Showing posts with label MBTA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MBTA. Show all posts

Friday, July 31, 2015

Obama nominates former MBTA head Scott to NTSB

Photo by: 

Angela Rowlings (file)
Former MBTA General Manager Beverly Scott speaks with a well-wisher during her going away party, Wednesday, April 08, 2015. Staff photo by Angela Rowlings.
The embattled former head of the MBTA, ousted after the transit system suffered a complete collapse last winter, is up for a plum federal transportation job.
President Obama announced Tuesday that he is nominating former MBTA chief Beverly Scott as a member on the National Transportation Safety Board. Board members are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate for five-year terms, according to agency.
Board members, who pull in annual salaries of about $155,000, attend NTSB board meetings, review and approve agency reports, safety studies and safety recommendations.
Scott left the T on April 11, but announced her resignation Feb. 11 under mounting public criticism as a string of snowstorms paralyzed the transit system.
Herald reports have revealed that Scott traveled across the country at taxpayer expense nearly every month during her two-plus-year tenure — sometimes several times a month — to conferences and meetings. She spent a total of 106 days traveling out of state during her tenure, taking 30 trips in 24 months, racking up $56,753 in expenses on lodging, airplane tickets and dining tabs, including at least $1,132 on hotel laundry and dry-cleaning bills.
Scott also went on a hiring and spending spree at the cash-strapped agency over the past year, nearly doubling the number of staffers with six-figure salaries. The 1,952 MBTA employees paid at least $100,000 represented a steep spike from 985 six-figure earners in 2013 and 711 in 2012.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Massachusetts: Democrats now cast wary eye on Baker

The governor’s announcement in February of a panel to overhaul the MBTA has led to disagreements with unions.
JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF/FILE

The governor’s announcement in February of a panel to overhaul the MBTA has led to disagreements with unions.
Union workers are frustrated by Charlie Baker’s bid to privatize services at the MBTA.
Environmentalists worry that he plans to gut the state’s clean air and water regulations.
Advocates for criminal sentencing reform say he appears to have cooled to their agenda, despite campaign promises.
Baker, a Republican who was elected governor by appealing to Democrats as well as his more natural constituencies, has, in the course of governing, demonstrated how difficult it is to please everyone on every issue.
Consider his fumble last week over the question of removing the Confederate flag from the South Carolina State House, after the massacre at an African-American church in Charleston. His initial answer: Leave it to the state to decide. But an immediate backlash forced him to back down and call for the flag’s removal. Friends, Baker said, had asked him, “What were you thinking?”
“Charlie Baker is a conservative, it will continue to emerge, and there will be some people who will be surprised by it,’’ said Peter Ubertaccio, an associate political science professor at Stonehill College.
In his first few months in office, Baker was mostly managing broken agencies, trying to make the MBTA’s trains run on time, getting the highways plowed, and closing a budget deficit, applying the managerial skills that were his strong suit in his race for governor.
But analysts say Baker is now crafting policies and spending decisions that sometimes go against the liberal grain of Massachusetts politics.
To be sure, the governor enjoys sky-high popularity ratings from the public. And he has made several decisions — raising pay for home health care workers, funding urban programs, increasing budgets for environmental programs — that are likely to be popular among liberals and moderates.
For its part, the Baker administration points with pride to his progress on attacking the state budget deficit, while spending on public education and other critical areas without raising taxes.
“Additionally, the administration, one of the most bipartisan in recent history, has won praise from leading Democrats for the governor’s crossing the aisle on issues such as battling the opioid epidemic, aiding low-income families, and offering state government opportunities to minorities,” said Tim Buckley, a Baker spokesman.
At this point, none of the criticisms of Baker has jelled into full-throated opposition from Democratic leaders. In fact, the first-year governor appears to have good relations with the Democrats who run the House and Senate.
Still, Baker’s unusually warm honeymoon is showing its first signs of fraying. It’s not a political crisis, but small cracks in the eclectic coalition that put him in the governor’s office are appearing.
It is particularly evident among some of the Democrats — liberals and moderates — who comfortably crossed party lines and chose Baker over Democrat Martha Coakley in last November’s election. Despite his conservative leanings, they found him to be sensible, approachable, and compassionate.
“Constituencies and interest groups can read into a candidate anything they want,’’ Ubertaccio said “With Baker, you could watch the campaign last fall and say, ‘He’s not a threat to my interests.’ But in the end he is a conservative.’’
The most high-profile example of such tension involves Baker’s push to privatize some services at the beleaguered MBTA, against the wishes not only of the T’s unionized workers (whose radio advertisements warn of “shark privatizers”), but also Democrats in the state Senate.
But there are less heralded skirmishes as well.

Saturday, July 4, 2015

BOSTON: July 4 Events 2015: Independence Day Guide To Fireworks, Concerts And Harborfest



GettyImages-172817763
Fireworks explode over the Charles River with the city of Cambridge in the background during Boston's Fourth of July celebration in 2013. Mario Tama/Getty Images
On the Fourth of July, that blissful holiday of reveling in fireworks and barbecues with friends and family, there is no better city to celebrate in than Boston, the place most closely associated with launch the American Revolution. Its most popular Independence Day events regularly draw half a million attendees and viewers. Here’s your guide to the best of them.
The immensely popular Boston Pops Fireworks Spectacular is a combination of music and fireworks. It’s a two-night affair, July 3 and 4, that takes place along the Charles River at the Hatch Shell on the Esplanade that lies between the Longfellow and Massachusetts Avenue bridges. The Friday concert will begin at 8:30 p.m. EDT and end at 10 p.m. The Saturday concert will start at 8:30 p.m., and fireworks will be launched at 10:30 p.m.
Visit this official site to learn how to enter different official viewing points for the  fireworks, as well as what items visitors are and are not permitted to  bring -- backpacks are not allowed and have not been for several years. Those planning to ride public transportation can check the special Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority schedule here (the T is reportedly free for all after 9:30 p.m.). Those eager to avoid the crowds -- and the security checks -- should check out this list of unofficial spots that offer an excellent view of the pyrotechnics without the hassle.
And, of course, don’t forget the plethora of activities continuing throughout the day on the Fourth of July. For example, the Boston Harborfest, a festival running July 1-5, includes walking tours, historical re-enactments, the famous Chowdafest, an 18th-century chocolate-making demonstration and more, all celebrating Boston’s history and heritage. Most events are held in downtown Boston and along the waterfront. A full schedule of events can be viewed here.
For the historically minded, the Declaration of Independence will be read on the balcony of Faneuil Hall Saturday at 10 a.m. The event is free for all.
Bars and restaurants and bars are featuring specials for Independence Day, ranging from Cinquecento’sbocce tournament (a $200 gift card goes to the winner) and cheap oysters to numerous holiday brunch and/or drink menus throughout the city.

Popular Posts