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Showing posts with label STATE TROOPERS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label STATE TROOPERS. Show all posts

Friday, December 17, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Healey makes a call

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

PROGRAMMING NOTE: We've made it to the last Playbook of the year! Massachusetts Playbook won’t publish from Monday, Dec. 20, through Friday, Dec. 31. I’ll be back in your inbox on Monday, Jan. 3. A heartfelt thank you to all who have welcomed me as your new Playbook scribe this year. I hope you have a happy and healthy rest of your holiday season. Send your tips and scoops to lkashinsky@politico.com and I'll see you in 2022!

SCOOPLET: MONEY TALKS — State Attorney General Maura Healey is planning a call with supporters and donors this morning as they — and we — wait for her to say whether she’s running for governor next year.

A senior advisor confirmed to POLITICO last night that the call is part of Healey's end-of-year fundraising push and said she is not expected to make any announcements while on the call. The advisor declined to say which office she’s seeking in 2022.

Healey also made another hire recently — finance consultant Kate Kelly, who served in the same role on Boston City Councilor Andrea Campbell’s mayoral campaign. Kelly joins veteran Democratic strategist Mindy Myers, who POLITICO first reported has been brought on as a general consultant.

Healey’s staffing up and hitting the fundraising circuit. Yet, with $3.3 million already in the bank, money coming in from at least four fundraisers this month, and other potential heavyweights yet to really come out of the woodwork, Healey has the leeway to wait out the holidays before making an announcement in the new year.

GOOD FRIDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Governor hopeful Danielle Allen’s climate plan is here, and Playbook has a first look.

Allen is calling for a 100 percent renewable energy economy and decarbonization by 2040. The Harvard professor wants to adopt a Zero-Waste strategy for the state, divest pensions and other state-held funds from fossil fuels, and says her administration won’t approve fossil-fuel infrastructure construction projects.

She’s also pushing for electrified public transit, congestion pricing and regional public transit systems with subsidized fares. Accelerating upgrades to school buildings, retrofitting homes and developing a green-jobs plan are all among her top priorities. All three major Democrats currently in the race have now released climate plans.

TODAY — Former Boston city councilors Tom Keene and Tito Jackson are on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” at 3 p.m.

THIS WEEKEND — UMass President Marty Meehan discusses tuition and fee hikes, race relations on campus and Covid-19 on WBZ’s “Keller @ Large” at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Rep. Richard Neal is this week’s guest on WCVB’s “On the Record” at 11 a.m. Sunday.

 

JOIN TODAY FOR A WOMEN RULE 2021 REWIND AND A LOOK AHEAD AT 2022: Congress is sprinting to get through a lengthy and challenging legislative to-do list before the end of the year that has major implications for women’s rights. Join Women Rule editor Elizabeth Ralph and POLITICO journalists Laura Barrón-LópezEleanor MuellerElena Schneider and Elana Schor for a virtual roundtable that will explore the biggest legislative and policy shifts in 2021 affecting women and what lies ahead in 2022. REGISTER HERE.

 
 


THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts coronavirus cases surge 5,883, the highest daily count in 11 months,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “The daily count of 5,883 new virus cases was the highest daily case total since Jan. 9’s tally of 7,110 infections. Thursday’s report is the seventh day of more than 5,000 daily cases so far this month.”

– “New COVID cases reported in 7,223 students, 1,153 staffers at Massachusetts schools as infections increase statewide,” by Melissa Hanson, MassLive: “[T]he rate of COVID-19 cases currently stands at 0.79% among students and 0.82% among staffers, according to DESE’s report.”

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

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Hugs, Tears As Gold Star Tree Tradition Resumes,” by Sam Doran, State House News Service (paywall): “With small color photographs of their loved ones looking down from the large Christmas tree, Gold Star families gathered next to the State House on Thursday for a cathartic recognition of another holiday season -- or in some cases, the first -- without their military family member.”

– “Report finds Hispanic residents have harder time getting health care,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Hispanic residents in Massachusetts have experienced some of the most significant struggles in obtaining timely, affordable health care in an appropriate setting, according to a study released Thursday by the state-run Center for Health Information and Analysis.”

– “A new state commission aims to unite the diverse disability community,” by Meghan Smith, GBH News: “While there has been some progress in recent years, disability advocates want to build on the momentum of the social justice reckoning that rippled through America last year to enact change in Massachusetts. Part of that work will be undertaken by the newly formed Commission on the Status of Persons with Disabilities, established by a 2020 law that aimed to expand equity and racial justice in Massachusetts.”

– “A teary Charlie Baker urges action one last time on dangerousness and revenge porn loopholes,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com: “The governor’s emotional remarks came during a roundtable discussion at the Plymouth Public Library on Wednesday, during which his administration announced it was — for the third time — introducing legislation aimed at providing new protections to survivors of crimes like domestic violence, sexual assault, and the harmful distribution of explicit images, sometimes referred to as revenge porn.”

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Nearly $160 million later, the state’s COVID-19 contact tracing program is ending,” by Kay Lazar, Boston Globe: “The Massachusetts program that tracks down people who were exposed to COVID-19, one of the most ambitious state initiatives in the country, is wrapping up as health leaders shift priorities and precious dollars to vaccinating and testing residents amid another surge of new cases and rising hospitalizations."

– “Gov. Baker resists imposing Massachusetts indoor mask mandate despite COVID spike, pressure from health professionals,” by Alison Kuznitz, MassLive: “Gov. Charlie Baker on Thursday again balked at the prospect of implementing a statewide mask mandate, instead empowering local officials to impose their own slate of COVID-19 restrictions as needed. Baker’s comments came hours after top medical experts, testifying to state lawmakers during a COVID-19 oversight hearing, resoundingly endorsed a renewed mask mandate…”

– “Hospital group boss cites ‘terrifying increase’ in hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Mass.,” by Travis Andersen, Boston Globe: “The head of an influential hospital trade group told a legislative committee Thursday that the state has had a ‘terrifying increase’ in the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients over the past month, as medical facilities are contending with shortages in staffing and available beds.”

– “Vaccine mandates kick in as hospitals struggle with staffing,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “Douglas Brown, president of UMass Memorial Community Hospitals, put it bluntly: ‘We’re going through the worst staffing crisis in our history.’ Yet, UMass fired more than 200 employees earlier this month, many of them working in clinical care. The reason: those employees did not comply with the health system’s mandate to get vaccinated against COVID-19.”

– “How Are Free Home COVID Tests Being Distributed? Mass. Cities Are Being Strategic,” by Abbey Niezgoda and Oscar Margain, NBC10 Boston.

– “With resurgent COVID, Baystate Health’s Dr. Mark Keroack says region faces crisis, urges state impose mask mandate,” by Jim Kinney, Springfield Republican.

– “Amid surge in patients, hospitals treat more people at home,” by Priyanka Dayal McCluskey, Boston Globe.

FROM THE HUB

– "Boston police bought spy tech with a pot of money hidden from the public," by Shannon Dooling and Christine Willmsen, WBUR: "Across the country, some law enforcement agencies have deployed controversial surveillance technology to track cell phone location and use. ... in 2019 the Boston Police Department bought the device known as a cell site simulator — and tapped a hidden pot of money that kept the purchase out of the public eye."

– “In less than a year, the number of Boston hospital chiefs on corporate boards is down by half,” by Liz Kowalczyk, Boston Globe: “The new heads of Boston Children’s, Mass. General, and Brigham and Women’s differ from their predecessors in deciding not to serve on paid corporate boards. But it’s unclear if the change signals that hospital trustees plan to tighten policies.”

– “Reaction to Boston’s immediate Mass. and Cass plan is decidedly mixed,” by Danny McDonald, Boston Globe: “A day after Mayor Michelle Wu’s administration detailed its immediate plan to find people who are living at Mass. and Cass shelter and treatment help, that news sparked mixed reactions by those who call the streets home. Some welcomed the mayor’s plans, saying they would like to have warm shelter and a roof over their head amid the New England winter. Others were indifferent. Yet others voiced skepticism, asking pointed questions about how the city planned to move people to housing and what services would be offered that don’t already exist.”

– "After years of deliberation, 3 Boston schools will close this summer," by Max Larkin, WBUR: "Next semester will be the last at two of Boston’s few remaining standalone middle schools — the Irving in Roslindale and the Timilty in Roxbury. The city’s school committee also voted to close the Jackson-Mann K-8 School in Allston, long plagued by its deteriorating physical plant."

– “Idea to convert Charlestown High School called ‘hostile takeover’,” by Marie Szaniszlo, Boston Herald: “Teachers, parents and their advocates are blasting a proposal to close Charlestown High School and convert it into an ‘innovation and inclusion school’ in what they are calling an attempt at ‘school gentrification.’”

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– NEW: With Boston City Councilor Lydia Edwards likely headed for the state Senate, Gabriela Coletta , a former Edwards chief of staff who’s now leading the New England Aquarium’s “waterfront for all” efforts, is considering running for her former boss’s seat. “I’m humbled by the amount of encouraging texts and calls I’m getting,” Coletta told me, adding she expects “to have more to say soon.”

Sal LaMattina, a former city councilor whose retirement paved the way for Edwards’ election to the District 1 City Council seat in 2017, is talking to supporters about potentially running for his old seat, per Universal Hub. Coletta and LaMattina would join Tania Del Rio, who told the Boston Herald earlier this week she’s seeking the seat.

– SOMERVILLE DISPATCHES: Somerville Mayor-elect Katjana Ballantyne has formed an advisory committee focused on pandemic recovery, climate change and affordable housing. Katie Brillantes is leading the 17-member committee, which includes Stephenson Aman, Michael Brown, Bonnie Denis, Howard Horton, Maggie Joseph, Tom Lamar, Daniele Lantagne, Paula Magnelli, Tony Pini, Gonzalo Puigbo, Ellin Reiser, Juliette Rooney-Varga, Letissia Scott, Bill Shelton, Larry Yu and Renee Scott.

FEELING '22

– “Why hasn't Maura Healey announced a run for governor yet? Because she doesn't have to,” by Mike Deehan, GBH News: “[State Attorney General Maura] Healey won't need to explicitly declare herself a candidate for governor to beat out any other Democrats when it comes to fundraising. At the end November, the three prominent Democrats already running for governor reported a cumulative $617,334 in campaign cash-on-hand. Healey reported having over $3,300,000 on hand. ‘It's the closest thing to a coronation I've ever seen,’ said one State House Democrat, a Healey supporter."

– “Auchincloss creates new PAC to support state, local candidates in Mass.,” by Ted Nesi, WPRI: “Massachusetts Congressman Jake Auchincloss keeps expanding his fundraising weapons as he wraps up his first year on Capitol Hill. The first-term Democrat filed paperwork on Monday with the Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance creating a new organization, the Jake Auchincloss 495 Political Action Committee.”

– PPAF ENDORSES AUCHINCLOSS: Planned Parenthood Action Fund endorsed Rep. Jake Auchincloss for reelection as part of its first wave of House incumbent endorsements for 2022. Auchincloss faces two Republican challengers, Emily Burns and former rival Julie Hall. Democrat Jesse Mermell is still considering a primary rematch in 2022, per a source familiar with her thinking.

 Attleboro mayor heading to DC to discuss run for higher office,” by Ted Nesi, WPRI: “Attleboro Mayor Paul Heroux is traveling to Washington on Friday as he explores a run for higher office next year, 12 News has confirmed. In an interview, Heroux said he will be ‘meeting with a couple of organizations’ in D.C. as he considers his options.”

– NOT FEELING '22: Angel Donahue-Rodriguez, the deputy chief of staff at the MBTA, has decided not to run for lieutenant governor "after much thought and consideration, and conversations with my family."

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “T’s largest union signs new contract,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “The MBTA board of directors on Thursday approved a new two-year contract with its largest union that provides 2.5 percent annual wage increases and one-time allotments per employee of $2,000 in pandemic pay and $2,500 for waiver of a job protection rule negotiated by the union in 2016. … Another provision allows the transit authority to pay signing bonuses to new employees, which had been prohibited previously.”

– “Support for North Adams-to-Boston rail service is clear. But, Rep. Barrett asks: Does the study need to take 18 months?” by Danny Jin, Berkshire Eagle: “State Rep. John Barrett III, D-North Adams, said he wants the state Department of Transportation to get the 18-month study finished in less time. … State lawmakers, regional planners and transportation advocates are eager to resurrect North Adams-to-Boston rail service, which ended in 1958.”

– “Legislators push for towns' flexibility to lower speed limits on Massachusetts roads,” by Bob Seay, GBH News: “Municipal leaders are asking the Massachusetts Legislature’s Joint Transportation Committee to make it easier for towns to lower their speed limits, saying the current process is time-consuming and costly.”

WARREN REPORT

– “Sen. Elizabeth Warren renews push to fight substance use disorder epidemic ‘head on’ with $125B bill to expand treatment, mental health support across US,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive: “On Thursday, [Sen. Elizabeth] Warren, Rep. Carolyn Maloney and Sen. Tammy Baldwin reintroduced the Comprehensive Addiction Resources Emergency (CARE) Act, which Warren and the late Rep. Elijah Cummings first pitched to Congress in 2018. Warren’s team described the initiative to MassLive as the most ambitious of its kind: a nationwide effort to expand access to treatment and recovery, mental health support, early intervention and harm reduction backed by $125 billion in funding over the next decade…”

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

– “Maine judge deals blow to Mass. climate change plan,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Magazine: “A Maine judge dealt a blow on Thursday to a key Massachusetts initiative to address climate change by importing hydroelectricity via a 145-mile transmission line running from Quebec down to Lewiston, Maine. Judge Michael Duddy refused to issue a preliminary injunction barring a voter-approved law blocking the transmission line from taking effect on Sunday. The decision means construction of the $1 billion transmission line cannot resume unless Duddy’s decision is reversed or a formal trial on the constitutionality of the law is held.”

WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

– "That Job at Harvard? It’s Not Real," by Jeffrey Gettleman, Kate Conger and Suhasini Raj, New York Times: "For over a year, prominent women in India, including journalists, were reeled into a labyrinthine online scam, offering work with Harvard University. Who targeted them, and why, is a mystery."

– “Biden awards Congressional Gold Medal to Lawrence Marine, 12 other service members killed in evacuation from Afghanistan,” by Meghan Ottolini, Boston Herald: “Marine Corps Sgt. Johanny Rosario Pichardo of Lawrence was among the 13 ‘heroes’ killed in the Afghan evacuation to be honored with the Congressional Gold Medal."

– "Judge Overturns Purdue Pharma’s Opioid Settlement," by Jan Hoffman, New York Times: "A federal judge on Thursday evening unraveled a painstakingly negotiated settlement between Purdue Pharma and thousands of state, local and tribal governments that had sued the maker of the prescription painkiller OxyContin for the company’s role in the opioid epidemic, saying that the plan was flawed in one critical area."

– "All state troopers given body cameras after overtime scandal," by the Associated Press: "Massachusetts State Police announced Thursday that all of its troopers have been assigned body cameras, a reform that was ordered in 2018 after the agency was rocked by an overtime scandal."

– “Perry: Hazard pay return 'not falling on the taxpayers – yet',” by Allison Corneau, Eagle-Tribune: “Mayor Neil Perry has pledged to keep the burden of returning at least $500,000 in COVID-19 relief aid off of taxpayers while preserving Methuen’s current pool of $12.9 million in free cash.”

– “TikTok school shooting threats deemed bogus by authorities have school districts, police on high alert across Massachusetts, US,” by Benjamin Kail, MassLive.

– “MIT graduate students seek to form union, ask university for voluntary recognition,” by Julia Carlin, Boston Globe.

MEDIA MATTERS

– “Miss the Boston Phoenix? You can now browse and download its archive for free,” by Morgan Rousseau, Boston.com.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Joe Kaplan, Catherine Sanderson and Zachary Gavel.

HAPPY BIRTHWEEKEND — to Dion Irish and Emily Williams, who celebrate Saturday; and to Sunday birthday-ers Tahirah Amatul-Wadud and Abby Charpentier.

AND HAPPY EARLY BIRTHDAY — to a lot of Playbookers: state Senate President Emerita Harriette Chandler, Maureen McInerney, Megan Johnson, Meaghan Callahan, Kalen O'Hare, Richard Purcell, Jakhari Watson, Judith Souweine, Scott Spencer, Bernie Lynch Jr., Koray Rosati, Joe Beebee, Scott Campanella and John Guilfoil.

NEW HORSE RACE ALERT: THE PUSH TO UNIONIZE NEWSROOMS — Host Jennifer Smith talks to state Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa about the Daily Hampshire Gazette writers' strike, and to WBUR's Ally Jarmanning and Boston.com's Kevin Slane about the general state of newsroom unions. Smith and host Lisa Kashinsky run through the week in politics. 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.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
 

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Monday, September 27, 2021

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: The governor’s race waiting game

 


 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

ALL EYES ON HEALEY — State Attorney General Maura Healey still hasn’t decided whether she’ll run for governor, but she seemed to be testing out her stump speech at Saturday’s MassDems Platform Convention.

Healey used Gov. Charlie Baker’s recent dismissal of same-day voter registration as a launching pad to address the “bigger problem.”

Massachusetts is in “a moment of great challenge, a moment that demands greater urgency” given rising food insecurity, racial wealth gaps and “systemic racism and misogyny," Healey said via video. "My work has been taking on these injustices."

Healey acknowledged the elephant in the room — that everyone’s waiting to see what she’ll do in 2022 — before closing out her speech with a lengthy list of what she believes Massachusetts needs in a governor. That list includes someone who will fight to cancel student loan debt, who supports a millionaires tax, who won’t support Maine Sen. Susan Collins (as Baker did) and who will support abortion rights here and across the country. And, of course, someone who’s a Democrat.

One of the Democrats already in the race for governor, Harvard professor Danielle Allen, urged party activists not to waste time waiting around for Healey.

“Please don’t delay considering your options,” Allen, who jumped into the race in June after a six-month exploratory committee, said. “The single most precious resource we have for beating the Baker-Polito administration is time. I’m not waiting.”

Baker hasn’t said whether he’s running for a third term. But all three Democratic hopefuls laid out their cases against him — and against the Beacon Hill establishment — to varying degrees.

State Sen. Sonia Chang-Díaz blasted the Republican governor who she said “looked the other way on our broken and racist criminal legal system” and who was slow to get behind the movement for education funding reform. Now, she said, “we’re building a movement to take on Charlie Baker himself."

Former state Sen. Ben Downing slammed leaders from both parties who “waste our time. I’m tired of watching a governor with all the popularity and a legislature with all the power refuse to use either to fight for us” while rents rise and childcare gets harder to find.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. As Acting Mayor Kim Janey endorsed City Councilor Michelle Wu in the Boston mayor’s race on Saturday, nearly six dozen of Boston's Black and Latino leaders were huddling to discuss the key issues they want the city's next leader to address.

The meeting, organized by state Rep. Russell Holmes, included two former mayoral candidates — state Rep. Jon Santiago and former city councilor Tito Jackson, who’d both endorsed Janey — state Rep. Brandy Fluker Oakley, faith leaders and community leaders including former state Sen. Dianne Wilkerson, NAACP Boston Branch President Tanisha Sullivan, Black Economic Council of Massachusetts President Segun Idowu and former Urban League president and CEO Darnell Williams.

The group plans to finalize its goals in coming days. Then "we'll go and meet with the candidates and get some quantifiable data, measure some real metrics as to whether they’ve done what they said they were going to do on housing, economic development and education," Holmes told me.

Some of the organizations involved, like the NAACP, won’t endorse in the mayor’s race. But Holmes said it’s important for their members to be part of the conversation as Black and Latino leaders work to ensure the city’s next leader — and its first non-white elected mayor — delivers on promises made to Black and Brown communities.

The group's goals will also factor into "report cards" the NAACP plans to issue at the middle and end of the next mayor's term, similar to the one issued during Labor Secretary Marty Walsh’s tenure as mayor, in order to promote ongoing accountability, Sullivan said.

TODAY — Baker, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, House Speaker Ron Mariano and Senate President Karen Spilka hold their weekly leadership meeting at 2 p.m., media availability to follow. Former Boston mayoral candidate City Councilor Andrea Campbell is on WBUR’s “Radio Boston” at 3 p.m. The Legislature's joint Mental Health, Substance Abuse and Recovery Committee holds hearings on decriminalization and safe consumption sites beginning at 9 a.m. Boston’s Board of Election Commissioners hosts a 10 a.m. public meeting to provide updates on reprecincting ahead of 2022.

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

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 
DATELINE BEACON HILL

– “Governor Baker wants more housing. A fight in his backyard shows how hard that will be,” by Zoe Greenberg, Boston Globe: “Almost everyone in this idyllic seaside town of 15,000 can agree that Swampscott, like many places in Eastern Massachusetts, needs more housing that regular people can afford. Governor Charlie Baker, himself a resident of Swampscott and former town selectman, has been pushing communities across the state to build more housing near public transit. But a battle over a proposed apartment building half a mile from the governor’s home — one that ticks his development boxes and could directly benefit people like Esquilin — illustrates the enormous challenges the state faces in actually increasing the supply of such housing.

– “In tweet, Baker urges St. Vincent Hospital brass, nurses to 'reach consensus'; both sides respond,” by Cyrus Moulton, Worcester Telegram & Gazette: “Gov. Charlie Baker weighed in on the nurses strike at St. Vincent Hospital on Friday afternoon, urging striking nurses and hospital owners to return to the negotiating table ‘and reach consensus.’

– “Student nutrition bill, barring ‘meal-shaming,’ on the move,” by Shira Schoenberg, CommonWealth Magazine: “After three years of advocacy, Massachusetts lawmakers are on the verge of adopting new policies that would provide free lunch to more children while ending the practice of ‘meal shaming,’ placing restrictions on children whose families owe money for meals.

– “Jack Lewis' bill to name an official state dinosaur continues legislative path,” by Haley Chi-Sing, Boston University Statehouse Program/Metrowest Daily News.

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “‘Dozens’ of Massachusetts troopers line up to quit over COVID vaccine mandate,” by Joe Dwinell and Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “‘Dozens’ of state troopers fed up with the governor’s vaccine mandate are filing paperwork to quit the force as a Superior Court judge has denied any delay in the mandate that kicks in Oct. 17. ‘Many of these troopers are going to be returning to their previous municipal police departments within the state that allow for regular testing and masks,’ said union boss Michael Cherven.

 “Nursing homes ramp up vaccinations ahead of mandates,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Newburyport Daily News: “Gov. Charlie Baker announced in August that the state will require staff at nursing homes, assisted living facilities and hospice programs to be fully vaccinated by Oct. 10 or face disciplinary action, including termination, unless they've been granted a medical or religious exemption.

– “Massachusetts makes COVID-19 vaccine booster available at 460 locations,” by Nik DeCosta-Klipa, Boston.com.

– “DCU Center not requiring proof of vaccination or negative COVID-19 test for most events,” by Anoushka Dalmia, Worcester Telegram & Gazette.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– NEW THIS MORNING: Rep. Ayanna Pressley has endorsed David HalbertRuthzee LouijeuneCarla Monteiro and incumbent City Councilor Julia Mejia in the Boston City Council at-large race. Pressley also endorsed Kendra Hicks for District 6. “Each of these candidates has shown their deep commitment to the Boston community and to advancing policies reflective of the real and pressing challenges people face,” Pressley, the first woman of color elected to the city council, said in a statement. No word if she's endorsing in the mayoral.

– FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: Assistant House Majority Leader Mike Moran has endorsed Erin Murphy for Boston City Council at-large, per her campaign.

– “Boston District 7 recount finalizes ballots for November election,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald: “Perennial candidate Roy Owens Sr. actually had slightly extended the lead in his preliminary-election success over community organizer Angie Camacho in Boston’s District 7 by the time city elections workers wrapped up the recount on Saturday, with Owens’ advantage rising from 28 to 37 votes.

– “In an unprecedented moment, Kim Janey endorses Michelle Wu for Boston mayor,” by Laura Crimaldi, Boston Globe: “In an unprecedented moment in Boston politics, Acting Mayor Kim Janey on Saturday endorsed City Councilor Michelle Wu for mayor during a jubilant gathering in Nubian Square, where the first woman and first Black person to lead the city shared the spotlight with a candidate who could become the first woman and first person of color to attain the top job through a win at the polls. … While campaigning Saturday, [rival Annissa] Essaibi George put Janey’s endorsement aside. ‘I got work to do,’ she said.

– More from GBH News’ Saraya Wintersmith: “‘Janey said she chose to endorse Wu based on a belief that she is best qualified to address racial and systemic inequities that have plagued the city.

– From the Boston Globe opinion pages: “How will mayoral candidates address inequities and empower Black Bostonians?” by Andrea Campbell: “My challenge to Essaibi George and Wu is to tell our communities — not merely in private meetings or phone calls with me or stakeholders, but publicly and directly to residents — what specific, tangible plans they have to deliver racial equity in our health, housing, schools, public safety, and economic systems. … My endorsement will go to the candidate who makes the most credible case and who inspires the most confidence that she will meet these challenges.

– “Be prepared for a weird series of electoral events in Boston,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Acting Mayor Kim Janey’s administration announced that the next elected mayor of Boston will be sworn in on Nov. 16, two weeks after the Nov. 2 general election between City Councilors Annissa Essaibi-George and Michelle Wu. … One consequence of the early swearing-in is that it will, no matter what, create a vacancy in an at-large council seat for about a month and a half."

ON THE STUMP

– Essaibi George is launching a “Listen & Learn” conversation tour today to “inform her official Equity, Inclusion and Justice Agenda,” according to her campaign.

The tour will focus on prioritizing access to and representation in city government, ensuring the city is “intentional in rooting out inequity and dismantling racism in our city and systems” and forming community partnerships to “find solutions to the city’s most pressing problems through a lens of equity and justice,” per her campaign. Essaibi George will kick things off with a coffee and conversation on equity at Dudley Cafe in Roxbury at 7 a.m., followed by other stops.

– WATCH: “Annissa Essaibi George: Any Suggestions Of Ties To Donald Trump Are ‘Gross Statement’,” by Jon Keller, WBZ: She also talked about how to tackle Mass and Cass and education reform.

FROM THE HUB

 “Sheriff Proposes Committing People Living At Mass And Cass To A Re-Purposed Detention Center,” by Deborah Becker, WBUR: “Suffolk County Sheriff Steve Tompkins wants to move people living in tents near ‘Mass and Cass’ to a former detention center in the South Bay House of Correction. … Tompkins says up to 100 people could be involuntarily committed to receive drug treatment and mental health counseling there."

– WATCH: “OTR: Boston City Councilor Lydia Edwards weighs in on Mass & Cass crisis,” by Ed Harding and Janet Wu, WCVB.

– “Secrecy around exam school admission data prompts lawsuit,” by James Vaznis, Boston Globe: “The Boston Parent Coalition for Academic Excellence filed the lawsuit in Suffolk Superior Court on Thursday, accusing the school department and the city’s legal department of failing to provide data, text messages, and other documents related to exam school admission changes, which increased the odds of Black and Latino applicants getting in while decreasing the chances of white and Asian applicants.

– “Protesters gather in Boston to oppose treatment of Haitians at the border,” by Amy Sokolow, Boston Herald.

FEELING '22

– “Geoff Diehl takes center stage at anti-vaccine, mask mandate rally,” by Erin Tiernan, Boston Herald: “A State House rally against Gov. Charlie Baker’s ‘forced’ vaccine and mask mandates doubled as a campaign rally for Republican candidate for governor Geoff Diehl, who took shots at Baker over everything from mail-in voting to free choice.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “Oversight of potential safety risks at MBTA stations under question after BU professor died in fall from staircase,” by Elizabeth Koh, Boston Globe: “Outside the MBTA’s Fenway Station, an aging three-story staircase rusts under a corrugated metal awning. In Alewife, it’s a deteriorating pedestrian bridge. At the Red Line’s Milton stop, stairs have sprouted cracks that expose rebar underneath, while years-old signs perpetually declare the steps closed. ... They’re among dozens of state public spaces that straddle administrative borders of different state agencies, putting them in a bureaucratic vortex where oversight can be lax and ownership uncertain.

MARIJUANA IN MASSACHUSETTS

– “State cannabis chief questions impact fees after city claims $1.3 million in costs,” by Mike LaBella, Eagle-Tribune: “A state official said Friday he has concerns about the relevance of impact fees being charged to retail marijuana shops by communities across the state, including in Haverhill.

– There’s always a Massachusetts connection: “Some cannabis firms see ‘disaster’ in federal legalization,” by Natalie Fertig, POLITICO.

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– NEW THIS MORNING: Former state Rep. Denise Provost and Somerville City Councilor Bill White have endorsed City Councilor Will Mbah for mayor of Somerville, per Mbah’s campaign. Provost previously endorsed Mary Cassesso, who finished third in this month’s preliminary election and did not advance.

– Northampton: “Mayoral, council hopefuls make last pitches to survive ballot cut,” by Brian Steele, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “After a decade in office, Mayor David Narkewicz is not seeking reelection. Five mayoral candidates will appear on the ballot: City Council President Gina-Louise Sciarra, retired resident Roy Martin, social worker Shanna Fishel, transportation analyst Marc Warner, and Rosechana Gordon, who dropped out of the race after the ballots were printed.

– “'Embarrassing' low turnout mars Beverly election,” by Paul Leighton, Salem News: “The 7.1% turnout was astonishingly low — the lowest in recent history for the city, and maybe ever.

FROM THE 413

– “UMass IT staff, police investigating racist messages,” by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “Racist email messages delivered to Black student organizations on the University of Massachusetts campus, and a recent incident in which a driver yelled an epithet at Black students, are being investigated by campus police and information technology staff, according to a letter sent to the campus community Thursday.

– “UMass students pack chancellor’s office, continuing week of protests over fraternity sexual assaults claims,” by Wil Katcher, MassLive.com: “Students filled the offices of University of Massachusetts Amherst administrators Friday afternoon, demanding a meeting with school leaders and continuing a week of protests over claims of sexual assault at UMass fraternities.

– More: “Fraternity’s national leader calls on UMass chancellor to stand by chapter,” by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette.

– “Few abuse survivors were involved in task force report on Springfield diocesan reforms,” by Anne-Gerard Flynn, Springfield Republican: “A total of 11 abuse survivors participated in three, 90-minute focus groups held online this winter, a form of response selected by the task force. In contrast, an online survey asking lay people for feedback drew 492 respondents, while a phone survey of clergy involved 83 priests.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Boycott targets college admissions boost given to children of alumni at Harvard, other elite schools,” by Rebecca Ostriker, Boston Globe: “Now a grad student at the Harvard Kennedy School, [Viet] Nguyen is leading a national grass-roots campaign to end admissions preferences for alumni children at Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Brown, and many other selective schools, including elite New England liberal arts colleges such as Amherst, Williams, and Bowdoin.

– "Mass. Locked Up People With Mental Illness For Decades. Now Advocates Want Their Stories Told," by Steve Brown, WBUR: "For many years, people with disabilities and mental illness in Massachusetts were locked away in state institutions to be kept separate from the rest of society. Now some advocates and families are pushing to create a commission to reckon with the way patients were treated and the abuses they endured."

– “'A complex problem': Could changes be coming to flight paths over Milton, Hull?” by Fred Hanson, Patriot Ledger: “A study done for Massport and the Federal Aviation Administration recommends no changes to the flight path over Milton and a slight change for one near the tip of Hull. The study also does not recommend dispersing aircraft headed into and out of Logan Airport, a solution sought by residents and officials of communities hardest hit by airplane noise.

– “Pembroke selectman compares diversity committee interview questions to Nazi Germany,” by Wheeler Cowperthwaite, Patriot Ledger: “A Pembroke selectman is under fire from his fellow board members, the public and the Anti-Defamation League after he compared interview questions for diversity committee candidates to Nazi Germany.

"As first Afghan families arrive in Mass. this weekend, state faces historic humanitarian challenge," by John Hilliard and Nick Stoico, Boston Globe.

MEDIA MATTERS

– “Senators say they pulled out of a Boston Globe conference to back a union,” by Marc Tracy, New York Times: “Senators Edward J. Markey and Elizabeth Warren, Democrats from Massachusetts, said Friday that they had backed out of a virtual conference hosted by The Boston Globe earlier in the week in solidarity with the journalists’ union there, which is in a yearslong dispute over a new labor contract.

CONGRATS – to Lauren Goldman Moran, Fair Labor Division chief at the state AG’s office, and Matthew Moran, assistant secretary and chief engagement officer at the Executive Office of Technology Services and Security, who recently welcomed their second daughter, Hannah Maeve Moran.

A FOND FAREWELL – to Chris Lovett of Boston Neighborhood News Network, who's called it a wrap after 34 years. Tweet.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Jack Eccles, Robert Cohen, Francisco Urena, Misha Hyman and Abby Curran.

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