Boston, MA
Get ready for Boston’s Hip Hop Summer
You were all ready for Hip Hop Summer, then LL Cool J bumped his The F.O.R.C.E Live date at the TD Garden from June 25 to Nov. 19. While you can rock the bells with LL, the Roots, DJ Jazzy Jeff and more this fall, you can also celebrate all 50 years of hip hop all summer long in Boston with classic albums live, dance throwdowns, groundbreaking local acts and more.
GZA, June 27, the Sinclair, Cambridge
Kung fu is so hot right now! (Thank you, Michelle Yeoh.) But Wu-Tang Clan honcho GZA dug deep into samurai, ninja and martial arts culture back in the ’90s. And then, on “Liquid Swords” in 1995, he paired them with metaphysical questions, rages against injustice, an epic vocabulary, and so much more. At the Sinclair, he will do the whole album with the perfect support act, Boston’s STL GLD, kicking off the evening.
Michael Franti & Spearhead, June 29, Leader Bank Pavilion
Franti has been a force in political hip hop since his ’90s band, the Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy. But he’s also a crazy and wonderful hippie who is happy to pull reggae, folk, funk and soul into his sound. Spearhead is the sound of sunshine and love married to the fight for social justice.
Drake, July 11 & 12, TD Garden
How do you get to headline the Garden for a two-night stand? First, you chart 11 No. 1 singles – the most for a hip hop act. Second, you make one of those No. 1’s the monster anthem “Nice For What.” That’s it. Two simple steps.
Nur-D & Cliff Notez, July 12, Middle East Up, Cambridge
Boston’s best… Well, what is it that Cliff Notez does? Let’s call it dreamy, poppy, broken-and-rebuilt indie hip hop. So anyway, Boston’s best dreamy, poppy, broken-and-rebuilt indie hip hop experimenter joins Minnesota’s Nur-D on this tour stop. It’s a nice pairing as Nur-D has a real, well, dreamy, poppy, broken-and-rebuilt indie hip hop vibe.
United Styles 2023, July 16, Middle East Downstairs, Cambridge
The Pro Breaking Tour helps local dance group the Floor Lords celebrate its 42nd anniversary. For decades, the Floor Lords have been expanding hip hop culture and defining (and redefining) the art of breakdancing – the Floor Lords host classes in locking, krump and more at their Cambridge studio. A series of 3 v. 3 crews will battle on the dance floor at this anniversary party for thousands in prize money.
Ice Cube & Cypress Hill, July 29, TD Garden
You know Ice Cube from his breakout role in “22 Jump Street.” You know Cypress Hill from ordering the London Symphony Orchestra, possibly while high, on “The Simpsons.” But did you know both were hip hop icons? Come see Ice Cube reclaim his rap crown while Cypress Hill (and Millyz and Twista) open the show.
Janelle Monáe, Sept. 17, MGM Music Hall
“Dirty Computer” was the best album of 2018 – the ideal synthesis of hip hop and pop (she became Chuck D and Cyndi Lauper all at once) with gospel, disco, and Beach Boys harmonies tossed in. But we had to wait half a decade for the follow up. Worth it. Close down the season with the queen of weird and perfect music.
Boston, MA
Why I opposed Mayor Wu’s tax proposal – The Boston Globe
Earlier this year, when a study produced by Tufts University’s Center for State Policy Analysis suggested Boston reevaluate how it finances government services, city officials pushed back, initially dismissing concerns and defending exponential spending increases. That defensiveness, though, quickly shifted to panicked claims of a dire economic scenario and prompted Mayor Michelle Wu to seek legislative approval to raise taxes on businesses more than state law allows. Such an abrupt and dramatic about-face was notable, to say the least.
The Wu administration then went on to suggest that residents would see a 33 percent increase in their taxes and risk losing their homes if this new tax increase did not pass the City Council and the Legislature. For months, city officials escalated their rhetoric, while refusing to share official data that would, in fact, show that Boston’s fiscal issues were not unmanageable. Even if the business tax hike passed, the city still planned to raise residential taxes by 9 percent in 2025, just as it did in 2024. Residential relief was never on the table.
The City Council and the House of Representatives passed the legislation without the city’s official valuation data, so I called for a pause in the Senate until the city disclosed the data. Upon their release, the data showed that the economic sky was not falling. They also showed that lawmakers did not have to accept the false choice of having to risk cratering the Boston economy to mitigate a spike in residential property taxes.
Ample due diligence is required to make informed public policy decisions. Matters that impact residents and businesses must be debated based on objective data and facts — not guesswork, conjecture, or political agendas.
When this matter came before the Senate at the end of its formal session this summer, I made my concerns known. It was clear that downtown businesses were not the only entities that would have suffered disproportionately under the city’s proposed tax increase. Small businesses would have suffered just as much, if not more.
According to the Massachusetts Department of Revenue, raising commercial tax rates beyond the current state limit is “not good public policy.” Doing so raises “constitutional issues” and poses “an impediment to attracting and retaining business.”
There are other tax relief options, such as increasing exemptions for homeowners, low-income residents, and seniors. Working together with Governor Maura Healey, the Legislature did exactly that this session by passing the largest tax relief package in a generation along with sweeping housing and economic development legislation. The tax relief package includes significant increases to the Child and Family Tax Credit, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and Senior Circuit Breaker Tax Credit.
We did this collaboratively while also increasing wages for state employees, improving the Commonwealth’s bond rating, and managing a 2.7 percent growth in our budget while providing record levels of local aid to Boston. Boston, on the other hand, grew its budget 8 percent year over year — a total of $350 million — and 21 percent over the past three years.
What this 10-month process has shown is that City Hall must be more transparent and demonstrate fiscal restraint — not pile more costs onto residents and businesses. To provide residential tax relief, the mayor and City Council should increase the maximum residential exemption from 35 percent to 40 percent.
The city could pay for this by:
▪ Drawing from the surplus rainy day fund without impacting the city’s bond rating, per the recent Moody’s report;
▪ Redirecting funds generated via the Article 80 process from the Bluebikes program to residential relief;
▪ Cutting redundant external programs;
▪ Executing other prudent but targeted cuts like the governor did in mid-fiscal 2024 to balance the state budget.
Whether taxes go up on Boston residents or by how much is strictly up to the mayor and the City Council. Like the state, the city can provide relief for taxpayers, stimulate economic growth, and balance a budget. But it requires being data driven and fiscally responsible.
There’s still time to do so. For the sake of Boston’s taxpayers and the city’s fiscal health, I hope they take the time to get it right. Because it’s clear: the numbers don’t lie.
Nick Collins is state senator for the First Suffolk District in Boston.
Boston, MA
Snowy weather causes gridlock traffic at Logan Airport in Boston
BOSTON – Holiday travel is in full swing with Christmas just days away and travelers at Logan Airport in Boston spent the day dealing with delays from snowy weather.
Delays nationwide
There was gridlock traffic at Logan as travelers embark on their holiday excursions. Donna Ragucci just flew into New England from Florida.
“I am so excited, I get to see my sister and we are going on the trolley today and North End,” Ragucci said.
AAA said snowy weather conditions on Friday led to delays, spinouts and disruptions with flights.
“Overall, we’ve seen a pretty strong volume, which is what we forecasted, a record number of people traveling this year,” said AAA Northeast spokesperson Mark Schieldrop. “There was a storm system that affected a good swath of the country, so Chicago and Boston are two major hub airports, so anytime you have delays or cancellations in one part of the country, we often see a little bit of a domino effect.”
Kevin Walker said this is his first and last time traveling for the holidays.
“Well, we got here yesterday morning and our flight was canceled right when we got here,” said Walker.
AAA said more than 119 million people will travel during from now and Jan. 2. While most flights are on time at Logan there are several delays and cancellations leading to holiday angst.
“Hasn’t been great, my first flight was cancelled and now I guess I didn’t make the cut off for this flight, so now they can’t check the bag but yeah, it’s alright. I got a JetBlue flight tomorrow,” traveler Abbey Reynolds said.
“It’s different because I’m driving this year, so we got the dog coming with us, so I just hope the flight goes OK for the two kiddos and we meet them on the other end,” said a Brookline man heading to North Carolina with his family.
Coping with travel stress
Paul Pierre is heading back to Columbus, Ohio and has his own philosophy when it comes to traveling.
“Don’t let the small stuff upset you. You just go through the airport and you do your best and be kind and you’ll get through it,” Pierre said.
“I’m a therapist, so I practice meditation, go to the gym,” said Ragucci.
“It is what it is, like, I’m not going to get that bent out of shape over it,” said Reynolds.
Boston, MA
Next Weather: WBZ Mid-Morning Update For December 22
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