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Showing posts with label FRAMINGHAM. Show all posts

Friday, October 22, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: The next city budget

 



 
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BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by the Massachusetts Coalition for Independent Work

CHECK AND BALANCE — Bostonians won’t just choose their next mayor next month, they’ll also decide how much power she’ll have over the city’s behemoth of a budget.

Ballot Question 1 proposes a charter change that would overhaul the budget process. Currently, the mayor presents a multi-billion-dollar budget and councilors can only vote to accept or reject it.

The ballot initiative , spearheaded by City Councilor Lydia Edwards and supported by mayoral rivals City Councilors Michelle Wu and Annissa Essaibi George, would let councilors draw up their own budget in response to the mayor's — so long as it doesn’t exceed the dollar amount the mayor put forward — and override a mayoral veto. It would also establish an Office of Participatory Budgeting to give residents a greater say in the process.

Supporters say participatory budgeting would empower councilors to better fight for their constituents’ needs.

Yes on 1 advocate Andres Del Castillo of Right to the City Boston said it would lead to “more transparency and accountability” in the city’s budgeting and “allow residents across the city to engage in that debate.” Edwards told Boston.com’s Nik DeCosta-Klipa she hopes it’ll lead to a more constructive back-and-forth between the mayor and councilors.

Opponents say participatory budgeting would put too many cooks in the kitchen and flood the budget process with special interests.

“We would have essentially 13 city councilors, all with their own agendas, all competing with each other,” said Pam Kocher, president of the Boston Municipal Research Bureau, a watchdog group advocating for the city to keep a “strong-mayor" government.

Boston already has a $1 million youth participatory budgeting process. Several major cities use forms of participatory budgeting, including Cambridge and New York City.

Brad Lander, the Democratic nominee for NYC comptroller who ushered participatory budgeting onto the city council there a decade ago, said to look at how much money mayors are willing to pony up for participatory budgeting (most of a city’s budget goes to perennial costs like salaries). Acting Mayor Kim Janey committed $1 million to set up the participatory budgeting office. Wu said she’ll “see that investment through” and glean best practices from other cities. Essaibi George pledged $1 million.

GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. The race is (still) on in the special election to finish out former state Rep. Brad Hill’s term, even though his 4th Essex District won’t exist come next fall.

With less than two weeks until the primary, Republicans Lisa-Marie Cashman and Robert Snow, and Democrats Jamie Belsito and Darcyll Dale, say they’re staying in the race — despite a redistricting map that would divvy up the district and place them in either state Rep. Lenny Mirra (R-Georgetown) or state Rep. Christina Minicucci’s (D-North Andover) districts in 2022.

Why run for a seat for only a year? Cashman said the district’s been without representation for two months while lawmakers are deciding how to dish out roughly $4.8 billion in federal aid. Belsito said she’s fighting to make sure current constituents still “have a voice” over the next year.

Tweaks to the House map approved yesterday also put Simon Cataldo’s Concord precinct back in the 14th Middlesex district he’s running to represent after state Rep. Tami Gouveia decided to run for lieutenant governor. Vivian Birchall, another Democrat, is also running.

TODAY — Gov. Charlie Baker joins Everett Mayor Carlo DeMaria, Somerville Mayor Joe Curtatone and other officials for a Mystic River Pedestrian Bridge announcement at Encore Boston Harbor at 3 p.m. Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito visits Cape Ann Museum at 9 a.m. and Belmont Street Community School in Worcester at 1:30 p.m. Wu and Suffolk DA Rachael Rollins appear on the Boston Globe’s “Black News Hour” at 8 a.m. on Boston Praise Radio. Janey visits Epiphany School’s Early Learning Center at 11:30 a.m. State Sen. Eric Lesser hosts a lunchtime livestream on East-West Rail ridership estimates at noon.

THIS WEEKEND — Wu and Sen. Elizabeth Warren kick off the first day of early voting at 10:15 a.m. Saturday outside BPL in Copley; Wu and Essaibi George participate in forums with state Rep. Russell Holmes at Morning Star Baptist Church. The Dorchester Reporter’s Bill Forry and Gintautas Dumcius talk the mayor's race on WBZ’s “Keller at Large” at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Wu is this week’s guest on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Wu and Rep. Ayanna Pressley lead "Souls to the Polls" at 2:30 p.m. Sunday starting at the Charles Street AME Church.

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

 

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83% support legislation like H.1234 that would do just that — offering them flexibility, independence, protections against discrimination, a portable benefits fund and more. Learn more.

 
 

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THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts reports 1,267 new coronavirus cases, nearly 300,000 booster doses,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald.

– “There were 1,804 Massachusetts students, 350 school staffers with COVID in past week, pooled testing positivity rate below 1%,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive.

– "Town-by-town COVID-19 data in Massachusetts," by Ryan Huddle and Peter Bailey-Wells, Boston Globe.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Massachusetts lawmakers push for genocide education in middle and high schools,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “The state Senate on Thursday passed a bill that requires all middle schools and high schools in Massachusetts to incorporate curriculum on the history of genocide, as lawmakers feared students increasingly lacked Holocaust education amid a rise in anti-Semitism.

– “Increasingly popular e-bikes are everywhere — and live in a legal gray zone in Massachusetts,” by Taylor Dolven, Boston Globe: “In Massachusetts, e-bikes are categorized as mopeds and prohibited on bike paths, though bike advocates say the law is largely unenforced. Now, some lawmakers are pushing a bill that would bring the state in line with 46 others and Washington, D.C., in regulating the very expensive but increasingly popular e-bikes as bikes.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Correction officers union appeals judge’s denial in vaccine mandate fight,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “The union representing correctional officers has vowed to ‘go down swinging’ in its attempts to block Gov. Charlie Baker’s vaccine mandate and has appealed a federal judge’s ‘disappointing’ denial of an injunction. The organization said it’s preparing yet another lawsuit to fight the order.

– “Mass. Preparing To Start Elementary School Vaccines Next Month,” by Mike Deehan, GBH News: “Secretary of Health and Human Services Marylou Sudders told a legislative oversight panel Thursday the Baker administration expects approval of the vaccine for younger children sometime in the first week of November and will deliver the shots to pediatricians, school-based clinics, local boards of health and other providers. 

– “State: School testing delays are being resolved,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Massachusetts health and education officials acknowledged on Thursday that ‘logistical challenges’ led to a delayed rollout of the state’s COVID-19 testing program in schools, but they said the problems, which were primarily attributable to low staffing, are being addressed.

– “New study reveals why Provincetown did not become a COVID superspreader,” by Kay Lazar, Boston Globe: “The team of researchers, led by scientists at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, concluded that Cape Cod’s high vaccination rate and quick public health measures in Massachusetts likely prevented the outbreak from erupting into many more infections.

FROM THE HUB

– “Boston Methadone Mile latest: Questions arise over new encampments, Tompkins prepares mobile courtroom,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Mass and Cass plans continue to move forward, with Acting Mayor Kim Janey’s recent moves being generally well-received — albeit with some questions over whether the homeless will just move onto other neighborhoods — and preparations continuing at the Suffolk County jail for a mobile courtroom and treatment space.

 “Doctors and researchers are concerned about the city’s efforts to remove tents at Mass. and Cass. Here’s why,” by Dialynn Dwyer, Boston.com: “Dr. Mark Eisenberg, a primary care physician at MGH-Charlestown Health Care Center with specialties in infectious diseases and addiction medicine, told Boston.com that while he applauds the move to declare the situation at Mass. and Cass a public health emergency, he doesn’t support the executive order. Doing a ‘sweep’ of the encampments will just criminalize and displace the people living there, he said.

– “Council backs law to give Boston surveillance tech oversight, limit info sharing between BPS and BPD,” by Christopher Gavin, Boston.com: “The law, years in the making, requires that any surveillance technology sought by Boston police be approved by the council beforehand. Authorities must also get the council’s sign-off to use any technology they already own for a new purpose.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “Third poll shows Wu with dominating lead, but a majority of voters support Essaibi George on policing,” by Milton J. Valencia, Boston Globe: “The poll, by the progressive think tank Data for Progress, showed Wu with 57 percent support among likely Boston voters, compared to 32 percent for Essaibi George — a lead of 25 percentage points for Wu, which is slightly less than the lead other recent polls have given her, but still comparable. ... Essaibi George has proposed spending more on policing, and respondents shared similar views: 64 percent said that local government should be spending more 'creating a fair and effective public safety system.'”

– “Like Other Arab Americans In Politics, Boston's Essaibi George Faces Questions About Her Identity,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Boston mayoral candidate Annissa Essaibi George, who counts herself as a person of color, has faced questions about her identity since she jumped into the historic field — then filled with candidates who were visibly not white. The Arab-Polish Boston native said she has identified as a person of color for the six years she has held public office, but she acknowledged she has not always. With less than two weeks to go before the Nov. 2 election, how Essaibi George identifies remains a quietly persistent issue on the campaign trail. Wu supporters interviewed by GBH News tended to be more skeptical than Essaibi George voters in accounting for the depth of her cultural and ethnic identification.

– “Essaibi George continues outreach to communities of color,” by Stephanie Ebbert, Emma Platoff and Milton J. Valencia, Boston Globe: “For weeks, City Councilor Annissa Essaibi George has been intently focusing her mayoral campaign on communities of color, meeting with Haitian seniors and Black hospitality workers, walking through Uphams Corner with Cape Verdean leaders, and campaigning with Roxbury mothers, even as polls show her badly trailing her rival and fellow city councilor, Michelle Wu. … On Thursday, Essaibi George was at Franklin Field public housing in Dorchester, promoting the diversity agenda she unveiled late last month and promising to devote $100 million in federal relief funds to the Black community.

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Boston City Council at-large candidate Carla Monteiro has been endorsed by Boston state Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz, who’s running for governor.

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: David Halbert has been endorsed by Boston state Rep. Jon Santiago and Acton state Rep. Tami Gouveia.

– WATCH: WBUR’s town halls with Wu and Essaibi George .

 

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PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “T delays Green Line extension a second time,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “The MBTA is once again delaying the initial opening of the Green Line extension into Somerville, this time because cramped quarters in a newly built facility for delivering electricity to the subway line is making it difficult to get enough workers inside to finish the job on time.

– More from Mohl: “New T board likely to move at slower pace,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine.

DAY IN COURT

– “Feds say Boston Grand Prix CFO spent COVID-19 funds on diamond ring, Match.com membership,” by WCVB: “John F. Casey, 57, formerly of Ipswich, pleaded guilty to 23 counts of wire fraud, three counts of aggravated identity theft, four counts of money laundering and three counts of filing false tax returns, federal prosecutors said.

FROM THE DELEGATION

– Rep. Jake Auchincloss is joining Rep. Bill Keating in blasting Sen. Ted Cruz’s “Stop the SURGE Act” that calls to send immigrants from the Texas border to Cambridge, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. “What you intend as a threat, we in Massachusetts consider a promise — the promise of more immigration, which makes the Commonwealth richer both economically and culturally,” Auchincloss wrote in the letter, which a TikTok (his first) shows him signing and delivering to Cruz’s office.

– Yet another advocacy coalition is targeting Rep. Richard Neal. This time it's a $100,000 ad buy telling the House Ways and Means chair and his colleagues to "make polluters pay" in the reconciliation bill. The billboard, radio and social ads start today and will run in 12 states, including Massachusetts. Reps. Jim McGovern and Ayanna Pressley support the "Make Polluters Pay" legislation.

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

– “Competition fierce for offshore wind's a 'once in a generation opportunity',” by Doug Fraser, Cape Cod Times: “But, even with the nation’s first wind farm, Vineyard Wind 1, now in its construction phase, Massachusetts risks losing that advantage as Connecticut, New York, New Jersey and other states invest in the infrastructure to encourage the manufacturing and supply chain industries that will provide the bulk of the jobs and billions in investments.

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– “She made history as the first Black woman mayor popularly elected in Mass. Now, she’s the underdog in her reelection bid,” by Stephanie Ebbert, Boston Globe: “Yvonne Spicer originated the role of mayor here nearly four years ago, when voters chose the STEM educator and Museum of Science executive to lead the freshly minted city government they had just voted to create. … Now, the incumbent finds herself an underdog in her reelection bid against a challenger who could hardly be viewed as the next face of change. Charlie Sisitsky, a 76-year-old former city councilor who ran the Department of Public Works in neighboring Natick for two decades, is the consensus candidate of voters who have soured on Spicer’s leadership.

– GBH’s Adam Reilly has more on Spicer’s uncertain future as Framingham’s mayor.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– Say it ain’t snow: “Here’s how snowy this winter will be, according to NOAA,” by Julia Taliesin, Boston.com: “The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released its winter weather predictions on Thursday morning, and it actually looks like it will be a mild winter.

– “Serial child rapist Wayne Chapman dead: ‘Hopefully there’s more justice on the other side’,” by Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald: “Wayne Chapman is dead, ending a nightmare sex offender story. He goes to his grave having admitted to molesting up to 100 boys across multiple states. He was also the lone person of interest in the disappearance of 10-year-old Andy Puglisi of Lawrence in 1976.

– “Massachusetts town Select Board asks FBI to investigate its own police department for payroll discrepancies,” by Will Katcher, MassLive: “The Boxborough Select Board is seeking the help of the FBI’s Public Corruption Unit in investigating payment discrepancies within the town’s police department.

– “Faculty members at Middlesex School sign letter to trustees, slamming decision to disinvite Nikole Hannah-Jones from speaking on campus,” by Travis Andersen, Boston Globe: “Nearly 100 faculty members and staffers at Middlesex School have signed an open letter to the trustees blasting the Concord boarding school’s decision to disinvite Nikole Hannah-Jones, the Pulitzer-Prize winning New York Times journalist who conceived The 1619 Project, from speaking on campus.

– “New Bedford PD unveils new policy for labeling gang members,” by Anastasia Lennon, New Bedford Light: “Some six months after a Boston-based youth advocacy group released a critical report alleging the city’s police department over-polices Black people and youth in the city, the department announced a new policy for policing gangs and identifying members or affiliates. … The policy brings some significant changes, including a requirement to notify people if they are labeled as gang members.

– “Mass. jobless claims continue to decline,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Eagle-Tribune: “There were 4,553 new applications for state benefits filed for the week ending Oct. 16 — a decline of 344 claims from the previous week, according to the U.S. Department of Labor’s weekly report.

– “Attleboro mayor meets Patriot linebacker 'by accident',” by George W. Rhodes, Sun Chronicle: “Rookie linebacker Ronnie Perkins of the New England Patriots had some business at the Registry of Motor Vehicles on Monday, but he also found himself visiting with the mayor.

– “MIT’s endowment rose by 49% to $27.4 billion in 2021, strongest annual financial performance in over 20 years,” by Cassie McGrath, MassLive.

TRANSITIONS – David Winslow, a former Massachusetts judge and chief legal counsel to former Gov. Mitt Romney, is the next president of the New England Legal Foundation. Ron Bell is now senior strategist of field operations for David Halbert’s Boston City Council at-large campaign.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to state Rep. John Rogers, Jonathan Carvalho, Jenna Lamond, Atlantic Council’s Trey Herr, Lindsay Kalter and Connor Meoli.

HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND – to Saturday birthday-ers Molly Drennan, Annika Lichtenbaum and Arielle Tait; and to Sunday birthday-ers Rep. Seth Moulton, Ernie Corrigan of Corrigan Communications, Leigh Appleby and Michael Antonellis.

THIS WEEK ON THE HORSE RACE — Hosts Steve Koczela, Jennifer Smith and Lisa Kashinsky get you up to speed on the latest happenings in the Boston mayor’s race and what a new poll means for Gov. Charlie Baker. Deanna Moran, director of environmental planning at the Conservation Law Foundation, joins to talk about climate resiliency in Boston and beyond. Subscribe and listen on iTunes and Sound Cloud.

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

 

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Tuesday, September 28, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Why the Wuniverse isn’t the Markeyverse

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

INTO THE WUNIVERSE — The Twitter accounts sprang up quickly after Michelle Wu declared she was running for mayor of Boston in September 2020 — “dogs 4 michelle wu,” “Hot Gays For Wu,” “Blue Line for Michelle Wu” and even “Potato for WU.”

They were the first signs that the "Markeyverse" — the highly online network of young, progressive activists who helped propel Sen. Ed Markey to primary victory over former Rep. Joe Kennedy III — was giving rise to the "Wuniverse."

A year laterthe Wuniverse is still starry-eyed for Wu. But young activists are focused less on creating memes and maintaining fan accounts — some of which haven’t been active since last fall — and more on in-person outreach. The mayoral race is far more localized and far less online than the statewide Senate contest, which drew national attention and largely played out on computer screens because of the pandemic.

“A lot of people came into the Wu race thinking we were going to use the exact same organizing model and win. We realized pretty soon afterwards that you can’t use the same model for a statewide race in a mayor’s race,” said Jonathan Waldmann, a 17-year-old from Milton who was part of the Markeyverse and is now part of “Youth for Michelle Wu,” which was previously “Students for Michelle Wu.”

The same activists who honed their political organizing chops from bedrooms and basements at the height of the pandemic were soon able to get outside to collect signatures for Wu to get on the ballot, and then go door-knocking for her throughout the summer ahead of the preliminary election. The result is a far more conventional grassroots effort by young activists for Wu than the hyper-online one for Markey.

“That’s definitely a factor,” in why the Wuniverse seems different, said Lillian Gibson, an 18-year-old from Dorchester who’s another Markeyverse alum organizing for Wu. “It’s also just a better use of time to be on the ground doing things — whether that’s canvassing, or texting, or calling. It can still be nice to have a social media presence. But I just don’t think in this time period they can do as much as they were able to do before.”

Still, Wu seems to enjoy more online engagement than her mayoral competitors, according to a recent analysis by Legislata, a productivity software for politicians, and your Playbook scribe’s less-scientific scrolls through Twitter. Acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey, for instance, didn't appear to enjoy the same level of engagement as Wu did through the preliminary election. But her endorsement of Wu on Saturday garnered hundreds and hundreds of likes and retweets across various tweets.

The Wuniverse has also been a thorn in City Councilor Annissa Essaibi George's side by pointing out policy positions of hers that they deem unfavorable, though the rancor is less intense than what Kennedy experienced.

John Walsh, who ran Markey's Senate reelection campaign, recently told the Boston Globe's Joan Vennochi that the mayor's race will "turn on the turnout of young people" who made up 33% of Markey's vote in Boston and 19% of his vote statewide.

Young activists are certainly excited for Wu. She handily won the younger-skewing Allston-Brighton neighborhoods in this month's preliminary, for instance.

But one factor to keep an eye on through November: Some of the issues that galvanized young voters to turn out for Markey — like climate change — aren't as dominant in a mayor's race where the two remaining candidates are asked near-daily about the worsening public health crisis at Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard. And while both candidates made overtures to young voters at a forum last week, they're more often being pressed on how they'll address the racial and socioeconomic inequities facing Bostonians, particularly Black Bostonians, after no Black candidate advanced to the final in a race that will deliver the city its first non-white mayor.

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

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito and HED Secretary Mike Kennealy are in Worcester for the Massachusetts Manufacturing Mash-Up at 9 a.m.; state Sen. Eric Lesser and state Rep. Jeffrey Roy stop by at 9:30 a.m. Polito and MassDOT Secretary and CEO Jamey Tesler attend a rail-trail ribbon cutting at 11 a.m. Polito and other administration officials visit affordable housing developments in Worcester at 1 p.m. Lawmakers virtually launch their Better Bottle Bill campaign at 11 a.m. Janey gives remarks at the Massachusetts Organization for Addiction Recovery’s 31st annual Recovery Month Celebration at 11:30 a.m. Drawing Democracy virtually releases its “Unity Maps” for state legislative redistricting at 1 p.m. Wu announces new endorsements at 1:15 p.m. at City Hall Plaza. Essaibi George makes local stops in the morning and calls into the “Wake Up with Tayla Andre” radio show at noon.

 

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THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts coronavirus cases up 4,095 over the weekend, the 2nd straight weekend of fewer cases,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The three-day total of 4,095 cases — a daily average of 1,365 infections — was a lower daily rate than last weekend’s daily average of 1,455 cases. The previous weekend’s daily average was 1,584 cases.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– Lawmakers are again considering bills that would authorize safe injection sites in Massachusetts — this time with a renewed sense of urgency from advocates amid the worsening addiction and homelessness crises at "Mass and Cass" and stats that show rising opioid deaths.

Boston’s two mayoral candidates disagree on whether safe injection sites — places where people can use drugs they acquire on their own under the supervision of medical professionals who can prevent overdoses and connect those struggling to treatments — are a good idea.

Essaibi George said she’s visited safe injection sites in Canada “and I am not in favor of them" due to the number of sites she believes are needed in Boston to be effective and the costs associated with them.

Wu supports safe injection sites, but called to be "very intentional" about their locations to lessen any potential impact on "one area of the city." Both councilors called for more investments in substance-use treatments.

Two other pols who disagree — Gov. Charlie Baker and GOP gubernatorial hopeful Geoff Diehl, who could face off in a 2022 Republican primary for governor.

Baker called safe injection sites “extremely controversial within the addiction community” when asked by a POLITICO reporter Monday. “I would much rather put people into treatment, and I think that should be our primary focus."

Diehl, the more conservative of the two, said the “benefits of safe consumption sites are compelling.” He’d like to see the pilot program run by private entities, the drugs screened for fentanyl and proof that people can be "migrated into effective recovery programs." For now, he said treatment centers "should be the main focus" statewide.

– MassLive.com's Benjamin Kail recaps Monday's hearing on the bills, and CommonWealth Magazine's Shira Schoenberg highlights the flashpoints.

– “Ombudsman Overseeing Mass. Prisons' COVID Mitigation Efforts Is Fired,” by Deborah Becker, WBUR: “The man hired to oversee pandemic mitigation efforts in state prisons was removed from the post days after reports last week surfaced that he may have been involved in a wrongful death lawsuit nine years ago.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– SHOT: “Mask mandate in Massachusetts public schools extended to Nov. 1. But some schools can drop masks earlier,” by Kay Lazar, Boston Globe: “State education officials on Monday extended the indoor mask mandate in Massachusetts public schools until at least Nov. 1, a decision that sparked frustration among some parents and infectious disease doctors, though for very different reasons. The extension provides the option for middle and high schools where 80 percent or more of their students and staff are vaccinated to lift the mandate well before Nov. 1."

– CHASER: "As School Year Begins, Parent Groups Are Suing To Block Mandatory Masking," by Max Larkin, WBUR: "In the past week, parents seeking to overturn the mandate have filed at least six suits in the state’s superior courts. The first cases are set to begin on Wednesday morning in Dedham and Woburn."

– SHOT: “Charlie Baker downplays claim that ‘dozens’ of Massachusetts state police troopers are resigning over his vaccine mandate,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “Gov. Charlie Baker says he isn’t too concerned about the Massachusetts state police union’s claims that ‘dozens’ of troopers are resigning in the wake of the administration’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for state employees. ... Baker suggested the primary reason for any such exodus was ‘demography,’ as baby boomers naturally age out of the force and said the state would ‘recruit aggressively to refill the ranks.’

– CHASER: “Massachusetts State Police aware of only 1 possible resignation over vaccine mandate, source says,” by Karen Anderson, WCVB: “...a source within the Massachusetts State Police told 5 Investigates that the department is only aware of one person who has submitted paperwork to resign as a result of the COVID-19 vaccine mandate.

– “Gov. Baker says Massachusetts is well-prepared to meet demand for Pfizer COVID-19 booster shots,” by Sharman Sacchetti, WCVB: “‘By the middle of October, Baker expects the state to have the capacity to administer as many as 300,000 Pfizer booster shots per week.

– “Massachusetts poised to extend paid leave for Covid shots into 2022,” by Steph Solis, Boston Business Journal: “The House and Senate swiftly enacted a bill to extend the paid leave policy until April 2022. ... Baker did not say whether he would support the bill ... but noted he had been willing to sign the Covid paid sick leave provision the first time around, and that vaccine access is crucial to help reduce Covid-related illnesses in Massachusetts.

FROM THE HUB

 “Some advocates and experts push back against sheriff’s Mass. & Cass proposal,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “Some civil rights advocates and public health experts are calling the Suffolk sheriff’s proposal to use one of his buildings as a treatment center to alleviate the suffering in Boston’s Mass. and Cass area deeply misguided and unjust."

– “Killings soared in U.S., but not in Boston; see latest crime statistics,” by Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “Black voters are on the line in the race for Boston mayor,” by Meghan E. Irons and Andrew Ryan, Boston Globe: “Two weeks after the preliminary election extinguished the hopes of three Black candidates vying for the city’s top job, [Annissa] Essaibi George, who is Arab American, and [Michelle] Wu, who is Asian American, are in a full courtship of the Black vote. The two at-large councilors have been attending Sunday services in Black churches, targeting ethnic media, going on peace walks, and fanning out in key areas of the city wooing Black voters, many of whom supported a Black candidate for mayor in the preliminary election.

– “Mayoral Candidate Wu To Top Boston's November Ballot,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Michelle Wu's name will appear first on the Nov. 2 ballot in Boston's race for mayor, and Annissa Essaibi George will appear second. … David Halbert will top the list of eight [Boston City Council at-large] competitors who emerged from a field of 17 earlier this month.

– Halbert will be off the campaign trail for at least the next 10 days after his daughter tested positive for COVID-19 following a “recent exposure at her school.” She’s asymptomatic, and Halbert said he’s vaccinated, has no symptoms and has not tested positive. But he’s staying home out of an “abundance of caution.” Tweet.

– City Councilor Andrea Campbell told WBUR’s “Radio Boston” Monday that she plans to sit down with the two remaining candidates for mayor and gauge how they’ll “specifically meet the needs of residents of color, especially Black residents” and how they plan to deliver on “racial equity in health, housing, schools, public safety” and policing reform before deciding whether she'll endorse. Campbell, who's off the City Council come January, said she's “excited about the possibilities to continue to serve the city" but isn't rushing into anything.

FEELING '22

– HOLD MY BEER: Gone are the days of Sen. Elizabeth Warren drinking a beer on Instagram Live to seem relatable. Republican Kim Duffy of Quincy grabbed a Bud Light seltzer for a quite-lengthy video about why she’s running for governor. One reason? Town boards are “too small” and “I do everything big.”

– “$1,000-a-ticket fundraiser for Charlie Baker at One Dalton tower,” by Joe Dwinell and Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “A $1,000-a-ticket fundraiser for Gov. Charlie Baker is set for Tuesday eve at the swanky Four Seasons One Dalton Street as speculation builds a re-election announcement may be around the corner.” Baker told reporters Monday he’ll announce whether he’s running for a third term “whenever my wife and I decide.”

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– Voters head to the polls in Northampton and New Bedford today as preliminary election season comes to a close. Four candidates are vying to succeed Northampton Mayor David Narkewicz, per the Daily Hampshire Gazette’s Brian Steele. New Bedford voters will cast ballots in the Ward 5 City Council race, per the Standard Times.

– “What went wrong for Framingham’s 1st mayor?” by Michael Jonas, CommonWealth Magazine: “The problems have either been the result of self-inflicted wounds from a novice politician who resisted calls for greater communication and collaboration with other officials, or the product of the determined efforts of Framingham’s ‘old guard’ to trip up the city’s new leader right out of the gate. Whatever the reasons, there is little doubt that [Mayor Yvonne] Spicer is now an underdog heading into the November 2 final election, an unusual position for an incumbent officeholder.

FROM THE DELEGATION

– “Markey, Trahan Call On Facebook To ‘Completely Abandon’ Instagram For Kids Following Pause,” by CBS Boston/CNN: “Instagram is pressing pause on plans to develop a version of its service for kids under 13 after facing pressure from lawmakers to back down on the effort and new questions about the impact the photo-sharing service has on teen girls. … Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Lori Trahan, of Lowell, were among the lawmakers who questioned the plan to create a kids version of Instagram back in April. They issued a statement following Monday’s news of the pause, calling on Facebook to go even further.

DAY IN COURT

– “Judge tosses tax fraud charges from Jasiel Correia's conviction, but sends him a huge bill,” by Dan Medeiros, Herald News: “Disgraced former mayor Jasiel Correia II was acquitted of two more convictions pertaining to his income tax filings, according to documents filed by Judge Douglas Woodlock on Monday. But the judge also gave the government the ability to seize more than half a million dollars of his assets.

– “Prisoners from Spotlight investigation sue over alleged abuse at Souza-Baranowski,” by Mark Arsenault, Boston Globe: “Two incarcerated men at Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center, who featured heavily in a Globe Spotlight investigation this summer, on Monday filed a federal lawsuit accusing more than 30 state and prison officials of conspiring to punish prisoners across the institution with violence, in collective retribution for an assault on corrections officers in early 2020.

– “Allegations of misconduct landed high ranking court officers, Nicholas DeAngelis and Heather Brouillette, on administrative leave,” by Douglas Hook, MassLive.com.

– “Lawsuit seeking closure of Roderick L. Ireland Courthouse refiled before SJC,” by Stephanie Barry, Springfield Republican.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “Massachusetts motorists face gridlock as MBTA ridership on life-support,” by Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald: “Ridership on the MBTA has yet to recover as motorists take to the streets driving up traffic jams to prepandemic levels, forcing police to flip on the blue lights with speeders topping the list of offenders."

FROM THE 413

– “Racist emails sent to UMass’ Black student groups spur responses from university leaders, but some students say it wasn’t fast enough,” by Will Katcher, MassLive.com: “Dr. Nefertiti Walker, the UMass chief diversity officer, said Friday that her office knew of an email sent early in the school year and was working specifically with the group that received it. But as she became aware of additional messages sent to other student groups, it became clear that she needed to alert the larger school community to the incidents. … On Monday, UMass system president Marty Meehan released a statement calling the messages ‘appalling and disgusting.’

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Fed’s Rosengren Retiring Due to Health, Following Trading News,” by Craig Torres, Bloomberg: “Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Eric Rosengren will retire this week due to a health condition, a decision that also follows revelations about his trading activity last year. ... He was due to step down by June, when he would have reached the mandatory retirement age of 65. The Boston Fed, citing a longstanding kidney condition, announced the news in a statement Monday. It said the search was underway for his successor.

– “Cupcake investigation baked,” by Taylor Ann Bradford, Gloucester Times: “The outside investigation of an incident involving two Gloucester city councilors and a cupcake has been cooked, and when the final report was completed, it cost the city $15,089. A New Hampshire-based attorney has found that City Councilor Melissa Cox has violated the council’s Civility Resolution for calling Councilor Jen Holmgren ‘a cupcake’ during a public meeting and that Holmgren’s subsequent actions of eating a cupcake on screen was also in violation of the Civility Resolution.

– “Racism classification ignites Lowell City Council at-large debate,” by Alana Melanson, Lowell Sun: “A question about whether racism is a public health crisis early on in Monday’s debate for at-large City Council candidates got the forum off to a contentious start.

MEANWHILE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

– "Liz Cheney to speak at Loeb School First Amendment event" in November by Union Leader staff.

SPOTTED – Baker at a fundraiser for GOP state Rep. Jim Kelcourse, who's running for mayor of Amesbury.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Matt Corridoni, comms director for Rep. Jake Auchincloss, Ryan Migeed, Kevin Ready, Molly Crosby of Planned Parenthood, Simon Winchester, Calley Means, Stephanie Blumenthal and filmmaker Nadia Szold, whose “Larry Flynt for President” film won Best Documentary Feature this weekend at Mammoth Lakes Film Festival (h/t proud brother Daniel Lippman).

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