Wage Transparency, Guns and ...

Dear Neighbor,

There is so much happening in the legislature (not to mention the world) the last two weeks of July!  Conference committees are resolving differences between many bills that have passed both houses.  

WAGE TRANSPARENCY 

The Senate passed our Wage Transparency bill last October.  But it was a little different than the House version.

More Housing: Necessary but not enough or soon enough

Dear Neighbor,

The next two and a half weeks in the legislature are going to be packed!  

Monday I wrote about important pieces of the Senate's version of the Housing Bond Bill.  This is about why the bond bill is not enough.  Following will be newsletters about the immediate emergency, and possible solutions to keep people in their homes..

WE NEED MUCH MORE SOONER!

Senate passes Housing Bond Bill

Dear Neighbor,

There's no place like home!  How can we make sure everyone in Massachusetts has a stable home they can afford, whether it's owning or renting?  Housing affordability is the biggest crisis right now in our state.

This is the first of three newsletters about the Housing Bond Bill the Senate passed on June 27.  Others will be about the housing emergency and other immediate solutions.

Plastics!

Dear Neighbor,

Thursday the Senate passed (38-2) an important comprehensive bill to reduce the use of single-use plastics.  Hundreds of you, my constituents, have asked us to reduce the use of plastics.

(We were also planning to pass a climate/energy bill, but Republicans tabled it. We went back Friday, and they tabled it again, so we'll pass it Tuesday, and then move on to the Housing Bond bill Thursday.  Busy days at end of session!)

Budget

Dear Neighbor,

Last week, the Senate approved a $57.999 billion budget for Fiscal Year 2025, after adopting over 400 amendments.  A fire alarm Thursday night delayed the final vote till shortly after midnight on Friday.

There were 43 roll call votes, most of which were unanimous.

Here's more about the budget process, including the Ways and Means proposal and the fate of 1000 amendments,.  

MassBudget, as always, has a good summary of the Ways and Means proposed budget.  The Mass. Municipal Association summarized local aid accounts.

THANKS TO THE FAIR SHARE AMENDMENT!

No news is bad news

Dear Neighbor,

THIS IS NOT A "NEWS" LETTER

If you've been reading this "newsletter" for a while, you know that it rarely has breaking "news,"  Sometimes I'll describe a particular day's activities or a bill the Senate voted on.  Mostly I write when I have time to talk about a particular issue.

Would you like to know more about what I'm testifying on or what local events I'm attending?  My communications director, Laura Gomez-Arango, posts regularly about those.  You can follow me on Facebook and Threads to get some updates.  We no longer post on Twitter: let me know if you agree or not.

Next week is budget week, so we'll post about that pretty often.

It's not always that easy to learn about the legislature from metro news sources.  In a recent Commonwealth column, Margaret Monsell of Cambridge noted that even the Globe, which reports at length on Patriots coaches and now covers RI and NH, has reduced coverage of the State House.  Neither metro nor local papers generally report roll call results in news stories.  Local papers often carry roll call votes from Beacon Hill Roll Call.

Health or Wealth?

Dear Neighbor,

In February, the Globe broke the story of Sungida Rashid, a new mother who died because St. Elizabeth's Hospital, owned by Steward Health Care, didn't have embolism coils to stop her bleeding.  The coils had been repossessed because Steward didn't pay the vendor - just as they weren't paying other vendors.

This tragedy is how most of us found out about the disaster that is Steward Health Care.  Now we're learning more and more and more.  Particularly memorable: Brian McGrory's column about CEO Ralph de la Torre's yachts.

Steward had already announced plans to close one of its eight Massachusetts hospitals   Now all of its hospitals face sale and/or closure. 

Rent Stabilization in Somerville 2

Dear Neighbor,

This is my second newsletter about rent stabilization.  Here's the first one.  

Channel 25 ran a story about the conflict between renters and homebuyers vs. investors.  They "found when investors use limited liability companies or LLCs to purchase properties – they can be hard to track."  Rep. Uyterhoeven's bill, H3566, would allow identification of the owners of LLCs.

Who's buying homes

Dear Neighbor,

There's a strong consensus that we need hundreds of thousands of new housing units in Massachusetts.  Governor Healey said in her State of the Commonwealth address that housing is our greatest challenge.

The Metropolitan Area Planning Council's recent report, Homes for Profit: Speculation and Investment in Greater Boston, uncovered another problem that prevents potential homebuyers from competing in the market, and raises rents for tenants.