Massachusetts
Babysitter accused of leaving children in car for hours on Martha’s Vineyard, boy found unresponsive

A babysitter on Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts is facing charges after police said she left two children in an SUV for several hours and one was found unresponsive.
It happened last week. Police said 40-year-old Aimee Cotton, of Oak Bluffs, was watching a 3-year-old boy from West Tisbury and a 1-year-old girl. On Thursday afternoon, Cotton allegedly called 911 to report the boy wasn’t breathing and had turned blue in the back of her SUV.
Surveillance video allegedly showed children alone
The boy was taken to Martha’s Vineyard Hospital and then airlifted to Mass General in Boston. As of Friday, police said he remained unresponsive and in critical condition. No other updates have been given.
Police said Cotton initially told them she left the boy buckled in a car seat in her SUV for 15 minutes before bringing both children inside. But after checking surveillance footage, police said it appeared the children were left unattended in the car for about three hours.
Children allegedly alone for three hours
Cotton then allegedly admitted she left the children unattended in the SUV while she did several household chores.
Cotton pleaded not guilty in Edgartown District Court Friday to assault and battery on a child with injury and reckless child endangerment.
Cotton’s bail was set at $2,800. She was ordered to stay away from and have no contact with the victim and his family. She was also ordered to have no unsupervised contact with children under 5 years old and is not allowed to conduct any child care.
Cotton is due back in court on April 28.

Massachusetts
Trump could reshape the economy. These Massachusetts business owners are betting on it. – The Boston Globe

And now, even with the stock market rattled by Trump’s tariff policies and recession fears rising, Johnson remains bullish.
“There might be a rocky road a little bit as the economy resets,” said Johnson. “It’s kind of like when a company files for a reorganization after bankruptcy. … It’s tough times going through that reorganization, but they come out of it a lot stronger.”
Trump’s sledgehammer approach to the economy may be unnerving to stock investors and economists, and in Massachusetts, his push to slash federal funding to universities and hospitals could jeopardize jobs, research, and health care access. But even amid the uncertainty, not everyone is bracing for bad times. Some local CEOs and business owners believe the president’s efforts to restructure the economy and rein in government spending will pay off in the long run.
“I would say pretty universally the sentiment is that businesses are going to be better under the Trump administration,” said Robert Hale, CEO of Granite Telecommunications in Quincy, a self-described fiscally moderate Democrat who was a big supporter of former governor Charlie Baker.
Hale doesn’t agree with all of what Trump is doing, and while the Biden administration did not hurt his business, it didn’t help either. “The Trump administration’s sentiment is pro business, which, as a business person, the wind at your back instead of in your face, is a lot different,” he said.
Other business owners have felt left behind by some of Biden’s signature initiatives, such as the Inflation Reduction Act, which injected hundreds of billions of dollars into emerging industries like clean energy.
“Universities, institutions, environmental groups were getting large amounts of funding, and that’s really not how an economy grows,” said Bruce J. Mittman, CEO of Needham advertising agency Mittcom who also owns 34 radio stations across the country. “Government is there to support us and help us grow and keep the marketplaces safe and fair, and borrowing accessible to all, but it’s not there to determine winners and losers, and I think the last administration did that, to their detriment.”
During Trump’s first term, many business leaders and groups clearly distanced themselves on issues ranging from his travel ban of Muslim immigrants to his failure to condemn the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol. But in his second term, even as Trump has ratcheted up deportation efforts and anti-diversity rhetoric, executives from Silicon Valley to Wall Street have fallen in line, attending his inauguration and rolling back corporate diversity programs.
Still, Trump remains a polarizing figure, especially in Massachusetts where even supportive business owners often stay quiet because they fear blowback, said Paul Craney, executive director of the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance. He thinks some business owners who backed the Biden-Harris ticket in 2020 switched to Trump in 2024.
“The Biden that was on the campaign stage against Trump four years ago — his first time where he wanted to kind of unify the country — was not the Biden people saw in the White House,” observed Craney. “I know a lot of business owners who just felt they were just basically making it the last four years. It was tough. … They didn’t feel like people in power cared about what they were trying to do.”
But one thing that has been tough to swallow is Trump’s escalating tariff war against Canada, Mexico, China, and other countries. While business owners laud Trump’s goal to bring more manufacturing back to the US, it’s difficult to plan when his strategy keeps evolving.

“If there are tariffs, we will learn to live with them — again, short-term pain through that restructuring, while businesses adapt and people adapt,” said Rod Egger, who lives in Wellesley and serves as CEO of Bariatrix Nutrition, a high-protein food manufacturer with factories in Vermont, Canada, and France. “The worst thing would be to start down a path and then reverse course in six months or 12 months.”
For now, Egger is making minor adjustments but holding off on big moves. He’s bringing about 30 jobs back to the US, shifting from his Montreal factory to Vermont. That’s because much of Bariatrix’s source material is made in the US, and manufacturing in Canada has become more expensive amid the tariff fight.
“If his tariff strategy is well communicated, and well thought out, it could be very effective for reshoring manufacturing to the US,” added Egger.
Then there are business owners like Quincy construction firm owner Jay Cashman, who think it’s way too early to say if Trump’s policies will strengthen the economy.
Cashman, who voted for Trump, said so far he likes the idea of bringing in billionaire businessman Elon Musk to disrupt government and make it more efficient. “I think the world of Elon Musk,” said Cashman. “It’s a different perspective.”
But on other matters, Cashman said he’s taking a “wait and see” approach, though he’s not too worried.
“I’m pragmatic,” he added. “America is resilient. It can take almost anything. … I think this could be OK.”
Shirley Leung is a Business columnist. She can be reached at shirley.leung@globe.com.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts families ‘at risk’ under Gov. Healey’s proposed mental health cuts, critics say

Directors overseeing programs that provide intensive mental health help to Massachusetts’ most vulnerable children and adolescents say Gov. Maura Healey’s proposal to consolidate the services has caught them “off guard.”
The Healey administration is looking to save $15.3 million in the next fiscal year’s budget by slashing funding for a 30-bed dual intensive residential treatment program for adolescents in Westboro and a 12-bed program for children ages 6-12 in Belchertown.
Officials with the state Department of Mental Health say the programs are operating at half capacity and consolidating them would ensure “taxpayer dollars are used effectively,” but the providers argue that there’s much more to the story.
If the proposal gets legislative approval in Healey’s roughly $62 billion budget request, the Bay State would lose its only intensive residential treatment program for children between the ages of 6 and 12 who are suffering from suicidal and/or homicidal ideations or other complex needs.
Tina Champagne, CEO of Cutchins Programs for Children and Families, runs the program, called “Three Rivers,” based in Western Massachusetts that serves children from all over the state. She called the governor’s request “mind boggling.”
“These services are needed or are going to be needed more than ever,” Champagne told the Herald. “The mental health crisis for children and families started to really increase after COVID. The pandemic ripple effects are still in effect in addition to all the uncertainty in the world.”
NFI Massachusetts provides intensive services to adolescents ages 13-18 who suffer from “serious emotional disturbance, trauma histories or mental health diagnoses.”
The program is like Three Rivers in that it helps those who need more care than what’s provided in a hospital or a more community-based setting, like at a school or doctor’s office, Executive Director Lydia Todd told the Herald.
“We maintain that the reasons for the underutilization do not equate to no need,” Todd said, “but there are instead bureaucratic obstacles, lack of marketing and lack of knowledge that needs to happen to make sure we are fully utilized.”
The proposed funding cuts are even more baffling, Champagne and Todd said, after they highlighted how the state had “invested millions” to relocate their programs within the past few years.
NFI Massachusetts and Three Rivers are not state-owned. The DMH has said that it “incurs the same costs regardless of whether a program is fully or partially utilized” as the programs are “contracted through an accommodation rate model.”
The proposed funding cuts “also reflect our commitment to helping people transition to receiving mental health care services in their homes and communities, which is a more effective way to provide treatment,” the agency says.
“However,” it has added, “adolescent patients will still be able to receive treatment at other locations in the state and younger children will be able to receive acute care treatment at hospitals when necessary.”
An agency spokesperson told the Herald Saturday that the governor’s proposed DMH budget requests an increase of $1.2 billion, or 7% more than current spending. The spokesperson added that the agency has “expanded access to care through our 31 Community Behavioral Health Centers.
“The Department of Mental Health is committed to supporting mental health needs across our state,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
After facing sharp backlash in the weeks following her budget proposal announcement in January, Healey decided to halt plans to close a Cape Cod psychiatric hospital and a Canton children’s rehab hospital. Working groups of stakeholders have convened to look into the future of both facilities.
An online petition urging the state to restore the “major cuts” to DMH’s youth and family services said losing the intensive residential treatment programs would “put entire families at risk.”
“This loss would force children to ‘board’ at home while waiting for the proper level of care,” the petition states, “affect schools, increase court involvement, and result in more lives lost to suicide. It will drive Emergency Room boarding back up.”
Massachusetts
Best places to find fresh flowers during spring in Massachusetts

Spring has sprung in Massachusetts.
People looking to shed the winter blues can once again immerse themselves in floral displays across the state.
From fruitful farms to bountiful gardens, here are some of the best places to see flowers bloom — and possibly take some home — during spring in Massachusetts.
Eastern Massachusetts
The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University
125 Arborway, Boston
The Arnold Arboretum’s 281 acres of trees, flowers and other plants make it an ideal place for walks, picnics and other activities this spring. Visitors can also celebrate Japanese culture during a cherry blossom celebration from 2 to 4:15 p.m. Saturday, April 19
Massachusetts Horticultural Society’s Garden at Elm Bank
900 Washington St., Wellesley
Not only can visitors see more than 75,000 blooming tulips at this garden, they can also take them home. Tulip Mania is set to return to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society’s Garden at Elm Bank in Wellesley in April. There are also several other gardens to stroll through.
Cider Hill Farm
45 Fern Ave., Amesbury
Named the fourth most beautiful farm in the world by The Travel in 2022, Cider Hill Farm is a 145-acre farm where visitors can cut their own flowers. The farm’s annual Tulip Feast, featuring 100,000 flowers, is scheduled for May 3 and 4 and May 10 and 11. Tickets should go on sale by late April.
Central Massachusetts
New England Botanic Garden
11 French Drive, Boylston
Visitors can see several blooming spring flowers at the New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill, from daffodils and tulips to magnolias and irises. The garden, which was voted the best Botanic Garden in the U.S. by TravelAwaits in 2023, has tons of events in March and April as well.
Ferjulian’s Farm
7 Lewis St., Hudson
Ferjulian’s Farm allows visitors to get lost in its two-acre hillside field this spring by offering subscriptions to the Flower Cutting Garden. The subscription costs $175 and lets people pick flowers from more than 200 varieties once a week from July 7 to Oct. 5. Subscriptions go on sale Sunday, April 13, on Ferjulian’s Farm’s website.
Western Massachusetts
Naumkeag
5 Prospect Hill Road, Stockbridge
Forty-eight acres of elegant gardens surrounding a rare cottage await visitors at this public garden in the Berkshires. Naumkeag will host its annual Daffodil & Tulip Festival, open Thursdays to Sundays from April 18 to May 11. Tickets for the festival can be purchased online.
The Botanic Garden at Smith College
16 College Lane, Northampton
The Botanic Garden of Smith College is free and open to the public year-round. Visitors can explore the garden’s 127-acre arboretum, 6 acres of managed outdoor gardens, and/or its 12,000-square-foot conservatory on a spring day.
Botanic Garden at Mt. Holyoke
15 Lower Lake Road, South Hadley
The Mount Holyoke College Botanic Garden has more than 2,000 different types of plants throughout its Talcott Greenhouse and surrounding gardens. The gardens and greenhouse are open year-round and are free for the public.
Did we miss your favorite flower destination? Email dcifarelli@masslive.com with suggestions.
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