Sign up for the Today newsletter
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
Crime
Gov. Maura Healey announced a $14 million safety grant following several so-called street takeovers this month.
Healey’s press conference on Thursday was in response to violent car meetups that occurred in several cities on Oct. 4, which allegedly saw a crowd use fireworks to ignite a police cruiser in the South End.
“We have zero tolerance for this kind of behavior,” Healey said. “It poses a real significant threat to public safety and certainly harms quality of life in our neighborhoods and communities.”
“These illegal car meetups, street takeovers have negatively impacted our residents, our businesses and our city as a whole, damaging personal and real property, … creating serious risk of personal injury to onlookers, pedestrians, passengers, and even injuring one of my officers,” Brockton Police Chief Brenda Perez said.
“These are organized groups whose purpose is to cause chaos and disruption, to create public disturbance, and to draw attention from both the communities they harass and the police want to protect those communities, and they have succeeded in gaining our attention,” said Fall River Police Chief Kelly Furtado.
In response to these meetups, State Police worked with local departments to prevent other meetups that were advertised online. On Oct. 11, law enforcement across the state issued 232 civil citations, 74 warnings, and 20 criminal summons, arrested seven people, towed 15 vehicles, seized two vehicles under the Controlled Substances Act, and recovered one stolen car as part of the prevention work, Healey said.
During Saturday’s efforts, some of the involved motorists fled the scene and State Police are continuing to work to identify the suspects, Massachusetts State Police Colonel Geoffrey Noble said.
To continue these prevention efforts, Healey issued a $14 million safety grant.. The grant includes $6.2 million from the Municipal Road Safety Grant Program for 210 local police departments, $7.1 million from the State Agency Traffic Safety Grant Program for nine state agencies, and $613,900 from the State Traffic Safety Information System Improvements Program to strengthen crash data collection and reporting, according to a press release.
“Every resident of our state deserves to live in a community with a high quality of life and where public safety is assured, and the men and women working across police departments are out there every day trying to do just that,” she said.
Healey said her office will continue to work with law enforcement to monitor online channels and prevent further dangerous meet ups. She urged the public to report any advertisements of such meetups to the authorities.
“The two operations the governor highlighted today illustrate the power of collaboration, the power of working together to meet the evolving needs of the Commonwealth, to make our community safer beyond any one mission,” Noble said.
Although street takeovers are new to the state, State Police and its partners have been tracking similar events across the country for several years, Noble said.
The street takeovers seem to be an escalation of the increase of road races seen during the COVID-19 pandemic, Healey added.
The takeovers in Massachusetts caught the attention of President Donald Trump, who said Tuesday he would prevent the 2026 World Cup games from taking place in Foxborough if he feels it is unsafe.
In addition to Massachusetts being one of the safest states in the nation, “I think that Robert Kraft and the team have safety well in hand,” Healey said when asked about Trump’s comments about the World Cup.
“That’s just more political theater,” Healey continued. “Another day, another Donald Trump comment.”
While public safety is a priority for Healey, she is also “dealing with and trying to mitigate against some of the serious, serious harm by the Trump administration and the reconciliation bill that has cut, effectively, [$3.7 billion] from our budget over the next couple of years,” she said.
Get everything you need to know to start your day, delivered right to your inbox every morning.
In the long-standing tradition of cold (or snowy) weekends this winter, this one won’t disappoint. Clouds are advancing today ahead of a complex storm system arriving late tonight.
Light snow or flurries may break out as early as this evening, but for the most part today is quiet and cloudy. After midnight, ocean effect snow should start to pop up along the coast.
Meantime, an arctic cold front will be moving in from the west toward daybreak. These two will intertwine and create snow bands or streaks through the day tomorrow – some of which may be moderate to heavy at times.
Where these precisely set up is anyone’s guess, as our guidance plots them anywhere from the coast to Metrowest to Greater Worcester. It’s the difference between seeing 2-4 inches of snow versus 4-6 inches – not a lot of difference, but still one that’s tough to nail down.
That aside, the wind will increase late into the evening as the arctic air moves in. Gusts through Saturday night into Sunday morning should top 40 mph at times – especially on Cape Cod.
Some drifting snow is possible, along with numbing wind chills into Sunday. Some may be dangerously cold – reaching -20 to -25 in Greater Worcester and parts of Western Massachusetts. It’s not much warmer elsewhere, with wind chills 10-15 below at times.
Winds will back off Monday as temperatures return to the low/mid 30s by Tuesday and Wednesday.
There are extreme cold watches and warnings in place for parts of Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire and Vermont.
The extreme cold warnings are in effect from 6 p.m. Saturday to 1 p.m. Sunday with dangerously cold wind chills as low as 25 to 30 below expected for portions of northern Connecticut and central and western Massachusetts.
Click here for a list of active weather alerts
We’re also watching another storm by the middle of week. This one appears to stay on the cold side, so we’re expecting mostly snow. More on this in the coming days.
Have a great weekend!
Waymo, the self-driving robotaxi company, says it is returning to Boston one year after its preliminary exploration of the city’s winding streets.
“We learned a lot from last year’s visit, and we’re excited to continue effectively adapting to Boston’s cobblestones, narrow alleyways, roundabouts and turnpikes,” Waymo said in a statement on Thursday.
But the Silicon Valley ride-hailing service says it needs help from Massachusetts lawmakers before Boston residents can hop in one of their futuristic cars.
“Before offering fully autonomous rides to Bostonians, we’ll first need the state to legalize fully autonomous vehicles,” Waymo said. “We’re looking forward to engaging with officials to inform that path.”
Waymo has not officially applied to have its vehicles operate without drivers on Massachusetts roads, according to MassDOT.
“The first step for any company seeking to operate autonomous vehicles on public roads in Massachusetts would be to complete the ‘Application to Test’ with MassDOT,” the agency said in a statement. “At present, Waymo has not done so.”
Uber and Lyft drivers who are worried about losing work have protested against allowing driverless cars in the state. The company seems to have at least one key lawmaker working to make something happen.
“Our goal is to create a clear and consistent framework to ensure that any new technology on our roads meets established safety standards,” said Lynn state Rep. Dan Cahill, who is chair of the Joint Committee on Public Safety and Homeland Security.
Waymo said it is committed to a “constructive dialogue with Boston’s communities.” But some city leaders were skeptical last year as Waymo tested its vehicles in Boston with humans behind the wheel.
“Driving here is not like driving in the rest of the country,” Chief of Streets Jascha Franklin-Hodge said. “Our streets are complex, they’re congested, they’re chaotic.”
City Councilor Ed Flynn said at a hearing last summer that he has concerns about Waymo navigating double-parkers and delivery drivers who take up space on Boston streets.
“There is also nonstop road construction during the summer, street closings as well,” Flynn said. “And in winter, we have snow banks.”
Waymo said Thursday it has been testing its technology “across some of the snowiest cities in the country to support fully autonomous operations in a wide range of winter weather, so Massachusetts residents and visitors can have an even more dependable way to get around.”
13-year-old rider dies following incident at northwest Indiana BMX park
TV star fisherman, crew all presumed dead after boat sinks off Massachusetts coast
UPDATE: Ohio woman charged in shooting death of West TN deputy
13-year-old boy dies in BMX accident, officials, Steel Wheels BMX says
Virginia Democrats seek dozens of new tax hikes, including on dog walking and dry cleaning
TEA is on board with almost all of Austin ISD’s turnaround plans
Trump unveils new rendering of sprawling White House ballroom project
Live results: Texas state Senate runoff