• Poll: Mass. residents’ financial worries grow

    Patriot Ledger

    Stafford’s gloomy sentiment is gaining hold among a growing number of residents across the state, according to polling results released Monday by the Boston think tank MassInc.

    Increasing percentages of people are also taking a dim view of the U.S. Congress, and fewer are carrying the banner for the tea party, the poll found.

    Nearly half of the 500 adults queried last week said they felt financially worse off now than they were a year ago. That’s up from 45 percent who held that view in April.

  • Young Bay Staters optimistic on economy

    The Springfield Republican

    Despite high unemployment rates and a sluggish economy, Massachusetts residents 18 to 29 years old are optimistic about their economic situation, according to a poll by the MassINC Polling Group released on Wednesday.

  • Mooring inequities require state to retake helm

    Patriot Ledger

    Complaining about the backroom trading of publicly owned moorings has long been viewed as being about as productive as spitting in the wind. But a recent account of just how unfair the system has become should prompt state officials to step in and enforce a uniform policy.

    The Ledger on Friday published an abridged version of a report by CommonWealth magazine that sheds light on a government-sanctioned gray market in which yacht club owners, marinas and individual boat owners can lease publicly owned moorings for a pittance and collect a handsome profit by selling access to them to someone else.

     
  • The quest for an updated bottle bill

    Cambridge Chronicle

    State Rep. Alice Wolf, state Sen. Cynthia Creem and environmental groups are leading the charge to update the Bottle Bill, enacted in 1982 requiring a 5-cent deposit on beer, malt, carbonated soft drinks and mineral water.
     
    A recent MassINC poll shows that 77 percent of Massachusetts residents are in favor of the bill.
  • The Power of a Network

    Worcester Telegram and Gazette

    Last month marked the third anniversary of a compact signed by leaders of the commonwealth’s Gateway Cities.

    “Built on a commonality of interests,” this historic agreement united Worcester with 10 sister Massachusetts mill cities working to reposition their economies to compete in a new era. 

  • Guest View: The Power of a Network Displayed in Gateway Cities

    New Bedford Standard Times

    Last month marked the third anniversary of a compact signed by leaders of the Commonwealth’s Gateway Cities.

    “Built on a commonality of interests,” this historic agreement united New Bedford with 10 sister Massachusetts mill cities working to reposition their economies to compete in a new era.

  • Turmoil, Aisle 12

    Boston Globe

    Enough already.

    When last we left Hyde Square in Jamaica Plain, it seemed like the battle over the incoming Whole Foods could only get less ugly.

  • Ethics forms are too vague and should apply to spouses

    Boston Globe

    Beacon Hill leaders patted themselves on the back two years ago when they completed a much-needed overhaul of the state’s ethics laws. But they left an important part of the job undone: Updating the financial-disclosure requirements for public officials.

  • Fool disclosure

    Boston Globe

    Just for chuckles, I went back and looked at the financial disclosure forms that Sal DiMasi filed during one of his last years as speaker of the Massachusetts House. It was a good laugh, too, until it suddenly hit me that the joke is actually on us.

  • In Springfield twisters struck city on the mend

    Boston Globe

    Trees were falling well before the tornadoes hit.

    When the state took over this city’s finances in 2004, the result of multimillion-dollar deficits and years of mismanagement, the onetime manufacturing center faced lawsuits from residents angry about dead tree limbs falling on their cars and houses.

  • Poll finds support for soda tax

    Boston Globe

    In the past three years, Governor Deval Patrick has proposed applying the state sales tax to soda and candy, a measure aimed at raising revenue and curbing consumption of products that researchers tie to rising obesity rates among the state’s adults and children.

    Each time, lawmakers refused to go along.

  • State revenues soar in April

    The Springfield Republican

    In new signs of economic strength in Massachusetts, state tax collections soared in April far above projections and a key business index rose to a nearly four-year high.

     

    But a new poll by a non-partisan organization in Boston found residents remain worried about their economic prospects and confidence in the recovery has dropped.

  • Poll: Massachusetts residents’ confidence in economy slips

    The Patriot Ledger

    The cartload of groceries that Ann Marie Joyce pushed across the BJ’s parking lot Tuesday afternoon looked bountiful, but Joyce’s outlook on the economy is far more bleak than rosy.
    “The media says it’s gaining strength, but I’m not feeling that,” said the Braintree mother of three boys and the wife of a construction worker. “It seems I never have enough money to cover the bills.”

  • Poll: Economic anxiety persists despite growing Massachusetts economy

    Patriot Ledger

    Despite strong statewide economic growth in the first quarter, Massachusetts residents are still anxious about their economic prospects and confidence in the recovery has slipped, according to a new statewide poll released today by The MassINC Polling Group. 

     

    The numbers are part of the Quarterly Trend Monitor which tracks a number of dynamics over time including direction of the state, and favorability for key leaders. 

  • White flight still seen

    Springfield Republican

    White people continued to leave cities like Hartford, Holyoke and Springfield during the past decade, mirroring a longtime pattern dictated mostly by economic forces, new statistics from the U.S. Census show.

    In Western Massachusetts, Springfield’s white population declined by 18,000, or 24 percent, since 2000, Holyoke’s fell by 3,000, or 13 percent, and Chicopee lost 3,500, or 7.5 percent, census statistics reveal.

  • Our View: Bay Staters willing to take lead on climate change

    South Coast Today

    It is easier to talk about global warming than it is to do something about it, but most Massachusetts citizens are willing to put their money where their mouths are.

    That is one of the lessons to be found in a report issued earlier this month by MassINC, an independent think tank and public issues organization.

  • Clean energy is good business for Massachusetts

    Springfield Republican
    A recent survey by The MassINCPolling Group indicates residents across the state see efforts to reduce climate change as a winning economic development strategy for the commonwealth. 

    This new poll, which was sponsored by the Barr Foundation, shows three out of four residents think action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions will either help or have no negative impact on the Bay State economy; about 60 percent believe “taking the lead” on efforts to reduce global warming will spur green job growth in Massachusetts.

  • Small changes big reforms

    Worcester Magazine

    Just last year, higher ups in Massachusetts public education seemed keen on infusing underperforming school districts with charter schools – public schools that could work outside the system and create small clusters of education reform.

    Administrators could hire whomever without much oversight thanks to a nonunionized teaching staff, and teachers had more flexibility to teach what they wanted.

  • True to our Founders

    Berkshire Eagle

    Does Glenn Beck’s departure from Fox News signal the advent of a new era of serious, civilized discourse in America?

    No, but it’s a start. There was a time when people could disagree on the issues of the day without portraying their opponents as devil-worshipping menaces to the American way of life, and maybe we can begin moving back to that day.

  • Editorial: Climate of skepticism

    Metro West Daily News
    Physically, humans are incapable of seeing beyond the horizon. Unfortunately, that appears to apply to time as well as space: We don’t react to problems in the distant future until they are too close to ignore.

  • Building a culture of climate protection

    WCAI

    Massachusetts has set an ambitious goal when it comes to combating climate change: the 2008 Global Warming Solutions Act mandates an 80% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions below 1990 levels by the year 2050, and an interim reduction of 25% this decade.

    Achieving those goals will require broad public support for carbon-cutting policies, plus widespread personal action.

  • New report shows belief in global warming but lack of alarm

    Metro West Daily News

    Three-quarters of Massachusetts residents surveyed in a new poll believe global temperatures are rising, but only a third think manmade emissions are at least partly to blame and that serious problems will result if no action is taken.

     

    The survey and an analysis, scheduled for release this morning by the nonpartisan think tank MassINC, finds Democrats, younger adults, and Latinos and blacks more likely to heed warnings on global warming.

  • Mass residents differ on threat from manmade climate change

    Boston Globe

    A majority of Massachusetts residents say global warming is happening and is caused by human activity, but many remain relatively apathetic on addressing the issue, a new survey released by MassInc shows.

    The Barr Foundation-sponsored study comes as the state works toward meeting a requirement to reduce heat-trapping greenhouse gases by 80 percent by 2050 – one of the most aggressive goals in the country. It also highlighted significant differences of opinion based on political party, minority group, age and income.

  • Region’s diversity continues to deepen

    Boston Globe

    US Census Bureau projections indicate that minorities will be the majority in America by 2050, but in communities like Lawrence and Chelsea, that has been the case for decades.

    Figures from the 2010 Census show that both cities, along with Lynn, Malden, and Lowell, have become even more diverse among communities north of Boston in the past decade. During the same period, all of them experienced significant decreases in their white populations.

  • Murray offers plan to monitor overhaul of state services

    Winchester Star
    As state government implements complex overhauls to Massachusetts’s transportation and economic development bureaucracies and lawmakers eye similar restructuring of the health care, criminal justice and pension systems, Senate President Therese Murray on Thursday outlined a plan to redouble the state’s effort to track their progress on these efforts.

    “Performance management should be a major factor in everything we do,” the Plymouth Democrat said, according to a prepared speech she plans to deliver Thursday morning to the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce at a Back Bay hotel.

  • Growth slow in Boston metro area

    Boston Globe

    The population of Boston’s metropolitan area grew by just 3.7 percent over the past decade, far more slowly than the nation and most other large urban areas, according to new US Census Bureau figures.

    Despite striking population gains in the city of Boston, the region’s overall population climbed just 161,000 between 2000 and 2010 to 4.5 million. Metro regions in Dallas, Houston, and Atlanta grew by more than 20 percent.

  • The Price of Taxing the Rich

    Wall Street Journal

    As Brad Williams walked the halls of the California state capitol in Sacramento on a recent afternoon, he spotted a small crowd of protesters battling state spending cuts. They wore shiny white buttons that said “We Love Jobs!” and argued that looming budget reductions will hurt the Golden State’s working class.

  • Few markets, poor nutrition

    Few markets, poor nutrition – Boston Globe

    Supermarket chains are quick to locate on busy roadways that pass through well-to-do suburbs. But in many urban areas — especially the state’s gateway cities — political leaders need to clamor harder for big food stores.

  • Rail woes drag down the state, showing need to overhaul the T

    Boston Globe

    When an MBTA commuter train takes more than three hours to get to Fitchburg, or more than four hours to limp into Worcester, the frustrated, long-delayed riders of each train aren’t the only ones who lose out.

    Too many other areas of state policy hinge on reliable commuter rail to tolerate the systemic woes that became evident throughout an unusually snowy winter — capped off by two high-profile delays well after the most recent major storm.

  • Timetable For Health Reform Bill? ‘Maybe 70% Chance By Year’s End’

    WBUR

    The scene: A packed forum yesterday at Suffolk University’s Modern Theatre, the old Theatre District movie house once considered beyond repair, now miraculously refurbished, a charming public space once again.

     

    The cast, brought together by CommonWealth magazine and MassINC: Star-studded, at least for our local health care world. Recent Republican gubernatorial candidate Charlie Baker. Health and Human Services secretary JudyAnn Bigby. Blue Cross Blue Shield chief Andrew Dreyfus. Outgoing Tufts Medical Center chief Ellen Zane. And representing the representatives, Ron Mariano, majority leader of the Massachusetts House.

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