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  • MBTA celebrates success of contactless payment system
    by Darren Botelho on January 22, 2025 at 1:21 pm

    The MBTA has hit 10 million contactless payment taps since the launch of the new system back in August. The payment system allows riders to tap a credit card, phone payment app or watch to get onto a subway, trolley or bus. Ryan Coholan, chief operating officer at the MBTA, said the milestone is a sign of things to come in the future. “This is an example of what the MBTA can do, you know, we introduced this program and I think this sets the stage for what we can do better, what we can do more efficiently to make public transit a simple effective option for ridership.” According to the MBTA, as of this month, one in five payment taps on the system’s buses and subways is contactless. The agency has struggled in recent years to get up to speed on necessary maintenance while also looking at long-term improvements. A new transportation investment plan from Gov. Maura Healey seeks to direct millions in funding toward the MBTA, under General Manager Phil Eng, for operating costs in an effort to reconcile its budget and continue improvements on the system. More on the MBTA Massachusetts Jan 14 Mass. governor announces $8B plan for transportation investment, including MBTA Weather 7 hours ago Subzero temps affecting the MBTA, schools and other commuters Massachusetts Jan 14 Mass. gives noncompliant towns more time to meet MBTA zoning regulations

  • A look at the history of Massachusetts' right to shelter law
    by Sam Doran on January 22, 2025 at 12:59 pm

    Massachusetts lawmakers are poised to dive into a right to shelter law debate this year after Gov. Maura Healey recommended reforms aimed at a return to the statute’s “original intent.” Decades ago, the so-called right to shelter was not headline material, although cost concerns were raised. Healey last week unveiled her reforms in a letter to top legislative Democrats, including a requirement that all shelter-seeking family members be Massachusetts residents and prove an intention to remain in the state. The governor wrote that the changes “ensure the long-term sustainability of the state shelter system in a way that aligns with the original intent of the law.” The videotape archive of House and Senate sessions does not extend back to the mists of 1983, when the bill (H 6694 / Chapter 450 of the Acts of 1983) emerged from incoming Gov. Michael Dukakis’ inaugural pledge to help “those in desperate need.” News Service session summaries can instead be used to fill the gaps and show contemporaneous legislative intent on a bill. Rep. Joseph DeNucci, the future state auditor who co-chaired the Human Services Committee and was serving his seventh year in the House, was a central figure as planning meetings hosted by Dukakis got underway. “Shelter alone is not the only answer. We need a multi-disciplinary approach to the problem. Shelter without rehabilitation is not enough,” DeNucci told the press after the first homelessness huddle in January 1983. After a signature bill responding to the crisis was locked up in committee for months, it hit the House floor in October for an initial vote and was enacted within 20 days. Media coverage often led with provisions that would extend General Relief cash assistance to people without fixed addresses, and would pay up to four months of rent, fuel, or utility debts for families at risk of eviction or losing utilities. A review of coverage did not turn up stories on the “right to shelter,” which now makes Massachusetts unique among states. The most controversial part of the law was the rent and utility payment assistance, DeNucci said at the time. He called rent arrearage payments the “hardest thing to sell to the membership,” according to SHNS coverage. Rep. Royall Switzler kicked off the debate that fall by contending that it created an “open-ended welfare enhancement program” offering aid to deinstitutionalized patients who were eligible for separate state aid, according to a News Service summary. “We have to be very, very careful on where we are going with these programs, identifying who should get aid. This bill sounds like an apple pie and motherhood bill, but how far does government go? We will have people coming in from out of state without a domicile applying for aid,” the Wellesley Republican said. He was joined in his opposition by a South Boston Democrat, Rep. Michael Flaherty Sr., who said the bill would bolster state programs but “it is not clear the problem will be addressed.” DeNucci emphasized safeguards against fraud and abuse, said the bill would finally “address the problem of homelessness, for the first time,” and focused on how it would extend emergency assistance eligibility to pregnant women who did not yet have children. “Domicile requirements are a Catch 22,” DeNucci said, according to the SHNS summary. “How can people get assistance if they don’t have the money for a home anyway?” “I am a Democrat because a society can only be judged on how it treats vulnerable people,” the Newton rep shot back to another salvo from Switzler. “It must step in and help. If that makes me a liberal, so what. It establishes money for shelters for the homeless: it is important for government to address that problem. It prevents evictions. [The Department of] Public Welfare must verify all eligible people.” A week later, the House adopted amendments including one “relative to definition of a resident” before passing the bill without any debate on a landslide 138-3 roll call. More on the shelter crisis Immigration Jan 15 Mass. governor proposes new changes to right to shelter law Immigration Jan 14 GOP lawmakers lay out proposal for revamped state shelter system Immigration Jan 6 Upon Arrival: The mental health impacts of immigration What is now the right to shelter law” generated comment from four senators the following week, when a Ways and Means redraft was approved and the bill was engrossed on a voice vote. Senate Minority Leader John Parker asked questions about the practicality of the bill, and about residency requirements. “To do the job for the homeless that has to be done will cost much more than this bill calls for,” he said of the pending $1.6 million package. ” … I don’t know how you are going to figure out who came to this state just to benefit from this. Many don’t have cars or registration or identification. This is one more bureaucracy that is being set up to correct deinstitutionalization.” Sen. Gerard D’Amico, a Worcester Democrat, was the only senator to speak in favor of the bill, according to the News Service coverage. The summary does not record a direct answer to Parker’s question about residency requirements, though D’Amico stressed the compromise nature of the bill and how it emerged from talks with organizations on the ground. Just 20 days after the bill first hit the House floor, the Senate sent it to Dukakis’ desk with little fanfare: “By voice vote and without debate the Senate enacted the $1.6 million homeless bill,” the News Service reported. Former Gov. Edward King had approved $600,000 in emergency shelter funding, which was estimated in early 1983 to open up 1,200 beds, while Senate President William Bulger estimated 2,000 to 4,000 homeless people were living in Boston alone. In October 1983, the News Service said there were around 9,000 homeless people in Massachusetts. Politicians pointed to the recent deinstitutionalization of patients from mental health facilities, along with a lack of available housing and a poor economy. Healey said earlier this month that around 48,000 people have lived in state-run emergency family shelters over the past three years. Her pending shelter bill seeks $425 million in added spending to keep the shelter system afloat for half a year. If anything, Sen. D’Amico had a good handle on the future. “This is an initial step,” he said before the Senate gave the 1983 bill initial approval, according to a News Service summary. “Down the road this is going to cost us much, much, much, much more.”

  • 2025 James Beard semifinalists include range of New Englanders
    by Thea DiGiammerino on January 22, 2025 at 12:03 pm

    Grab your fork and knife – the 2025 James Beard semifinalists are out and New Englanders are well-represented. The James Beard Awards are considered by many some of the top honors in the culinary industry. Winners will be announced in April, but it’s never too early to start sampling the offerings! Outstanding restaurateur Cara Chigazola-Tobin and Allison Gibson, Honey Road and Gray Jay, Burlington, VT Douglass Williams, MIDA, Boston, MA Outstanding chef Cassie Piuma, Sarma, Somerville, MA   Oustanding restaurant Havana, Bar Harbor, ME   Emerging Chef Jason Eckerson and Kate Hamm, Fish & Whistle, Biddeford, ME Nikhil Naiker, NIMKI, Providence, RI Best New Restaurant LUNE, Dennis Port, MA Somaek, Boston, MA Outstanding bakery Super Secret Ice Cream, Bethlehem, NH Outstanding pastry chef or baker Brant Dadaleares, Gross Confection Bar, Portland, ME Outstanding hospitality Persimmon, Providence, RI Taj Indian Cuisine, South Portland, ME Outstanding wine and other beverages program Oyster Club, Mystic, CT Outstanding bar Wolf Tree, White River Junction, VT Best new bar The Abbey, Brunswick, ME Equal Measure, Boston, MA Merai, Brookline, MA Outstanding professional in beverage service Mary Allen Lindemann, Coffee By Design, Portland, ME Alyssa Mikiko DiPasquale, The Koji Club, Brighton, MA Outstanding professional cocktail service Nathaniel Meiklejohn, The Jewel Box, Portland, ME Oscar Simoza, The Wig Shop, Boston, MA Best chef: Northeast Robert Andreozzi, Pizza Marvin, Providence, RI Avery Buck, May Day, Burlington, VT John DaSilva, Chickadee, Boston, MA Conor Dennehy, Tallula, Cambridge, MA Subat Dilmurat, Jahunger, Providence, RI Lee Frank, Lee Frank’s, South Berwick, ME Michelle Greenfield, Allium Eatery, Westport, CT Sky Haneul Kim, Gift Horse, Providence, RI Valentine Howell, Black Cat, Jamaica Plain, MA Kwasi Kwaa, Comfort Kitchen, Boston, MA Brian Lewis, The Cottage, Westport, CT Charlie Menard, Canteen Creemee, Waitsfield, VT Rachel Miller, Nightshade Noodle Bar, Lynn, MA Erin Miller, Urban Hearth, Cambridge, MA Nicole Nocella, Stalk, Dover, NH Nick Rabar, Honeybird Kitchen & Cocktails, East Providence, RI   Jordan Rubin, Mr. Tuna, Portland, ME Michael Serpa, Select Oyster, Boston, MA Jake Stevens, Leeward, Portland, ME Derek Wagner, Nicks on Broadway, Providence, RI More restaurant news Boston restaurant talk Jan 20 Big pizza news and a brand new bakery: Greater Boston restaurant openings and closings news Jan 1 These restaurant chains closed locations in 2024

  • Water service disrupted as hydrant valve failure floods street in Roslindale
    by Thea DiGiammerino on January 22, 2025 at 11:40 am

    A valve break flooded the street in Boston’s Roslindale neighborhood Wednesday, cutting off water service to dozens of customers as crews worked to make repairs. It happened near the intersection of Catherine Street and Bourne Street, according to Boston Water & Sewer. The water quickly froze in the bitter cold, leaving icy conditions as crews worked to make repairs. While initially reported as a water main break, crews later determined it was actually a failure of a 6-inch hydrant gate valve head. Crews work to repair a hydrant valve that flooded the street in Roslindale. Some 50 services are affected, according to the agency’s post on X. Water service will be restored as soon as crews make the repair. The cause of the failure was not immediately clear. Low temperatures were in the single digits in Boston Wednesday morning. There is no main break at Catherine and Bourne, Roslindale, a 6 inch hydrant gate valve head gave way. Crew is now securing a replacement part to make repair, water will be restored once repair is complete. Thanks to the neighborhood for your patience.— BWSC (@BOSTON_WATER) January 22, 2025

  • Person shot in Jamaica Plain
    by Thea DiGiammerino on January 22, 2025 at 10:10 am

    A person was shot and taken to the hospital in Boston’s Jamaica Plain neighborhood Tuesday night. Police said they were first called to Walden Street for a shooting around 9 p.m. They found the victim with a gunshot wound. They were taken to the hospital for treatment. The victim’s condition was not immediately clear. The investigation is ongoing and no arrests have been made at this time. More Boston news Boston 6 hours ago 2 Boston City Council hearings today over new White Stadium concerns Traffic 22 hours ago Could congestion pricing work in Boston? What we're learning from NYC's example Boston Jan 21 Josh Kraft planning to run for Boston mayor, source says

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