Massachusetts
Massachusetts Police Enter Classroom to Search for LGBTQ+ Book
Earlier this month, a Massachusetts police officer entered a middle school classroom to search for a book about LGBTQ+ issues—an incident for which both the department and the school are now apologizing. A parent called the Great Barrington Police Department to report that they were concerned about an illustration in a book that an eighth-grade teacher at WEB Dubois Regional Middle School had made available to students. Police and school officials determined the illustration was from Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe, which led to the plainclothes officer (who was reportedly wearing a bodycam that was recording, per the Berkshire Eagle) entering a classroom on December 8. The teacher told the officer there were no copies of the book in the room, and the officer left, CNN reports.
After the incident made headlines, the department issued a mea culpa, with the chief of police apologizing to “anyone who was negatively effected by our involvement” at the school. School officials also apologized and acknowledged the incident should have been handled differently. The police department says it had a duty to respond since police were contacted, but that the investigation has been dropped, the New York Post reports. The graphic novel, one of the books most challenged or banned by school libraries recently, charts the coming-of-age exploration of gender identity and sexual orientation by Kobabe, who is nonbinary, and includes some sexually explicit text and illustrations. Per PEN, a Pennsylvania superintendent explained, after his school district voted to keep the book, “The illustrations of concern are just a piece of the larger mosaic that supports the tale and message of this memoir.”
Kobabe has said in the past that anyone concerned about the book should “read the whole thing and judge for yourself, don’t just go based on the one or two tiny clips you’ve seen on social media.” “When I couldn’t yet figure out who I was, it felt important to answer that question before I could start answering other questions about my life,” Kobabe told the Des Moines Register last month. “I did not write it to arouse a reader. I did not write it to titillate a reader. I wrote it to educate and explain.” The American Civil Liberties Union says it is not aware of any other incidents in the US in which police have searched a school for a book, and says it is very concerned about the entire incident, especially the fact that it was recorded on bodycam, the Eagle reports. The organization has requested the footage, and other documents related to the incident. (Read more Massachusetts stories.)
Massachusetts
Massachusetts woman worries for family in Jamaica as Hurricane Melissa could bring mud slides, flooding
A woman in Massachusetts is worried for her family in Jamaica as Hurricane Melissa could bring catastrophic flooding to the island.
Hurricane Melissa is currently a Category 4 hurricane, but could strengthen to a Category 5 before it hits Jamaica and Haiti in the coming days. The storm could bring up to 30 inches of rain to the island and cause damage to infrastructure.
“I am really concerned about mud slides,” Framingham resident and real-estate agent JoAnn Frye said.
Frye owns an Airbnb in Ocho Rios, Jamaica, at Pyramid Point. She said that she has already lost power to her outdoor video cameras and that her home manager moved everything inside in anticipation of the storm.
“I’m very nervous. I’ve been watching this WhatsApp group because that’s how we communicate in the community,” Frye said.
Residents in Jamaica prepare for Hurricane Melissa
Jamaica’s Prime Minister, Andrew Holness, urged residents to take the storm very seriously.
“We’ve been prepared for a couple of days now. We have gas generators. We have extra water in the rooms, and then we have some larger tanks of water prepared for that, just in case power goes out. We have some solar lights,” said Frye’s cousin, Mark Walker, who lives on the island.
He plans on hunkering down with his family for the next few days.
“It’s one of those scenarios where it’s not just us, it’s everyone else, but we have a pretty good group of neighbors and friends that are close by, kind of looking out for each other,” Walker said.
Joanne says she’s glad she’s not there, but is praying for her people in Jamaica.
“I’m still scared for the people I know and love there. I’m scared for the community,” Frye said.
She said that she plans to fly down once the storm passes to check on her loved ones and her home.
For more information on Hurricane Melissa and to see its potential path, click here.
Massachusetts
Who is Michael J. Curll? 5 facts about man who attacked Trump supporter in Massachusetts
Published on: Oct 26, 2025 11:50 am IST
Michael J. Curll, 48, is facing criminal charges after allegedly attacking a man in an inflatable costume of Donald Trump in Swampscott, Massachusetts.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts millionaire’s tax supporting MBTA projects
The MBTA is dumping nearly a billion dollars in revenue from the Massachusetts millionaire’s tax on projects officials say are aimed at enhancing safety and reliability, while the agency transitions to an in-house bus maintenance program.
The network’s Board of Directors has approved using $850 million from the millionaire’s tax to fund four “major infrastructure projects,” including a battery-electric bus maintenance facility that will support up to 200 vehicles.
This is the second allocation that the T has used to bolster its infrastructure from what officials refer to as the Fair Share Amendment. The board approved a $200.8-million initial pool in January 2024 that addressed safety and hiring and retaining employees.
Bay State voters in November 2022 approved a 4% surtax on incomes above $1 million annually, with the revenue dedicated to improving education and transportation.
With the second batch generated from the tax in hand, the MBTA is set to complete power upgrades, track reconfigurations and signal system updates on the Green Line; procure new Commuter Rail locomotives; and work on the first phase of a Widett Regional Rail Layover Facility project
“The MBTA has been making significant progress to improve safety and reliability across the system, and this funding will help them continue this essential work,” Gov. Maura Healey said in a statement. “Together with the Legislature, we are making sure that the T has a balanced budget and the resources it needs to deliver the world-class service that the people of Massachusetts deserve.”
The MBTA is expecting to bring in massive savings, in the tens of millions, as the transit network moves to “in-house” bus repair services instead of contracting with a third-party to overhaul the vehicles.
A fleet of 175 buses that the agency purchased in 2016 and 2017 is due for what officials describe as a “mid-life overhaul,” and they’ve determined that the repair work can be completed within the agency rather than paying an outside vendor to do the job.
The move is expected to generate some $73 million in savings – the difference between the $116 million that it costs to outsource the work and the $43 million it would take for the MBTA workforce to get the job done.
MBTA General Manager Phil Eng is looking at the transition as a short- and long-term investment that he believes will improve bus maintenance and service, making the vehicles durable for longer stretches.
“The investment in transportation, the investment in our workforce,” Eng told the Board of Directors on Thursday, “we have an obligation to show that that investment is delivering for the public, not only with improved service, safe service, better service, but we can actually save taxpayer dollars, and that we can do quality work.”
Thursday’s meeting marked the first time Eng has addressed the board as the state’s transportation secretary. He is maintaining his GM role, but he has replaced Monica Tibbits-Nutt as the leader of MassDOT in the interim.
Tibbits-Nutt will stay on until the end of the year in an advisory capacity, on the taxpayer’s dime, as she is also keeping her $200,000 pay.
To support the in-house bus repairs, officials say the agency will be looking to a crew of machinists, sheet metal workers, painters and an engineer. The work will be implemented in three phases over four years at four buses per month.
“It’s a massive, massive savings,” Chief Operating Officer Ryan Coholan said. “And it goes beyond dollars, because when you talk about the quality of a program like this, the pride that a program like this can build in-house with our workforce. … I’m going to put the value even higher than the cost savings.”
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