Massachusetts
Massachusetts' Haitian community feels the weight and history of racist lies
Hundreds of Haitians and their allies gathered on Boston Common Tuesday to protest the racist lies being perpetuated by presidential nominee Donald Trump and his running mate JD Vance.
Among those who spoke at the rally was Boston City Councilor Ruthzee Louijeune, herself the daughter of Haitian immigrants, who expressed disdain for former President Trump, saying “someone who used to occupy the highest seat in the land is spreading these hateful xenophobic and racist lies.”
“Do not hit people who already have their backs against the wall,” said Louijeune. “We stand here in solidarity because we must.”
The Tuesday rally came as Massachusetts’ large Haitian population reckons with the ugly rhetoric that’s become a flashpoint in the 2024 election.
Ishtar Pady and her father came to Massachusetts in 2023 through a humanitarian parole program set up by the Biden administration. Her father was suffering from stage four cancer with no possibility of treatment in Haiti, and the family had been subject to kidnapping attempts there, with an uncle being killed. Her father died after their arrival in Massachusetts.
Pady said no one “wants” to leave their home, but challenging circumstances in Haiti have forced many to migrate.
“In general, the population, the country, is going through tough times and we’re not in our strongest point,” she said. “We’re already down. It’s easy to pick on us — like bullies pick on the weak kids at school.”
Pady said the ugly, racist lies about Haitians eating domestic pets, and the absence of compassion from the Republican presidential ticket, has left her baffled and saddened. She hasn’t encountered much hatred that’s targeted her directly, but there was a recent, telling question from a white person.
“I’ve had somebody ask me, ‘Do Haitians eat cats and dogs?’” she recalled. “I wouldn’t qualify it as racism, personally. Maybe ignorance.”
“We’re already down. It’s easy to pick on us — like bullies pick on the weak kids at school.”
Ishtar Pady
The Rev. Myrlande DesRosiers is the founder of the Everett Haitian Community Center, which provides a variety services to the Haitian community, including English for Speakers of Other Languages classes aimed at parents. She said that among the adults she works with, there’s a sense of fear that their children will be attacked in school because of the rhetoric being perpetuated by top Republicans.
“They are lies. Haitians don’t eat pets,” DesRosiers said. “In Haitian Creole, we call them animal domestik. Dogs are considered bon zanmi, which means best friend.”
Changing the conversation
The racist myths being spread by high-level Republicans are hitting especially hard in Massachusetts, which has the third-largest Haitian community in the U.S., according to the Massachusetts Immigrant & Refugee Advocacy Coalition, MIRA.
Sarah Betancourt
GBH News
The individuals GBH News spoke with for this story say that deep-rooted racism and xenophobia come from a lack of education and misunderstanding about Haitian culture and history.
Haiti was the first Black-led republic in the world, where the enslaved population threw off French colonial rule in 1804.
“[We are] the very first Black people to have fought and gained our independence. So we do know that we have value,” said DesRosiers.
The young nation played a prominent role in world politics, becoming the first country to recognize the Greek Revolution against Ottoman rule in 1821. Greece recognizes this
even today.
But the long-lasting impacts of French colonialism and U.S. foreign policy have led to chronic instability in Haiti, with waves of political and economic refugees fleeing to the United States.
Gabrielle Rene is a local community activist and podcaster who came to Massachusetts from Haiti in the 1980s, when she was 13 years old. The violent reign of Haitian dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier and ongoing unrest prompted her family to resettle in Somerville.
“My people have gone through enough. The fact that [Trump and Vance] are using them [Haitians] to get votes, it’s really embarrassing. And it’s not fair to us,” Rene said.
“I’ve spoken extensively about what it means to be an immigrant in this country,” said Rene, referring to her podcast and community work. “Some of what we’ve had to give up. I had hidden my dreams of growing up in my own country and having to come to another.”
Elizabeth Sweet, executive director of MIRA, said the racist rhetoric ignores the valuable ways Haitians have integrated into communities across the United States.
“They [Haitians] are building businesses there. They’re working in our health care system,” she said. “We see so many contributions from Haitians and are really saddened that this kind of information is being said about them.”
“We just have to learn how to sometimes not internalize any shame around us, but also to educate.”
Gabrielle Rene, community activist and podcaster
It’s not the first time
Rene recalls the painful racism prompted by the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention incorrectly suggested that Haitians were at
increased risk for acquiring HIV, and that the nation had been a root cause in its spread. Those claims led to major burdens on Haiti’s economy.
“They had started the rumor that the Haitians were the carriers of HIV/AIDS. And at the time I was a child, I really didn’t know what was happening,” Rene said, recounting how the adults in her life went to a rally to demonstrate against the rhetoric.
“So it happens every generation,” she added. “It happens all the time, and we just have to learn how to sometimes not internalize any shame around us, but also to educate.”
Régine Michelle Jean-Charles, director of Africana studies at Northeastern University, said the current rhetoric is an extension of “a longstanding campaign of vilification and dehumanization of Haitians,” including Trump’s reference to the country as a “shithole” in 2018.
Jean-Charles said that from the U.S. occupation of Haiti in the early twentieth century, through the devastating earthquake of 2010, and up to the present day, Haitians have been targets for American racism and xenophobia. Community members agree.
“It’s an old playbook,” said Dr. Geralde Gabeau. Gabeau is the head of the Immigrant Family Services Institute, a nonprofit in Mattapan that’s helping an unprecedented number of Haitians who’ve fled to Boston. She grew up in Haiti, and still has family there.
“I think anyone who has the smallest appreciation for human dignity to stand with us and say enough is enough,” she said. Gabeau believes that the lies spread by Trump and Vance will continue to reverberate.
“Words do have consequences,” said Gabeau. “Are we still allowed to walk down the street without having any fear?”
Massachusetts
Marijuana prices have been taking a nosedive. What comes next? – The Boston Globe
Grocery prices are rising. Rents are up. There is one product, though, that’s actually getting cheaper: marijuana.
The price of a gram of weed — the amount in a large joint — was down to just above $4, on average, in January, the latest continuation of a years-long nose-dive that has brought prices plummeting over 70 percent since pot stores first opened in Massachusetts in 2018. In those days, a gram cost more than $14.
“I’m taking advantage definitely,” Tori Wells, a Boston customer, said of current rock-bottom prices as she left downtown dispensary Pure Oasis one recent afternoon.
While consumers are happy, low prices have launched the industry into turmoil. It’s a far cry from the visions of wealth in cannabis that laid the foundation for many entrepreneurs to enter the industry and the state’s efforts at enriching Black and Latino communities that were targeted by the war on drugs.
“Profitability is tough to reach,” said Gabriel Vieira, CEO of Zyp Run, the first cannabis delivery service to open in Greater Boston in 2023. Delivery business licenses remain exclusive to equity operators, but many have struggled to find success. Just last month, Vieira’s company had to settle a state tax debt of more than $410,000 in order to continue operating this year, he said.
Marijuana growers and manufacturers said retail businesses are increasingly stiffing them on payments as money runs thin across the industry. There are signs that lawsuits, debts, and unpaid taxes are piling up, while business closures accelerate. Last fiscal year, 13 retail stores closed after either having their licenses revoked or choosing not to renew their licenses operations — more than in all previous years of legalization combined. And of the 71 cannabis business licenses of all kinds surrendered since recreational pot sales began, almost half were given up in the most recent fiscal year.
“Every state has a bottom, and we are in it,” said Derek Ross, CEO of Nova Farms, a company with six dispensaries across Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, and New Jersey, and hundreds of cultivation acres in the Northeast. “If we didn’t have opportunities in other states, we’d be struggling to keep our head above water.”
The industry’s dismal state is the result of an oversaturated market with too many marijuana plants being grown, said Commissioner Kimberly Roy, of the Cannabis Control Commission.
The commission is considering whether to freeze new cultivation licenses, with a public hearing on the matter likely soon. It’s a measure Roy supports.
“We need to hit the brakes,” Roy said. “Quite frankly, it’s overdue.”
By the end of 2025, the industry had the capacity to grow over 4.5 million square feet of cannabis plant canopy, up from 3.65 million in 2023.
Now cultivator competition is driving “razor-thin margins,” Roy added, and becoming a pain point for the entire industry.
Andrew Kazakoff, of Fathom Cannabis, a cultivator in West Boylston, said he supports a freeze on new growers.
“We need to take a halt,” Kazakoff said, adding: “Let the industry settle, work on itself, and come to equilibrium.”
As companies jockey for business there is also a “race to the bottom” on prices in the retail market that has led to “a lot of these businesses kind of cannibalizing each other,” said Ryan Dominguez, executive director of the Massachusetts Cannabis Coalition, a trade group. He added that a freeze could be a necessary step in righting the industry.
What’s happening in Massachusetts is something that other states have experienced, said Beau Kilmer, co-director of the RAND Drug Policy Research Center.
Cannabis prices have fallen nationwide, particularly in early legalizing states such as Colorado, California, and Oregon, whose head start in infrastructure building has quickly turned to rampant oversupply. Oregon has imposed various pauses on its cannabis licensing dating back to 2018, with new license approvals of any kind currently banned.
“If you’re not going to limit the amount that’s produced, you should expect to see these price declines,” Kilmer said. Likewise, other New England states, including Connecticut and Maine, have retained higher prices than Massachusetts, the first pot stronghold on the East Coast and still its largest grower, since going legal.
The low prices mean cannabis businesses are mired in money problems, even as demand has continued to grow for their products. The number of cannabis sales that occurred last year increased by 8 percent over 2024, but revenues from those sales essentially plateaued, totaling around $1.65 billion for both 2024 and 2025.
Ross, the CEO of Nova Farms, said he cut 25 percent of his multi-state workforce in the last 18 months, as even diversified outfits have had to become “lean and mean,” to weather today’s market.
Two dozen companies, including four cultivators and 12 retailers, were in court-appointed receivership, the state’s legal alternative to bankruptcy, in January, according to commission data. More have been added since. Bankruptcy isn’t an option for cannabis companies as long as the drug remains federally illegal.
Designated as participating in “trafficking,” cannabis sellers also pay significantly more in federal taxes, often at rates of 60 to 80 percent, and are barred from making some regular deductible expenses.
Brian Keith, cofounder of Rooted In, said his Newbury Street dispensary, which opened in 2022, would be profitable if it weren’t for the heavy burden of the federal tax code, which places the most strain on retail stores.
Brian Keith, owner of Rooted In, is one of many small cannabis shops facing plummeting retail prices on cannabis and a compression that is making it difficult for local owners to stay afloat.
A future VIP social consumption private room is set up downstairs at Rooted In.
(David L. Ryan/Globe Staff)
(David L. Ryan/Globe Staff)
He filed his taxes on time this year but didn’t have the funds, he said, and now it may take over 12 months to settle over $170,000 in outstanding debts through a payment plan with the IRS.
“We’re seeing the same number of people walking through the door, but less revenue,” Keith said.
Keith is a member of the state’s social equity program, aimed at helping communities disproportionately impacted by the war on drugs build wealth.
His company has raised more than a quarter million dollars from communities of color in Dorchester, Roxbury, and Mattapan to fund its initial operations, he said, but the profits he planned to bring back to those communities haven’t materialized because of the prices plummeting.
Keith’s business is one of about 100 owned by people in the state’s two equity programs — about 15 percent of all open businesses in the state. Many of these entrepreneurs are struggling to make ends meet, the Globe has reported.
The CCC has approved a framework to allow the opening of marijuana lounges, giving exclusive access to equity entrepreneurs and smaller operations, though that rollout is just getting off the ground.
Many cannabis cultivators and manufacturers are seeing an escalating issue of unpaid debts.
Kazakoff, the grower in West Boylston, said half his orders last year were not paid on time by retailers, and a few not at all. That was barely a problem before 2025, he said.
“I grapple with the fact every single month of: Do I stay in business when I’m not getting paid by dispensaries?” he said. “Or how am I going to pay my employees?”
Currently, the CCC has no authority to police these business-to-business transactions, Commissioner Roy said, though she said it’s time for them to try and address it. Cannabis reform bills pending in the State House and Senate look to reshape cannabis regulations, including by mirroring alcohol enforcement, by restricting delinquent companies to having to pay their bills as soon as they receive products and publishing their names. Both versions of the legislation would also dissolve the current five-member cannabis commission, replacing it with a smaller three-member body.

Cultivators such as Kris Foley, CEO of Berkshire Roots, have taken matters into their own hands, initiating legal action to retrieve funds he said he is owed from around a half dozen retailers.
“A lot of partners that we worked with early on, they were good payers,” but that changed suddenly, said Foley, who runs two Pittsfield cultivation facilities and a nearby dispensary, as well as another shop in East Boston. He hasn’t been paid on time for between $150,000 and $200,000 worth of product since 2024.
Nova Farms has been shorted payment for an estimated $4.5 million in product in Massachusetts in the past two years, far more than its other states, Ross said.
Steve Reilly, co-owner and head of government relations at INSA, a large cannabis operator in Massachusetts and four other states, worries that debt issues in the industry have driven away investment.
“Most of these companies are just struggling to keep the lights on and they’re doing what they can do,” he said. “But as they’re doing that, they’re dragging everybody else down.”
Bryan Hecht can be reached at bryan.hecht@globe.com. Follow him on Instagram @bhechtjournalism.
Massachusetts
Pedestrian hospitalized after being hit in Waltham
A person was hit by a vehicle Tuesday morning in Waltham, Massachusetts.
Police responded just after 10 a.m. to the crash at the intersection of Elm Street and Carter Street.
Officers began treating the pedestrian, who was then taken to an area hospital with unspecified injuries.
The driver stayed at the scene, the Waltham Police Department said.
The cause of the crash is under investigation.
Massachusetts
People are moving out of Massachusetts but the population still grew
Is support for Trump waning due to immigration policy?
A growing backlash to ICE tactics is fueling a major shift in public opinion on Trump’s immigration strategy.
More people left Massachusetts than moved in from 2024 to 2025, with the state ranking fourth in the nation for net domestic migration loss, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Thousands of residents left the Bay State for other states during that period. Regionally, the Northeast experienced a net domestic migration loss of 205,552, according to the data.
Despite the domestic outflow, Massachusetts’ population still grew by 15,524 when factoring in births, deaths, and international migration.
Here’s what to know about the states with the highest and lowest net domestic migration across the country:
Massachusetts’ net domestic, international migration from 2024 to 2025
From July 1, 2024, to July 1, 2025, Massachusetts had a net domestic migration of -33,340, with 33,340 more people moving out of the state than moving in, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Meanwhile, the state had a net international migration of 40,240, as 40,240 more people moved into Massachusetts from abroad than left.
States with highest net domestic migration from 2024 to 2025
Here were the states with the highest net domestic migration from July 1, 2024, to July 1, 2025, according to U.S. Census data:
- North Carolina: 84,064 residents
- Texas: 67,299 residents
- South Carolina: 66,622 residents
- Tennessee: 42,389 residents
- Arizona: 31,107 residents
- Georgia: 27,333 residents
- Alabama: 23,358 residents
- Florida: 22,517 residents
- Idaho: 19,915 residents
- Nevada: 14,914 residents
States with lowest net domestic migration from 2024 to 2025
Here were the states with the lowest net domestic migration from July 1, 2024, to July 1, 2025, according to U.S. Census data:
- California: -229,077 residents
- New York: -137,586 residents
- Illinois: -40,017 residents
- New Jersey: -37,428 residents
- Massachusetts: -33,340 residents
- Louisiana: -14,387 residents
- Maryland: -12,127 residents
- Colorado: -12,100 residents
- Hawaii: -8,876 residents
- Connecticut: -5,945 residents
New England states’ net domestic migration from 2024 to 2025
Here’s how New England states ranked on net domestic migration from July 1, 2024, to July 1, 2025, according to U.S. Census data:
- Maine: 7,406 residents (ranked 18th nationally)
- New Hampshire: 6,554 residents (ranked 22nd nationally)
- Vermont: -726 residents (ranked 34th nationally)
- Rhode Island: -1,551 residents (ranked 36th nationally)
- Connecticut: -5,945 residents (ranked 42nd nationally)
- Massachusetts: -33,340 residents (ranked 47th nationally)
Census regions with highest net domestic migration from 2024 to 2025
Here’s how the four Census regions ranked on net domestic migration from July 1, 2024, to July 1, 2025, according to U.S. Census data:
- South: 357,790 residents
- Midwest: 16,040 residents
- West: -168,278 residents
- Northeast: -205,552 residents
-
Wisconsin1 week agoSetting sail on iceboats across a frozen lake in Wisconsin
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMassachusetts man awaits word from family in Iran after attacks
-
Detroit, MI5 days agoU.S. Postal Service could run out of money within a year
-
Pennsylvania6 days agoPa. man found guilty of raping teen girl who he took to Mexico
-
Miami, FL7 days agoCity of Miami celebrates reopening of Flagler Street as part of beautification project
-
Sports7 days agoKeith Olbermann under fire for calling Lou Holtz a ‘scumbag’ after legendary coach’s death
-
Michigan2 days agoOperation BBQ Relief helping with Southwest Michigan tornado recovery
-
Virginia1 week agoGiants will hold 2026 training camp in West Virginia