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There’s good motive to need candidates for auditor, a very powerful monitor of state authorities, to be as clear as doable, however each candidate for workplace in Massachusetts ought to observe Dempsey’s instance. The marketing campaign of state Senator Diana DiZoglio, Dempsey’s rival within the Democratic major, has stated she is going to publish her accomplished questionnaires as properly. As of Thursday, 4 have been up, however she hadn’t posted these from the Massachusetts Academics Affiliation or the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Staff, each of which have endorsed her.
It ought to go with out saying that candidates shouldn’t make undisclosed commitments to constituency teams. Nor, for that matter, ought to constituency or advocacy teams ask for solutions they themselves received’t make public.
But many do. Take, for instance, the Massachusetts AFL-CIO. In a quick cellphone dialog, president Steven Tolman stated this of his union’s questionnaires: “We don’t launch folks’s responses. That’s for our inside info.” Pushed on whether or not it was acceptable for the union to search nonpublic commitments from candidates for public workplace, Tolman stated he would get again to the Globe editorial board. A spokesman later emailed a press release in Tolman’s identify that failed to deal with the appropriateness query.
“Whereas we don’t launch candidate questionnaires, we’re proud to face by the candidates we recommend and the problems for which we advocate,” it proclaimed.
Over on the Massachusetts Academics Affiliation, Scott McLellan, a spokesman, stated the state’s largest academics union wouldn’t launch the finished questionnaires and suggested a reporter to as an alternative request them from the assorted candidates. Requested why the union thought it acceptable to hunt commitments it wouldn’t make public from public candidates for public workplace, McLellan ducked and dodged.
The American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Staff didn’t reply in any respect to a Globe editorial board request for the paperwork.
In a cellphone interview, Christopher Carlozzi, state director for the Nationwide Federation of Impartial Enterprise, stated the enterprise group has not but written, not to mention distributed, its endorsement questionnaire for non-incumbents, however added: “We don’t publicly disclose these.”
Nonetheless, because of Dempsey, we all know the commitments no less than a few of these teams search.
For unions, it’s usually about limiting competitors.
The AFL-CIO, for instance, desires candidates to help so-called challenge labor agreements, which successfully hold non-union building corporations from competing for public building contracts. Equally, the union opposes any try by state authorities to contract with non-public corporations for companies at present supplied by public workers. Thus this query: “Efforts to denationalise within the identify of bigger company earnings are a menace to the general public companies that working folks depend on in our Commonwealth. If elected, what is going to you do to guard public companies and defend in opposition to privatization?”
However AFSCME makes the AFL-CIO appear like a piker relating to opposing privatization. That public-employee union asks no fewer than 5 questions on the matter, searching for not only a candidate’s dedication to the Pacheco Regulation, which makes privatization very tough, but in addition to increasing that competition-discouraging statute. To wit: The union desires to increase the legislation to cowl all municipalities, not simply state authorities.
The MTA, unsurprisingly, is utilizing its questionnaire to attempt to leverage anti-charter faculty guarantees.
Regardless of top-flight tutorial analysis displaying the tutorial worth that constitution colleges impart in Massachusetts, the MTA is useless set in opposition to the modern public-school academies as a result of they aren’t routinely unionized and reply to the state board of schooling relatively than the native faculty district. Thus the MTA’s questionnaire seeks commitments from candidates on sustaining a present cap on charters and requiring native approval of all new charters, a tall order in most districts.
The MTA additionally desires candidates to hitch its unending battle to get rid of the MCAS take a look at as a commencement requirement. The Massachusetts Complete Evaluation System is extensively credited with serving to increase Massachusetts into the function of nationwide chief on academic high quality. However the state additionally makes use of scores from these standardized checks to judge colleges and, if they’re persistently subpar, to intervene to enhance them.
The MTA additionally desires academics to be given the authorized proper to strike and seeks help for modifications within the pension-reform legislation handed a decade or so in the past.
Irrespective of the place one stands on these public-policy issues, the candidates’ responses to these questions needs to be public.
“Publishing these responses on our web site lets voters see for themselves what I’m saying and what commitments I’m making,” stated Dempsey. “Each candidate ought to be a part of me in taking this pledge for the sake of larger accountability and transparency. It’s the least that voters deserve.”
It’s laborious to place issues any higher than that.
Editorials signify the views of the Boston Globe Editorial Board. Comply with us on Twitter at @GlobeOpinion.
A new report says the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families mismanaged mental health care for children.
State Auditor Diana DiZoglio said her report found that DCF did not always obtain or renew court approval before children under its care were given antipsychotic medications. It also found the agency did not always document or update medications listed in children’s medical passports. And nearly all of the cases examined by the audit had information missing from their files.
DiZoglio said this shows procedures need to change.
“There are young lives attached to each of these case files and proper documentation can make all of the difference when it comes to a child’s protection,” she told NBC10 Boston Friday.
In a statement, a representative for the department said it appreciated DiZoglio’s “attention to the safety and health of children in foster care” and that it was working on addressing the documentation gaps her report identified.
“We also recognize the importance of consistently updating current medical information in the child’s electronic case record and are exploring adjustments to policy and practice,” the statement said. “Since the audit period ended in June 2021, DCF gained access to monthly MassHealth Pharmacy claims data, which is used to create electronic medication records and, any time prescribers recommend anti-psychotics for a child, DCF conducts a medical review to assesses the appropriateness of the medication.”
Politics
Donald Trump is on his way back to the White House following his decisive win Tuesday, and his sweeping campaign promises could yield some big impacts in Massachusetts.
For one thing, there’s no love lost between Trump and Gov. Maura Healey, who took the first Trump administration to court 96 times during her tenure as state attorney general (and won in 77% of those cases, per The Boston Globe). Likewise, current Attorney General Andrea Campbell said her office is ready to pounce.
Trump’s vows to overhaul education and reshape health care hit home for Massachusetts, which prides itself on being a national leader in both sectors. His mass deportation plans could devastate some communities in the Bay State, where 18.1% of residents were born in another country.
Here’s a (non-exhaustive) roundup of five areas where Trump’s policies could impact Massachusetts.
Trump has promised to “carry out the largest deportation operation in American history.” His hardline approach focuses largely on the U.S.-Mexico border, with vows to strengthen U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and increase penalties for illegal border crossings and overstayed visas. And that could have serious impacts in Massachusetts, which had about 325,000 unauthorized immigrants as of 2022, per Pew Research Center data.
The ongoing migrant crisis has become a hot-button issue in Massachusetts in recent years, with frequent battles over shelters and other forms of state aid. Immigration policies were also a key issue in the lawsuits Healey filed or joined against the federal government as AG.
Trump is likely to face more legal challenges this time around, and the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition has vowed to “fight against xenophobic policies and rhetoric.”
“Policies such as carrying out mass deportations, revoking humanitarian parole programs, and ending Temporary Protected Status are unjust and un-American,” Executive Director Elizabeth Sweet said in a statement Wednesday. “MIRA will not stand by quietly while our immigrant communities are under attack. We will tirelessly work to protect our immigrant population, and their right to due process here in Massachusetts and across the country.”
Also prepared is Boston-based Lawyers for Civil Rights, which filed a class action lawsuit against Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and others on behalf of a group of migrants flown to Martha’s Vineyard in 2022.
“At Lawyers for Civil Rights, we have been down this road before,” LCR Executive Director Iván Espinoza-Madrigal said in a statement. “Time after time, we have filed lawsuits against the Trump Administration — as we would against any official, blue or red, who tramples on the Constitution.”
The MBTA has benefitted substantially from federal funding during President Joe Biden’s time in office, and General Manager Phil Eng has said he will seek federal grants and assistance as the T tries to stave off a “fiscal cliff” projected for next year.
Yet the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which has provided millions of dollars in funding for the MBTA and Massachusetts transportation projects, expires in 2026. The law’s future beyond then isn’t clear, and Project 2025 — a possible blueprint for Trump’s second term written by his allies — proposes further attacks on federal transit funding.
According to the Center for American Progress, a liberal-leaning public policy research organization, Project 2025 would defund transit maintenance and increase costs for commuters in part by eliminating critical Federal Transit Administration funding. The MBTA sorely needs those funds; last year, the agency said it would cost about $24.5 billion to bring the T’s infrastructure into a state of good repair, thanks to years of underinvestment.
Trump has long taken aim at the Affordable Care Act, colloquially known as Obamacare, and in September’s presidential debate said his team is “looking at different plans” to possibly replace it. If he gets his way with proposed health care policy changes, that could mean higher costs for Americans, including some in Massachusetts.
Speaking to The Boston Globe, Massachusetts Nurses Association Executive Director Julie Pinkham also raised concerns that a growing crisis in the state’s health care system could fester or worsen under Trump’s second term. She also pointed out that the health care workforce here has long been overburdened and needs higher federal reimbursements for insurance programs for many patients, according to the Globe.
“From the standpoint of people delivering care, this isn’t good,” Pinkham told the newspaper. She also reportedly expressed fear the new administration could jeopardize the state’s health reforms and ability to treat low-income patients.
Trump has hinted that Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vaccine critic who holds no medical or public health degrees, could have a “big role” in his second administration. RFK Jr. has said “entire departments” of the Food and Drug Administration “have to go,” and his comments have stoked fear and uncertainty among public health experts and the pharmaceutical and biotech industries, which have a large footprint in Greater Boston.
Experts have also warned that Trump’s second term will likely mean more threats to reproductive rights. Abortion remains legal and protected by state law in Massachusetts, and Healey has taken steps to stockpile the abortion medication mifepristone amid federal turmoil. But experts told the Globe some New England abortion providers are likely to lose significant federal funding under the new Trump administration and may need state leaders to cover the shortfall.
Lora Pellegrini, president of the Massachusetts Women’s Political Caucus, told GBH Trump’s election stokes other fears concerning reproductive care.
“We could see a complete federal ban on abortion, contraception, IVF that would impact all the states, including Massachusetts, so that’s pretty shocking and I’m not sure everyone fully understands that,” Pellegrini told the news outlet.
Trump also made attacks on transgender Americans central to his campaign, often targeting gender-affirming care.
Trump has threatened to issue an executive order targeting offshore wind development, a cornerstone of Massachusetts’s clean energy and climate goals.
“He’s going to shut down offshore wind,” Healey said in August, according to CommonWealth. “He’s going to shut down all clean energy technology. He’s going to shut down the move toward renewables. And if that were to happen, we would end up with a sicker, less healthy population. The consequences on our economy would be devastating.”
Trump’s election raises concerns about the state’s likely loss in federal support for clean energy, a sector that contributed more than $14 billion to Massachusetts’s gross state product in 2022, according to the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center. In fact, Trump has vowed to increase U.S. production of fossil fuels, and the Republican platform includes a promise to “DRILL, BABY, DRILL.”
Trump has said he wants to close the federal Department of Education and give more control to individual states, though he wouldn’t be able to do so unilaterally. One of his core campaign promises is to “cut federal funding for any school pushing critical race theory, radical gender ideology, and other inappropriate racial, sexual, or political content on our children,” potentially teeing up a battle with more liberal-leaning states like Massachusetts.
Trump’s election will likely impact the state’s robust higher education sector, too, given his plan to “reclaim” universities from “Marxist maniacs.” According to the Globe, Trump and his allies propose replacing universities’ existing oversight agencies with new ones that would defend “the American tradition and Western civilization,” and they’ve hinted at plans to target campus diversity initiatives. A second Trump term also spells some uncertainty for Massachusetts student loan borrowers.
But there’s a chance Massachusetts won’t feel the educational impacts quite as deeply as some other states, John Baick, a history professor at Western New England University, suggested in comments to MassLive last month.
“The basic reality is that we’re going to be a pro-education state. And to put it rather bluntly, it’s similar to the idea of reproductive rights and a woman’s right to choose,” Baick told the news outlet. “What happens in Washington, D.C. may affect the country pretty dramatically, in some states pretty dramatically, but Massachusetts will basically be okay.”
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Schools are closed in two Massachusetts cities on Friday as teachers go on strike. Teachers in Beverly and Gloucester plan to picket as they continue to negotiate a new contract.
Well, they’ve been in negotiations without a contract since February – and have reached an impasse.
So instead of being in the classrooms today, teachers will be picketing outside these schools.
In Gloucester, they’re looking for an 18-25% raise over the course of a new contract, and up to 52 days of paid parental leave, among other issues.
But Gloucester’s mayor says the city is facing up to a $7 million budget shortfall, and it’s impossible to give teachers everything they’re asking for.
Meanwhile in Beverly, teachers say they’re underpaid, schools are understaffed, classrooms are overflowing, and teachers are burned out and heading to other districts.
The Department of Labor Relations is now involved, and so negotiations will be through a mediator going forward.
“None of us wants to do this, but at this point we have no choice,” said Julia Brotherton, of the Beverly Teachers Association. “Beverly schools are in crisis. Critical paraprofessional positions regularly go unfilled because the city pays only poverty wages.”
The Beverly School Committee said in a statement, “We want to make it clear that the School Committee does not condone the illegal actions of the Beverly Teachers Association…We understand that this is a severe disruption to the lives of our students and families…”
Meanwhile, Gloucester has a playoff football game Friday night that could be in jeopardy and might not happen due to the strike. We should find out later in the day whether that will happen.
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