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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.

New from CommonWealth Beacon

NIMBY ALERT: Massachusetts residents are conflicted on the MBTA Communities Act. A new CommonWealth Beacon/GBH News poll says 50 percent say the housing rezoning law is good policy, but only 31 percent think the state should force local compliance. Bhaamati Borkhetaria has the details.


TIGHT LEASH: House Speaker Ron Mariano is using the state budget to keep the Healey administration on a tight leash when it comes to emergency shelter spending, providing only about half of the money needed. Bruce Mohl reports he indicated the elections in November may determine whether the shelter program continues or not.


OPINION: James Aloisi, the former state transportation secretary, says the Senate needs to follow the lead of the House and Gov. Maura Healey on upping funding for transit.

Healey, House at odds on low-income fare cost


April 11, 2024

By Bruce Mohl

Let the horse-trading begin.


The MBTA says it needs between $27 million and $30 million to give low-income riders a half-off fare discount, but the House budget plan, despite throwing a record amount of money the T’s way, ponies up only $20 million.


In a $58 billion budget, the $7 million to $10 million difference isn’t a lot, but it could become a big deal if the low-income fare being championed by Gov. Maura Healey and her top transportation lieutenant, Monica Tibbits-Nutt, fails to get off the ground.


The new fare, approved by the MBTA board of directors on March 28, would offer riders between the ages of 26 and 64 who earn less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level a half-off fare on all bus, subway, commuter rail, and ferry trips.


Healey’s budget proposal for the fiscal year beginning July 1 called for financing the low-income fare using $45 million from the state’s tax surcharge on income over $1 million. The House plan would use $20 million from the same pot of money. The Senate budget proposal won’t be unveiled until May, so there’s plenty of time left to negotiate.


The MBTA refused to engage on the issue Wednesday, declining to say whether the program could launch this summer with just $20 million. “We are grateful for the House's proposed investments in the MBTA and look forward to continued discussions about how to make this transformative low-income fares program a success,” a spokesman said.


House leaders said the funding level for the low-income fare was appropriate. Rep. Aaron Michlewitz of Boston, the House’s budget chief, said the $20 million represents a four-fold increase over the $5 million provided in this year’s budget.

The Codcast

This week on the Codcast, a live recording of an MBTA Communities law panel, moderated by CommonWealth Beacon's Gin Dumcius. The panelists are Andrea Harris-Long of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council, State Rep. Russell Holmes, and Quincy City Council President Ian Cain.

LISTEN NOW

When it was pointed out that the $5 million was only seed money to help set up the program – and not operating funding – Michlewitz didn’t budge. He said the House is proposing to spend a record amount on the MBTA in the coming fiscal year, with the focus on initiatives to improve safety and reliability.


“If it’s not safe and reliable, then it doesn’t matter what the means-tested fare system needs,” he said.


House Speaker Ron Mariano said the MBTA’s cost estimates for the low-income discount are only estimates. “It’s a moving target,” he said of the T’s cost projections. “They don’t know exactly how much it’s going to cost.”


The MBTA has spent several years researching a low-income fare program. The transit authority developed five-year cost projections that hinge on how many people take advantage of the fare discount and what impact the discount has on people who use the T’s paratransit service, which is called the RIDE.


Roughly half of the estimated cost of the low-income discount is attributable to the RIDE because paratransit trips cost the T so much. A RIDE trip in the T’s core service area costs $72, far more than the current $3.80 fare. If the fare is cut in half and demand for rides go up, the T’s costs could rise dramatically.


Over the objections of T staff, the MBTA approved an amendment proposed by Tibbits-Nutt, the secretary of transportation, to extend the low-income discount to rides outside the T’s core service area. T officials said that amendment boosted the cost of the low-income fare discount program by nearly $4 million.

More from CommonWealth Beacon

REVENUES FLAT, SPENDING UP: Despite flat tax collections, the proposed House spending plan for fiscal 2025 would increase spending by 3.3 percent. Chris Lisinski of State House News Service explains where the money is coming from. 


BAD OPTICS: Amid talk of hiking commercial tax rates on already-struggling building owners, should Boston Mayor Michell Wu also be talking about cutting spending? Michael Jonas explains the growing controversy.


PRESIDENTIAL TRENDLINES: Steve Koczela, the president of the MassINC Polling Group, finds some intriguing trends in a new CommonWealth Beacon/GBH News poll on how Massachusetts voters will cast ballots in the race for president.

In Other News

MUNICIPAL MATTERS  

  • The debate over Boston property taxes continues, with Mayor Michelle Wu saying a report that projected a potential $400 to $500 million annual budget shortfall from a steep decline in commercial real estate values is “false information.” (Boston Herald

  • The Quincy School Committee rejects giving students a day off for the Lunar New Year, despite Mayor Tom Koch’s support for the proposal. Nearly 30 percent of the Boston suburb’s population is Asian. (Patriot Ledger)

HEALTH/HEALTH CARE

  • Worcester’s medical director, a pediatric surgeon at UMass Memorial Medical Center, wants to establish a long COVID clinic in Worcester. (Worcester Telegram)

ELECTIONS

  • Crypto lawyer John Deaton officially launched his longshot Republican challenge to Sen. Elizabeth Warren. (Boston Herald

BUSINESS/ECONOMY

  • In a marketing first for the cannabis sector and major Massachusetts music venues, a brand owned by Marimed will be seen on the video screens and ticket websites of MGM Music Hall Fenway and Citizens House of Blues Boston, both owned by the Fenway Music Company. (Boston Business Journal)

IMMIGRATION

  • Even with work permits, migrants living in the state’s emergency shelter system are having difficulty finding self-sustaining jobs because of language and skill barriers. (GBH News)

EDUCATION

  • Boston is renaming one of its 7-12 grade schools after Ruth Batson, the late Roxbury native who fought for desegregation of public education and became the first head of the METCO busing program. (WBUR)

  • Noho drama: Northampton High School students occupied the mayor’s office to protest proposed cuts in spending on the school’s theater department. (Daily Hampshire Gazette)

TRANSPORTATION

  • Employers want to see workers back in the office, but the biggest obstacle? The commute, whether it’s the MBTA (breakdowns and slow zones) or traffic (which has returned to pre-pandemic levels). (Boston Business Journal)

  • Attendees at a Fall River meeting about South Coast Rail left with a sense that the MBTA may be backing away from its previously stated timeline that trains would be rolling sometime this summer. (The Standard-Times)

  • Storms that have pushed sand into the navigational channel used by ferries to arrive at Cuttyhunk Island are threatening the only transportation link between the island at the outer edge of Buzzards Bay and the Massachusetts mainland. (New Bedford Light

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/COURTS

  • Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno swore in the city’s first Black police superintendent, Lawrence Akers, a 38-year veteran. (MassLive)

MEDIA

  • NPR’s top editor, in a memo to staff, responds to a critique from a long-time employee that accuses the news service of left-leaning bias. (Media Nation)

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