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The Download: Politics, Ideas, and Civic Life in Massachusetts
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CommonWealth Beacon Download. Politics, Ideas, & Civic Life in Massachusetts.

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HEMP HIGHS: Hemp-based THC products are showing up in bars, restaurants, and package stores, falling through regulatory cracks. Justin Evans, a selectman in Whitman, says the emerging market growing outside the reach of the Cannabis Control Commission could undermine the state’s system for regulating marijuana.


OPINION: Paul Hattis of the Lown Institute and John McDonough of the TH Chan School of Public Health at Harvard University offer some suggestions on how to deal with the deteriorating financial situation at Steward Health Care.


LOOK WHO’S BACKING AUDIT CAMPAIGN: A referendum campaign for a law authorizing the state auditor to audit the Legislature has raised $300,000 so far. Most of the money came from Auditor Diana DiZoglio and the business sector, although Rep. Patrick Kearney of Scituate donated $1,000.

Healey on board with reforms at southern border


January 24, 2024

By BRUCE MOHL 

As Senate negotiators in Washington edge closer to a deal on immigration, Gov. Maura Healey is signaling a willingness to support steps that restrict access to migrants at the border.


At a press availability with the state’s top legislative leaders on Monday, Healey reiterated her refrain that Congress must strike a deal on immigration and funnel federal dollars to states grappling with an influx of migrants.


Pressed on whether federal funding was the state’s primary goal in Washington, Senate President Karen Spilka indicated it was. But Healey, who had begun to exit the press conference, returned to the podium and argued forcefully for more than just money.


“We need DC to act. We need Congress to act,” she said. “The path is there in terms of what needs to be done to fix the border situation, to change some of the asylum processes, and get much needed funding to interior states who had to shoulder the burden for a problem that’s geopolitical and is not the state’s making. That is going to be my continued demand to Congress and the federal government. We need help here.”


The substance and tone of her remarks reflect a growing awareness that Massachusetts is no longer immune from the impact of immigration. A state that was largely oblivious to the problem before Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in September 2022 sent a planeload of Venezuelan immigrants to Martha’s Vineyard is now acutely aware of the human and financial cost of a porous border.

The Codcast

Former transportation secretary JIM ALOISI and BRIAN KANE , the executive director of the MBTA advisory board, join CommonWealth Beacon's BRUCE MOHL to discuss what kind of support the state's transportation system needs and is likely to get.

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Healey and the Democratic governors of New York, California, Illinois, New Jersey, Arizona, Colorado, Maryland, and New Mexicosent a letter on Monday to President Biden and congressional leaders urging them to address the problem.


“We strongly urge Congress and the Administration to quickly negotiate an agreement on a border security legislative package that includes federal coordination and decompression at the southern and northern borders; federal funding for both border and interior states and cities receiving new arrivals; and a serious commitment to modernizing our immigration system in the United States,” the letter said.


The pressure from the governors and many others is propelling negotiations between Democrat and Republicans on Capitol Hill. Biden has indicated a willingness to bargain on border security and a bipartisan group of senators is trying to come up with an immigration compromise that can work for both sides and unlock aid desperately needed by Ukraine.


The New York Timesreported on Monday that the rough outlines of a deal to reduce the number of migrants allowed to live and work in the country temporarily has been negotiated, but the funding needed to carry out the terms of that deal still needs to be hashed out.


The focus of the negotiations appears to center on how to tighten asylum laws and restrain the use of parole, which allows the federal government to grant migrants a special status to remain in the US. The Biden administration reportedly has used parole to assist roughly 1 million migrants from the Ukraine, Afghanistan, Haiti, Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua.

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"PBMs treat patients badly and get away with it." - Former MA Governor Jane Swift

Healey appears to be paying close attention to the negotiations. In mid-December, she firstbroached her idea to tap $700 million in unused surplus funds from past years to deal with budget deficits associated with the state’s efforts to provide shelter to qualifying homeless families and pregnant women, nearly half of them migrants from outside the country. At the time, Healey said she planned to file legislation to tap the $700 million in the next few weeks, but nothing has been filed yet.


Spilka on Monday said an infusion of federal dollars might make it possible to avoid using the $700 million on the emergency shelter crisis. Healey said action in Washington is needed, both on funding and border reforms.


“The numbers that we’re seeing is exactly why we need Congress to act,” she said. “We need funding from the federal government. And we need reforms at the border. And I’ll continue to say that.”

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Now is the time to move equity. Now is the time to move Boston. The Boston Foundation

More from CommonWealth Beacon

GAINS FROM TUTORING: Is tutoring the answer to pandemic learning loss? Evidence suggests it could be, but executing a tutoring program at scale is proving difficult. 


POWER GOES MISSING: Gov. Maura Healey files a municipal empowerment bill lacking one of the powers she touted at a conference three days earlier.


STRIKE SUPPORT: Striking Newton teachers get support from US Rep. Ayanna Pressley, but not from most pols who represent Newton.

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In Other News

MUNICIPAL MATTERS 

  • Quincy’s planning board signed off on a 40-year tax exemption for developer FoxRock Properties, which is owned by telecommunications CEO Rob Hale. FoxRock is proposing to build a medical office building downtown, and plans to lease space to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. (Patriot Ledger)

ELECTIONS

  • Matt Muratore, a Republican who represents Plymouth in the House, announced he’s running for state Sen. Susan Moran’s seat after the Falmouth Democrat decided against a reelection campaign. State Rep. Dylan Fernandes, a Democrat, is also a candidate. (Plymouth Independent)

  • It’s sure looking like a Trump-Biden rematch in November, as the former and current president roll to wins in the Republican and Democratic primaries in New Hampshire. (Boston Globe)

EDUCATION

  • Striking Newton teachers say they are not deterred by mounting fines that could quickly become the largest imposed on a Massachusetts teachers’ walkout in decades. (Boston Globe)

  • Boston University’s business school is launching a new institute, with the largest donation coming from a shipping company founder. The Ravi K. Mehrotra Institute for Business, Markets and Society will focus on the business sector’s effect on society. (Boston Business Journal)

  • UMass Lowell pays out $150,000 to settle a racism complaint brought by a student athlete against his coach. (GBH)

  • The principal of an alternative Fitchburg high school has been placed on leave amid an independent investigation, with no further information provided by the mayor. (Worcester Telegram)

  • Several school administrators say that a lottery based voc-tech system would take seats away from students who benefit most from vocational education. (MetroWest Daily News)

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/COURTS

  • The Supreme Judicial Court leaned into the obligation of prosecutors to share exculpatory evidence with defendants in a case centered on police misconduct in Springfield. (Boston Globe

  • Lynn Clark, a former superintendent of schools in Chicopee, pleaded guilty to lying to FBI agents about sending threatening texts designed to undermine a candidate for police chief. Her lawyer says she will be sentenced to one year on probation. (Daily Hampshire Gazette)

  • In the tangled web of the Karen Read murder case, letters between the Norfolk DA Michael Morrissey's office, which is prosecuting the case, and the US attorney’s office show that the feds are looking into some aspect of the DA’s handling of the. Morrissey unsuccessfully sought to have that probe transferred to a federal prosecutor out of state. (Boston Herald

MEDIA

  • Former WBCN disc jockey John Garabedian, who hosted “Open House Party” on the radio, has bought the Cambridge radio station WJIB. (Universal Hub)

PASSINGS

  • Boston native Stephen Volk, who “counseled generations of corporate chieftains,” including Sumner Redstone and Jack Welch, died Saturday at age 87. (Wall Street Journal)

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