them,” by Michael Stratford, POLITICO: “The Biden administration announced Friday that it would extend the pause on federal student loan payments until the end of January following growing pressure from Congressional Democrats, including progressives who want to cancel large swaths of the outstanding debt. … ‘While this temporary relief is welcome, it doesn’t go far enough,’ Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) said in a joint statement."

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “Seven Berkshire County towns among those left vulnerable by state's new biomass rules, observers say,” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “New state regulations effectively protect 90 percent of Massachusetts municipalities from new wood-burning energy facilities, which scientists say are dirtier than fossil fuel plants. But, those rules leave 35 towns, including seven in Berkshire County, open to new biomass plants. That doesn’t sit well with lawmakers, scientists and activists, who want the state to go further and fully eliminate the possibility of new biomass generation.

 More: “State wants to expose 5 South Shore towns to wood-burning power plants,” by Wheeler Cowperthwaite, Patriot Ledger.

 "With the window to act narrowing, a stark report from the world’s climate experts," by Sabrina Shankman, Boston Globe: "The Earth’s climate is warming at a faster rate than previously thought, and with greater and more widespread consequences, according to a landmark report by the world’s top climate scientists."

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “100 permanent replacement nurses hired as St. Vincent strike hits 155 days,” by Kim Ring, Worcester Telegram & Gazette: “More than 100 replacement nurses have been hired by St. Vincent Hospital to fill some of the roles left vacant by the ongoing nurses' strike, according to a statement released by hospital officials Sunday. After viewing a strike schedule that shows events listed for the picket line extending into December, hospital officials have concluded that the nurses, ‘have minimal interest or intention to end the strike.’"

— “‘This is a crisis on top of a crisis’: Patients with mental illness are waiting for overwhelmed hospitals to treat them,” by Priyanka Dayal McCluskey, Boston Globe: “Massachusetts hospitals estimate that more than 500 patients across the state who need mental health treatment are stuck in emergency departments and medical units right now — a phenomenon known as ‘boarding.’ Many are reeling from the stress and trauma of a pandemic that has upended normal life and stubbornly will not end.

— “Methuen PD moves toward transparency, accountability,” by Allison Corneau, Eagle-Tribune: “Eight months after a scathing audit painted the police department as rife with mistrust and favoritism and lacking basic policies and procedures, the agency is on its way to addressing those concerns and others as Mayor Neil Perry prepares to name the person who will take over for retired Chief Joseph Solomon.

 

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MEDIA MATTERS

 “Boston Globe sues City of Boston over public records,” by Ivy Scott, Boston Globe: “The Boston Globe filed a lawsuit against the City of Boston on Thursday, accusing government officials of failing to comply with state law in their handling of more than two dozen public records requests the newspaper has filed, including inquiries for police records involving former police commissioner Dennis White and former officer Patrick Rose.

SPOTTED — at former President Barack Obama’s 60th b-day bash on Martha’s Vineyard: Beyoncé and Jay- ZCBS’s Gayle King, Erykah Badu, Bradley Cooper, George ClooneyQuestlove, H.E.R.Tom Hanks John Legend sang "Happy Birthday," as did Alicia Keys, per the Daily Mail.

 A Playbook tipster also spotted Obama brunching at Beach Road restaurant in Vineyard Haven on Sunday.

SPOTTED — at Josh Gee and Crissy Rea-Bain’s wedding in New York (per the tweets and IG stories): Garrett Quinn, Megan Johnson, Jennifer Smith, Gustavo Quiroga, Gintautas Dumcius and Amy Derjue, Michael Ratty and Amy Deveau, Jeff Israel, Jamie Chisholm, Caroline Holland and Massachusetts Playbook alum Lauren Dezenski.

TRANSITIONS — “Makeeba McCreary is leaving the MFA to run New Commonwealth fund and will adopt a ‘start up’ approach,” by Shirley Leung, Boston Globe.

HAPPY BELATED — to Ed Lyons, who celebrated Friday.

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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