2016-02-02


Tuesday, February 2, 2016

By George Donnelly (@geodonnelly) and Keith Regan

Today: It's all things New Hampshire

Iowa has been evacuated, and New Hampshire becomes the center of the political universe for the next week. Donald Trump's second-place finish validates the hope in some corners that his candidacy is more chimera than real after he underperformed against his poll numbers. The Globe's Joan Vennochi writes: "Now [Trump] has to show his poll numbers in other states are something more than illusion. And he will have to answer another question: If he can't win Iowa, where can he win?"

Also today: budget hearing, many primaries

House and Senate budget chiefs Brian Dempsey and Karen Spilka join other members of the House and Senate Ways and Means committees to launch public hearings on Gov. Baker's $39.55 billion state budget proposal. Administration and Finance Secretary Kristen Lepore leads off the hearing, and Auditor Suzanne Bump, Treasurer Deb Goldberg, Attorney General Maura Healey, Secretary of State William Galvin and Inspector General Glenn Cunha are also have been invited to testify. Gardner Auditorium, 10 am.

Joint Committee on Housing accepts testimony on 37 bills pertaining to Chapter 40B, the law that produces affordable housing using the comprehensive permit process in certain communities. Room B-1, 10 am.

The city of Boston and ArtsBoston host a series of free events to celebrate Black History Month, starting with a kickoff celebration with Mayor Marty Walsh. Boston City Hall, third floor mezzanine, 12 pm.

The MBTA conducts a public hearing on the two fare hike proposals, aimed at raising between $33.2 million and $49.4 million. 10 Park Plaza, second floor Transportation Library, Boston, 5 pm.

It also is primary day for three House seats. Elections for vacant seats will be held in Brockton, Peabody, and Fitchburg.

n Suffolk drama, Globe editorial backs McKenna

In the soap opera between embattled Suffolk University president Margaret McKenna and the university's board of trustees, the Boston Globe editorial board has sided with McKenna. "The trustees, who are supposed to look out for the best interests of the nonprofit university, must confront an uncomfortable possibility: that they, and not McKenna, are the problem." http://bit.ly/1NOCtax

The board definitely is the problem, writes longtime Suffolk University political science professor John C. Berg in CommonWealth magazine. "On the one hand, there is a strong hope that McKenna can lead us forward to a period of strength; on the other, there is a profound fear that the trustees will once again set us back through their micromanaging of the university's day to [day] operations and sacking of yet another president."http://bit.ly/1STQ5sQ

And some Suffolk trustees are baffled by what's going on, including Jennifer Nassour, the former head of the Massachusetts Republican Party. "For some reason the rest of us are being kept out," she said in Globe reporter Laura Krantz's update of the ongoing controversy. http://bit.ly/1m9rt19

Pollack won't opine on millionaire's tax

Now the score within the Baker administration on the millionaire tax is: No: 1; undecided: 1. Secretary Transportation Stephanie Pollack, asked after yesterday's MBTA Fiscal Control Board meeting, said she had "no position" about the ballot question that would tack a surtax on incomes over $1 million. Andy Metzger of the State House News Service notes that Pollack provided written testimony in favor of transportation revenue in 2013 when she worked at Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy at Northeastern University.http://bit.ly/1g3AhR6 (paywall)

Charter school principal excluded from meeting with Rosenberg

A meeting in Greenfield with Senate President Stan Rosenberg organized by a group opposed to the expansion of charter schools blocked a charter school principal from attending, Shira Schoenberg of MassLive reports. Peter Garbus of the Four Rivers Charter School in Greenfield read a story about the impending meeting, but wasn't allowed in the private home where it was being held. "I thought to myself, why does this even need to be a private meeting? What is there to talk about that can't be discussed in an open meeting?" Garbus said.

http://bit.ly/1QWRVrG

Town of Medfield pays computer hackers ransom

This just in by John Ellement on BostonGlobe.com: "The town of Medfield paid a $300 ransom to hackers who installed a virus that completely disabled the municipal computer network for about a week, the town reported Tuesday." http://bit.ly/1QEsbOF

Rosenberg slams Baker's UMass funding plan

Senate President Stan Rosenberg is calling Gov. Baker's proposed 1.4 percent increase in funding for the University of Massachusetts system "woefully inadequate" and says the legislature will work hard to find a way to boost funding, the Daily Hampshire Gazette's Dave Eisentadter reports. Rosenberg said he hears often from business leaders concerned about graduates leaving UMass burdened by student debt. http://bit.ly/205qZpZ

Millions at stake as MBTA sues Amtrak

The MBTA has gone to court in a bid to avoid paying out $30 million this year alone to Amtrak for the cost of maintaining rail lines they share, the Boston Business Journal's Greg Ryan reports. The T is arguing that an agreement to allow Amtrak to use the T's Attleboro Line in exchange for maintenance and upkeep trumps a decision by a commission created by Congress to require equal cost-sharing. http://bit.ly/1nKgbC4

Fantasy sports companies scramble to keep cash flowing

The decision by the main payment processing vendor for daily fantasy sports sites to stop handling payments to the sites has the companies searching for alternatives, Curt Woodward and Don Adams of the Globe report. The vendor, Vantiv, said Friday it would drop the sites by the end of the month. Boston's DraftKings is not affected immediately, as a judge has issued a restraining order enforcing the contract between the two that runs until the middle of next year.  http://bit.ly/23Gswrk

Technical schools laud Baker funding plan

Leaders of technical and vocational high schools are applauding Gov. Baker's plan to boost funding for them in the fiscal year 2017 budget he unveiled last week, the Lowell Sun's Amelia Pak-Harvey reports. Such schools in and around Lowell - and other so-called Gateway Cities - have some of the longest waiting lists, with more students than they can take each year. http://bit.ly/1SpZlFt

Clark is apparent target of swatting hoax

U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark, who has sponsored a bill in Congress to make it a federal crime to cause a police response without cause, has become an apparent victim of the very swatting hoax she is targeting, the Globe's Joshua Miller reports. Police descended on Clark's Melrose home Sunday night after receiving an automated call reporting an active shooter at the address. http://bit.ly/1VGdpbB

The T tries to quantify 'overcrowded'

The MBTA's Fiscal Control Board is trying to put hard numbers on what constitutes an over-crowded subway car, CommonWealth Magazine's Jack Sullivan reports. The T has surveyed thousands of riders and even staged focus group tests that involved seeing how many riders could squeeze into a confined space before others would refuse to join the fray. One finding: 18 percent of riders would force their way into a car, no matter how crowded it was when the doors opened.  http://bit.ly/20DMb8S

Anti-Narcan Facebook post gets Weymouth firefighter suspended

The city of Weymouth has suspended a firefighter who took to social media to argue that addicts should be allowed to die from overdoses rather than treated with Narcan, the Patriot Ledger's Christian Schiavone reports. Mark Carron, an 11-year veteran of the department, has been suspended 90 days without pay, Mayor Robert Hedlund announced on Monday. In the since-deleted Facebook post, Carron called Narcan "the worst drug ever created" and said most addicts saved with the treatment return to using a short time later. http://bit.ly/1o1W6qD

Lawrence gets OK to hire Spanish-speaking cops

After initially saying no, state officials have now cleared the way for the city of Lawrence to hire seven new police officers specifically because they speak Spanish, the Globe's Travis Andersen reports. The state's Human Resources Division gave Lawrence an exemption from the so-called Castro consent decree because the new officers possess a specific skill in high demand in a city where half of the residents are Spanish speakers.  http://bit.ly/1SBhjTu

Why Stephanos landed at WCVB

Maria Stephanos will join WCVB as an evening anchor, a move that made sense given the position of the other competing stations, writes Gayle Fee of the Herald. Stephanos, who left Fox suddenly in September, will begin Feb. 29. http://bit.ly/23GBUeC

REMEMBER: To send your tips to me at gdonnelly@massterlist.com. Op-eds and other commentary are invited for publication on MASSterList.

Subscribe now for free!

TODAY'S TOP STORIES

National headlines

Mike Huckabee ends bid for president - The Boston Globe

O'Malley ends his bid for the Democratic nomination for president - The Boston Globe

Candidates to descend on N.H. for primary frenzy - The Boston Globe

Bernie Sanders says result gave his campaign a 'kick-start' - The Boston Globe

Iowa answers the questions the media couldn't - The Boston Globe

Photo of Emerson students' fake engagement at Ted Cruz rally goes viral - The Boston Globe

State headlines

MBTA pension inquiry firm seeking Markopolos-Williams report - The Boston Globe

Mass. gun owners seek law to bar patchwork of local rules

Worcester asks attorney general to look into Mosaic Cultural Complex

Technical schools happy with Baker funding plan - Lowell Sun Online

Why Suffolk community stands behind Margaret McKenna - CommonWealth Magazine

MBTA sues Amtrak in bid to save tens of millions a year - Boston Business Journal

MBTA Riders Blast Proposed Increase In Pass Prices As 'Inequitable'

Former Mass. Governor Jane Swift Campaigning for Jeb Bush in Iowa, New Hampshire

MBTA Commuter Rail Trains Fail, but On-Time Rate Improves

All aboard - CommonWealth Magazine

Judge blasts Healey's office, Bridgewater State in ruling on daycare rape suit

T fare proposals draw flak at Boston meeting - The Boston Globe

Police swarm Katherine Clark's home after apparent hoax - The Boston Globe

Dissension surfaces among some Suffolk trustees - The Boston Globe

Home foreclosures rose in 2015, though remain low overall - The Boston Globe

Mass. Senate to revisit public records reforms | Local News | salemnews.com

Local headlines

Acushnet Town Counsel: feds will have final say on LNG

Final public input meeting for Brockton casino plan set for March 1

As Linchpin Of Project, Mass. Town Of Acushnet Weighs Pipeline Facility

MBTA Plans To Improve Service By Improving Data

Quincy faces $170,000 in overrun legal costs from permit dispute

Weymouth firefighter suspended over Facebook post against Narcan, addicts

Which school districts in Massachusetts spend the most money per student?

Baker proposes change to charter school reimbursement formula - News - telegram.com - Worcester, MA

Fitchburg, some Lunenburg voters go to polls Tuesday in state rep primary

Worcester health official encouraged by gun buyback tally

AIDS Project Worcester to administer city's needle exchange program

<a href="http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001aAVU4F44apUkf23XwDjUVS4VpPhtypz5e7Vg0FMPcmFJdO9IVpDClpWwzCj2F6LuwXe6wXZI_CPcFRPIWo2FpU6qXEVWvOjmlLx_5KcF3xIiL_a82URe_8o75cR59nqzCTEtKN2LUscdXK71Hh0Fdl30W_CQ2fF5FwYZbB6yWYLZ-A9dvJcchErKWkDzz_eveNAN13KbaYpbOx0bufi2WTPLBnud-N8xrWEkZg4qaew7QX_2Gm0sHA==&c=TGnBVPzmLumWxNGV-v-Hbd_JPeYl2oV4QfHy1woOLG_UiH4BTfKoRw==&ch=g3e4RYzRNlI_ThdoBCBfYywxABBKfDNB7tfSPYMakk0UDF2g

Show more