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Boston — For Arwa Ait-Chaib and her mother, Wafa El Hidar, summertime in Chelsea, Massachusetts, means trying to beat the heat. 

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“There are always some days that I feel like we live in the middle of the Sahara desert,”  Ait-Chaib told CBS News.  

Their Chelsea neighborhood, located just across the river from Boston, offers little shade.

“We had no trees over here at all,” El Hidar said.  

Chelsea is plagued by what is known as the Urban Heat Island effect, where dense development and a lack of green space can cause some neighborhoods to bake.

“I just can’t stand it,” Ait-Chaib said. “It’s like, I feel sticky. It’s humid out, and if you go out the sun immediately burns your skin.”     

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Research from the nonprofit Climate Central shows peak temperatures in such urban areas can be 15 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit hotter than greener ones.  

“We’re basically an island of hot stuff,” Bianca Bowman, a climate justice manager with GreenRoots, a local Boston environmental group, said of Chelsea.

GreenRoots is experimenting with cooling solutions on a single block in Chelsea that GreenRoots calls the “cool block.”

“We looked at those spots and said, ‘OK, where can we throw as many solutions as possible to cool those areas down?’” Bowman said.

In what it calls an “urban laboratory,” GreenRoots has planted more than 100 trees on the block, resurfaced the street in lighter colors to reflect heat, and painted nearby rooftops white. GreenRoots is partnering with the city of Chelsea on the project, which is receiving a combination of funding from the state and philanthropic foundations. 

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“So when you paint a rooftop white, it’s actually reflecting heat instead of absorbing heat,” Bowman said.

Fixes like these could help save lives as climate change makes heat waves worse. Climate Central research has found that 88% of 247 major U.S. cities now have more extremely hot summer days than they did 55 years ago. Climate Central defines an extremely hot summer day as one that has a maximum temperature hotter than 95% of all summer days between 1970 and 2024.

On Tuesday, Boston recorded a high of 102 degrees, the hottest June day in the city since 1872, according to the National Weather Service.  

Boston University researchers are working with Chelsea residents this summer to study the problem even further. Some families are wearing small sensors to track heat exposure.  

Their research shows parks, trees and green space can reduce peak urban temperatures by two to nine degrees Fahrenheit. Of course, finding space in big, crowded cities is not always easy, so those that design such spaces have to make the most of what they have.

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A project is underway to replace pavement behind Ait-Chaib’s Chelsea home with a park that is being built by the city of Chelsea, but inspired by the “Cool Blocks” initiative. She says it feels like the neighborhood is improving.

Chris Reed, founder of the landscape architecture studio Stoss Landscape Urbanism, designed Boston’s groundbreaking Urban Forest Plan, first launched by the city in 2022. The plan established the city’s first urban forester position and urban forestry department. It also put in place procedures for preserving and extending the city’s tree canopy.

Under the plan, on one particular strip of land, about 400 trees were planted on just a single acre, Reed explains.

“So, you don’t need acres and acres and acres of land,” Reed told CBS News. “These kinds of places are in cities everywhere and can be transformed one by one.”


This story was produced in partnership with Climate Central.  

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Immigration, fertility drops show Massachusetts losing people

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Immigration, fertility drops show Massachusetts losing people


BOSTON — On the heels of federal estimates that reflect slowing population growth in Massachusetts, an expert on the topic cited dropping international immigration levels and long-term fertility trends as she told lawmakers that the drain could get even worse.

Immigration accounts for the biggest change in the state and nation’s population growth rate, Susan Strate, senior program manager for the UMass Donahue Institute’s Population Estimates Program, said Tuesday.

U.S. Census estimates released in January suggest Massachusetts’ population increased by about 0.2% between July 1, 2024 to July 1, 2025, to 7,154,084. The figure represents a slowdown in population growth compared to the previous year-over-year period, when Massachusetts saw its largest population increase in 60 years, almost 1%, between 2023 and 2024. It was fueled largely by high immigration levels.

Estimated net international immigration rates fell in Massachusetts in July 2025 to 40,240, compared to July 2024 at 77,957, Strate said. The Census Bureau named “a historic decline in net international migration” as the cause of slower overall U.S. population growth, showing a year-over-year increase of .5%.

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Population growth is critical for any state but in Massachusetts in particular immigrants have played a major role across sectors over the years, helping to boost an economy where high living costs can deter new arrivals and cause longtime residents to look out of state for more affordable lifestyles.

The recent estimate captured six months during the Biden administration, and six months under the administration of President Donald Trump, Sen. Will Brownsberger, D-Boston, noted while chairing a Senate Committee on the Census hearing. He asked Strate whether the majority of those 40,000 immigrants came to Massachusetts during the first half of that timeframe.

“I’d hesitate to put numbers on it,” Strate said. “I’m not an expert on federal policy, but as you know — mass deportations, and also this kind of, death by a thousand paper cuts, where a lot of the administrative processes for people are getting much harder, much more difficult to navigate, a lot more barriers being put up.”

“Absolutely, we would expect that number to continue to drop,” Strate added, referring to the state’s net international immigration figure.

The Trump administration has accelerated deportations and taken actions that will “secure” U.S. borders and “end illegal immigration,” according to the Department of Homeland Security. The administration has escalated federal immigration enforcement tactics since the recent estimates’ cutoff in July 2025, and there are no signs that the approach will change in the nearly three years remaining on the president’s term.

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Net immigration into Massachusetts has historically offset domestic outmigration. That held true in July 2025 estimates, which show that year-over-year immigration estimates still outweighed the estimated 33,340 people who left the state for other parts of the U.S., according to the Donahue Institute.

“Absent immigration, Massachusetts would already be losing population,” the Boston-based Pioneer Institute’s Economic Research Associate Aidan Enright said in a policy brief responding to the Census estimates. “Domestic out-migration rose again in 2025, and that’s a clear signal that the state is becoming less competitive as a place to live, work, and do business.”

Pioneer is among several groups that continue to warn about outmigration and are backing two tax-related ballot measures that could go before voters in November. Pioneer on Thursday released a report suggesting that domestic outmigration is “hollowing out” the state’s workforce and economy. The report also suggested Massachusetts lost an estimated 182,000 residents to net domestic outmigration from 2020 through 2025.

“We have sustained population growth entirely based on international migration,” Brownsberger told the News Service. “Over the past 12 months, international immigration has slowed to a trickle as a result of federal policy changes. That means that our projections of future population growth and future household formation need to be reviewed. All of our existing projections are based on immigration rates which are no longer to be expected.”

“It’s also hard to imagine the immigration trends will suddenly reverse, even if we have different policies coming from Washington,” the Boston Democrat added.

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In longer-term projections, Strate tied fertility rates into the mix. The median age of millennials was about 34 years old in 2025, Strate said, and the peak fertility cohort is aged 30 to 34 years old in Massachusetts.

“For the next 10 years, the folks who are aged 20-to-24 now will be aged 30-to-34, so they will be passing through that higher fertility period. But then kind of looking forward 20 years, to 2045, there’s no next wave of large population coming behind them,” Strate said.

Population projections begin to start falling after 2035, she said, in part because the population aging into that fertile group is smaller. The combination of baby boomers aging, and millennials passing through fertile range is a “perfect storm” for increased death and declining birth rates, Strate added.

Declining immigration will reduce births even further in Massachusetts, she said, referring to 2024 American Community Survey data measuring births by year and mother’s nativity.

“I think it’s quite striking that by 2024, about 38% of all of the births in Massachusetts are to mothers who were born outside of the U.S. So you can kind of imagine if immigration continues to fall off, that births will also be undercut to the tune of 38% or more going forward,” Strate said.

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Concerns about reaching immigrant communities for the Census have already been reflected upon by Brownsberger, and Secretary of State William F. Galvin recently cited concerns about “efforts now underway to limit the process and procedures for the count” in a reelection message.

While those count concerns and immigration projections are different issues, they’re linked in that they’re both a consequence of federal policy, Brownsberger said. It will be harder to count immigration populations, and those populations will be smaller, he said.

“The challenge in the 2030 census count is to include marginalized populations, especially immigrant populations,” Brownsberger said. “That’s always a challenge, but the events of the last 12 months have enormously reduced trust in immigrant communities and they’re less likely to stand up to be counted in the 2030 Census.”

Ella Adams is a reporter for the State House News Service and State Affairs Massachusetts. Reach her at ella.adams@statehousenews.com.

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Massachusetts State Trooper seriously injured after cruiser is hit on I-95 in Salisbury

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Massachusetts State Trooper seriously injured after cruiser is hit on I-95 in Salisbury



A Massachusetts State Trooper was seriously injured after his cruiser was hit on Interstate-95 in Salisbury on Saturday.

The trooper pulled over with his emergency lights on to remove a ladder from the left lane around 2:15 p.m. He removed the ladder, got back into the car and buckled his seatbelt when he was hit by another vehicle, according to police. 

State Police said it happened “suddenly and without warning.” 

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The trooper was seriously injured and received medical attention from EMS and other officers on scene. He was taken to Portsmouth Regional Hospital in New Hampshire. There is no update on his condition. His identity has not been released.

The driver of the other vehicle was taken to Lawrence General Hospital. Their condition and identity are not available. There are no charges at this time. 

Three lanes of I-95 were closed while debris and the ladder were cleaned up. 

Salisbury, Massachusetts is over 40 miles from Boston. It is located around 2 miles from the New Hampshire border. 

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Mass. weather: Snowy weekend forecast ahead of warm temps across state

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Mass. weather: Snowy weekend forecast ahead of warm temps across state


Some parts of Massachusetts could see snow over the weekend, but that won’t stop the state’s string of above-freezing days from continuing into next week.

The National Weather Service forecast calls for possible snow showers on Sunday night into Monday morning, but there is only a 20% chance of precipitation in most areas. Central and Western Massachusetts have a better chance to see snow, but it will likely present as light flurries with little to no accumulation.

At most, the National Weather Service predicts any accumulation to be less than a half-inch.

Daytime conditions on Saturday will once again be dry and sunny, with afternoon highs approaching 30 degrees across much of the state. Boston will see a high temp of 38 degrees, while Worcester will check in at 37 degrees and Springfield will hit 39 degrees. Pittsfield will be slightly cooler at 34 degrees, while Cape Cod & the Islands will top out at 35 degrees.

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Temperatures will drop to the low 20s and mid teens overnight with Boston going as low as 22 degrees and Central and Western Massachusetts hitting 17 degrees.

Conditions will be dry and sunny again Sunday, with temperatures in the mid 30s for most of the state before the overnight flurries move in.

Next week will be seasonably warm, with Monday temperatures in the high 30s to low 40s, and Tuesday and Wednesday forecasts calling for afternoon temperatures in the mid to high 40s across the state.



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