Massachusetts
‘Sound of freedom’ raised at annual White Cane Awareness Day for visually impaired in Hub
BOSTON — While October is designated as White Cane Awareness Month, the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind and Perkins School for the Blind chose Friday to bring its membership, local and national advocates and service providers together at the State House to mark the month and a special awareness day.
“This event is designed more as an educational day to alert people to the importance of white cane awareness and to increase the safety of the vision-impaired and blind residents,” said Michela Meaney, one of five orientation and mobility specialists working in Massachusetts. “Cane users spend hours, days, trying to rehabilitate into our world. This day provides a way to make it safer for them.”
More than 300 people gathered in the Great Hall at the State House to help extend awareness of the law that requires motorists come to a full stop when they see a person wielding a white cane or walking with a service dog, attempting to cross an intersection.
“Pump the brakes,” said Joseph Buizon, director of programs and services with the commission. Individuals who are visually impaired, Buizon said, walking with a cane or a dog, are protected under Massachusetts law. Those who fail to follow the law are subject to a ticket and fine.
He asked all those in attendance who walk with a white cane to open the tools and hold them high.
“When I hear the click, click, click of the white canes, to me that’s the sound of freedom,” Buizon said.
White canes, as their users will tell you, need hours of practice to master. They impart information to the user and communicate spatial relationships, textures, changes in paving material and irregularities in walkways and sidewalks.
“I know a white cane is so much more than a mobility tool,” said Kate Walsh, state secretary of health and human services. She called it a tool of independence and self-determination for the visually impaired and the blind that allows them to live freely and safely and participate fully in their communities.
Walsh was given a special gift to commemorate the day: a Barbie doll packaged in a box labeled in Braille. The doll was sporting a white cane and high heels; those heels were made to order, said John Oliveira, the leader of the commission, who was appointed to the job last year.
That Barbie doll is wearing high heels to counter the common misconception that blind women cannot wear high heels, Oliveira said. The commission acted as consultants with Mattel to ensure accuracy in depicting a vision-impaired Barbie.
Walsh, visibly moved by the gift, looked around the packed Great Hall and found a special child to be the recipient of the doll. Amyah Walker, 7 of East Taunton, was attending the day with her mother, Victoria, and her family. Her mother said the girl had been “wanting the doll forever.” The family held up her white cane when Buizon called for the audience to do so.
Sharing personal stories was a big part of the day. One of the featured speakers, Kate Higgins, associate director of Harvard University Disability Resources and a board member at the Perkins School for the Blind, became blind as a teenager.
“I was just looking to get my driver’s license,” Higgins said, adding that she received a white cane instead. She outlined the “long, annoying” task of learning how to use the cane, telling of countless times the tip became lodged in a crack or crevice, and times when she jabbed herself in the stomach.
“It took a long time for the white cane to become an extension of my arm,” Higgins said. She also discussed the first time she ventured beyond her cul de sac on her own with just her white cane. She made it across two streets, but it started the process of her gaining confidence “with every step,” and to learn to trust and depend on the information conveyed by the white cane.
“It wasn’t as fast as a car, but it allowed me to explore the whole world,” Higgins said. She took a minute to detour from her life’s narrative to talk about that first journey out of her comfort zone. Two neighborhood classmates took it upon themselves to walk behind her. “They coached me on how to swing my cane and yelled periodically, ‘Watch out!’”
Those shouts prompted her to question how she would “watch out now that I can’t see.” In an aside, she counseled the seeing people in the audience to be specific in their advice to “watch out!” She mentioned several instances where being specific would help a blind person understand a peril: the car that’s running the red light where you were about to cross or the person sleeping on the bench where you were about to sit.
Higgins, who uses both a white cane and has a service dog, Dodger, depending on the circumstances of her schedule, said White Cane Awareness Day matters to the vision-impaired community. The day highlights the importance of the tool that ensures all Massachusetts residents have the same access to mobility as the seeing community.
“This is an opportunity to acknowledge, champion and support the vision-impaired community,” Higgins said. “Mobility is a right to be shared by all.”
Massachusetts
Massachusetts beach towns look to ease ‘overly strict’ conservation rules: ‘Common sense’
As certain shorebirds rebound in population along the Massachusetts coast, beach towns are pushing for the state to strike a healthier balance between conservation and recreation.
State Rep. Kenneth Sweezey, a South Shore Republican, is leading the charge on Beacon Hill, authoring legislation to untangle what he describes as “overly strict” regulations hindering his region’s access to its beaches.
Over the years, Duxbury Beach, in particular, has borne the brunt of protecting recovering bird species, including piping plovers and terns, limiting business and recreational opportunities at the prominent South Shore coastline.
The Duxbury Beach Reservation, a private landlord, has had to close certain roads and portions of the shoreline while birds are nesting. Residents and visitors are also required to have an oversand vehicle permit, which costs more than $150, for beach access.
Under one of Sweezey’s proposals, the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife would only restrict over-sand vehicle access or other recreational activities if the bird species is listed as endangered or threatened under the federal Endangered Species Act.
Sweezey has said that piping plovers are the only species nesting on Duxbury Beach, which his district includes, that are federally endangered, while other birds carry a state designation.
“Birds may be federally protected because they’re doing poorly in one region of the nation, even though they may be thriving in the Commonwealth,” Sweezey said at the State House last week. “Those differences sort of create problems when you’re looking at human access, recreational opportunities on the beaches and conservation on the beach.”
Sweezey made his appeal to the Joint Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, touting shorebird management expert Chris Kennedy for helping him craft his proposals.
Kennedy, a wildlife biologist who has worked for the state Environmental Police and Division of Fisheries and Wildlife over the decades, is championing an equal balance between conservation and recreation.
In response to a post in the ‘Save Duxbury Beach’ Facebook page, Kennedy highlighted how the Bay State has seen a nearly “tenfold” jump in nesting plovers since 1986, going from 140 to over 1,200 last year. Roseate and common terns are also “strongly increasing,” while least terns are “slowly climbing.”
“Reasonable public access is not anti-birds,” Kennedy stated. “It is simply common sense.”
The 1,221 nesting pairs of plovers identified in 2025 marked a record high for the species’ population, up even from the 1,196 in 2024, numbers show.
According to the state’s Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program, Duxbury Beach had 149 days of recreational activity last year.
Sweezey is also calling state regulators to conduct a review of their recreational management guidelines that protect piping plovers, terns and their habitats across the state at least once every two years. Part of that process would include two public hearings.
Patrick Parquette, a government affairs officer for the Massachusetts Striped Bass Association, called the state’s current shorebird management program “long outdated,” having been adopted in 1993.
Parquette pointed out how, decades ago, nests of certain shorebirds needed to be a minimum of an eighth of a mile apart. Today, species, including the piping plover, are nesting within 100 feet of each other.
“At the time, it was based on the best thinking that we had,” he said. “I don’t think there’s a reasonable human being in this building, no matter the ilk or philosophy they come from, that would say that our knowledge base 33 years ago could compare with today’s knowledge base.”
Andrew Marshall, founder of the Save Duxbury Beach nonprofit advocacy group, centers his concerns around climate change and its effects on the Plymouth County town of roughly 16,000.
“We’re being unfairly punished due to climate change, with some of these southern birds moving up to the north here,” Marshall told lawmakers. “These birds aren’t rare or threatened. They’re just new in our area.”
A third piece of legislation that Sweezey has crafted would ban state regulators from prohibiting any beach management program from using all legally authorized shorebird nesting mitigation tools under the state’s habitat conservation plan.
Sweezey said a goal of the bill would be to promote parity among Massachusetts beaches.
“These bills,” the representative said, “are critically important to our environment, our coastal traditions and local economies down in Duxbury, but really along the entire coast.”
Massachusetts
State police investigate fatal crash on I-93 in Quincy
A person has died after a single-vehicle crash on I-93 in Quincy on Sunday morning.
Troopers responded to the single-vehicle crash around 6:05 a.m. and found two people injured. One person has died, and another was seriously hurt.
The right lane remains closed at this time to allow for an investigation, according to Massachusetts State Police.
The victim’s name is not being released at this time.
Massachusetts
Here’s what’s on tap during Mass Beer Week
Calling all beer lovers…More than 200 small, independent breweries from all over the state are participating in Mass Beer Week, a celebration that highlights the craft beer community by bringing businesses together.
Gov. Maura Healey has officially proclaimed March 7-14 as Mass Beer Week in the Commonwealth, formally recognizing the vital role that local breweries play in the state’s economy, culture, tourism and communities.
“From Boston to the Berkshires, our craft breweries are anchors in their communities and significant contributors to our regional economies,” Healey said in a statement. “I’m proud to proclaim Mass Beer Week and encourage everyone to go celebrate at their local brewery safely and responsibly!”
The statewide celebration of Massachusetts-made beer officially kicked off Saturday and continues through the next week, during which time participating breweries will host special releases, collaborative brews, tasting events, educational programming, and community fundraisers.
The Massachusetts Brewers Guild says the formal recognition of this week by the Commonwealth is an incredible honor for the brewing community.
“Massachusetts breweries are small manufacturers, employers, and community gathering spaces,” said Katie Stinchon, the executive director of the Massachusetts Brewers Guild. “This proclamation underscores the importance of supporting local businesses and the people behind them.”
The owner of Drawdown Brewing says unification is exactly how she would describe Mass Beer Week.
“Beer is intrinsically very community based and brings people together and the Massachusetts/New England community we’re definitely kind of ride or die so it’s just a great unifier,” said Liz Nicol. “We’re all making beer. We’re all moving in the same direction, but everyone has something that makes us really unique so for us we do more malt forward beverages.”
Sarah Harkness says she also loves the comraderie.
“I just love that it grows the craft beer community as opposed to pitting breweries against each other,” she said.
While others say they just love beer, period.
“It’s such a New England thing to go to a brewery after going hiking and stuff so Boston really loves their beer,” said Dylan Pollman-Blom.
Events are scheduled all over the state for the next week. Beer lovers are encouraged to visit local taprooms, try Massachusetts-made beer, and share their experiences on social media. Click here for a full list of participating breweries and event details.
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