Massachusetts
Massachusetts is creating overnight shelter spots to help newly arriving migrant families
BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts has begun awarding grants to local agencies to set up temporary housing sites for homeless families as officials grapple with finding newly arriving migrants places to stay after hitting a state-imposed limit of 7,500 families in the state’s emergency homeless shelter system.
Catholic Charities Boston is the first organization to be awarded a grant to provide temporary rooms to extremely low-income families with children and pregnant individuals, the United Way of Massachusetts Bay announced this week.
The grant will pay for a site in the greater Boston area that opened on Tuesday evening and can accommodate up to 27 families, or about 81 people, as they wait to enter the state’s emergency shelter system, officials said.
Catholic Charities Boston will provide bedding, meals, staff, and security. The site is available to families eligible for the the state’s family shelter system but who could not be immediately placed in a shelter.
Democratic Gov. Maura Healey announced the $5 million grant program earlier this month.
Sarah Bartley of the United Way said the agency has already received several other grant applications. The grants are meant to support community gathering spaces with restrooms and heat, such as places of worship, community centers, and school buildings, to provide safe space for families to find short-term, congregate shelter, meals and other basic necessities, she said.
The flexible program will remain in place through the winter and spring, officials said.
On Monday, the state began letting homeless families stay overnight in the state transportation building in Boston. The space in the office building is large enough to provide overnight shelter for up to 25 families with cots and limited amenities and will only be used in the evening and overnight hours, officials said.
The space will be available to families determined eligible for emergency assistance and is expected to operate for about two weeks until additional safety net shelter sites are operational.
The spike in demand is being driven in part by migrant families entering the state. About half of the current shelter caseload are new arrivals to Massachusetts, according to the Healey administration.
As of last Friday, there were 92 families on the state’s waiting list for emergency shelter.
Massachusetts
Driver captured after wild police chase on I-190, Route 12 in Sterling, Massachusetts
STERLING – A dramatic, high speed police chase in central Massachusetts came to a peaceful end Monday morning when the driver surrendered to officers.
As seen live via helicopter on CBS News Boston, police were pursuing an SUV on Interstate 190 south in Sterling around 11 a.m. when the car nearly collided with another vehicle, then suddenly pulled into the median, swung around into a U-turn and took off on the opposite side of the highway.
After driving in the northbound lanes for a few miles, with police keeping their distance from the SUV, the driver got off the highway at exit 14 and continued onto Route 12.
Several minutes later, the SUV pulled over to the side of the road near Sterling’s border with West Boylston. Moments later, the car was surrounded by four police cruisers. The driver got out with his hands up, was immediately handcuffed and taken away.
The driver has not been identified yet and there’s no word as to why police were pursuing him or the SUV.
There have been no reports of any injuries.
No other information is available at this point in the investigation.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts aims to reduce emergency shelter costs to $350 million per year
The Healey administration is aiming to eventually limit shelter costs to $350 million per year compared to the more than $1 billion dollars spent this fiscal year.
Governor Healey announced her plan on Friday that would bring significant changes over the next 19 months.
It includes winding down the use of 56 hotels and motels across the state and cutting down the shelter stay limit from nine months to six months.
Those steps will come with increased resources for finding long-term housing.
Healey is proposing that the rental stipend families can receive under state’s HomeBASE program increase from $15,000 per family per year to $25,000 per family per year.
“The landlord gets payments from HomeBASE. As a family’s income increases, the goal is to get their income so they’re no longer dependent on HomeBASE,” said Jeff Thielman, President and CEO of the International Institute of New England.
The state intends to slash the 7,500-family limit across shelter system to below 3,500.
“To make the Governor’s plan work, the shelter system and all of us who work in it, have to work faster than we are right now,” said Thielman.
The plans to further limit shelter stays would need the approval of lawmakers.
If approved, families considered more capable of supporting themselves could potentially face 30-day shelter limits.
“I think moving to a six-month limit is going to be tricky,” said Thielman. “There is a shortage of available units all across the state.”
Thielman said most of the migrant families his organization is working with in the shelter system have been temporarily paroled into the country for humanitarian reasons.
He said many have applied for or have received temporary protective status.
President-elect Trump has said he plans to end those legal entry programs.
“It’s highly unlikely that President Trump will have the ability to revoke someone’s lawful status,” said Thielman.
Trump has said that the more than one million migrants who are in the U.S. under Humanitarian Parole will be subject to deportations.
While Massachusetts is not a sanctuary state, it has eight sanctuary cities.
Mayors in those communities and Governor Healey have all said that they will not target people based on their immigration status.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates as more information becomes available.
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Massachusetts
Will Marblehead, Beverly teacher strikes end tonight?
Students in Gloucester, Massachusetts, will be back in class Monday, but contract negotiations continue in Beverly and Marblehead.
The deadline is imminent for teachers and their school committees to reach an agreement that will see students return to school to start the week. If they fail to finally put an end to this strike, a third party will take over talks.
Since teacher strikes are illegal in Massachusetts, unions in both of those North Shore communities are facing tens of thousands of dollars in fines.
An Essex Superior Court judge agreed to waive those fines Friday if an agreement could be reached by 6 p.m. Sunday. Otherwise, both districts will begin the Department of Labor’s fact-finding process. That’s the next step when a state mediator can’t help both sides come to an agreement on a contract.
Teachers say that takes longer, and students could miss an additional four to six days of school.
The Marblehead Education Association bargaining team said Sunday evening that it is continuing to work on reaching an agreement on a new contract with the school committee, noting that the two parties have been exchanging proposals throughout the day.
The MEA said while it is committed to reaching an agreement that can reopen Marblehead Public Schools Monday, a settlement could not be reached by 6 p.m., per the court order issued Thursday.
“The MEA continues to demand that the School Committee end its pursuit of legal charges against individual educators related to the strike,” a statement read. “The MEA furthermore stresses the importance of reaching an agreement on return-to-work provisions that ensure no educators will be subject to retaliation for participating in the strike.”
In Beverly, the chair of the school committee said for two days they have had “an improved, serious and fair offer on the table” for teachers and paraprofessionals that includes “significant wage increases and paid family leave.”
Rachael Abell said she believes that the only way to achieve a solution at this point is through face-to-face discussion between school committee leaders and Beverly Teachers Association co-presidents Julia Brotherton and Andrea Sherman.
Abell later said BTA leadership had accepted their offer at 5 p.m. to meet in person to try to break the impasse and reach an agreement to end the strike, adding that she was encouraged by this step and that the two sides are exchanging new ideas and are in active discussions.
“As a show of further good faith,” the school committee agreed to continue negotiations and wait a bit longer to call school for Monday.
“If we do not have a tentative agreement soon, we will unfortunately be forced to call school for tomorrow and will decide then whether to continue with mediation,” Abell said. “If significant progress is not made soon, the School Committee intends to abide by the court order, end mediation and begin the state fact-finding process immediately.”
In a brief update around 7:30 p.m., Brotherton and Sherman, co-presidents of the BTA, said they had just sent some counterproposals over to management.
“We’re really hoping that those counterproposals will get the job done and that we can open schools tomorrow and be back at work with our students,” Brotherton said.
She noted that the proposal that the BTA has on the table right now costs $1 million less than the proposal that management has given them, but a sticking point appears to be that “management doesn’t seem to want to pay paraprofessionals a living wage and we are committed to that.”
“We can be here all night and we’d like to be,” Sherman said of ongoing bargaining. “Our number one goal is to be back in school as soon as possible, so we will stay until the deal is done if they will stay.”
Students in Gloucester will be back in school Monday after educators were on strike for two weeks; strikes continue in Beverly and Marblehead.
The strikes have kept thousands of students across the three communities north of Boston at home and will force schools to hold classes during vacations and weekends to meet the required 180 days of classroom learning required by state law — a situation that any snow days could make worse.
Gov. Maura Healey Saturday called it “unacceptable” that students have missed over two weeks of school.
“It’s hurting our young people, parents and families above all else. Students need to be back in school on Monday,” the governor said. “I have spoken to all parties, and I believe they are at a place where they should be able to reach an agreement this weekend, and they should do so. If they don’t reach that agreement, they should ensure that students can return to the classroom on Monday while these negotiations continue.”
Healey reiterated that the parties must continue to negotiate throughout the weekend, saying that she and the lieutenant governor have been and will continue to request updates.
“Our young people need to be back in school,” she said.
An Essex County Superior Court judge said there would be no fines Friday if teachers end their strikes by Sunday evening.
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Both sides in both towns have continuously pointed fingers at one another, while families and students are caught in the middle. Parents organized a candlelight vigil in support of teachers in Beverly Sunday evening.
Kimberley Coelho, a member of the Beverly School Committee, spoke out on social media Saturday saying some of her own colleagues seem more focused on breaking the teachers spirits than finding common ground.
In her Facebook post, Coelho called the process “disgusting,” saying in part, “What is abundantly clear is some do not want to settle a contract. Instead, feel more concerned about breaking the union’s spirits and dividing our community. I feel the legal advice of our counsel is wrong and only delays reopening schools.”
We have not yet heard of any deal being reached in either town. We are expecting to hear from officials Sunday night.
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