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‘Applying a wrecking ball': Mass. teachers, leaders react to Trump's order on education

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‘Applying a wrecking ball': Mass. teachers, leaders react to Trump's order on education


President Donald Trump’s executive order calling for the dismantling of the U.S. Department of Education has been met with condemnation from Massachusetts leaders and the state’s largest teachers union.

Trump promised on the campaign trail to do away with the agency. Its official dismantling would require an act of Congress.

“We’re going to shut it down, and shut it down as quickly as possible,” Trump said. “It’s doing us no good.”

Educators expressed concern that the move would impact class sizes while taking resources away from students. Democratic elected officials, including Gov. Maura Healey, sounded off on the measure, while Republicans who spoke with NBC10 Boston Thursday applauded it.

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“What they’re doing is applying a wrecking ball to the Department of Education that’s going to affect 50 million public school students and college students across the country,” said Max Page, president of the Massachusetts Teachers Association.

Gov. Maura Healey is expressing concern about how some of President Donald Trump’s moves will affect Massachusetts.

“To me, this is really distressing,” Healey told NBC10 Boston in an interview Thursday. “I think it’s a dumb idea. It seems to me we should be doing everything we can to make America more competitive, continue to invest in education, and I can tell you as governor, I’m going to continue to support and invest in education in our state.”

Healey was not alone among Massachusetts Democrats to criticize Trump’s move, with some also calling out billionaire advisor Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency.

“Before Linda McMahon was sworn in, Donald Trump and Elon Musk were already working to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education,” Massachusetts Education Secretary Patrick Tutwiler said in a statement shared by Healey’s office. “Today’s executive order does nothing to improve opportunities and outcomes for students but instead will negatively impact our most vulnerable student populations and exacerbate longstanding challenges around wealth inequality. As a former history teacher, I know how important public education is to a functioning democracy. The fight to protect students’ civil rights is urgent and here.”

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“This is a code red for every public school student, parent, and teacher in this country. Trump is telling public school kids in America that their futures don’t matter,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren said in a statement. “Billionaires like Trump and Musk won’t feel the difference when after school programs are slashed, class sizes go up, and help for families to pay for school gets cut. But working families, students, and teachers will pay a heavy price.”

“President Trump, Elon Musk, and Secretary McMahon have a clear education agenda: stealing from public schools to fund tax breaks for billionaires,” added Sen. Ed Markey in his own statement. “Dismantling the Department of Education is just code for cuts to public schools, educators, students, and parents. Their anti-student, anti-family, anti-educator plan to dismantle the Department will harm every community across the country. They are attempting to privatize education, locking the promise of opportunity in an ivory tower accessible only to those born into the right circumstances.”

Rep. Ayanna Pressley reacted to President Donald Trump’s forthcoming executive order calling for the U.S. Department of Education to be shut down.

“Every child will feel the impact, and we will feel it for generations,” Rep. Ayanna Pressley told NBC10 Boston Wednesday after learning Trump planned to sign the order the next day. “To defund Head Start? I have 2,600 low-income families in my district that rely upon that early education and care.”

Republicans, meanwhile, defended the move.

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“Not one child is educated by the Department of Education, not one school is run by the Department of Education. This is a great day for students,” said Massachusetts Republican strategist Wendy Wakeman.

In Massachusetts, about 9.7% percent of school funding comes from the federal government, totaling about $2.1 billion. School districts are now afraid to lose millions.

“The community is very upset and disturbed by the actions that the federal government is taking,” said Margaret Foley, a reading teacher in Framingham — a district that receives about $9 million in federal funding.

With President Trump signing an executive order calling for the U.S. Department of Education to be dismantled, we’re looking into whether he actually can get rid of a federal department, what the department actually does and why it was founded. 

Established in 1979 by President Jimmy Carter’s administration, the Department of Education distributes financial aid for FAFSA applications, oversees federal government grant funding, and is responsible for overseeing policies enacted by Congress.

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“Those old ways are failing our children,” Wakeman argued. “We need new ideas. We need new life, and one of the ways to do it is to get rid of this bureaucratic bloat.”

For now, cities throughout the state are still scrambling to figure out exactly how their schools will be affected.

“We haven’t really fully understood what it is going to mean when it gets down to the ground in Massachusetts, so we’re going to talk with our team, figure out what impacts it may have,” said Revere Mayor Patrick Keefe Jr.



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Massachusetts

Arlington Nonprofit Receives Statewide Grant Funding

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Arlington Nonprofit Receives Statewide Grant Funding


“We are proud to support this remarkable group of nonprofit organizations and the essential work they do across Massachusetts,” Sincere Foundation Executive Director Rebecca Reiner said in a statement. “Their collective impact strengthens communities throughout the Commonwealth and we are honored to help advance their efforts.”

According to the foundation, grant recipients were selected across three focus areas: food security, housing stability, and safe spaces. Organizations receiving support in the food security category alongside Food Link include The Open Door in Gloucester, Worcester County Food Bank, Food For Free, and other nonprofits working to increase access to nutritious food.





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Massachusetts man indicted on murder charge in child’s 2017 death

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Massachusetts man indicted on murder charge in child’s 2017 death


WORCESTER, MA (WGGB/WSHM) – A Massachusetts man has been indicted in connection with the death of a child.

Laura French, spokesperson for the Worcester County District Attorney’s Office, said 35-year-old Steven Stuart of Auburn was indicted by a grand jury on a murder charge. The charge stems from the 2017 death of seven-year-old Jayden Carlson.

Stuart was convicted in September 2015 on a charge of assault and batter on a child causing serious bodily injury in connection with an August 2012 incident involving Carlson, who was two years old at the time. Stuart was sentenced to six to eight years in state prison for that conviction.

French added that Carlson suffered serious, “life-altering injuries and subsequently experienced ongoing medical complications” following the 2012 incident. Carlson died in December 2017 as a result of those injuries.

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Stuart has been arraigned on the indictment and is being held without bail. His next court date is scheduled for July 20.

Copyright 2026 Western Mass News (WGGB/WSHM). All rights reserved.



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Rent control question tossed from ballot, SJC cites religious exemptions

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Rent control question tossed from ballot, SJC cites religious exemptions


Massachusetts voters will not have the opportunity to decide whether to end a decades-long ban on rent control after the Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) ruled Tuesday that it must not appear on the November ballot, citing the exemptions for religious organizations included in the question.

The SJC ruled that the initiative petition “impermissibly” relates to religion and religious institutions – something the Massachusetts Constitution states cannot be involved in the initiative petition process.

It’s the second ballot initiative struck down by the SJC in less than a week where the high court cited errors made by Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s office, with justices issuing an opinion in May on a third ballot initiative regarding legislative stipends they said should not have been certified the AG’s office.

Last week, the SJC struck from the ballot a measure that would have gradually lowered the state income tax, citing a “misleading summary” authored by Campbell’s office. The SJC sided with Campbell on three other challenges to ballot initiatives certified by her office.

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But even with the Attorney General’s office committing errors on three of six ballot initiative certifications, Campbell is defending her staff, and even calls it a “great record.”

“We have 47 (ballot initiatives) that we approved, we have 44 we certified. We had six challenges, and we got three wrong. I think that’s a great record,” Campbell said when asked by the Herald if the her qualifications, as well as those of her staff, should be called into question.

“That just tells me we have more to do to be better. Any institution, whether it’s media outlets or any industry, if they can get it 100% right every time…that doesn’t happen. We own these mistakes, I own these mistake, and now we’ll move forward to improve our process to get it right the next time,” she said.

When it comes to the rent control decision, Campbell had certified the question for the ballot. She reacted to the court’s ruling to block it shortly after it was posted by the SJC .

“We got the rent control initiative, we certified it. But we, of course, have to respect the court’s decision which was against us, and we got that wrong,” Campbell admitted during her monthly appearance on GBH radio Tuesday morning.

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Campbell went on to say that her office attempted to explain in its summary, which appeared on the petition used to gather required signatures to qualify for the ballot, that religious institutions would be exempt from the law, if it were to pass.

The exemption for religious organizations controlling rental units was part of the language of the original petition.

“The court disagreed and said that even a minor reference to religion was not appropriate for a valid initiative, and we were just reviewing this. Obviously the decision just came out, and I think it was only the second time that the court has broken this standard, so it’s not like it happens frequently,” she said.

The plaintiffs, whom the SJC sided with in its ruling, claimed the petition should be disqualified because “religion is a factor in the application of the law,” citing a legal precedent that is key to the court’s ruling.

“The petition … concerns a generally secular subject matter — rent control. But, by including an express exemption for facilities operated solely for religious purposes, the petition impermissibly makes religion “a factor in [the petition’s] application.” And in order to enforce the proposed law, the exemption would require the government to determine if a facility is “operated solely for . . . religious . . . purposes,” and then make an enforcement decision based on the facility’s religious purpose (or lack thereof),” Justice Frank Gaziano in the SJC decision. “Further, the petition would confer preferential treatment on religious institutions by allowing them to increase rent prices, while limiting rent increases for secular facilities.”

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The AG’s summary of the proposal stated that the rent control measure “would not apply to … units operated for educational, religious, or non-profit purposes.” Campbell had certified the question for the ballot, using a process that she has called “stupid” and said needs to be “revamped.”

Several other organizations involved in the fight for and against rent control are weighed in on the ruling, with rent control proponents calling it  “disappointing,” and opponents celebrate.

“This decision is a massive disappointment after all the work that thousands of volunteers and advocates in every corner of the state put into qualifying our rent control initiative for the ballot, but it’s far from the end of our campaign to protect Massachusetts renters from excessive rent hikes,” said New England Community Project Executive Director, who also chairs the Keep Massachusetts Home campaign, adding that the plaintiffs were financed by  “equity-backed real estate investment corporations.”

Housing for Massachusetts – a nonprofit organization against the rent control initiative, called it “the nation’s most extreme” rent control proposal in a statement celebrating the ruling.

“Today the Supreme Judicial Court confirmed that the nation’s most extreme rent control proposal was unconstitutional. While we firmly believe that Massachusetts voters were prepared to vote ‘no’ in November, today’s decision puts the issue to rest and protects our housing pipeline and our communities from the proven damage that rent control inflicts,” the organization said. “We are incredibly grateful to the countless small property owners, real estate professionals, elected officials, and community leaders who supported our coalition, and we look forward to working together to create more homes and tackle affordability through real policy solutions.”

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The rent control question was the last of this year’s ballot questions still pending with the SJC.

Meanwhile, the SJC also ruled this week to allow a question to move forward that would switch the state’s primary election system to an all-party primary, proving to be a significant influence on what voters will decide on in the November election.



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