Baker-Polito Administration’s vaccination rollout: Another management failure

Baker-Polito Administration’s vaccination rollout: Another management failure

By John Lippitt
The Baker-Polito Administration’s latest management failure has been the poor implementation of COVID vaccinations. Massachusetts is lagging behind every other northeast state with only 5.5% of its population having received a first vaccination shot by January 24. Connecticut is at 8%, while Alaska and West Virginia are at about twice the MA rate. MA ranks 29th in the country. Furthermore, only 51% of the vaccine doses delivered to MA have been injected into people’s arms as-of January 24. Keep in mind that vaccine doses can’t be stored indefinitely. (https://www.bostonglobe.com/2021/01/23/metro/massachusetts-lagging-most-other-states-covid-19-vaccination-rollout/) The administration has not implemented a centralized process for signing up to get vaccinated. New Mexico launched such a website in December as have other states including Oklahoma, Indiana, and New York. MA has a cumbersome, patchwork of ways to sign…
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Pass the Next-Gen Roadmap Climate Bill

Pass the Next-Gen Roadmap Climate Bill

By Mary Ann Stewart, for the PDM Leadership Team
Governor Baker vetoed the Next-Generation Roadmap Climate Bill. Among other excuses, his reasons—and responses from our allies at 350Mass—include: The bill would halt new construction of affordable housing. In reality, energy efficient homes cost the same or less than those using gas, save money over time, and improve health by reducing indoor pollution. Baker’s stance is supported by the real estate lobby but opposed by advocates for affordable housing. The bill is too ambitious in seeking 50 percent reduction in climate pollution by 2030; he prefers a goal of 45 percent reduction, and less frequent monitoring of progress made. As the climate crisis intensifies, the Commonwealth’s actions need to be more aggressive, not less. He complained about the Roadmap’s new Stretch Building Codes for clean energy, even though they are…
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Baker-Polito Administration finally announces plan for COVID testing in public schools

Baker-Polito Administration finally announces plan for COVID testing in public schools

By John Lippitt for the Leadership Team
The Baker-Polito Administration has finally announced a plan for broad COVID testing of public school students, teachers, and staff. It will begin in about a month. Local higher education institutions, and some local K-12 systems, realized last summer that broad testing of students and faculty was necessary to safely re-open face-to-face education in the fall. Why it’s taken the Baker-Polito Administration this long to figure out that a similar COVID testing approach was necessary for K-12 education is a mystery. We all know kids learn best with face-to-face instruction and the Administration has been pushing communities to re-open schools. But parents, teachers, and students deserve to know if being in school is safe. They also need to know what steps will be taken to protect them if a member of…
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Baker-Polito Administration continues to be too little, too late on COVID

Baker-Polito Administration continues to be too little, too late on COVID

By John Lippitt
The Baker-Polito Administration’s response to the COVID pandemic continues to be too little, too late, while failing to put forth any metric-driven plan and failing to share important data. Testing lacks a coherent system and people wait for hours to get tested and days to get results. No plans to expand or systematize testing are evident. COVID is running rampant in Massachusetts prisons with one in six prisoners and hundreds of prison workers testing positive over a recent six-week period from Nov. into Dec. Meanwhile, the Baker-Polito Administration has refused to report on how almost $3 billion of federal COVID assistance has been spent.
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As evictions increase, the Baker-Polito Administration weakens protections

As evictions increase, the Baker-Polito Administration weakens protections

By John Lippitt
The Baker-Polito Administration weakened eviction protections in the state budget by: 1) removing a requirement that landlords beginning the eviction process notify tenants of their rights, 2) eliminating a pause in the eviction process if a tenant is applying for rental assistance, and 3) deleting reporting on and monitoring of the Eviction Diversion Initiative. Fortunately, the Legislature overrode these actions. Previously, the Baker-Polito Administration let the moratorium on evictions expire despite the facts that its rental assistance program is insufficient and inefficient, and that evictions are increasing dramatically as pandemic assistance is falling.
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Baker-Polito Administration doing too little on COVID

Baker-Polito Administration doing too little on COVID

By John Lippitt
According to Mayors of five Massachusetts cities, the Baker-Polito Administration is doing too little to stop the spread of COVID, so they are taking action on their own to close businesses. As hospitals are filling up, municipal leaders are taking dramatic action despite the harm to businesses, especially in the absence of state or federal economic relief. They are frustrated by the lack of statewide action by the Baker-Polito Administration because residents and COVID flow freely among communities. https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/12/14/metro/mayor-walsh-other-city-mayors-agree-roll-back-reopening-wake-rising-covid-19-rates/
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Baker-Polito Administration needs to support schools and face-to-face learning

Baker-Polito Administration needs to support schools and face-to-face learning

By John Lippitt
The Baker-Polito Administration is doing too little to stop spiking numbers of COVID cases in MA, particularly given its push to have students in face-to-face classes. For all of us to feel safe and have some predictability, clear metrics should be laid for determining when restrictions need to be tightened and when they can be relaxed. This is particularly important for schools. If the Baker-Polito Administration wants to have children safely back in school – as we all do – then it should provide support and a plan for widespread testing and contact tracing in schools – as many colleges have done – so parents and teachers know that our schools are safe. The Administration also needs to invest in ensuring air quality and room for social distancing in our…
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Baker-Polito Administration fails to build needed COVID testing capacity

Baker-Polito Administration fails to build needed COVID testing capacity

By John Lippitt
The Baker-Polito Administration has failed to build needed COVID testing capacity. Experts recommended in July that at least 140,000 tests per day were needed. However, MA is currently averaging only about 70,000 tests a day. When demand spiked to 100,000, long lines and waits occurred, but the Administration said the state would not expand testing sites. https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/11/27/nation/across-state-long-lines-covid-19-testing-reflect-bigger-problem/
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Baker-Polito Administration doing too little, with no plan, on COVID restrictions

Baker-Polito Administration doing too little, with no plan, on COVID restrictions

By John Lippitt
After weeks of dramatically increasing COVID cases, the Baker-Polito Administration finally took action. But public health experts say the steps taken are unlikely to make any significant difference. Data do not support the effectiveness of these steps and some of them have been tried in European countries without success. The Baker-Polito Administration has not released any data-driven plan for how it will respond to the alarming increases in COVID cases. Communicating the metrics that will trigger restrictions (e.g., what numbers of cases per day or what rate of positive test results) and what those restrictions will be on schools, businesses, and other activities is important. This lets people know what to expect and that restrictions are data-driven and not just a political decision. It also gives people an incentive to…
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Help needed to pass Housing Stability bill

Help needed to pass Housing Stability bill

By admin
Dear Colleagues, We are approaching a dangerous housing and public health crisis. Governor Baker has decided to END the Eviction and Foreclosure Moratorium on October 17. This will enable the 10,000 eviction cases frozen by the April Moratorium to go forward in Court and many thousands of other cases owners will file against tenants who have fallen behind on rent due to unemployment during the pandemic. Unfortunately, many tenants decide to move when they get an Eviction Notice or the Summons to Court because they don't understand their rights, can't afford a lawyer, or are afraid of the courts. ***The last thing we need during a pandemic public health crisis and colder months is thousands of people doubling up with others or going to shelters or the streets. How you can help prevent…
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