Massachusetts
Massachusetts has a nearly $5 billion surplus. Now what? – The Boston Globe
Underneath the Baker administration’s accounting, a lot of the additional income would pay an estimated $3 billion refund due again to taxpayers ought to the state, as anticipated, set off a Nineteen Eighties-era legislation supposed to restrict state tax income progress to the expansion of complete wages and salaries.
After overlaying that credit score, the Baker administration stated, the state would have $1.9 billion in surplus income — itself a whopping determine.
Baker’s launch of the excess estimate served one other objective, too: It helped fortify his argument that the state has sufficient of a monetary cushion to soak up the price of each the shock tax credit score and a sweeping $1 billion tax aid package deal that, till final week, appeared on a glide path to his desk.
“The excess is a little bit bit bigger than we initially anticipated, even a pair weeks in the past,” stated Doug Howgate, government vice chairman of the Massachusetts Taxpayers Basis, a business-backed price range watchdog that, as lately as final week, estimated the excess might attain practically $4.7 billion. “It’s the very best I’ve ever seen.”
The Legislature had initially devoted no less than a part of the excess to serving to cowl a mammoth $4 billion financial improvement invoice that included plans for $250 rebates to probably hundreds of thousands of residents and greater than $500 million in everlasting tax aid, together with expanded tax breaks for seniors, low-income employees, and others.
However the invoice’s prospects faltered within the ultimate chaotic days of the legislative session — which ended Monday morning — after Baker introduced the probability of the state triggering the 1986 tax cap legislation generally known as Part 62F. The information shocked legislators; Home Speaker Ronald Mariano even accused Baker of conserving them in the dead of night about its probability for months, a cost that Baker aides denied. And negotiations over the package deal in the end fell aside amid doubts within the Home that the state might nonetheless afford the tax aid plans.
Thursday’s launch of the estimated price range surplus appeared to do little to assuage these fears.
In an announcement, Mariano emphasised that with the $3 billion tax invoice looming, the state nonetheless should navigate rising inflation and a possible financial downturn. “It’s completely essential that any further aid doesn’t deplete the Commonwealth’s monetary sources,” the Quincy Democrat stated.
State Consultant Aaron Michlewitz, the Home price range chairman, additionally preached warning, noting that whereas the excess is dramatic, it’s largely consistent with what lawmakers had been anticipating.
“The near $3 billion that may take impact from 62F definitely modifications how we needs to be spending the remainder of that cash,” the North Finish Democrat stated.
Just like Baker, state Senate leaders are much more bullish on the state’s capability to cross, and pay for, long-term tax breaks.
Senate President Karen E. Spilka stated the tax cap legislation’s credit score, which might be distributed proportionally to an individual’s earnings tax legal responsibility, shouldn’t cease the lawmakers’ plans for a extra “progressive tax aid package deal” that may largely goal low- and middle-income employees.
“The Senate is dedicated to working with our companions within the Home and the Administration to lastly ship the tax aid that residents deserve, as quickly as we are able to,” Spilka stated in an announcement.
The tax aid debate is way from the one place the place Baker is placing his stamp after the top of the legislative session. He additionally spiked a provision inside an almost $5.2 billion borrowing invoice that may put a five-year ban on the development of latest correctional amenities or the enlargement of present ones throughout the state.
The proposal included a carve-out for “accommodating” a switch of inmates as a result of one other facility is closed, however Baker administration officers had raised considerations a couple of moratorium probably tying their arms.
The Ripples Group, a state-hired consulting agency, additionally concluded final month that MCI-Framingham, the state’s solely ladies’s jail, must be changed, and that the state ought to construct a $40 million 150-bed medium safety facility.
In a letter to lawmakers, Baker stated state officers haven’t any intention of constructing new correction amenities “now or within the foreseeable future,” nor do they consider they’ll must increase the system’s capability with the state’s inmate inhabitants at a 35-year low. State officers say they plan to close down the maximum-security jail in Walpole over the subsequent two years.
However Baker argued that the invoice might restrict the state’s capability to switch different amenities and “maximize operational efficiencies.”
Senator Jo Comerford, a Northampton Democrat who sponsored laws to pause jail building, known as Baker’s selections a “setback, not an finish.” However regardless of having Democratic supermajorities in each chambers, Baker’s veto seems prone to stand.
Lawmakers didn’t cross the invoice till July 26, and on Monday they accomplished their ultimate formal session for the 12 months, which means they now can not override Baker’s veto exterior calling a particular formal session, a rarity on Beacon Hill.
Advocates for the moratorium argue lawmakers ought to nonetheless pursue that possibility.
Baker’s veto is “not shocking, and it’s additionally not acceptable,” stated Mallory Hanora, director of Households For Justice as Therapeutic. “We’re urging the Legislature to take motion and respect the need of the folks . . . and name a particular session. The Legislature left an excessive amount of enterprise on the desk that impacts folks’s day-to-day lives.”
Matt Stout could be reached at matt.stout@globe.com. Observe him on Twitter @mattpstout.
Massachusetts
High winds making house fires difficult to extinguish in Massachusetts
MARSHFIELD – Fire crews in Massachusetts are not just dealing with brush fires in these dry and windy conditions, but two house fires had them scrambling to prevent the flames from spreading to neighboring homes.
Marshfield fire
“The whole sky was covered with black smoke, didn’t know what was happening,” said George Haldoupis, a neighbor who saw the flames quickly spread at a home on Sheridan Drive in Marshfield. “I came out and we saw that house was totally engulfed in flames, it didn’t take long.”
Firefighters from several communities continually poured water on the home and surrounding houses in a neighborhood filled with trees and dried leaves.
“[The wind] was just like a blow torch, it just took off in one direction to the other,” said Marshfield Acting Fire Chief Mike Laselva. “As soon as it caught whatever fire was going, it quickly accelerated it.”
Mara Cronin’s home next door had enough damage to the roof to displace her for now. Fire crews were also able to rescue her three cats hiding under a bed. “Thank god nobody’s hurt, everyone’s OK. We just rescued our three cats so everyone’s fine and we’ll rebuild and we’ll be back,” said Cronin.
Dorchester fire
With only charred remains of the Marshfield home, it was a similar scene on Weyanoke Street in Dorchester as flames quickly engulfed an old Victorian.
“It was quite a bit of smoke in the area. But we couldn’t really figure out where it was. And then we saw the roof literally catch on fire and it looked like a giant candlestick,” said neighbor Dan DeChristoforo.
Six residents were displaced in two units, along with pets. The issue here not just wind but also access. Boston Deputy Fire Chief Scott Malone said rear exits were not only blocked but nailed shut. Dominic Lopez was left screaming from a second floor window to be rescued.
“Within a minute or something like that and then I opened up the window and they were pretty much there,” said Lopez.
“You push security versus safety sometimes,” said Malone. “In this particular case it almost cost someone a life. But thank god we got here in time and that person is saved.”
There were no serious injuries in both fires, but one Boston firefighter had to be treated for neck burns.
Massachusetts
Shellfish dying, lobster leaving: Mass. marine ecosystem faces hotter, harsher future as climate warms – The Boston Globe
The Boston Research Advisory Group report found that deadly hot marine heat waves — once extremely rare — could become commonplace. Scientists warn that those and other impacts are only going to get worse if the climate continues to warm with dire and possibly irreversible impacts on the ocean.
If the planet does not stop emitting planet-warming greenhouse gasses, marine heat waves could occur off the coast of Massachusetts once every decade if the planet reaches 2 degrees Celsius of warming and perhaps every other year with 3 degrees of warming. The vast majority of excess heat generated by anthropogenic warming is absorbed by the planet’s oceans.
“The possible impacts described in this report are not pleasant,” said Paul Kirshen, a professor of climate adaptation at the University of Massachusetts Boston and an author of the report. “We need to get to net zero emissions and below as soon as possible.”
Unlike on land, where humans can build a seawall to protect from coastal flooding, for example, there is very little that can be done to help ecosystems adapt to warmer water and higher acidity, experts said. The trends noted in the report will be “very difficult” to respond to, Kirshen said.
The report was created to answer questions posed by leaders of coastal Massachusetts towns and cities about what communities could expect over the next few decades as the climate continues to warm. Many of those towns have local economies that are at least in part dependent on commercial fishing, an industry that is likely to be dramatically changed by a warmer and more acidic Massachusetts Bay.
Native fish populations will likely continue their decline off of Massachusetts’ coast, while species from further south will move in, scientists found. The bay will continue to get acidic and inhospitable for the many fish, plants, and shellfish that live there now.
Oceans absorb about 30 percent of the carbon dioxide that’s released into the atmosphere. When absorbed, carbon dioxide makes sea water more acidic through chemical reactions, putting the entire food web in the marine ecosystem at risk, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
One example: Higher acidity causes shells to deteriorate, which kills shellfish. That will be an early marker of a shift in fishing ecology in Massachusetts Bay, the Boston-area researchers warned.
“Shell fisheries should be monitored … for warning signs,” the report said. As acidity increases, there are fewer carbonate ions in the water, an essential ingredient to build shells.
Meanwhile, the Atlantic Cod’s numbers have already declined and the American lobster population is moving north. Scientists further expect populations of winter flounder, silver hake, and Atlantic herring to decline as well.
As others move out, species more suited to warmer temperatures are expected to move in, such as summer flounder, black sea bass, blue crab, and butterfish among them.
Jason Krumholz, an oceanographer and associate professor at the University of Connecticut, said that when he started graduate school in 2005, only very rarely did he catch blue crabs in nets. Now, more than half the crabs he catches are blue crabs, he said.
“I’m not that old yet, and this is a change that I’ve seen just in my career,” said Krumholz, one of the authors of the report. “It’s pretty fast.”
The fishing industry could likely adapt to this change by convincing buyers to push different offerings on the menu, Krumholz said. “We may have a lot more flags outside of restaurants with blue crabs on them instead of lobsters in 20 years.”
Scientists have also observed that the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation is slowing down. It’s one of the planet’s most prominent and powerful ocean currents and helps to moderate the climate at sea and on land near the shore.
That’s a wild card for ocean temperatures, said Bruce Anderson, an oceanographer and professor at Boston University and one of the lead authors of the report. The phenomenon could weaken and broaden the Gulf Stream, which brings warm tropical waters to the region.
“It’s really unclear what the Gulf Stream is going to do and how that change is going to affect things like the fisheries or even our climate here in Massachusetts,” Anderson said.
If the Gulf Stream slowdown continues, the water offshore of Massachusetts could see “substantial” warming as subtropical waters diffuse northward into the region, scientists found, further compounding the problems.
Another area of uncertainty: How President-elect Donald Trump’s administration could impact the trajectory of offshore ecosystems.
Environmental advocates are worried that the incoming Trump administration will try to slash budgets for federal environmental agencies, which could both slow the energy transition from fossil fuels to clean energy and affect efforts to clean up marine pollution.
Many federal grants finance beach cleanups, water quality testing, and other programs to manage the marine environment, said Jeff Watters, vice president of external affairs of the Ocean Conservancy, a nonprofit organization.
“I think they’re more at risk now than they were under the first [Trump] administration,” Watters said, because Congress was able to block some of those defunding efforts last time. “Pollution could absolutely go up; that’s a real possibility.”
Those fears come as marshes and coastal ecosystems are already threatened by plastic and pharmaceutical pollution, and runoff pollution is expected to increase due to stronger storms and an increase in coastal populations, according to the new report.
The pollution in Massachusetts Bay is affected by the behavior of people: What they buy, where they fish, how they recreate, and where they live, said Anderson of Boston University.
Yet, perhaps in that relationship lies a glimmer of hope: Towns, cities, and individuals can prevent further pollutants from entering the ecosystem. “This is a very sensitive environment to everyday decisions,” Anderson said.
Erin Douglas can be reached at erin.douglas@globe.com. Follow her @erinmdouglas23.
Massachusetts
Scores of recruits injured at Mass. State Police Academy in recent years, data show
Broken bones, muscle tears, concussions, even a gunshot wound — those are just some of the injuries sustained by Massachusetts State Police recruits during their training in recent years.
After a recruit died following a training exercise in September, the NBC10 Investigators began asking how many other recruits have been injured during training.
There have been 185 injuries reported across recruiting classes since 2018, according to police records obtained by NBC10 Boston. Among the injuries are broken fingers and broken ribs, torn ACLs, dislocated limbs, back injuries, eye injuries and two cases of rhabdomyolysis, a potentially life-threatening condition caused by overexertion of the muscles
Dozens of these injuries have resulted in 180 recruits being awarded workman’s compensation, and from those recruiting classes, 49 recruits resigned from the academy following their injuries.
Asked about the data, a police spokesman said in a statement the agency is committed to all employees’ health and safety, and that an on-site medical team monitors trainees throughout their time at the police academy to ensure they can physically perform their duties “with excellence.”
Enrique Delgado-Garcia died after a defensive tactics training exercise. His mother Sandra Garcia told NBC10 Boston at the time that the training is too brutal. An outside investigator was tapped to look into Delgado-Garcia’s death.
The NBC10 Investigators were invited inside the academy walls to get a firsthand look at what it takes to become a Massachusetts state trooper and the extremely demanding training involved after we began asking questions about the high attrition rate of this class.
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