COVID-19

Democracy Threatened and Restored Again

Of course, the big news — historic news — this week is the ransacking of the Nation’s Capital by an angry mob of Trump followers. Prior to the incident, the malignant mass of protesters-turned-rioters was assured by Trump that the 2020 election was a sham and the win was stolen. They were then encouraged to march to the Capitol Building where the electoral college votes were being counted and told essentially to demand justice. 

This is all despite the fact that there’s zero evidence that the election was stolen and dozens of losses in state and federal court cases attempting to overturn results in swing states. 

It’s not at all clear what the congregation expected to accomplish. Ironically, their actions could very likely get their beloved leader impeached and removed from office, and possibly even blocked from running for any federal office in the future. Having floated the idea of running again in 2024, it now seems highly improbably that Trump will ever see a second term. In fact, he might not even make it to the end of this first term as the bipartisan call for his removal from office grows in volume. 

In addition to doing Trump no favors, many of those involved in the kerfuffle have potentially earned themselves some pretty stiff prison sentences. (For example, the man in the iconic photo sitting at Nancy Pelosi’s ransacked office with his feet up on her desk has been apprehended by the FBI.) Why these thugs weren’t rounded up and arrested on the spot by Capital Police is still a mystery. Now it’s up to the FBI and other law enforcement agencies to hunt them all down and hold them accountable. 

All the hubbub, however, overshadowed a pivotal moment in Massachusetts politics as POTUS-elect Joe Biden announced that Boston Mayor Marty Walsh is his pick for U.S. Labor Secretary. The announcement opens up an exciting race for Mayor in 2021. 

Let’s look into this and other Massachusetts political news stories for this first week of 2021. 

Politics

Biden Names Boston Mayor Walsh U.S. Labor Secretary

In what will amount to a seismic shift in Boston politics POTUS-elect Joe Biden has named Boston Mayor Marty Walsh as his pick for labor secretary. Walsh’s departure leaves City Councilors Michelle Wu and Andrea Campbell in the race for Mayor. If either Campbell or Wu is elected, they will be the first female mayor of Boston.

However, there is still plenty of time for more challengers to enter the ring. Among those rumored to be eyeing the Mayor’s seat is City Council President Kim Janey, who will be sworn in as mayor if Walsh goes to Washington at which point she will be Boston’s first Black Mayor.

Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo will also presumably be heading to Washington as Biden’s commerce secretary. 

New 2021-2022 Legislative Session Underway

Meanwhile, a new legislative session is underway in Massachusetts. In one of their first official acts of the new session, House members elected Democratic Rep. Ron Mariano as the new House speaker. Mariano replaces former Democratic Speaker Robert DeLeo who resigned last month. Democratic Sen. Karen Spilka was reelected Senate president.

Priorities for the new session listed by Mariano include monitoring vaccine distribution, supporting small businesses, bolstering remote learning, and addressing housing troubles brought on by emergency measures.

More Politics

Business

Statewide Restrictions Extended, Relief Increased for Small Businesses

Statewide restrictions have been extended by Mass. Gov. Charlie Baker until at least January 24 as Mass. hit a record-high for single-day Covid-19 cases last Thursday. The capacity limit for outdoor gatherings remains at 25 people

“Cases are growing, and hospitalizations continue to climb,” said Baker. “We know that extending those restrictions for any businesses, especially small businesses, is a lot to ask, but we need to stay in this game a little longer.”

While most small businesses in Mass. are suffering as a result of emergency restrictions, restaurant owners are finding it particularly challenging to accommodate comfortable outdoor dining in the face of freezing winter temperatures. 

However, as we mentioned last week, businesses impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic might breathe a small sigh of relief in light of Mass. Gov. Charlie Baker’s $668 million financial assistance program. The new program offers grants up to $75,000 to be used for employee wages and benefits, operational costs, and debt payments.

The online application portal for the new program will close on Friday, Jan. 15 and the state could start releasing millions in new funding to restaurants and other small businesses in the state as soon as next week.

Details on the program including how to apply are available at www.empoweringsmallbusiness.org.

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Energy

Mass. Lawmakers Sign Sweeping Climate Bill

After months of negotiations, Massachusetts lawmakers have signed off on “An Act Creating a Next-generation Roadmap For Massachusetts Climate Policy.” The sweeping legislation is intended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, create renewable energy jobs, and protect poorer communities that can be at higher risk from pollution. Passage of the bill was near-unanimous in both the House and Senate. 

The centerpiece of the legislation is the state’s goal of hitting net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. The measure also increases requirements for offshore wind energy, improves gas pipeline safety, and increase support for renewable energy workforce development programs.

The law stipulates: that the state must reduce emissions by 50 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and by 75 percent below 1990 levels by 2040. The legislation also ups the state’s renewable portfolio standard to 40 percent by 2030 and increases its offshore wind targets from 3.2 gigawatts to 5.6 gigawatts.

Last week by Gov. Charlie Baker pushed the Massachusetts 2050 Decarbonization Roadmap Report and an interim 2030 Clean Energy and Climate Plan. The proposal would require all new cars sold in the state to be electric by 2035 and also calls for converting 1 million homes from fossil fuel to electric heating.

The climate bill approved by lawmakers on Monday prioritizes access to the state’s solar programs by low-income communities and creates a pathway into the clean energy industry for minority-owned and women-owned businesses.

In addition to the above points, Bill, S. 2995 also calls for:

  • Setting new energy efficiency standards for 17 common appliances

  • Adopting measures to improve gas pipeline safety, including increased fines for safety violations;

  • Increasing the state's RPS by 3% annually from 2025 to 2029

  • Establishing $12 million in annual funding for the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center, earmarked for assisting minority-owned and women-owned businesses in the clean energy industry

  • Setting benchmarks for the adoption of electric vehicles, charging stations, solar technology, energy storage, and heat pumps

  • Providing solar incentives for businesses by exempting them from the state's net metering cap.

The bill now awaits the governor’s signature which is all but guaranteed. 

More Energy News

Transportation

Massachusetts May Require All New Cars To Be Electric by 2035

In support of the net-zero carbon footprint goals outlined in the new climate legislation mentioned above, a new proposal calls for the sale of gas-powered vehicles in the state to end by 2035. It also seeks to have 30 percent of all trucks and busses purchased in the Bay State to be electric by 2030 and 50 percent by 2050. 

Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs Kathleen Theoharides released the plan last week. The report reads in part:

"For the Commonwealth to achieve Net Zero, fossil fuel use must be all but completely eliminated in on-road vehicles by 2050. Given the cost and scarcity of low- or zero-carbon drop-in replacement fuels and the current market and growing availability of high-efficiency battery-electric and other zero-emission vehicle (ZEV) alternatives, this likely means reaching near complete electrification of the light-duty fleet."

The move follows California’s lead as Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed an executive order outlining very similar goals. 

More Transportation News

Real Estate

Massachusetts Makes Top 10 List of Out-of-State Moves

Moving enterprise United Van Lines says Massachusetts is one of the top 10 states in the country losing residents since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Mass. ranked 8th with New Jersey, New York, Illinois, Connecticut, and California at the top of the list. 

United tracked 3,355 moves in and out of Massachusetts in 2020. According to the company’s report, 56.6 percent of those moves were customers leaving the state. Of those, a little over one-third said it was because of work. About one-quarter said they were leaving to retire or for family. And about one-fifth said they left for a change in lifestyle. 

In a statement released by the company, Michael Stoll, an economist and University of California, Los Angeles professor had this to say:

“United Van Lines’ data makes it clear that migration to western and southern states, a prevalent pattern for the past several years, persisted in 2020. However, we’re seeing that the COVID-19 pandemic has without a doubt accelerated broader moving trends, including retirement driving top inbound regions as the Baby Boomer generation continues to reach that next phase of life.” 

Elsewhere in New England, Vermont, Maine, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire all saw more people moving into the state than out. Topping the survey for inbound moves was Idaho, followed by South Carolina, Oregon, South Dakota, and Arizona. However, the survey only represents United’s clientele and doesn’t necessarily reflect overall trends.

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Cannabis

Curaleaf Announces $216 Million Stock Offering

In a bid to raise more than $216 million dollars, Multistate cannabis operator Curaleaf Holdings announced a new stock offering after the closing of markets on Wednesday. The company is offering 16.5 million subordinate voting shares priced at CA$16.70 per share. Curaleaf management says the funds will be used “for working capital and general corporate purposes.”

In a news release, Curaleaf Executive Chair Boris Jordan said the company anticipates “the acceleration of legalization at the federal level.” Jordan is referring to the U.S. Senate runoff elections in Georgia in which Democrats won control of the Senate.

Jordan goes on to say:

“With the recent adult-use cannabis deregulation initiatives in New Jersey and Arizona, and New York announcing its proposal to legalize and create a comprehensive system to oversee and regulate cannabis as part of the 2021 State of the State, now is a pivotal time to raise additional capital to support our growth initiatives as we continue to build out our capabilities in these new markets.” 

Curaleaf trades on the Canadian stock exchange under the ticker symbol CURA and on the U.S. over-the-counter markets as CURLF. The company reported record revenues of $182.4 million for its quarter ended September 30., with a net loss of $9.3 million.

More Cannabis News

A New End

While last year saw record numbers of hurricanes, wildfires, recessions, roller-coaster stock markets, and a defeat of a sitting president — all of which are huge stories in any given year — the coronavirus pandemic has overshadowed everything on earth for the past ten months.

By Mid-December, Massachusetts had blown past the 100,000 COVID-19 cases mark with 10% of those were confirmed just over the Christmas holiday weekend. There have been more than 11,500 confirmed fatalities in Mass since the start of the pandemic.

In an effort to ward off a public health crisis of biblical proportions, Gov. Charlie Baker has given the tourniquet another turn and asked businesses to reduce capacity to 25% and to limit public and private gatherings to 10 people indoors and 25 outdoors for the next two weeks. 

The good news is that vaccinations are underway for the front lines and the most vulnerable. More than 146,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine recently arrived in the state. Another 60,000 or so Pfizer vaccines have also been distributed. So far, more than 35,000 Massachusetts residents have been vaccinated. Although it doesn’t yet toll the death knell for the pandemic, vaccination has brought with it much needed hope. 

In other news...

Politics

GOP Gives Lyons Another Term

Jim Lyons was reelected Sunday to a second term as the state Republican Party’s chairman by a narrow margin of 39-36, against challenger Shawn Dooley. In his pitch prior to the vote (which took place in a parking lot) before the vote. His opponents, Lyons had this to say:

“I should continue to bring conservative and pro-life voices into our party, to give conservatives a seat at the table for which too often in Massachusetts Republican politics [they] have been excluded in the past.”

Lyons, a vociferous Trump supporter, vowed to “make the Massachusetts Republican Party great again.” This might be a bit challenging considering the GOP lost five seats in the Legislature in November. Republicans now hold just three seats in the 40-member Senate and zero in the house.

That being said, Lyons victory is expected to complicate a potential reelection bid by Gov. Charlie Baker who has burned some bridges with pro-Trump forces. Trump recently attacked Baker as a “RINO” (Republican in name only).

Interestingly, to facilitate social distancing, the vote was held in a parking lot in an industrial park in Littleton. Committee members tuned in a live radio broadcast to hear the candidates’ pitches. After the vote was tallied, Lyons supporters honked their horns in lieu of applause. 

The Boston Globe has a more in-depth report on Lyons’ win.

Landmark Police Bill Gets a Touchup

Facing the threat of Gov. Charlie Baker's veto, the Massachusetts Senate did some remodeling on a comprehensive policing bill. The Massachusetts House on Tuesday approved the revisions.

Should it pass, the revamped legislation would create a system for certifying police officers in Massachusetts. It also creates a new civilian-led panel that can revoke badges for misconduct. One of the main sticking points in the bill was the proposed restriction of the use of facial recognition technology by police.

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Business

More Stimulus Money on the Way

Gov. Charlie Baker last week unveiled an additional $668 million stimulus package aimed at small businesses in the Bay State. The money can be used to curtail layoffs, as well as to pay utility bills, rent, and other operational costs. 

Eligible industries include restaurants and bars, caterers, indoor recreation and entertainment establishments, fitness centers, personal services, retailers, and event-support professionals such as photographers and videographers.

More than 10,000 applicants applied for grants from the COVID-19 Small Business Program since it was launched this past fall. State officials will continue to award grants to eligible businesses who already applied but did not receive funding.

Businesses will have a two-week window to apply for grants through an online portal scheduled to come online before the new year and grants will be awarded starting in February.

More information is available at EmpoweringSmallBusinesses.org. 

On a side note, although funding for the state’s stimulus package is not dependent on federal stimulus money, the bill, which was reluctantly signed by Trump, gives the state more flexibility in dealing with the pandemic.

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Energy

In early August, three senators and three representatives were appointed to reconcile differences between climate bills passed by the Mass. Senate and House. However, with the current two-year legislative session coming to an end on Jan. 5, no compromise has been reached. 

Now, in an effort to assure prompt action, climate policy advocates are mounting an “all-out offensive" to keep the pressure on lawmakers.

If the conference committee doesn't produce a compromise bill this session, it will mean a slippery slope for the measures. In order to avoid backsliding, climate advocacy group 350Mass called on its supporters to unleash an “all-out offensive via phone, email, and Twitter, to ensure Massachusetts advances this crucial climate legislation." 

Both climate bills put forth last January call for net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. The bills also set deadlines for the state to impose carbon-pricing mechanisms for transportation, commercial buildings, and homes. 

The Baker administration is planning to release its 2050 Decarbonization Roadmap and the 2030 Clean Energy and Climate Plan by the end of this month.

Read all about it at NBCBoston.com.

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Transportation

Replacement of the 85-year-old Bourne and Sagamore bridges is among 65 transportation projects included in an omnibus package passed along with the $900 billion federal stimulus bill. The 5,000-plus-page bundle includes funding for bridge repairs and replacements as well as other transportation projects. In fact, transportation projects account for about $45 billion of the total relief bill.

The Cape Cod Times has more on this story.

More Transportation News

Real Estate

Since the eviction moratorium expired in Massachusetts, renters across the state are now finding eviction notices taped to their doors and tenant advocates fear a rise in homelessness and a continued spike in COVID-19 cases across the state. 

However, in the days before the moratorium expired, Gov. Charlie Baker announced $171 million earmarked for rental assistance and rapid rehousing programs. Baker also recently signed a budget that includes added funding for housing-related programs.

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Cannabis

Although the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission has taken steps to ensure equitable opportunities within the cannabis industry for minorities, according to a report by Commonwealth Magazine, “one segment of the industry remains controlled – largely by design – by big companies, including some multi-state operators: medical marijuana.”

One reason for the lack of diversity in the medical market, says the report, is the requirement that medical marijuana dispensaries grow and manufacture all of the cannabis products they sell. This vertical integration requirement means it costs a lot more to enter the medical marijuana market than it does to break into the recreational market which has no such requirement.

Mass. CCC chairman Steven Hoffman said a reevaluation of vertical integration requirements will be a priority going forward. “We’ve made a commitment to look into that, to give it the time and study it deserves,” Hoffman said.

Read the full report at Commonwealth Magazine

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A Timely Wish List

Two curves need some serious bending here in Massachusetts — the Covid-19 infection curve, and the state budget curve. Although there was a lot of push and pull going last week, it’s looking like the Covid Curve won’t trend downward until at least mid-January. And the state’s budget is unlikely to bend upward until mid-2022. Lawmakers wishes might come true with the news of a federal relief package coming our way, but it’s doubtful any of the funding needed will make it here in time to make a difference for the holidays.

Meanwhile, Massachusetts has lost its crown of Most Energy Efficient State in the U.S. to California. If you’re going to lose that crown to any state it might as well be the Golden State as it keeps the Bay State in good company. 

The real news, however, is that Massachusetts is and likely always will be a heavyweight contender on clean energy. Gov. Baker has been cheerleading a collection of Northeastern states to pass the Transportation and Climate Initiative — a cap-and-trade program for fuel companies in the Northeast modeled after the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. It looks like we’re close to a deal that could save billions of dollars and countless lives in the coming decades.

And speaking of good company, Lowe’s Home Improvement has agreed to purchase 250MW of renewable energy from Massachusetts-headquartered Swift Current Energy in a 12-year power purchase agreement.

All this and a bag of chips in this week’s news. 

Covid Might Not Bend Until Mid January

With civilian vaccinations still months away, an updated Covid-19 projection model out of UMass Amherst, predicts that the total number of new coronavirus infections will continue to increase well into January. The model projects more than 40,000 new cases by Jan. 2. At just over 33,000 in the first week of December, that’s an increase of about 25%. 

In terms of deaths, the model — which is actually based on an ensemble of different models — predicts mortality will surpass 500 cases per week in Mass. before January with total deaths projected to hit 13,120 by Jan. 9. 

In an attempt to stem the evil tide, Gov. Charlie Baker and some cities and towns continue to re-tighten restrictions. Amid rising COVID-19 numbers in Massachusetts, a number of cities and towns in the state announced they are reverting to more restrictive phases of reopening.

Gov. Baker announced last week that the state would turn back to Phase 3, Step 1 of its reopening plan. And officials in Boston, Arlington, Brockton, Lynn, and Somerville, and Newton have all begun to roll the pace of reopenings back to Phase 2, Sept 2 for at least three weeks.  

If the public doesn’t heed the Governor’s new holiday safety guidelines, a full shutdown could become a reality before the year’s end.

Politics

What The New Federal Relief Bill Means for Mass.

Covid-19 deaths in the U.S. now surpassing 911 deaths on a daily basis. And nearly 8 million Americans have fallen into poverty since this summer. Nonetheless, Washington lawmakers have been in a Red vs. Blue tug-o-war over a second relief bill for weeks. 

Now Congressional and Senate leaders might be close to hammering out a $900 billion COVID-19 economic relief package that would mean billions in aid to small businesses, extended federal and state unemployment benefits, direct payments to Americans, and additional funds to renters and people needing food aid. In fact, by now, the deal might be in the history books.

So what does this mean for Massachusetts?

Direct payments to individuals appeared to be off the table until Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnel realized that Republicans could lose their Senate majority if Georgia voters turned against the GOP before the senate seat runoffs on Jan. 5. Currently, Dems are willing to compromise on direct payments and are asking for one-time payments of $600 — half that of the previous round of checks called for by the CARES Act.

The bad news is, the direct payments are in lieu of financial assistance to state and municipal governments. However, Senate Ed Markey said Thursday he has high hopes that President-elect Joe Biden would facilitate a third relief package before winter’s end.

A $300-per-week federal jobless benefit would run until April 2021 — half of the $600 benefits provided by the CARES Act passed back in March. A $300-per-week extension runs out on Dec. 31.

The package also calls for $300 billion for the Paycheck Protection Program which attempts to stem the tide of layoffs by offering business owners with 300 or fewer employees forgivable loans to be used to cover employees' wages. 

An eviction ban set to expire at year’s end will be extended for another month. (The Mass. eviction moratorium expired in October.) 

Also, a report by Vox claims the package will provide $13 billion for a 15 percent increase in food stamps benefits as well as other food assistance programs.

And finally, to the relief of more than 40 million Americans paying back federal student loans, the package also calls for the deferral of payments until April 2021. 

More Politics

Business

Mass. Economy Not Expected to Improve Substantially Until 2022

With the state’s fiscal health teetering on a cliff, economists are saying that things might not improve until fiscal 2022. A lot depends on how quickly vaccines can be rolled out and how effective the jabs will be at “bending the curve.” It also depends on the flow of federal stimulus money. 

At a Tuesday hearing, Secretary of Administration and Finance Michael Heffernan waxed poetic saying: “Happy holidays, here’s to the new year. We hope there’s a vaccine. We hope there’s federal money.” Okay, so it wasn’t so poetic. 

Meanwhile, Department of Revenue Commissioner Geoffrey Snyder estimated that tax revenue for Fiscal 2022 will fall between $27 billion (a 1% decline) and $30 billion (and 8.8% gain). Several estimates from NGO experts also fell within the range of or slightly higher than the Department of Revenue estimate.

More details on the Mass. 2022 revenue projections can be found at Commonwealth Magazine’s website.

Check out last week’s news to learn more about the state’s fresh-squeezed 2021 budget. 

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Energy

Mass. No Longer Most Energy Efficient State

For nine straight years, Massachusetts has held the gold medal for Most Energy-Efficient State In the Nation according to rankings provided by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE). The Bay State is now number two compared to California. 

"In a year dramatically impacted by a global pandemic and associated recession, efforts to advance clean energy goals struggled to maintain momentum amid the loss of 400,000 energy efficiency jobs by the summer and disruptions to countless lives. Despite these challenges, some states continued to successfully prioritize energy efficiency as an important resource to help reduce household and business energy bills, create jobs, and reduce emissions. First place goes to California, which sets the pace in saving energy on multiple fronts with adoption of net-zero energy building codes, stringent vehicle emissions standards, and industry-leading appliance standards." — ACEEE annual scorecard

Massachusetts has been in the top 10 all 14 years that the ACEEE has published its annual scorecard. However, in recent years, California has spent millions of dollars to provide incentives for high-efficiency heat pump water heaters. And a recently signed executive order calls for phasing out the sale of new gasoline-powered vehicles by 2035.

Here’s a more extensive report from the Boston Globe. 

Lowe’s Taps Mass.-Based Swift Current Energy for 250MW of Solar

Massachusetts-headquartered Swift Current Energy is working on a 12-year power purchase agreement to supply Lowe’s home improvement with 250MW of renewable energy from its Black Diamond Solar park in Illinois. 

Currently under construction, the facility will house over 1 million solar panels with a total capacity of 593MW. The new installation is expected to go online by the summer of 2023.

Swift Current Energy has developed and commercialized more than 1GW of clean energy projects with more than 3GW under development.

Read more at PV-Tech.org. 

More Energy News

Transportation

Northeast States Agree on Cap-and-Invest Plan for Autos

After years of negotiation, a collection of Northeastern states are expected to unveil a final agreement Monday on the Transportation and Climate Initiative. TCI, a cap-and-trade program for fuel companies in the Northeast, would set decreasing limits on carbon emissions from autos. The program is modeled after the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative being applied to power plants. 

Under the agreement, fuel suppliers would be required to buy carbon credits to cover their emissions. Proceeds from the credits — estimated to be as high as $8.5 billion annually — would be earmarked for clean infrastructure projects.

Twelve states are involved in the pact championed by Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker. However, governors from Connecticut, Vermont, and Maine have expressed reservations about the plan. Other states involved include Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island, and Virginia, as well as the District of Columbia. 

While some states may be required to adopt the program via their legislature, Massachusetts can do so through executive action.

A study by Harvard University's T.H. Chan School of Public Health claims the plan found the improvement in air quality alone would prevent up to 1,000 deaths annually and reduce emissions up to 25% by 2032.

Read all about it at EEnews.net.

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Real Estate

Blackstone is Now King of the Hill in Cambridge Biotech

Blackstone Property Partners Life Sciences is acquiring 2.3 million square feet of lab office buildings from a Brookfield Asset Management real estate fund. The deal, valued at $3.45 billion, puts Blackstone at the top of the heap of biotech space in Cambridge. The deal is expected to go down in the first quarter of 2021.

The life sciences real estate sector is booming. More than $16 billion has been raised from private investors during the first half of 2020. Cambridge is one of the fastest-growing  biotech hubs in the country. 

Learn more at GlobeSt.com. 

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Cannabis

The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission has appointed two new members. 

Nurys Camargo is a regional AT&T executive. Camargo previously directed youth violence prevention programs under the administration of former Governor Deval Patrick and founded a nonprofit to mentor Latinas. Camargo will assume the commission’s social justice seat for a five-year term beginning January 1.

Bruce Stebbins is a longtime Republican political operative who currently serves on the Massachusetts Gaming Commission. Stebbins will also be appointed to a five-year term on the cannabis commission as of January 1. 

The new appointments to the independent commission were made jointly by the offices of Governor Charlie Baker, Attorney General Maura Healey, and state Treasurer Deborah Goldberg.

MJ Biz Daily has more on this story.

More Cannabis News

More of the Latest Massachusetts News

Two Steps Forward and Back Again

Even when we’re making significant progress, Massachusetts seems to be experiencing setbacks in equal measure.

For instance, the Commonwealth seems to be all set in the energy department. Grid operators are saying they’ll have no problem meeting demand this winter. But shivering throngs of residents might not have a home to heat. That is if the Federal eviction moratorium expires on schedule on December 31. Even if folks can pay their rent or mortgage, they may not have enough money to pay their electric bills as unemployment balloons and relief shrivels. 

On the bright side, sarcastically speaking, trains, trolley’s and buses will be using a lot less energy this winter as ridership has plummeted and the MBTA plans stiff cuts in services. And with lawmakers in Washington squabbling over who gets what in federal assistance, things aren’t guaranteed to be getting better anytime soon. 

On a “lighter” note, one week after marijuana sales blew past the billion-dollar mark here in Mass., Maine has announced that marijuana is now it’s number one cash crop. Also this week, Congress passed the MORE Act which includes an attempt to decriminalize marijuana and remove it from the DEA’s list of Schedule I controlled substances. If these trends continue — and they will — the smart money is going to start piling into cannabis like children in a heap of autumn leaves.

Let’s unpack this week’s news: 

Politics

Mass. Reopening Turns Retrograde

Just last week, Gov. Charlie Baker had no plans to double down on COVID-19 restrictions. However, that was before we repeatedly smashed single-day coronavirus records with hospitalizations rising 44% the week after Thanksgiving. Health officials have reported 3,627 new coronavirus cases and 40 more deaths from COVID-19.

As a result, the Bay State’s reopening process has gone into retrograde. Baker announced Tuesday that he will roll back to Phase 3, Step 1 of the state’s reopening plan starting Sunday, Dec. 13, with reduced capacity for "pretty much everything." 

"The rate Massachusetts residents are getting infected and the rate at which they are needing medical care, if all continues to move at this pace, is simply not sustainable over time, and our health care system will be put at risk," Baker said. "We have to do more."

The exact details of the rollback can be found here. 

Hopefully, help is on the way. By the time you read this, trucks full of Covid-19 vaccines could be rolling into Massachusetts

The FDA’s advisory committee has recommended the approval of Pfizer’s vaccine for emergency use in the United States. Now we wait for the FDA to decide whether to accept the recommendation. Once this happens, doses of the vaccine could be in Massachusetts within days. Healthcare workers are expected to be among the first group eligible for the vaccine. 

According to a report at WWLP.com:

“The Baker administration plans to distribute 300,000 COVID-19 vaccines over the next three months to Massachusetts residents and workers who face the highest risks for the virus, starting its immunization rollout by focusing on health care workers, long-term care facilities, first responders and congregate care settings… The three-phase plan is scheduled to roar into action this month with the first 60,000 doses set to arrive by Dec. 15. About 300,000 doses, including both Moderna- and Pfizer-manufactured vaccines, should arrive by the end of the month.”

The general public should be able to get in line for vaccines by Mid-April. 

Details of the Governor’s plan to distribute vaccines can be found here.

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Business

Unemployment Continues to Rise

Again with the jump in jobless claims as the state rolls back its reopening plan. Nearly 34,000 Massachusetts residents filed for first-time unemployment benefits last week — up by more than 2,800 from the week prior. As the virus continued to spiral out of control, unemployment has jumped nationwide to 853,000 last week. 

Included in these figures are “gig workers” and the self-employed who qualify for aid via the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program — which expires at the end of the month.

WBUR has more on this story.

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Energy

ISO Predicts No Grid Problem This Winter

Electric grid operators ISO-New England are assuring the public that they expect no problems in meeting New England’s power demand this winter. ISO expects to be able to provide electricity “under both normal and short durations of extreme temperatures” — at least through February.

ISO-New England Vice President of System Operations & Market Administration Peter Brandien said that based on weather forecasts, “fuel inventory assessments, and decreasing peak energy usage trends, the ISO expects the region will have the electricity it needs to meet consumer demand and maintain system reliability this winter.” 

The grid operator said it expects peak demand will be greater than 20,000 megawatts under normal winter weather — a decline of 310 MW or 1.5 percent from last winter’s forecast.

More details can be found at WWLP.com.

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Transportation

MBTA Waffling On Service Cuts 

After an outcry from riders, transit advocates, and political leaders including Boston Mayor Walsh, the MBTA is trying to work out a plan to scale back planned system-wide service cuts meant to plus the budget deficit created by pandemic emergency measures.

Mayor Walsh lambasted the agency’s plan going so far as to call on state officials to solve the issue, even if it meant raising taxes. 

Emergency measures sent the ridership and revenue into a sinkhole forcing transit officials to consider cuts of more than $100 million to bus, rail, and ferry service.

Proposed cuts could eliminate 25 of 169 bus routes, consolidate another 14, and shorten five. It would also entail eliminating bus and train service after midnight and reducing the frequency of some train and bus routes. “Ferry service would be torpedoed,” as the Boston Globe cleverly put it

MBTA officials said they would provide details of the final draft of the proposed cuts in the coming days. A vote could come as early as next week. 

Below is more news and commentary on the MBTA woes:

Real Estate

Up To 14 Million Evictions Could Follow Expiration of Eviction Moratorium

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eviction moratorium is set to expire on December 31. And more than 14 million American households are currently at risk of receiving eviction notices with  4.9 million of them likely to be kicked out into the cold in January, alone. That is according to a report by global investment bank and advisory firm, Stout. 

Meanwhile, public health officials predicted that evictions could worsen the Covid-19 crisis resulting in a vicious cycle. 

Asked whether he would consider resuming the state’s eviction moratorium, Mass. Gov. Charlie Baker said the commonwealth should have enough resources to assist tenants and landlords who are behind on payments. 

Currently, renters in the U.S. are already burdened by an estimated $25 billion in past-due rent debt.  

Read all about it at Boston Business Journal. 

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Cannabis

Marijuana Delivery Rules Expose Rift In Mass. Cannabis Industry

Newly approved home delivery rules have caused a rift in the Massachusetts cannabis industry. The Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission voted to approve the revised regulations on November 30. Many dispensaries across the state are protesting the revised regulations. 

Most unhappy are the brick-and-mortar dispensaries which would be prevented from making their own deliveries until 2024. 

The CCC created two classes of adult-use marijuana delivery licenses —  marijuana couriers, and marijuana delivery operators. Third-party marijuana couriers will be permitted to pick up and deliver cannabis products to consumers from a retail dispensary. And marijuana delivery operators would be permitted to inventory products without having to operate a retail storefront essentially putting them in direct competition with local marijuana dispensaries.

The Commonwealth Dispensary Association (CDA) plans to challenge the new regulations in court. 

Check out the report at the Berkshire Edge. 

Cannabis Now Most Valuable Crop in Maine

Move over potatoes and blueberries. Cannabis is now Maine’s most valuable crop.  Medical marijuana sales in the state rose from over $100 million in 2019 to more than a quarter of a billion dollars in 2020. Potatoes bring in around $180 million, and blueberries a mere $26 million according to Maine Revenue Services.

According to state sales tax figures, medical marijuana sales added up to more than $220 million from January through October. That’s more than double the previous year, Maines cannabis industry is on pace to hit $266 million in sales for 2020. 

It has been a record-breaking year for the cannabis industry as a whole. 

Learn more at the Portland Press Herald.

More Cannabis News

More of the Latest Massachusetts News

Public Transit Collides with COVID-19

This week in Massachusetts news, the Covid-19 pandemic continues to ravage the state, the economy and now the MBTA. While the state insists recently proposed service cuts are necessary and temporary, most residents are in disbelief and living in fear that the axed services will never return. 

Worse yet, but not as widely discussed, the number of small businesses open in Massachusetts has plummeted by a staggering 37 percent this year as small business revenue has decreased nationwide by 44 percent since January 15, 2020. 

The hospitality industry has been especially hard hit with a 64 percent decrease in revenue for small businesses in the industry. One particularly sad sign of the decline is the unloading of the iconic Commonwealth Hotel by Xenia Hotels & Resorts just four years after the company acquired the property. The landmark hotel was sold at a cavernous loss of $23 million. 

In the good news column — at least if you’re a stakeholder in the cannabis industry — within the same week, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a landmark marijuana policy reform bill while the U.N. removed cannabis from its most prohibitive controlled substances classification. The changes are bound to increase the flow of investment capital into the Green Rush.

Let’s get to work. 

Transportation

The big news in transportation these past few weeks has been the looking cuts in MBTA services. The proposed cuts, called “unnecessary” in an extensive op-ed at CommonWealth Magazine penned by Chris Lisinski, have been extremely unpopular. 

An online survey of 1,340 Massachusetts residents showed that 64 percent somewhat or strongly oppose the proposed cuts in service. Moreover, although MBTA General Manager Steven Poftak has stated that the cuts are not permanent, 54 percent said they didn’t think the eliminated services would be restored after the pandemic abates.

A laundry list of service cuts has been proposed by the MBTA in order to deal with a $579 million budget shortfall as ridership has been decimated during the pandemic. Cuts include less frequent subway and commuter trains, the elimination of 25 bus routes, and the cancellation of ferry service.

The Fiscal and Management Control Board plans to vote on the package soon.

More Transportation News

Business

The Number Of Open Small Businesses In the Bay State Falls By a Staggering 37%

The number of small businesses open in Massachusetts has declined by a staggering 37 percent since January 15, 2020, as nationwide revenue for small businesses has plummeted by an even more unbelievable figure of 44 percent. That is according to data published by a nonpartisan research organization at Harvard University. Interestingly, revenue for small businesses offering professional and business services decreased by only 4.4 percent.

Both CBS Local and the Boston Herald have more details on this story.

More Business News

Real Estate

Landmark Hotel Commonwealth Sold At $23 Million Loss

Boston’s beleaguered hotel industry is in shock after Hotel Commonwealth, a popular Kenmore Square hotel was sold at a loss. Florida-based Xenia Hotels & Resorts sold the luxury hotel to Ohana Real Estate Investors for $113 million. That’s $23 million less than Xenia paid for the property just four years ago.

The Boston Globe had this to say about the news:

“It’s a rare reversal in price for a trophy piece of Boston real estate, which for the most part has only gone up in value over the last decade. But it has been an unusual nine months in the real estate market, especially for hotels, whose bookings have evaporated amid a pandemic that has largely shut down both business and leisure travel.”

According to a report by hotel consulting firm Pinnacle Advisory Group, Boston has suffered the sharpest drop in business of any of the 25 largest hotel markets in the country. 

More Real Estate News

Politics

Kimberly Budd sworn in as chief justice of the Supreme Judicial Court

Kimberly Budd has been sworn in as Supreme Judicial Court Chief Justice. Budd served on the SJC since 2016, where she has co-authored more than 85 decisions and has served on several judicial committees. Budd was unanimously confirmed by the Governor’s Council to lead the high court last month. 

Councilor Marilyn Devaney said during the Governor’s Council hearing last month:

“[Justice Budd] has all the attributes. She is compassionate. She has empathy. She has all the qualifications, and she has the demeanor and temperament that we need in that position.”

Budd replaces her mentor, the late chief justice Ralph Gants. She is the first Black woman to lead the high court. 

Read more at MassLive.com.

More Politics News

Energy

Offshore Wind “Lynchpin” of Mass. Clean Energy Transition

Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Kathleen Theoharides, the Baker administration’s top energy official, recently said at a conference of regional power generators, market regulators, and other energy experts that she expects offshore wind to be the “linchpin of the state’s clean energy transition.” That is according to a report in the Lowell Sun

However, she says the state will need help from the incoming Biden Administration in order to meet the state’s goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. 

Theoharides said: 

“To fully address the issues of climate change, we feel strongly we need every level of government working in this space and I am hopeful there will be increasingly emphasis on this in the new administration, but I have no doubts that it will continue to be a challenge given the politically divisive nature of climate action.” 

Also, according to the report, Federal Energy Regulatory Commissioner, Republican Neil Chatterjee predicted that the Biden administration would bring renewed focus on climate and energy policy stating that it is “clear that energy and environmental policy issues are going to be top priorities for the incoming administration.” 

Chatterjee was recently demoted by President Donald Trump from chairman of FERC.

More Energy News

Cannabis Industry

This big news for the Massachusetts cannabis industry is global this week. 

First off, in an historic move, the U.S. House of Representatives has passed the MORE Act by a vote of 228-164, largely along party lines. The measure goes beyond decriminalization “including several social and criminal justice measures that would help lift up the communities of color ravaged by the War on Drugs, while helping build an equitable cannabis industry in which the people of color disproportionately impacted by prohibition have a seat at the table,” says Rolling Stone

The bill must still run the Senate gauntlet and be signed by the president. Whether or not those things will come to pass are anyone’s guess. 

Second, The United Nations’ Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) has removed Marijuana From its Most Strict Global Drug Category. The move, which was recommended by the UN-based World Health Organization, has U.S. Support. Cannabis, which has been on Schedule IV since 1961, is now a Schedule I controlled substance. 

Cannabis policy reform advocates say the move “demonstrates an evolution in how the international community views cannabis policy, as it formally recognizes the medical value of the plant and it could promote further research into its therapeutic potential.” 

Read more at industry news source Marijuana Moment

More Cannabis Industry News

COVID-19 News

We have quite a bit of news on the Covid-19 pandemic this week:

A Peaceful Transition but More Work To Do

While Democrats are rejoicing at President Trump’s defeat at the hands of Joe Biden, not everyone is happy with Biden’s seeming lack of concern for the wishes of the more progressive wing of the party. 

While former Senator John Kerry has been named Biden’s “Climate Czar,” it seems that presidential primary runner-ups Senator Elizabeth Warren and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders — both progressive Democrats — are being passed over for cabinet seats, the rationale being that their influence is more highly necessitated in the U.S. Senate. While that might be true, it’s still a huge disappointment to Warren and Sanders supporters. 

Meanwhile, the new wave of Covid-19 cases threatens to set the state back even farther than the first. Witness a massive drop in holiday travelers and the slow but inevitable decay of shopping malls in the state. 

Although malls were already on the skids as a result of the rise of online shopping, it seems that the pandemic has nailed the lid on the coffin not only for many of the state’s small businesses but also national brick-and-mortar retailers. Ironically, mall-killer Amazon.com is now taking over many of these shopping ghost towns and turning them into distribution and fulfillment centers including their latest takeover of the flagging Greendale Mall in Worcester - which was down to its last tenant.

Read on to learn more about all that, plus the results of Monday’s vote on marijuana delivery rules in this week’s news.

Politics News

Biden Snubs Warren and Sanders for Cabinet Seats

Under “normal” circumstances, runners-up in a presidential primary would be among the top contenders for cabinet seats under an incoming administration (ie President Barack Obama’s nomination of Hillary Clinton for Secretary of State in 2008). However, circumstances are nowhere near normal in the 2020 race for political power in America. 

Although there was some speculation that Biden might bring second and third runner-up candidates — Vermont’s Bernie Sanders and Massachusetts’ Elizabeth Warren, both of whom expressed interest in joining Biden’s cabinet — it’s now looking like Biden would prefer that the two Senators from New England remain in the Senate. 

In an interview with NBC’s Lester Holt last Tuesday night, Biden stated:

“One thing is really critical: Taking someone out of the Senate, taking someone out of the House, particularly a person of consequence, is a really difficult decision that would have to be made. I have a very ambitious, very progressive agenda. And it’s going to take really strong leaders in the House and Senate to get it done.”

While Warren was reportedly eyeing the Treasury Secretary position, Sanders had his sights set on the Labor Secretary seat. Biden has officially chosen former Federal Reserve Chairperson Janet Yellen to head up the Treasury.

Although most within the progressive wing of the Democratic Party are ecstatic that Biden beat Trump, many are not pleased with Biden’s seeming propensity to favor moderates for his cabinet, claiming that the transition team seems more interested in courting Republicans (in the interest of unity and bipartisanship) than in nominating progressives. 

Read the report at Boston.com.

More Politics News

Transportation News

After travel seemed to be on an upswing in Massachusetts — traffic and T ridership had been slowly but steadily increasing throughout the summer — a new surge of Covid-19 cases has put a damper on holiday travel in the Bay State and in Bean Town, especially. That is according to a report in the Boston Globe.

According to Transportation Secretary Stephanie Pollack, MBTA subway ridership which had been nearing 140,000 daily riders in October, has slipped back to around 120,000. Similarly, bus ridership is down from nearly 180,000 daily trips to about 160,000. Traffic has also tapered off since peaking around Labor Day.

Pollack’s said in a recent statement:

“Given the surge, given the advice from the Centers for Disease Control and the governor and everyone else that people need to spend more time at home and not travel for Thanksgiving, we may well see a remaining fall and winter. From the perspective of the pandemic, that is a good thing.”

A similar slowdown in air travel is being attributed to the autumnal coronavirus surge with just under 150,000 travelers departing from six major airports in New England between Friday and Wednesday. That figure, according to a Patch.com report is down more than 70 percent from the same time period ahead of Thanksgiving last year.

Jennifer Mehigan, a spokesperson for the Massachusetts Port Authority, has said that prior to the pandemic Logan International airport routinely saw between 120,000 and 140,000 travelers arriving and departing each day.

“Heading into the Thanksgiving holiday this year, the busiest day was Nov. 21, when 27,761 people traveled from the six airports. That was down from the busiest day ahead of Thanksgiving 2019, when 93,000 people traveled from the airports,” according to the Boston Globe’s report. 

According to the report, the decline in Thanksgiving travelers “was steeper in New England than in other parts of the country, where the decline in travelers was 60 percent.” 

More Transportation News

Energy News

President-Elect Joe Biden Taps John Kerry for “Climate Czar”

Former Secretary of State John Kerry has been tapped by President-elect Joe Biden to be the nation’s international climate czar. Kerry’s position is a first for the National Security Council.

Kerry, who served as secretary of state in the Obama administration, Tweeted:

“America will soon have a government that treats the climate crisis as the urgent national security threat it is. I’m proud to partner with the President-elect, our allies, and the young leaders of the climate movement to take on this crisis.”

In contrast to outgoing President Trump, Biden has signaled that he views climate change as a threat to the country’s national security.

Kerry was instrumental in negotiating the Paris Climate Accord which was nixed by Trump to the dismay of climate activists. Trump also rolled back numerous additional environmental and energy regulations instantiated by the Obama administration.

The Boston Globe has an extensive report on this story. 

More Energy News

Business and Real Estate News

Amazon.com To Take Over Flagging Greendale Mall

As shopping malls across the nation continue to see a vast decline in foot traffic, online mega-retailer Amazon.com has been busy converting emptied malls into distribution and fulfillment centers. Now it looks as if the Greendale Mall in Worcester, which is down to a single tenant, is next.

The Greendale Mall will be the first major shopping center in New England to be converted into an industrial site. That is according to the national real estate firm CBRE which maintains that nationwide 13.8 million square feet of retail space has been converted into 15.5 million square feet of industrial space since 2017. 

While Amazon.com is responsible for a major decline in brick-and-mortar sales, a global pandemic seems to be collecting nails for the coffin. The only other major shopping mall in the city, the Galleria, closed in 2006 after a failed attempt at converting the property to a factory outlet mall.

The Worcester Business Journal has the scoop.

More Real Estate News

Cannabis News

The Mass. Cannabis Control Commission has given final approval to new home delivery regulations. The new rules specify a delivery license framework and also include changes to the medical marijuana caregiver program.

Regulators said the new rules include an initial period of exclusivity for the state’s economic empowerment applicants and participants in the Social Equity Program are crucial to preventing monopolization of the new delivery sector.

Home delivery of marijuana was already allowed for medical marijuana dispensaries. Not everyone is happy with the new regulations. Some marijuana retailers have threatened to sue the CCC to prevent the implementation of the new policy.

Howard Cooper, an attorney with Todd & Weld LLP, wrote in a letter to regulators in mid-November:

“Put simply, the Commission’s adoption and implementation of the Proposed Regulation would be in direct contravention of its own governing and enabling statute which clearly and unambiguously states that only Marijuana Retailers, as defined in the statute, are [already] permitted to deliver cannabis products to consumers. Given the clarity of the law here, please understand that our clients will have no choice but to challenge the Commission’s Proposed Regulations in court if adopted. We write in hope of avoiding a legal dispute.”

CCC Chairman Steven Hoffman counters that the agency is acting within its authority. And Aaron Goines who advises the Massachusetts Cannabis Association said:

“Essentially, they want to own 100 percent of it or 80 percent or have as much control or influence over it as possible. That’s just not how the regulations are written, so get on board. Compete. You are not entitled to a clear runway of no competition in this country, it just doesn’t work like that.”

The new rules are expected to go into effect next year.

Learn more at MassLive.com. 

Massachusetts Among 10 Best Cannabis Business States in the US

Massachusetts has earned the number six spot on cannabis news publisher Greentrepreneur’s list of the “10 Best Places To Start A Cannabis Business in the US.” 

“Despite being the latest state to legalize recreational cannabis,” writes Tammy Taylor, “Massachusetts is quickly taking a prime position in the cannabis business world,” adding that now is the “perfect time to start your cannabis dispensary [in Mass.].”

Taylor points out that it can take under three months to be approved for a cannabis business license in the Bay State. “Aside from starting your dispensary, you can also consider supplying dispensaries and stores as the alternative,” writes Taylor.

Check out the full Top 10 list at Greentrepreneur.com.

More Cannabis News

More of the Latest Massachusetts News

On Budgeting in a Pandemic

It would be a massive understatement to say that it’s challenging to ascertain an accurate annual budget for a Commonwealth the size of Massachusetts when there’s a global pandemic raging and literally no one knows what the future holds. The state has been running on a stopgap budget since the beginning of Fiscal 2021 (beginning of July) while lawmakers fumble with vacillating revenue projections. 

The much-dreaded second wave of Covid-19 cases is blowing up the state’s unemployment numbers once again. And there’s talk of another statewide shutdown casting increased uncertainty about whether or not revenue projections are accurate. 

Nonetheless, both houses of the state legislature have finally passed a $46 billion budget for fiscal 2021. 

Also now in question is the ambitious Transportation and Climate Initiative. In its current state, the proposed measures were based on pre-pandemic travel statistics. But travel in the state has plummeted due to emergency measures — and more are on the horizon.

The initiative, intended to reduce carbon emissions, was this close to being signed, sealed, and delivered. However, Governor Baker and some of the other governors of the Northeast and Mid Atlantic states taking part in the pact are now questioning the wisdom of passing a program that was based on an economy that now seems like a past life. 

It’s a mad, mad world. 

Let’s have a look at this and other news from around the state. 

Politics

Senate Approves $46B Budget

Last week, the Mass. House of Representatives approved a $46 billion budget proposal. This week, the Senate has approved its version of the budget. According to Senate leaders, the proposed budget — an increase of about 5.5% over the prior fiscal year —  is centered around an effort to build a more equitable economic recovery by making investments in early education and childcare, food security, housing support, and public health.

Although the budget is for the fiscal year that began back on July 1, due to uncertainty of the economic impacts of the pandemic, the state has been running on a temporary budget. 

Governor Baker is expected to sign off on the final budget. 

Massachusetts Officially Breaks Turnout Record by Nearly 300,000 Votes

All of the ballots for the 2020 election have been tallied and certified and the grand total of voters fell just short of a record-breaking 3.7 million. To be exact, 3,657,972 ballots were cast in the election — or about 76 percent of the number of registered voters — busting the previous record set in 2016 by about 300,000 votes. 

Earlier this year, in response to the pandemic, lawmakers expanded early and mail-in voting, methods which accounted for almost 2.6 million ballots. Secretary of State Bill Galvin has voiced his support for making expanded mail-in voting options permanent.

Economy

Unemployment On the Rise Again

This past October, the Massachusetts unemployment rate fell to its lowest level since June — down to 7.4 percent, from 17.7 percent in June. However, along with Covid-19 cases, unemployment claims are again on the rise. 

According to the latest data from the U.S. Labor Department, more than 60,000 Mass. residents filed first-time claims last week. That number, which is more than 10,000 higher than the previous week, includes both traditional unemployment claims as well as independent contractors and gig workers who have been filing under emergency rules.

The higher numbers are being attributed to business closings due to new restrictions imposed in early November including a stay-at-home advisory and a 9:30 p.m. curfew for most activities.

More than six percent of the Massachusetts workforce was receiving unemployment compensation at the end of last month. That’s one of the highest rates in the country.

More Economic News:

Transportation

Baker Voices Pessimism on Transportation and Climate Initiative 

Gov. Charlie Baker and fellow governors taking part in the Transportation and Climate Initiative are reevaluating support of a controversial carbon tax. The program is a regional pact between 11 Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. 

Last Tuesday during a press conference at the State House, Baker pointed out that travel patterns have shifted as more people work from home. 

Baker stated:

"We're living at a point in time right now that's dramatically different than the point in time we were living in when people's expectations about miles traveled and all the rest were a lot different… Modeling, I think, is an import part of figuring out how people feel about the cost-benefit associated with the program and the product and it's certainly something that we think is an important part of helping states make decisions." 

Meanwhile, advocates of the measure are still urging its passage. Earlier in the day, more than a dozen Massachusetts environmental, health and transportation groups joined 200 organizations in penning a letter to Northeast governors, including Baker, urging them to launch the Transportation and Climate Initiative program. Additionally, Mass. Director of Transportation Chris Dempsey said the program would "address climate change and improve the quality of life of Massachusetts residents."

Paul Craney, of the conservative Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance, on the other hand, called the initiative "elitist" stating, quote: "Climate alarmists that are still pushing the regressive TCI gas tax scheme need to understand that the world we live in now is not the same world we lived in when TCI was first introduced."

Studies have shown transportation is the largest source of air pollution in Mass. accounting for more than 40 percent of the state’s greenhouse gas emissions. However, with a massive reduction in travel, Baker believes those numbers need to be reevaluated.

Official estimates put the increase in gas prices due to the measure at between 5 and 17 cents per gallon in the first year. 

Governors in New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Vermont are also voicing concerns about the plan. An agreement was originally expected by the year's end. However, with support waning, the fate of the initiative is unclear. 

Read all about it at MassTransitMag.com.

More Transportation News

Energy

At the Third Annual MassEVolves Recognition Ceremony, held this week, several companies and higher education institutions across Massachusetts were recognized for their work in promoting the expanded use of electric vehicles in their communities and across the state.

To receive recognition, MassEVolves participants are required to create and execute an EV Action Plan. The plan must outline steps being taken to help Massachusetts residents gain greater access to electric vehicles. 

Participants Recognized for 2020 MassEVolves program:

  • Analog Devices

  • AstraZeneca

  • Bard College at Simon's Rock

  • Boston University

  • Braintree Electric Light Department

  • Bristol Community College

  • EMD Serono Research

  • Energy New England

  • Hampshire College

  • Holyoke Community College

  • Millipore Sigma

  • Tufts University

  • University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

  • University of Massachusetts Boston

  • University of Massachusetts Medical School

  • Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

  • Worcester Polytechnic Institute

  • Worcester State University

Read more at Yahoo Finance. 

Videos from the event are accessible at massevolves.org/2020-recognition-event.

More Energy News

Real Estate

The median home prices for single-family properties and condos in Massachusetts hit record highs for October. According to a report released Tuesday by The Warren Group, single-family home sales are up 27 percent and the cost of a single-family home rose 17 percent. The median price of a home in Mass. is now $455,000. The median price of a condo went up 10.8 percent to $410,000 with a rise in sales of 17 percent year-over-year.

Tim Warren, CEO of The Warren Group had this to say about that:

“Despite higher COVID-19 infection rates, consumers across Massachusetts continued their real estate buying binge in October. Strong demand from buyers, scant supply from sellers, and rock bottom interest rates continued to push the median single-family home price higher, and it has now been above $450,000 for four consecutive months.”

Read all about it in Real Estate News.

More Real Estate News

Business

Although the House of Representatives approved sports betting in its economic development bill, the Senate has nixed the notion. The proposed amendment to legalize sports betting in the state was expelled without a roll call vote. 

The amendment, proffered by Minority Leader Bruce Tarr would have allowed licensed casinos, racetracks, and online operators to take bets on sporting events. 

Experts estimate the annual revenue from sports betting in Massachusetts might have ranged from about $20 million to $35 million. For comparison, casino and slot parlors in the state currently average about $21 million in revenue each month. 

The dead amendment had earmarked revenue from application fees to be used to create a new economic recovery fund.

More Business News

Cannabis 

Hemp Farmers Eyeball Marijuana Dispensary Sales 

The 79 licensed hemp farmers and 19 hemp processors in Massachusetts are anxious to get their products onto marijuana dispensary shelves in the state. They’ve been lobbying for the inclusion of a budget amendment to allow them to do just that. 

However the proposal “carries complex policy implications that highlight the unusual regulatory system governing different aspects of the cannabis plant,” according to Commonwealth Magazine. 

Currently, the FDA prohibits the use of CBD in foods and dietary supplements. Furthermore, the state Department of Agricultural Resources prohibits the sale of raw hemp flower which is commonly used for smoking, vaping, and cooking because it could easily be confused with marijuana (which is now legal for all adults).

On a related note, as we reported last week, earlier this month it was announced that state-licensed dispensaries had passed the $1 billion mark in cannabis sales. 

Commonwealth Magazine has more on this story.

More Cannabis News

More of the Latest Massachusetts News

Video: Mass. Gov. Charlie Baker's coronavirus update Wednesday, Nov. 18

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No End In Sight

We’re not even going to talk about the election. There’s a much more pressing matter for the residents of Massachusetts this week. A ghastly resurgence of Covid-19 now threatens the lives and livelihoods of all of us here in the Bay State. We were hoping to be done reporting on this months ago. 

One of the institutions hit hardest by pandemic-related emergency measures is the MBATA — which is considering massive cuts to services early next spring that will inevitably and adversely affect untold numbers of commuters and the carless. 

Meanwhile, over at the Boston Herald, contributor David Gahl has pointed out a major loophole in the state’s hallmark climate bill, ‘Creating a 2050 Roadmap to a Clean and Thriving Commonwealth.’ Language in Section 15 could be exploited to end the longstanding separation of utilities and power generation companies — with potentially dire consequences.

On a debatably brighter note, the state recently passed the $1 billion mark in legal cannabis sales bringing in over $200,000 in tax revenue. However, that news is sullied by the fact that the state’s social equity programs are sorely lagging.

Let’s talk about these things...

A Grim Milestone: 10,000 Covid-19 Deaths

Back in late winter and early spring when everyone was freaking out about the specter of the “novel coronavirus,” who would have guessed that ten months later the problem would be far worse but that far less would be being done about it? It seems more is being done to manage the economic and financial fallout than is being done to prevent a humanitarian disaster of epic proportions. 

The number of confirmed Covid-19 cases in Massachusetts is screaming past 175,000 as you read this. And 10,000-plus Mass. residents are now dead since the first confirmed passing back in mid-March — an 87-year-old veteran. This past April, around 2,000 people a day were being diagnosed with the virus. After a brief summer downturn, that number has since doubled to 4,000 statewide.

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh is warning that a second shutdown of the economy would be "far worse" than the first. Here’s what he had to say:

"What we're seeing in Tennessee and other parts of the country and other parts of the world, honestly, we cannot afford to have that in Boston. If we do, we're going to have to shut everything down again. The first one was bad on business. I think the second one will be far worse."

Boston.com has some Mass. Covid-19 charts and graphs for those who are interested in following along as the crisis continues to unfold.

MBTA Slashing Services as Funds “Fall Off Cliff”

Over the past couple of weeks, this column has bemoaned the MBTA’s budget woes and pondered possible courses of action. Fare revenues have been razed by pandemic response measures. And now the agency is proposing to cut $142 million from its spending by summer 2022.

As reported by the Boston Globe, here are just a few of the changes being proposed:

  • All bus and subway service would end at midnight rather than 2am.

  • Subway frequency would decline by about 20 percent.

  • The most frequent bus routes would be reduced by an average of 5 percent.

  • A number of bus routes would be consolidated or shortened.

  • 25 bus routes would be eliminated.

  • Ferry service between downtown Boston and Hingham, Hull, and Charlestown would stop operating as soon as March.

  • Commuter rail service would no longer operate on weekends.

  • Six commuter rail stops would be closed.

Needless to say, not everyone agrees on whether or not these changes are a good idea, but the consensus seems to be that there is no other choice. 

Just take a look at some of these headlines:

Information about changes to specific routes is available online at mbta.com/forging-ahead. The MBTA’s plan will go out for public comment over the next month, before the agency’s oversight board votes in December.

Solar Industry Wary of “Poison Pill” provision

In a Boston Herald op-ed by David Ghal, “Poison pill provision undermines Massachusetts climate legislation,” that deserves to be quoted at length, the author writes:

“Buried deep within a hallmark climate bill, ‘Creating a 2050 Roadmap to a Clean and Thriving Commonwealth’ (H.4993), is an anti-competitive provision that would allow electric and gas utilities to construct, operate and own solar projects. On its face, it appears helpful but in reality, it’s a time machine back to the 1990s when utilities had a monopoly on energy services and left customers with inflated, artificially high energy bills.”

Gahl goes on to state that the current law enabled solar to go from .002% of the Commonwealth’s in-state electricity generation in 2010 to over 17% today with powering being generated by more than 400 solar companies that employ over 10,000 Massachusetts residents. 

According to Gahl:

“The [existing] law was specifically designed to separate the duties of electricity generation from power delivery. Utilities would focus on delivering power, while encouraging private companies to compete in electricity markets to supply power to residents, helping us incorporate clean energy sources while also building a local economy to support these businesses.”

Gahl then makes an even better point: Section 15H of the climate bill would end the longstanding prohibition on utilities owning power plants and permit them to “get back into the power plant business under the auspices of serving local governments.” The move, says Gahl, could allow profit-motivated utilities to “resume their reign over both electricity delivery and production.” 

According to Gahl, there is no evidence that utilities can serve municipal customers better than the independent market. “In fact,” says Galh, “the utility industry’s record is the exact opposite… and that there is already a successful program in place that “encourages independent solar companies to serve local governments by offering them low-cost clean power to meet their energy goals.”

Unlike nearly all of the bill’s major provisions, says Gahl, Section 15H “was never part of stand-alone legislation; nor was it subject to a hearing or testimony from stakeholders. Instead, it takes advantage of the pandemic to tacitly reintroduce vertically integrated monopolies at the expense of our local solar industry and Commonwealth residents.”

Gahl is calling on lawmakers to drop Section 15H, from any final legislation.

You can read the entire op-ed here, but our summary does it justice.

Cannabis Sales Blast Past the $1 Billion Mark

While much of the state’s economy is feeling the crush of Covid, there is arguably at least one bright spot. Massachusetts has officially surpassed $1 billion in adult-use cannabis sales. And, so far, legal marijuana has brought in about $200 million in tax revenue.

Exactly four years after Mass. voters chose to legalize marijuana for medicinal use, and two years after retail pot shops opened, the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission reported exactly $1,000,521,905 in sales.

Commission Chairman Steven J. Hoffman had this to say about the momentous milestone:

“This sales milestone represents licensees’ ability to successfully support a safe, accessible and effective adult-use industry, and I am pleased the resulting tax benefits will have a significant impact on communities throughout the commonwealth. These numbers also speak to commission licensing and enforcement staff working around the clock to make sure these businesses and their products comply with all of our regulations, especially the health and safety provisions.”  

However, not all aspects of the state cannabis program are full steam ahead. One of the most important pieces of the puzzle — social equity programs — are severely lagging behind goals set by the Mass. legislature and the CCC. 

Still, to this day, people of color and people from communities disproportionately harmed by the Failed War on Drugs are grossly underrepresented in the state’s cannabis industry. That is according to Shanel Lindsay, who has served on the Cannabis Advisory Board and is the CEO of Ardent Life. Lindsay said:

“Despite the fact that we worked tirelessly for over five years, minority ownership is almost non-existent. So yes, we should be angry and offended when, as we’re starting to make small steps towards equity in these delivery licenses, that like clockwork the same corporate interests focused only on preserving their unearned monopoly come in to push back on equity and to crush us.” 

VIDEO: Equity advocates tired of waiting on marijuana delivery framework

The state’s adult-use cannabis industry has employed nearly 6,000 workers making Massachusetts one of the leading states for cannabis employment. Nationwide, legal cannabis operations now employ nearly a quarter of a million Americans.

On Election Day 2020, another four states joined the ranks of those with recreational marijuana programs bringing the total number of states with legal cannabis to 15. Voters in Arizona, Montana, New Jersey, and South Dakota all passed adult-use cannabis ballot initiatives. Mississippi joined the ranks of the now 34 states with medical marijuana programs. 

Also this week, Gallup released a poll that showed that 68% of Americans now support state and federal marijuana policy reforms. How long will it be before the Federal government stops dragging its feet on this issue? Someone needs to tell Senate Republicans to concede on this matter. Let’s face it. They lost the war on drugs. And at great cost to the American people. 

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