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Showing posts with label MARKEY. Show all posts

Thursday, July 22, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: NARAL SHAKEUP — House tees up SPORTS BETTING — Cape COVID CLUSTER grows

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by SimpliSafe

NARAL SHAKEUP — With states passing laws restricting access to abortions and a potential Supreme Court battle loomingNARAL Pro-Choice America is revamping its organizing model over the next couple years — and ditching its 11 independent state affiliates in favor of chapters that would be part of the national organization.

It’s a development that’s left the nation’s oldest abortion rights group in upheaval. NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts Executive Director Rebecca Hart Holder was quick to assure supporters that the influential and highly active Bay State affiliate, which has successfully pushed to expand abortion rights here including through the ROE Act , won’t be going anywhere. If anything, NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts might actually expand its purview.

“Our mission and our ability to do that work will not change,” she wrote in an email last week. “The fact is our organization already operated largely separate from our national organization. So while this may eventually impact our name, it won’t impact our work. In fact, it may give us an opportunity to enhance it and expand it.”

NARAL Pro-Choice Massachusetts is actively exploring its options, including the possibility of branching off from the national organization entirely and forming its own abortion-rights advocacy group — one that would potentially be active across New England, according to a person familiar with the group’s internal conversations.

And that could mean wading into New Hampshire, where GOP Gov. Chris Sununu signed a budget bill last month prohibiting abortions after 24 weeks of pregnancy and requiring all women receive ultrasounds before having the procedure. Democrats and pro-choice advocacy groups slammed the move — and vowed to hold Sununu accountable for it as top Republicans lobby the popular governor to run against Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan next year in an election that could tip the balance of power in the Senate.

GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Rep. Jim McGovern’s “Sicko Mode” ringtone wasn’t the only thing capturing attention yesterday.

McGovern backed up House Speaker Nancy Pelosi after she rejected two Republican picks to serve on the select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol attack who both voted against certifying the 2020 election for President Joe Biden.

He then issued a ringing rebuke of House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy for yanking all five Republicans from the panel and threatening to forge ahead with his own investigation if Pelosi doesn’t reverse course.

“This has to be a serious commission and it cannot be packed with people who embrace the ‘big lie’ people who are themselves liars,” McGovern, who came face-to-face with rioters on the House floor that fateful day, told me.

McCarthy “sabotaged a bipartisan deal, he walked away from it and he did so because he was trying to please a disgraced former president,” McGovern continued. “Kevin McCarthy’s not interested in the truth. He’s interested in the coverup. And to the speaker’s credit, she’s having none of it. Good for her, I support her.”

TODAY — is the last day to register for the first “VaxMillions” giveaway. Gov. Charlie Baker, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito and other administration officials make a MassTrails Grants Announcement at 10:45 a.m. in Sandwich, participate in a Cape housing roundtable at 1:45 p.m. in Falmouth and make a local business stop. Boston Acting Mayor Kim Janey announces new appointments to the Boston School Committee at 2:30 p.m. at City Hall, makes remarks at the Chester Square Neighbors Summer Festival at 5:30 p.m., and attends the West Roxbury Neighborhood Concert: Northeast Groove at 7:30 p.m. State Sen. Adam Hinds hosts a discussion with equal pay advocate Megan Driscoll at 1 p.m. on his Facebook page. Activists head to Sen. Ed Markey's Boston office at 2 p.m. to urge him to cut military spending and cooperate with China.

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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THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts coronavirus cases spike 457 as infections keep climbing,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The state reported a spike of 457 coronavirus cases Wednesday, as infections keep climbing amid the more contagious delta variant. The 457 COVID-19 case count is the first single-day tally that exceeded 400 since May 22.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Legislation on the move: Sports betting, T governance, vote-by-mail,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “The Massachusetts House teed up a bill authorizing sports betting for debate on Thursday, marking the second time the House will weigh in on the policy. … A supplemental budget bill that the House adopted Monday and the Senate accepted Wednesday will, if signed by Baker, create a new MBTA board of directors. … The budget bill would also extend voting by mail for municipal elections through December 15.”

– More: “Massachusetts House encounters diversity, equity questions as it debates sports betting bill,” by Steph Solis, MassLive.com: “[State Rep. Orlando Ramos] filed two amendments Wednesday that would add diversity, equity and inclusion requirements to the sports betting bill. Rep. Chynah Tyler, a Boston Democrat who heads the Black and Latino Legislative Caucus, backed the proposals.

– And more: “Red Sox, other pro sports teams back sports betting in or nearby stadiums,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “...the state’s pro sports franchises said they are looking for a piece of the action. Two of 28 amendments filed alongside the bill ahead of Thursday’s scheduled debate propose allowing gambling inside or nearby stadiums and would allow teams to apply for the licenses.

– “Sen. Adam Gomez calls for assurance DYS staff, juveniles are safe after death of employee James Hillman,” by Jeanette DeForge, Springfield Republican: “A state senator who heads the Joint Committee on Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities offered his sympathies to the family and coworkers of the 60-year-old Department of Youth Services worker who was attacked by a 16-year-old in custody and later died. Sen. Adam Gomez, D-Springfield, said on Wednesday that he had the ‘utmost confidence’ in the state police Detective Unit assigned to Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni’s office, and the office’s Murder and Juvenile Units, which are investigating the death of James Hillman.

– “Councilor Demands Answers on Former Judge’s Hiring,” by Matt Murphy, State House News Service (paywall): “A member of the Governor's Council asked Gov. Charlie Baker on Wednesday to fire a former judge Industrial Accident Board judge who landed a job at the Executive Office of Health and Human Services after her reappointment as a judge was withdrawn last year. Councilor Marilyn Devaney delivered a letter to Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito asking that Sabina Herlihy be removed from her position in the Baker administration."

– “State representative makes new push to end happy hour ban in Massachusetts,” by Peter Eliopoulos, WCVB: “There is a push on Beacon Hill to bring back ‘happy hour’ in Massachusetts, as the state's restaurants and bars have been banned from offering deals on after-work drinks for decades. State Rep. Mike Connolly added a provision to a larger piece of legislation that includes long-term support for restaurants following the COVID-19 pandemic.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Provincetown COVID-19 cluster grows to 256 confirmed cases, town manager says,” by Amanda Kaufman, Boston Globe: “A COVID-19 cluster in Provincetown that prompted officials there to issue an indoor mask-wearing advisory earlier this week has grown to 256 confirmed cases, a town official said. … Of those who tested positive, 190 are Massachusetts residents, 109 of whom live in Barnstable County, Morse said. The rest live outside Massachusetts. Those who were fully vaccinated and tested positive are largely experiencing mild symptoms, officials said.

– From the Cape Cod Times' Cynthia McCormick: “Cape officials suspect Delta variant behind recent COVID-19 outbreaks"

– “As checking vaccine ID cards becomes norm in Provincetown, experts predict other bars soon to follow,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “Revelers headed for a night out in Provincetown are being asked to carry two forms of ID following a sudden spike in cases — and public health experts say it might not be long before bars and nightclubs outside Cape Cod also start asking patrons to show CDC vaccine verification cards.

– From the Boston Globe's Jeremy C. Fox: "Nantucket advises face masks indoors as COVID-19 cases rise"

FROM THE HUB

– “Kim Janey to release Pat Rose recommendations ‘in coming days’ as Andrea Campbell criticizes,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Acting Mayor Kim Janey said she plans to release initial recommendations from the Pat Rose report ‘in the coming days’ as mayoral opponent Andrea Campbell criticizes the fact that the promised report is not yet out. Rose, a longtime Boston cop who rose to lead the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association union, is now behind bars as charges that he raped multiple children over the course of decades move forward.

– More: “Campbell Slams Janey’s Handling Of Rose Case, Renews Call For A Federal Investigation,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “Boston city councilor and mayoral candidate Andrea Campbell on Wednesday renewed her call for the U.S. Attorney’s office to investigate the Boston Police Department's handling of Patrick Rose, Sr., the former officer who remained on the force and became the patrolman's union president despite credible child abuse allegations against him as early as the 1990s.

 “Aiming to preserve certain affordable housing units, Boston council approves home rule petition,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “The Boston City Council on Wednesday passed a home rule petition aimed at preserving and restoring certain affordable housing units and discouraging the conversions of such homes into market-rate condominiums."

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– So much for the summer doldrums. Endorsements are flying in the Boston mayor's race. And, first in Playbook, Brookline state Rep. Tommy Vitolo is throwing his support behind City Councilor Michelle Wu.

"Michelle’s clear vision and regional collaboration has already made her a leading voice across the Commonwealth on the issues we both champion — a transportation system that works for everyone, housing affordability, and climate justice,” Vitolo said in a statement. “Her election as mayor will be transformative for Boston and its neighbors."

Wu and Acting Mayor Kim Janey have been locked in an endorsement battle of sorts over the past week. Janey's campaign last week rolled out endorsements from Suffolk County Register of Probate Felix D. Arroyo and City Councilor Ricardo Arroyo, followed by Jamaica Plain state Rep. Nika Elugardo on Monday and SEIU 32BJ on Tuesday. Wu released endorsements from Andover state Rep. Tram Nguyen on Monday, Boston Ward 5 Democrats and City Councilor Lydia Edwards yesterday and now Vitolo today.

– “As Free Transit Gains Momentum Across U.S., It's A Big Boston Mayoral Race Topic,” by Bruce Gellerman: “A growing number of systems across the state and country are experimenting with making public transit free in an effort to improve service, reduce pollution and aid low-income riders. … There's also growing momentum to bring free public transit to Boston. The issue has become a hot topic in the Boston mayoral campaign, where all the major candidates say they support some form of free fares.

– “‘Bostonians for Real Progress,’ another super PAC, surfaces,” by Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter: “The group on Wednesday filed paperwork with the independent Office of Campaign and Political Finance (OCPF), calling itself ‘Bostonians for Real Progress.’ It was not immediately clear which political candidate, if any, the group may support.

– “17 hopefuls make their cases for at-large seats on the City Council,” by Katie Trojano, Dorchester Reporter: “After the preliminary election, 8 of the 17 will continue campaigning for the 4 at-large seats on the 13-member body. The general election is set for Nov. 2."

PARTY POLITICS

– Gov. Charlie Baker is back in Massachusetts after a few days in Aspen, where he discussed policy issues facing GOP governors and political strategy for the 2022 election cycle at a meeting of the Republican Governors Association. Still no word, unsurprisingly, if Baker himself is running for reelection next year.

– Speaking of 2022: The state GOP’s push to get a voter ID law on the ballot next November moved forward yesterday, when the Committee to Bring Voter ID to Massachusetts filed paperwork with the state Office of Campaign and Political Finance.

MARKEYCHUSETTS

– “No red lines, just green lines: Ed Markey takes key role in Senate climate fight,” by Jess Bidgood and Jim Puzzanghera, Boston Globe: “With the climate crisis looming, Ed Markey devised a plan to tackle it with sweeping legislation that would have established new energy standards, cut carbon emissions, and seeded a greener economy. That was 2009, and the bill he pushed through the House as a congressman went on to wither on the vine in the Senate. Markey has since moved up to the Senate, where more than a decade later and with the climate threat graver than ever, the Massachusetts Democrat is seizing his best opportunity yet to get global warming provisions passed, maneuvering them into the infrastructure package slogging its way through a divided Congress.

 

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WARREN REPORT

– “Warren warns Biden administration on PPP fees,” by Maeve Sheehey, POLITICO: “Sen. Elizabeth Warren is pressing the Biden administration to explain the extent to which accountants and lawyers who helped businesses receive aid under the Paycheck Protection Program may have been shortchanged for their services.

DATELINE D.C.

– “Biden nominates Victoria Kennedy to be ambassador to Austria,” by Jim Puzzanghera and Emma Platoff, Boston Globe: “President Biden on Wednesday nominated Victoria Reggie Kennedy, the widow of the late senator Edward M. Kennedy, to be US ambassador to Austria. Kennedy, 67, is a senior counsel at the international law firm Greenberg Traurig and a longtime friend of Biden. If confirmed by the Senate, she would extend the Kennedy family’s diplomatic tradition, which began with its patriarch, Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., who served as ambassador to the United Kingdom.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “Seaplanes will finally launch from Boston Harbor in just a few weeks,” by Jon Chesto, Boston Globe: “Tailwind Air has won the race to bring commercial seaplane service to Boston Harbor. The Rye Brook, N.Y.-based airline is launching ticket sales this week for flights to New York that begin on Aug. 3.

DAY IN COURT

– “Hil Camara, ex-mayor Jasiel Correia's middleman in marijuana shakedown, sentenced,” by Lynne Sullivan, Linda Murphy and Jo C. Goode, Herald News: “Former Bristol County Training Consortium director Hildegar Camara, a co-conspirator of former mayor Jasiel Correia II who admitted to being a middleman who negotiated the shakedown of marijuana vendors looking to do business in Fall River, escaped jail time, instead receiving a sentence of three years of probation with 18 months of home confinement.

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

– “Feud between energy giants puts state’s climate goals at risk,” by David Abel, Boston Globe: “A proposal to build a $1 billion transmission line to bring hydropower from Canada to Massachusetts has survived years of thorny negotiations and court challenges to win critical state and federal permits. The 145-mile line, Governor Charlie Baker has said, is critical to curb the state’s reliance on fossil fuels and reduce emissions. But none of that matters if Avangrid, a Connecticut-based subsidiary of a massive Spanish energy company, can’t connect the line to New England’s power grid..."

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “With federal aid, small towns keep it simple,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Town administrators are poring over rules and figuring out what exactly they are eligible for. For many of the smallest towns, there is little talk of systemic change. Rather, the money is a vital resource to complete what is often a single project, something that would otherwise strain town and taxpayer budgets.

– “Striking nurses, St. Vincent talks to resume Thursday and Friday,” by Cyrus Moulton, Worcester Telegram & Gazette: “Nurses on strike and St. Vincent Hospital leaders are headed back to the table, as a federal mediator has scheduled face-to-face, all-day talks on Thursday and Friday. … The nurses’ strike will reach 137 days on Thursday, the longest strike nationally in more than a decade, according to the MNA. 

– 'Even the pandemic was easier:' Dreary weather hits some local businesses where it hurts,” by Marty Whitfill, Patriot Ledger: “Humid, wet weather on the South Shore has ruined many a picnic day and summer camp session so far this month, but for local business owners, the less than ideal weather is much more than just a bummer — it's a hit to their bottom line. Dozens of restaurants, ice cream shops, beer gardens, water rental shops and other businesses in local seaside towns like Hull rely on warm, sunny days to bring customers to the water and through their doors. But in a historically rainy July, those customers have been staying home more than usual.

MEDIA MATTERS

– “I just learned I only have months to live. This is what I want to say,” by Jack Thomas, Boston Globe: “As a teenager, I often wondered how my life would change if I knew that I would die soon. Morbid, perhaps, but not obsessed. Just curious. How does a person live with the knowledge that the end is coming? … After a week of injections, blood tests, X-rays, and a CAT scan, I have been diagnosed with cancer. It’s inoperable. Doctors say it will kill me within a time they measure not in years, but months. As the saying goes, fate has dealt me one from the bottom of the deck, and I am now condemned to confront the question that has plagued me for years: How does a person spend what he knows are his final months of life?

TRANSITIONS – Timothy J. Spiegel joins Boston law firm Davis Malm’s business practice area.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Rosemary Powers.

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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Wednesday, July 21, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: HAPPY HOUR comeback — COVID CASES on the RISE — Baker, lawmakers TUSSLE over FED AID — CAMPBELL’S NEW AD

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

Presented by SimpliSafe

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: CHEERS TO THAT — As bars and restaurants roar back to life, a strong majority of residents would like to see long-banned happy hours return along with them.

A new MassINC Polling Group survey shows 70% of Bay State residents would support allowing bars and restaurants to offer discounted after-work drinks again, while only 20% oppose the idea. Of that majority, 38% are strongly in favor of bringing back happy hour, and 32% are somewhat in favor of it.

Massachusetts banned happy hour in 1984 after a young woman was killed in a drunk-driving incident on the South Shore. Efforts to ease the restrictions on discounted drinks haven’t progressed on Beacon Hill. Gov. Charlie Baker said in 2015 that he’s got “no problem with the fact that we don’t discount alcohol” even if it makes him an “old fuddy-duddy.”

But residents seem ready to raise their glasses to happy hour once more, per the MassINC poll of 1,453 residents that was conducted for the Mass Reboot podcast , a weekly series about restarting Massachusetts post-pandemic. The fourth episode, “Food,” will be out later today.

The poll also showed similar majorities support continuing to-go alcoholic beverage sales and keeping expanded outdoor dining — even if it comes at the expense of parking. Sixty-four percent of those surveyed support keeping to-go cocktails and other drinks, a pandemic-era policy now extended through May 1, 2022, compared to 27% who oppose the practice. A larger majority, 72%, support eating up street space for outdoor dining, while 19% are against it. The state eased permitting for expanded outdoor dining through April 1.

"People are thinking differently about restaurants now and are supportive of new models,” MassINC Polling Group President Steve Koczela told me. “This includes things like expanded outdoor dining and cocktails to-go as well as happy hour."

MASS GOP, JIM LYONS is embracing ANTI-VAX IGNORANCE - THERE IS NO EXCUSE!

This is the tragic cost of ignorance and misinformation.

Let's depend on FACTS, RESEARCH and SCIENCE.

There is no indication that other than speaking loudly and spreading misinformation, Linda Zuern had any science background. The ANTI-VAXXERS are spreading the virus and jeopardizing others.
Not only was Linda Zuern unvaccinated, but went before a pubic meeting:

"At a Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates meeting in December, Zuern spoke about a report on the use of hydroxychloroquine as a treatment of the COVID-19 virus. Zuern questioned why some doctors were not allowed to use the medicine on patients. "

PUBLISHED IN JAMA (there are other studies as well):
“In the well-conducted clinical trials published to date, hydroxychloroquine has been evaluated in a wide variety of populations, ranging from patients with severe illness to individuals at risk of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, in whom the drug was used as primary prophylaxis; these studies failed to show any beneficial effect of the drug.”
LINK


This comment from the NY POST, the MURDOCH TABLOID:

The same kind of misinformation could have potentially prevented smallpox from being eradicated in the US, Fauci said.
“If you look at the extraordinary historic success in eradicating smallpox and eliminating polio from most of the world, and we’re on the brink of eradicating polio, if we had the pushback for vaccines the way we’re seeing on certain media, I don’t think it would have been possible at all to not only eradicate smallpox,” Fauci said.


GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. A Bourne community activist and Donald Trump supporter who died of severe complications from Covid-19 last week ended up trending on Twitter Tuesday after users seized on her reportedly unvaccinated status to rip Trumpers for eschewing the shots.

Linda Zuern, a stalwart conservative and respected community member who held leadership positions on local Republican committees and served on several town boards, died at Brigham and Women’s Hospital on Friday. She was transported there by MedFlight from Cape Cod in June, and had been in a coma on a ventilator, according to the Cape Cod Times. She was 70.

Zuern was a member of the United Cape Patriots, a self-described “grassroots conservative movement” on Cape Cod that frequently held standouts in support of Trump. A handful of its members protested the state-sponsored “VaxBus” when it rolled into Provincetown last week, where Covid-19 cases are on the rise. The group claims on its website that it’s “not anti-Vaxx” but is “pro medical freedom, and believe people need all the facts before they take an experimental vaccine that is racking up a spike in bad health outcomes.”

As Zuern’s name trended alongside “Unvaccinated Trump” — a reference to his supporters, the ex-president is vaccinated — MassGOP Chair Jim Lyons ripped the Twitter commentators’ “lack of respect and common decency.” He praised Zuern as a “great lady who served her community in so many different ways” and who was “unafraid to stand for her conservative values.”

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, state and local officials make a Shared Streets Program grant announcement at 9 a.m. in Dedham. Boston City Councilor Lydia Edwards endorses colleague Michelle Wu for mayor at 10:30 a.m. at LoPresti Park. City Councilor and Boston mayoral hopeful Andrea Campbell hosts a news conference at 11:30 a.m. at City Hall Plaza to demand the release of the city’s Patrick Rose report. State Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz hosts a virtual town hall on pandemic recovery for Second Suffolk District residents at 5:30 p.m. Boston Acting Mayor Kim Janey speaks at a virtual meeting for Mattapan residents on vaccine distribution at 6 p.m.

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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THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts coronavirus cases rise 366, the highest single-day count since late May,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The 366 COVID cases are the first single-day infection tally that has surpassed 300 cases since May 26. … The seven-day average of cases is now 218 daily cases, which is more than triple the 64 daily cases reported in late June."

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– State lawmakers made clear yesterday they’re in no rush to dole out nearly $5 billion in remaining American Rescue Plan Act funding, even as Gov. Charlie Baker said “time is of the essence” to address urgent needs and community advocates have previously urged expediency . At least one lawmaker indicated hearings on how best to spend the federal aid could stretch into the fall. And economic experts who testified yesterday largely gave credence to the legislature’s slow-roll plan.

– Go in-depth with the Boston Globe’s Emma Platoff: “In hearing, Baker tells Legislature ‘time is of the essence’ for spending federal COVID aid.”

– And the Boston Herald’s Erin Tiernan: “Economic experts back Massachusetts Legislature’s slow approach to spending federal coronavirus relief dollars.”

– More: “Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker’s $186 million ARPA investment leaves little for COVID variant response, top state Democrats say,” by Steph Solis, MassLive.com: “Gov. Charlie Baker has already announced plans to dedicate $186 million — nearly all of the federal funding under his control — to skills training, hospital relief and mental health services. Now Democratic legislative leaders are questioning the Republican governor’s decision, saying the $200 million at the Baker administration’s disposal should have been set aside in case Massachusetts faces a COVID variant breakout or a different public health emergency.

– “Worker advocates blast state — again — for failing to protect workers from COVID,” by Katie Johnston, Boston Globe: “A group of labor advocates is once again decrying the state’s inaction on COVID-19 workplace safety, citing its decisions to drop Massachusetts regulations on masking, distancing, and sanitization and to disregard new federal protections for public-sector health care workers. The Department of Labor Standards is holding a public hearing Wednesday about eliminating the state regulations, and the Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety & Health and a group of unions plan to testify about the dangers of potentially exposing workers to the virus.

– “Activists seek moratorium on prison construction,” by Lily Robinson, CommonWealth Magazine: “The bill being pushed by [State Sen. Jo Comerford], formerly incarcerated people, and prison justice advocates would implement a five-year moratorium on investments in incarceration. That includes studying, designing, expanding, or building new jails and prisons within the state. The bill comes in response to a move by the state to invest $50 million to construct a new women’s prison to replace the deteriorating MCI-Framingham.

– “Budget provision sets standard on visa document,” by Sarah Betancourt, CommonWealth Magazine: “The provision, initially filed by Sen. Mark Montigny of New Bedford and Reps. Tram Nguyen of Andover and Patricia Haddad of Somerset, requires state agencies and local law enforcement offices to assist immigrants who testify in criminal cases or are victims of human trafficking and domestic violence with documentation they need to apply for two types of visas.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Cape Cod is weathering a surge in COVID cases at the height of tourism season — including many among vaccinated people,” by Kay Lazar and Camille Caldera, Boston Globe: “State officials dispatched teams of health workers to Cape Cod and issued new safety guidance amid worrisome signs Tuesday that COVID cases are on the rise across the renowned summer playground. Despite having one of the most vaccinated populations in the state, Cape Cod now has the highest rate of new COVID cases in Massachusetts. Health officials are battling an outbreak in Provincetown that has infected at least 132 people since July 1 — most of them vaccinated — as well as a cluster in a Yarmouth nursing home, where as many as 33 residents and staff are infected, many of them already vaccinated, too.

– “Provincetown coronavirus cluster: Boston residents who visited Cape town should get tested and avoid groups, city says,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “Boston residents who recently visited Provincetown are urged to get tested for coronavirus and stay away from groups in the wake of the Cape town’s COVID cluster. At least 35 virus cases in Boston residents have been traced back to the Provincetown cluster of 132 positive cases. Of the 35 Boston cases, the ‘overwhelming majority’ have been people who are fully vaccinated...

– “‘Shockingly low’: How Mattapan came to have Boston’s lowest COVID-19 vaccination rate,” by Christopher Gavin, Boston.com: “In Mattapan, where Black residents account for approximately 75 percent of the neighborhood’s population — a greater percentage than anywhere else in Boston — a mere 39 percent of all individuals are fully vaccinated, less than in any other neighborhood, city data shows.

– “More than half of Mass. children ages 12 to 15 have received a COVID-19 shot, but push may have plateaued,” by Camille Caldera, Boston Globe: “Ten weeks after they became eligible, 55 percent of children ages 12 to 15 in Massachusetts have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. While that’s higher than the national average, local disease experts are concerned that vaccinations for that age range are starting to plateau in the critical run-up to the start of school in the fall.

FROM THE HUB

 “Boston police emphasize de-escalation, disengagement in mental health calls,” by Tonya Alanez, Boston Globe: “If denied entry, disengage. If a person facing involuntary hospitalization becomes combative or refuses services, disengage. No more restraints. No more forced entry. Leave and try again later. De-escalation is the essence of the Boston Police Department’s new rules of engagement, distributed departmentwide last week, for interacting with people in mental health crises."

– “What Would It Take for Boston to Become a Car-Free City?” by Rachel Slade, Boston Magazine: “To entice the newly liberated worker and the newly hybrid company, Boston will need to become truly livable. That means abandoning its midcentury car-centric mentality for real. To free us from cars, policymakers will need to nurture urban life at a much more granular level and shift resources from drivability to livability. With a crowded mayor’s race under way, we’ve got a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reshape the city into a place we can call home.

– “After a year of tensions with district leaders, Boston teachers propose new contract to improve working conditions,” by Jenna Russell, Boston Globe: “With weeks to go until the start of the new school year — and the expiration of their current labor contract — the Boston Teachers Union unveiled a sweeping package of proposals for new policies and investments aimed at upgrading aging school buildings, improving working conditions for educators, and better supporting the system’s most vulnerable students.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– The “Better Boston” super PAC backing Andrea Campbell in the Boston mayor’s race is out with a new ad highlighting how she overcame the “hard” circumstances of her childhood to graduate from Princeton and become the first Black woman to serve as Boston City Council president. “Now she’s running for mayor because to Andrea, helping people is personal,” the narrator says in the 30-second spot.

“The System,” which was uploaded to the PAC’s YouTube page on Tuesday and was seen on television that night, follows “Personal,” which was released back in June. It wasn’t immediately clear how much the PAC spent on the new ad. The group plans to be up on broadcast and cable through the summer.

– “Owning a home in Boston is hard. Would-be mayors — all homeowners themselves — aim to make it easier,” by Andy Rosen, Boston Globe: “In a city where two-thirds of residents are renters and housing costs are through the roof, the major candidates say their journey to homeownership — and the stability it represents — informs their efforts to help more people put down roots here and build the wealth that can help them to stay.

– “Heavily Latino SEIU Backs Janey For Boston Mayor,” by Saraya Wintersmith, GBH News: “[32BJ SEIU] has endorsed Acting Mayor Kim Janey’s bid to win a full, four-year term. It’s a move that could improve Janey’s standing among Latino and immigrant voters, add volunteers to her ranks and provide additional campaign funds."

– "Edwards, influential city councilor from East Boston, endorses Wu for mayor," by Milton J. Valencia, Boston Globe: "City Councilor Michelle Wu has won the endorsement of fellow Councilor Lydia Edwards, a close colleague and a powerful political ally from East Boston, a strategic neighborhood in what has become a heated race for mayor."

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: City Councilor Ricardo Arroyo has endorsed Ruthzee Louijeune for Boston City Council at-large. "Born and raised in the neighborhoods of Mattapan and Hyde Park, which I represent, Ruthzee’s life experiences and her professional track record leave no doubt she’ll be an excellent public servant," Arroyo said in a statement through the campaign.

 

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FEELING '22

– “Charlie Baker’s Cape Cod fundraiser back on the books for September,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “A high-profile Cape Cod fundraiser for Gov. Charlie Baker is back on the books, the Herald has learned, rescheduled for September after an erroneous invitation forced the campaign to cancel. The soiree for both Baker and Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito at public relations executive George Regan’s Mashpee estate is now scheduled for Sept. 2, campaign adviser Jim Conroy confirmed.

FROM THE DELEGATION

– “Sen. Ed Markey, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez press Congress to work Civilian Climate Corps into final budget reconciliation bill,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive.com: “The final annual budget bill should include a new Civilian Climate Corps to create one million-plus union jobs that bolster energy and climate projects across the country, according to more than 80 lawmakers, including Sen. Ed Markey of Massachusetts."

– “Elizabeth Warren says Jeff Bezos 'forgot to thank all the hardworking Americans who actually paid taxes' after his space flight,” by Azmi Haroun and Juliana Kaplan, Insider: “Sen. Elizabeth Warren took a jab at Jeff Bezos after the world's richest man returned to Earth from his suborbital space trip with Blue Origin."

DATELINE D.C.

– The CEO and co-founder of ARCHANGELS, a women-owned Massachusetts startup that works to support unpaid caregivers, is urging Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey to make sure investments in home and community based services are included in the Senate's upcoming $3.5 trillion spending plan.

Seventy percent of caregivers reported adverse mental health symptoms ranging from anxiety to suicidal thoughts in a nationwide study of the effects of Covid-19 on unpaid caregivers by ARCHANGELS and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Alexandra Drane said in a letter to the lawmakers. She's hoping the senators, who already support President Joe Biden's plan to invest more in the care economy, will make sure “more funding and resources can be delivered to our caregivers now.”

EX-PATS

– “Tom Brady returns to the White House — and gets a little political,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “Recalling the Bucs’ run to upset the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl next to President Joe Biden, the 43-year-old quarterback jokingly compared the team’s doubters to the strikingly large percentage of Americans who believe Trump’s unfounded claims that widespread voter fraud swung the 2020 election.” Labor Secretary Marty Walsh was there, too.

FROM THE 413

– “Southwick petition for massive online car dealership withdrawn: Carvana pledges to look elsewhere,” by Jeanette DeForge, Springfield Republican: “Facing massive opposition and possible lawsuits, an online used car distribution center withdrew its plans Tuesday night to build a 200,000 square-foot business on a 137-acre tobacco field in a rowdy meeting that drew cheers and jeers from a large and sometimes unruly crowd."

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Harvard report: Pandemic affect on kids shows negative academic and social impacts,” by Alexi Cohan, Boston Herald: “Parents overwhelmingly feel as though their child’s academic and social development has been negatively impacted by the pandemic, according to a Harvard report, and even toddlers had more temper tantrums and sadness.

– “How Mass. May Use Millions From Opioid Settlements,” by Martha Bebinger, WBUR: “An advisory group has started hashing out criteria for how the state will use millions of dollars that has already started flowing from multiple lawsuits stemming from the opioid crisis. Counseling for children who’ve lost a parent to overdose. Mobile vans distributing clean needles and treatment to rural areas. More job training for former drug users coming out of jail. Recovery programs with black, brown and multilingual staff. Those are a few of the dozens of ways the group suggests..."

– “Haverhill Mayor Says He Supports Overhauling City’s Electoral System,” by Jenifer B. McKim, GBH News: “Haverhill Mayor James Fiorentini said Tuesday he plans to re-open talks with city councilors about overhauling the city’s entirely at-large election process, one day after receiving a letter from a group of civil rights lawyers seeking to diversify the city’s political leadership and threatening litigation.

MEDIA MATTERS

– IN MEMORIAM: “WBZ Mourns Loss Of Longtime Colleague And Friend Jim 'Murph' Murphy.”

TRANSITIONS – Valerie Buvat de Virginy has joined Assistant House Speaker Rep. Katherine Clark’s staff as press assistant. She is an alum of Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s presidential campaign in Iowa. Alex Vuskovic, former campaign manager for Becky Grossman for Congress, joins Deliver Strategies as vice president.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to NBC 10 Boston digital producer Mary Markos, Dracut state Rep. Colleen Garry, former MassDems chair Phil Johnston, Sara Seager and Rachel Nieves.

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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