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  • Police accuse Essex driver in hit-run that left woman seriously hurt

    Police accuse Essex driver in hit-run that left woman seriously hurt

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    BEVERLY — Police have arrested an Essex man who appears to have been the driver in a Sunday night a hit-and-run crash that left an Ipswich woman seriously injured.

    On Monday, police arrested Diego Mattos-Vazualdo, 47, of Essex, charging him with negligent operation of a motor vehicle and leaving the scene of a personal injury accident.

    Officers responded to 375 Rantoul St. about 10:15 p.m. on the report of a female pedestrian who had been struck by a vehicle. The victim was identified as a 27-year-old Ipswich resident.

    Upon locating the woman, police immediately began treating her and tried to make her comfortable. The woman, whose ID has not yet been released, was transported by ambulance to Beverly Hospital to stabilize her injuries — which were believed to be serious — before being Medflighted to Brigham & Women’s Hospital in Boston.

    At this time her condition has not been updated.

    A preliminary investigation revealed the victim had walked into the street and was first struck by a vehicle moving traveling southbound.

    The operator of that vehicle remained on the scene and is cooperating with police.

    The woman was then struck by the second vehicle, operated by Mattos-Vazualdo, who was traveling northbound. He stopped for a matter of seconds, then fled the scene.

    Based on witness statements, an accurate description of the fleeing vehicle was obtained and relayed to surrounding areas.

    Essex police were able to stop a vehicle matching that description, and the operator, identified as Mattos-Vazualdo, told Essex officers he thought he may have struck something.

    He was transported by Beverly Officers back to police headquarters where he was charged. He was expected to be arraigned in court later Monday.

    The investigation remains ongoing with Beverly police and the assistance of the State Police Crash Recon team.

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    By Buck Anderson | Staff Writer

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  • UM Dance Team first to compete nationally in university, state history

    UM Dance Team first to compete nationally in university, state history

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    Between performing in front of crowds exceeding 26,000 and committing to a lengthy season that spans July through April, the University of Montana Dance Team knows how to face a challenge together.

    The team is about to take on a new and historic challenge: dancing on behalf of the university and the entire Treasure State at a national championship competition.






    The team’s competition routine is an ambitious dance that requires each teammate to be perfectly synchronized.




    “This is the first time in program history, in school history and in the history of the entire state of Montana that a college team is going to represent our state at the national level,” said UM Dance Team Coach Alli Baumgardner. “This is such a huge step for our program. Our momentum with the team is just exploding.”

    The Dance Team, along with their coach, spirit squad director, Monte and a few very excited moms, will travel to Orlando, Florida, for the College Classic National Championship on April 10-15. They will face off against others from around the country to compete in the jazz and spirit categories.

    People are also reading…

    The team and Monte also will showcase their competition routines for the campus community at 8 p.m. Sunday, April 7, in Dahlberg Arena in the Adams Center. Admission is free.

    Baumgardner hopes the competition will put a national spotlight on the team, gaining more recognition, respect and support for their somewhat hidden talent.







    Dance Team practice

    UM Dance Team Coach Alli Baumgardner instructs her team during rehearsal.




    “I’m really hoping to increase awareness of our spirit program,” echoed UM Spirit Squad Director Stacey Richards, who oversees both the Dance and Cheer teams. “They really are such a talented, amazing group, and I think our dance program is only going to gain more recognition after nationals. I want to put the University of Montana on the map for dance.”

    Baumgardner, who danced for UM as a student and captained the team her sophomore through senior years, took the coaching reins last academic year. She saw how the team had grown in talent and number — almost doubling in less than a decade to 20 members this year — and realized their talent rose to the level of nationally competitive.

    Raising the $2,000 needed for each dancer to go to Orlando was the first step. The team met their goal through donations and fundraising, with some team members running dance clinics for high schoolers over winter break.

    “I’m really proud of them for stepping up and finding ways to generate some revenue,” Richards said. “We’re in a good place now, and we have a good plan in place for next year so all of this is done earlier and nobody has that extra stress.”

    The road to the national stage also required additional rehearsal hours to learn a new, unfamiliar routine while maintaining the dancers’ regular practice and performance duties, as well as their responsibilities as students.

    During a normal season, the dancers practice four to five days each week for two to four hours depending on the time of year, and dedicate time to lifting in the weight room. They also perform at all home football, basketball and volleyball game days. In November, each sport overlaps, meaning the team can perform at as many as six different games in a week.

    “We’re dedicated athletes,” said team captain Andrea Newbrough, a biochemistry senior from Great Falls who’s danced since age 4. “We put a lot of time and effort into our craft, just like any other sport does.”

    Newbrough and her teammates noted how the smiles, cheers and laughter they share with crowds on game days can create the illusion that the team’s work is relatively easy, but it’s the behind-the-scenes work that allows the dancers to entertain with seemingly such ease.

    Competing nationally meant adding a new practice day to their calendars to rehearse choreography for their two-minute jazz routine — a physically demanding dance that is stylistically different from game day performances and requires each dancer to operate synchronously. They danced for 30 hours over a single weekend while learning choreography from Seattle Seahawks dancers, who were blown away by the UM team’s talent.







    Dance Team practice

    On top of their game day and student responsibilities, the Dance Team puts in copious hours practicing each week.




    “The choreographers were like, ‘These are the dancers hiding in Montana?’” Baumgardner said. “We are now to the point where we have the skills that big teams are competing with.”

    Since then, the team has meticulously cleaned every second of choreography to ensure each dancer perfectly mirrors the other, down to details as precise as the angle of their hands.

    The competition’s spirit category, which showcases the team’s fight song and media timeout routine, is familiar ground. Entertaining and hyping-up Griz Nation on game day is the Dance Team’s top focus and area of excellence. Dancers cite the rush of performing in front of 26,000-plus fans at Griz football games, which ranks among the top attendance in FCS football, as an experience unequal in measure that helped prepare them for the pressure of nationals.

    “I’ll be recognized by people I don’t know at the grocery store. It feels like being a part of a big family,” said co-captain Addie Wood, a senior elementary education major from Spokane, Washington. “I take a lot of pride in who the people in the community know me as.”

    Until this year though, dancing at UM meant trading the thrill of competition for the excitement of game day.

    “It’s been a dream for a lot of the girls on the team, because most of us were competitive studio dancers growing up,” Newbrough said. “It’s something you had to walk away from when you committed to this team. Now you can have both: You get quite possibly one of the best game day experiences dancing here, but you also get to compete.”

    Competing is a major selling point to prospective dancers considering UM, as it was for freshman dancer Kendall Hanson of Coeur D’Alene, Idaho.

    “This is literally what I dreamed of in college,” said Hanson, who began dancing competitively at age 6. “The teamwork, the effort, the determination by everyone.”

    Despite the absence of a crowd, Hanson said, practicing for nationals is just as thrilling as game days. While nervous, she feels more confident in the jazz routine with each practice.

    “It’s definitely the hardest dance I’ve ever done, and I’ve been dancing since I was 2,” Hanson said. “I just want my team to be the best we can be and leave our hearts out on the stage. No matter what happens, we’re proud of each other.

    “I also want to make coach proud. She’s put so much effort into building this team.”

    Regardless of how they place, Hanson said, it’s an honor to hold the title of first team to represent Montana at nationals, and she looks forward to carrying that torch forward at UM.







    Team.jpg

    The UM Dance Team practices for the College Classic National Championship in their competition uniforms.




    For seniors Newbrough and Wood, this year’s nationals represent their only chance to compete nationally with a team of girls who are also their best friends and fiercest advocates.

    “I’ve been watching this competition for years. The moment I get on stage is just going to be surreal,” Wood said. “We’re all working so hard for one unified goal and for each other.”

    Wood is proud to leave a legacy by helping the dance team take a massive leap and is excited to see how it will grow after she leaves.

    “Every single year I’ve been on this team, the freshmen are better and better,” Wood said. “We are moving up in the eyes of the competition world and the dance team world, as well as in the eyes of our community.”







    uniform.jpg

    UM student Andrea Newbrough holds up her competition uniform.




    Newbrough has high hopes for her team at nationals but can’t help get emotional thinking about ending her college dance career with such a historic achievement.

    “I cannot imagine my college experience without Dance Team,” Newbrough said. “I think I’ll miss the girls the most.”

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  • Danvers siblings raise autism awareness

    Danvers siblings raise autism awareness

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    DANVERS — Brother and sister duo Jackson and Taylor Skane, of Danvers, have been advocating for autism most of their lives. On Friday, they were at three elementary schools in Peabody and Danvers to help bring awareness to the neurological disorder and kick off April as Autism Awareness Month.

    Jackson, a high school senior studying dental assisting at Essex Tech, was diagnosed with autism at age 3. His younger sister Taylor, a junior studying culinary also at Essex Tech, has been by Jackson’s side supporting him as they spread the word about autism to communities on the North Shore. On Friday, they visited students at the Brown School in Peabody and the Great Oak and Smith schools in Danvers.

    For nearly 15 years, the siblings have been strong advocates for autism in their neighborhood, schools, and with other organizations, working to raise awareness. They started by giving out blue light bulbs to friends, neighbors, and their schools, and that grew into larger events and opportunities.

    Jackson is one of two student representatives for the Essex Tech School Committee, a member of the Student Council, DECA, an advisory board member for the school’s dental programs, a National Honor Society recipient, and an assistant at North Shore Dance Academy for a class for students with a disability. He is also a youth Board of Director to the Northeast Arc’s board where he is the youngest member, speaking to the interests and priorities of young people with disabilities and autism. He has been part of the Northeast Arc since he was a young child.

    Jackson plans to study special education in college next fall.

    Taylor is a member of the Youth Board for The Rock The Spectrum, a volunteer at The Northeast Arc and Citizens Inn/Haven from Hunger, and an assistant at North Shore Dance Academy for a class for students with a disability. She will graduate next year and also plans to study special education in college.

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    By News Staff

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  • Panel shows the power of nonprofits in Gloucester

    Panel shows the power of nonprofits in Gloucester

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    No matter what you hear, nobody’s gotten to where they are totally on their own.

    That’s what Cape Ann nonprofit leaders said during a panel discussion held Friday on the state of local social justice work following the COVID-19 pandemic. and it’s why their nonprofits are so important, they added.

    “Even being able to get to work, you didn’t do that alone,” said Jill Brown, a SNAP advocate for The Open Door and panelist at the event. “You did that because there’s an infrastructure in place, which happened because of a whole bunch of people working together.”

    Held at the Backyard Growers headquarters off Maplewood Avenue, the panel was largely attended by students of moderator Shoshana Madmoni-Gerber, a Suffolk University professor and Gloucester resident.

    It’s been an uphill battle to help locals in need since the start of the pandemic, panelists said. Prior to 2020, 44% of Gloucester residents were low-income and 66% were cost-burdened, meaning more than 30% of their income goes toward housing, Brown said.

    “Things before the pandemic were not good, and a lot of people who were teetering on the edge just got pushed off it,” said panelist Leah Briere, a client services coordinator for The Open Door.

    “People were not affected equally,” she said. “Those who were already experiencing inequalities, that got even worse.”

    Poverty disproportionately affected people of color during the pandemic, and more than half a million women left the workforce at the time, mostly to care for children during online schooling and missing out on career advancement as a result. Children in poverty experienced higher learning losses than their more well-to-do classmates, Briere said.

    Creating food pathways

    The Open Door reported a dramatic increase in its number of clients during the pandemic. Requests for help are still far from pre-pandemic levels, but there’s more opportunities for those in need, Brown said.

    The Open Door started an online grocery ordering system during the pandemic that allows clients to choose what food they want from the organization, instead of receiving pre-packed bags that might include food they don’t like or can’t eat.

    There’s a new translating service that connects clients with someone who speaks their language when placing an order or requesting other types of assistance from The Open Door, rather than relying on Google Translate as the nonprofit did in the past, Briere said.

    Backyard Growers is starting a farmers market at Burnham’s Field this year that’s focused on providing healthy, affordable food from local farmers. The new spot is easier to walk to for many of the area’s low-income residents, and the market will accept SNAP benefits, said Alison DiFiore, executive director of the organization.

    Valuing skillsets

    Nonprofits have placed a larger emphasis on fostering equity since the pandemic. But creating equity doesn’t just mean promoting diversity, said Andy Allen, director of education and career pathways for Wellspring House in Gloucester.

    Equity is about valuing the skillsets of those with different backgrounds — including immigrants who are learning English, a fair share of Wellspring’s clients who take part in its housing, education and job training assistance programs.

    These clients often feel ashamed of their budding English skills even when they have degrees or worked as lawyers, doctors, engineers or in other high-paying careers back in their old countries.

    “I turn it and say, ‘You know more than one language already. You’re a valuable entity — your qualities are far beyond mine’,” Allen said.

    “You can get a much better job. Yeah, you need to have some English to help you get there, but as soon as (employers) find out that you know eight languages or three, you might be making $50 an hour,” he said.

    Being the change

    The last few years have been overwhelming for the nonprofit sector, even in Gloucester. Yet, as Allen said during the panel, “If you want to make a change, you have to be the one to make change, and you can’t do it by yourself. You need a group of people to stand up.”

    That’s what Susan Erony did when Seham Awad and her family, all Syrian refugees, arrived in Gloucester in 2016. Having fled dictator Hafez al-Assad’s regime prior to staying in overcrowded refugee camps in Turkey, the Awads came to America with next to nothing.

    Erony brought together her friends and other Gloucester residents to raise $35,000 for the Awads and a family of Afghani refugees at the time. The effort turned into The Friends of Cape Ann Refugees, and “friends” is the best way to describe what the unofficial group has become.

    Members celebrate birthdays together and bond over Seham Awad’s delicious cooking, which she’s taught to local schoolchildren through the group. Madmoni-Gerber acts as a translator, speaking both Arabic and English.

    “She loves all the people that helped her along the way,” Madmoni-Gerber said Friday, translating for Awad. “This is beyond an organization. We really love each other and it’s just a wonderful friendship.”

    Contact Caroline E nos at CEnos@northofboston.com.

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    By Caroline Enos | Staff Writer

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  • Meet the man who has tasted everything on the Cheesecake Factory’s ridiculously long menu

    Meet the man who has tasted everything on the Cheesecake Factory’s ridiculously long menu

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    LOS ANGELES — and jabbed his fork into a chunk of glistening cashew chicken.

    He closed his eyes for a moment, considering the texture of the dish, a longtime staple that, after a couple-year hiatus, would soon return to the chain’s menu.

    “Not as soft as I’d like it,” he told the executive chef, who nodded.

    Next, he turned to the seared ahi tuna salad, but he doesn’t like fish, so he took a single bite of lettuce and radish before confidently setting down his fork.

    “Nicely dressed. Great crunch!”

    Third up was Cajun salmon with mashed potatoes and corn. He dredged a spoonful of potatoes through the sauce and his lips wiggled from side to side. He nodded twice.

    “OK, delicious.”

    In the 46 years since he opened the first Cheesecake Factory restaurant in Beverly Hills and grew it into the behemoth of casual dining with locations across the globe, David Overton — the company’s official taster, but also its chief executive and co-founder — has built a deep trust in the profitability of his own palate.

    Overton has tasted and approved every one of the menu’s more than 250 items, which despite the factory in its name, the company likes to emphasize are prepared from scratch on site or at the company’s two bakeries.

    “What I like, millions of people like,” Overton, 77, said on a recent morning at the company’s Calabasas Hills headquarters as he weighed in on new offerings. “I have the taste buds of the common man.”

    ■■■

    Over the last few decades, as Cheesecake Factory locations popped up at malls and suburban plazas, they brought to each new corner of the country a sense that you were now in on some universal slice of Americana — a slice, it turns out, that provokes impressively fierce reactions.

    It didn’t matter if you were Tucson, Tampa or Tulsa, you, too, could now laugh with family and friends as you collectively gorged yourselves on the chain’s iconic brown bread. Before long, you, too, would come to associate the restaurant’s decor — a mashup of Egyptian-style columns, dark-wood wainscoting and ethereal murals that, when combined, exude the same over-the-top-yet-somehow-appealing vibe as a Vegas casino — with a sense of nostalgia. This would become the backdrop of birthdays and graduations and late-night meals after prom.

    You were now part of the collective experience shared by doctor and author Atul Gawande, who penned a sprawling ode to the Cheesecake Factory in the New Yorker, a Los Angeles Times food columnist, who, in a viral review in 2019, called his love of the chain “irrational and possibly pathological,” and rapper Drake, who sings about his love for the Cheesecake Factory, christening it as “a place for families that drive Camrys and go to Disney.”

    But not all of the attention is fawning.

    The chain made national headlines in 2017, when a man detonated a homemade explosive device inside a Cheesecake Factory in Pasadena. The FBI said the case remains unsolved.

    Late last year, a video went viral on TikTok of a woman refusing to get out of the car during a first date.

    “This is the Cheesecake Factory,” she says, filming herself, in what some viewers suggested was a staged scene.

    “What’s the problem with that?” he asks.

    “This is a chain restaurant.”

    Before long, someone compiled a list, which also circulated on social media, of places women should refuse to go on first dates, listing Cheesecake Factory as No. 1. (No. 2, Applebee’s; No. 15, the gym; No. 16, church.) The discourse swept the internet, earning two separate pieces in the Washington Post, and loyal fans soon swarmed to the brand’s defense on X.

    “WHO THE HELL DOES NOT WANNA GO TO THE CHEESECAKE FACTORY? BRO IF I WAS TAKEN THERE I WOULD PROPOSE,” one person posted on X (formerly Twitter).

    “I literally met my husband at the bar of a Cheesecake Factory 10 years ago,” Rachelle Tomlinson tweeted. “Stop all the slander!”

    Tomlinson, 30, was on a girls trip to Honolulu in 2014 when she visited the chain for the first time. Tomlinson recounted in an interview how she can still visualize the moment the double doors opened and she locked into a gaze with a man with hazel eyes.

    “Legit love at first sight,” her husband, Sam, recalled, saying the other thing he remembers from that night is that he drank a bunch of Mai Tais.

    Exactly a year from their Cheesecake meet cute, they got married.

    ■■■

    Growing up in Detroit, Overton said, his family could afford to eat out only once a week, usually Sundays at a deli or Chinese spot.

    His father worked at a department store and his mother sold cheesecakes she baked in the family’s basement based on a recipe found in a newspaper. Back then, there were only two varieties — original and original with strawberry topping — and Overton said he and his sister earned a penny for every bakery box they helped their mother fold.

    Years later, when Overton was in his 20s and chasing dreams of becoming a rock ‘n’ roll drummer in San Francisco, his parents, Evelyn and Oscar, tired of Detroit and a string of business ventures that never took off, decided to move west.

    They opened a small, wholesale bakery in North Hollywood, expanding their cheesecake options to include several more flavors, but the Cheesecake Factory Bakery floundered. They were in their mid-50s, working long hours and struggling to find customers who would buy in bulk.

    “I was really getting tired of all these restaurateurs that wouldn’t buy the cake,” Overton said, recalling the frustration that inspired him to start a restaurant of their own.

    On the day they opened in Beverly Hills in 1978, they began welcoming patrons at 2 p.m. and, by 2:10 p.m., Overton said, they were so busy that people had to wait to be seated — an immediate rush he attributes to divine intervention.

    “God was really watching over us,” he said. “I like to say that we had a line in 10 minutes, and it’s really never stopped for the last 45 years.”

    The company opened its second location in Marina del Rey in the early ‘80s and, in 1991, opened the first out-of-state location in Washington, D.C. The next year, the company went public — ticker symbol: CAKE — and today has more than 200 locations in the U.S., as well as several in the Middle East, Mexico and Asia.

    Cheesecake Factory locations brought in $2.5 billion of the company’s $3.3 billion in revenue in 2022, an average of about $12 million in sales at each restaurant, according to the company’s latest annual report to shareholders. (The company also owns the growing chain North Italia, acquired in 2019, as well as Fox Restaurant Concepts, whose upscale, fast casual restaurants the chain sees as a vehicle for expansion.)

    A key growth point, the report notes, has been an increase in takeout and delivery orders, which accounted for about 25% of total sales that year.

    Last year was bruising for a restaurant industry still recovering from pandemic shutdowns and buffeted by rising costs and labor shortages. But during the first nine months of 2023, the Calabasas Hills company racked up increased sales and income, and continued to expand.

    They’ve differentiated themselves with ample portions, a variety of “craveable” dishes difficult to replicate at home and the fact that they, unlike some competitors, still prepare everything from scratch at each restaurant, said Joshua Long, who follows the company in his role as managing director of the financial services firm Stephens.

    “The brand,” Long said, “has really found a spot in the hearts of consumers.”

    ■■■

    As the company grew, so did the length of the menu.

    It started as a single page, front and back, of items simple enough that, if a chef walked out on him, Overton could make them himself — a factory burger, which sold in the early days for $2.10, the Avocado Delights sandwich for $1.75, a slice of cheesecake for $1.25.

    For several years, Overton’s taste buds kept him from adding fish to the menu, and he also dragged his feet on selling steak, because of its price tag.

    “If you went on a date,” he said, “I didn’t want anybody ordering the steak and you couldn’t afford it.”

    Whenever he ate at a rival restaurant, he kept an eye out for dishes he could simplify or transform. During a meal at the Peninsula Beverly Hills years ago, he saw a menu item of cheese straws with avocado, which inspired the idea for avocado egg rolls, now a top seller.

    “How did I let the menu get so big?” Overton said. “I didn’t know what the heck I was doing. If I knew what I was doing and understood the restaurant business, it probably wouldn’t have turned out this way.”

    But it worked — and today, it’s become a key marketing tactic.

    The sheer size of the multi-page, spiral-bound menu has earned a ribbing from Ellen DeGeneres and inspired Halloween costumes and a Buzzfeed list of jokes, including one that, given the menu’s girth, and cultural relevance, compared it to the Bible.

    “We get so much PR just cause of that big menu,” Overton said, smiling. “I always say that our greatest difficulty is the size of the menu, but our greatest defense against competition is the size of our menu.”

    The menu items themselves are a cacophony of calories.

    Every year, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a nonprofit health advocacy group, releases an “Xtreme Eating Awards “ list of single restaurant dishes that contain around a full day’s worth of calories. Two Cheesecake Factory items made the latest list — an Italian combo plate at 2,800 calories and a French Dip cheeseburger with fries at 2,200.

    But when you bring up calories with Overton, he looks unfazed — decadence is part of the brand and besides, he says, people rarely finish a dish in a single sitting.

    “We’re the king of doggy bags,” he says. “I don’t pay a lot of attention to calories, because we let people choose what they want.”

    But if there’s one thing America wants more than delicious, fattening food, it’s the idea — the vow — that they will soon eat less of it. Enter: SkinnyLicious, the brand’s name for menu items with fewer than 600 calories, which they added to the menu in 2011.

    SkinnyLicious items, Overton said, account for around 15% of sales.

    ■■■

    In the winter of 1993, David Gordon, now the company’s president, was looking for a job as a restaurant manager.

    He had applied to two different places, including a Cheesecake Factory on the Westside, but was more interested in the other small chain — until he had his Cheesecake Factory interview.

    The people interviewing him ate a burger in the middle of the interview — “a little strange,” Gordon says — and steered the conversation toward the intricacies and caliber of french fries. Over 20 minutes, they discussed everything from starch levels to how hollow the fries felt when you bit into them.

    “It intrigued me,” Gordon said. “This is somewhere where quality is incredibly important.”

    Early in his career at the company, Gordon recalled asking the person in charge of operations if there was a chance he would be transferred. He was planning to buy a house in Redondo Beach, Gordon explained, but didn’t want to if he might be moved.

    “No, no, fantastic, things are great,” he recalled being told.

    But a few months later, the man in charge of operations asked him to move to Woodland Hills, promising Gordon that, within a year, he would get him back to the location closest to his home. As the year mark approached, the boss kept his commitment.

    “He cared about me as a person,” Gordon said, noting that the company still works hard to live out that ethos.

    Cheesecake Factory locations are notoriously busy, so if you’re going to ask workers to be slammed all day and prepare and serve more than 200 different items from scratch, the workers need to feel a connection to the restaurant and the people they work for, Gordon said.

    Last year, the Cheesecake Factory, whose restaurants employ about 35,000 people, was one of only two restaurant chains — Panda Express’ parent company was the second — to earn a spot on both Fortune’s 100 Best Companies to Work For and People’s Companies that Care lists, which survey employees about company culture, pay, retention, opportunities and fairness.

    Their reputation for conscientiousness took a hit in 2018 when the California Department of Industrial Relations held the company and two janitorial contractors jointly liable for more than $4 million in wage theft violations after an investigation found the contractors’ employees assigned to eight Southern California Cheesecake Factory restaurants didn’t get proper rest or meal breaks, and weren’t paid overtime while waiting for kitchen managers to review their work at the end of a shift. Although Cheesecake Factory didn’t directly employ the workers, state law dictates that companies relying on subcontractors for labor can be held liable for workplace violations.

    In January, the California Labor Commissioner’s Office announced that it had reached a $1 million settlement against the company and both contractors.

    Sidney M. Greathouse, the vice president of legal services for the Cheesecake Factory, issued a statement that said “the company denies any wrongdoing and no longer utilizes the services of the janitorial companies at issue in the case.”

    ■■■

    Today, the company sells more than 30 varieties of cheesecake, but a massive painting of one of the originals — a simple slice topped with strawberry filling — hangs above Overton’s desk in his office that looks out on the hills of Calabasas.

    Sprawled across his desk are several stacks of folders each about a foot high. He’s a few years from 80, but between work and spending time with his wife, children and grandchildren, he doesn’t have much down time.

    “I have no time for hobbies,” he says. “I don’t play golf. I don’t do any of that.”

    He thought back on his 20s, around the time he started the business, when he first learned that you didn’t have to print your signature literally, but could sign it however you wanted.

    He played around with it and, as he wrote, let emotion guide him, creating a flowing capital D, which then exploded into 14 looping, semi ovals that start big and trail off.

    “It’s an emotion,” he said. “I just felt like I was moving forward.”

    Through the years, a few people had mocked his signature, he said, including someone who wrote to him saying, “I’m so sorry, with a signature like that, I won’t be investing in your company.”

    But he stuck with it. His gut hadn’t failed him yet.

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    By Marisa Gerber | Los Angeles Times

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  • Lawmakers seek FEMA funds, longer work permits for migrants

    Lawmakers seek FEMA funds, longer work permits for migrants

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    BOSTON — Members of the state’s congressional delegation are calling on the Biden administration to provide more funding to cover migrant costs and extend the time frame for federal work permits amid delays in processing extensions.

    In a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Sens. Ed Markey and Elizabeth Warren call on the agency to “immediately” distribute Federal Emergency Management Agency funding through its Shelter and Services Program to Massachusetts and other states that “are in desperate need of federal support” amid a surge of migrants.

    “Now is a critical moment to provide federal relief to Massachusetts as the Commonwealth continues its steadfast efforts to care for new arrivals and existing residents alike, as well as ensure the state’s long-term financial stability,” they wrote. “Given the far-reaching extent of this need, we also ask you to provide ample funding to locations such as Massachusetts, which are experiencing particularly notable increases in new arrivals.”

    Congress earmarked $650 million in a recently approved federal supplemental spending bill for the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide grant money to municipal governments and nonprofit groups to assist the homeless and newly arrived migrants.

    The lawmakers called on the Biden administration to begin distributing the FEMA funding “expeditiously and equitably” to Massachusetts and other states wrestling with increased migrant costs. They noted that the state expects to spend nearly $1 billion over the next year to provide housing, food and other necessities to migrants.

    “Over the past two years, families have been arriving in Massachusetts at a dramatic rate, which spiked in the second half of 2023,” they wrote. “The last round of SSP funds allocated to Massachusetts was in August 2023 and was based, in part, on a formula that did not fully capture the exponential growth of new arrivals in Massachusetts.”

    Last year, FEMA awarded more than $3.1 million to Massachusetts nonprofit organizations to provide shelter, food and other services for the homeless through the program. That included $408,915 for Essex County and $640,137 for Middlesex County groups.

    Meanwhile, Warren is leading a group of Democratic lawmakers in calling on the Biden administration to take “immediate action” to extend federal work permits for migrants.

    In a letter to Biden and senior administration officials, the lawmakers urge the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to lengthen the automatic extension period for Employment Authorization Documents from 180 to 540 days. They also call on the federal agency to enact the proposed rules without a sunset date, or for at least three years.

    The lawmakers, who included other members of the state’s delegation, said the move is essential to prevent the loss of employment authorization for hundreds of thousands of migrants amid paperwork processing delays by the federal government.

    “Many lose their jobs, income, and access to driver’s licenses because of bureaucratic delays outside of their control,” the lawmakers wrote. “This severely limits their ability to pay rent, buy food, and support themselves and their families.”

    “If they continue to work without authorization, they can also become removable from the United States, and their employers can be subject to civil penalties,” they added.

    Massachusetts is dealing with a historic influx of thousands of migrants over the past year amid a surge of immigration along the U.S.-Mexico border.

    Gov. Maura Healey, a first-term Democrat who declared a state of emergency last year amid a surge of asylum seekers, has also pushed the Biden administration for more federal funding and expedited work authorization.

    Under Massachusetts’ right-to-shelter law, the state is required to provide emergency housing to people regardless of their immigration status. Healey and Democratic legislative leaders has resisted calls from Republicans and others to scale back or temporarily lift the requirements amid claims that it is drawing more asylum seekers to the state.

    The state is spending about $75 million a month – or roughly $10,000 per family – to provide housing and other needs for 7,500 migrant and other homeless families in emergency shelters.

    House and Senate leaders are negotiating a supplemental spending bill that would provide hundreds of millions of dollars to cover migrants costs and set limits on the length of stay in state-run shelters, which now averages about 18 months.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • SENIOR LOOKOUT: A few health decisions to make before you get sick

    SENIOR LOOKOUT: A few health decisions to make before you get sick

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    April is Health Care Decisions Month. A couple years ago, when I heard of this month-long awareness campaign, I thought it was odd. I didn’t understand the importance of having an official health care proxy and discussing how I want my medical care to be handled if I become unable to make decisions on my own. I did not know that my family would not automatically be making these decisions. To ensure that my wishes are known, it was important to set up a health care proxy.

    A health care proxy is a document in which an individual appoints an agent to legally make health care decisions on behalf of the patient when they are incapable of making and executing health care decisions. While a health care proxy can be setup with a lawyer when you prepare your will and other estate documents, it is not necessary to involve a lawyer in this specific document. A health care proxy can be completed at home and only needs your signature with two witnesses. (Note: you should work with a reputable attorney that specializes in estate planning when you prepare your estate documents.)

    I downloaded my health care proxy form from the Honoring Choices Massachusetts website (www.honoringchoicesmass.com). This website will help you explore how to make care choices that are best for you. It has a step-by-step process that helps you to consider the various aspects of choosing an agent and discussing your wishes with them. It also has instructions on voiding a health care proxy, if your circumstances change.

    Once you have chosen a health care agent, you should discuss your feelings on various health care situations with your agent and your doctor(s). The Honoring Choices website has various scenarios that it suggests discussing. Copies of your signed and witnessed document should be placed in your personal files and given to your health care agent and your doctor.

    Once you have your health care proxy in place, there are other written plans you should consider (you can find these documents on www.honoringchoicesmass.com).

    Personal directive. This is a living will. It provides the person you name in your Health Care Proxy with detailed instructions as to how you would like to be cared for. This is not a legal document in Massachusetts, so you want to choose someone who will respect your wishes, even if it is emotionally difficult for them to do so.

    Durable power of attorney. This is assigning a person you trust to handle your money, property and financial matters. It does not have to be the same person you name in your health care proxy. It is recommended, but not required under law, that you complete a durable power of attorney with a lawyer who can advise you given your personal financial matters.

    Medical orders for life-sustaining treatment (MOLST). This document communicates your choices regarding life-sustaining treatments should you become seriously ill. You and your family do not complete this form unless you become seriously ill, but there is a sample document on the website.

    Comfort care/Do Not Resuscitate Order (CC/DNR).This form indicates you do not want resuscitation efforts in the case your heart or breathing stops. It is completed by you or your health care agent should the circumstances for making this decision arise.

    I was very nervous about asking my daughter to be my health care agent. I was afraid that she would panic and worry that I was ill right now. My fears were unfounded. We were able to have a conversation about how I feel about treatment options and a variety of situations. It wasn’t hard and it was a relief to know that this important task has been completed.

    Tracy Arabian is the communications officer at SeniorCare Inc., a local agency on aging that serves Gloucester, Beverly, Essex, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Rockport, Topsfield and Wenham.

    Tracy Arabian is the communications officer at SeniorCare Inc., a local agency on aging that serves Gloucester, Beverly, Essex, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Rockport, Topsfield and Wenham.

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    Senior Lookout | Tracy Arabian

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  • It’s OK to ask for help: A look at local Community Behavioral Health Centers

    It’s OK to ask for help: A look at local Community Behavioral Health Centers

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    Whether you’re a student juggling too many deadlines and competing commitments on campus or a police officer struggling with a seemingly no-win situation on the job — or some other level of crisis — there are dedicated places and people you can lean on in your own backyard.

    Throughout the region, behavioral health services operate around the clock as a vital area of support for those in need of help. Many are partnered with community crisis stabilization programs that accept insurance and provide a bed, individual and group therapy, and a life-changing serving of hope to anyone placing an order.

    These services have expanded greatly with the state’s launch of a “Community Behavioral Health Center” system in early 2023. The system, which can be found at tinyurl.com/3s59jpsp, is rapidly expanding with increased awareness and demand.

    “The main reason the state did this redesign from the former service programs to CBHC’s was because, well… the two main reasons were that there was an increase in boarding times, and hospital systems and hospital ERs were flooded with folks walking in for services who may not necessarily need to access the intensity of the emergency room,” said Josh Eigen, CBHC director at Eliot Community Behavioral Health, at 75 Sylvan St. in Danvers and 95 Pleasant St. in Lynn. “And folks were just waiting for placement, so CBHCs were created as an option for folks to get all of their care in the community.”

    People from all walks of life are now walking into such facilities and getting rapid access to care, and coming out well on their way toward a new lease on life.

    “One of the things the pandemic did which was good was that it did bring up conversations,” said Kristen Godin, market president for Northeast Health Services, at 199 Rosewood Drive in Danvers. “We weren’t able to use telehealth before. There was a very select number of players that would allow for telehealth, and that opened the door.

    “That, in and of itself, is a huge access point. Folks who are extremely busy — they work, bring their kids to soccer, are on the PTA, all the things they had to do in their offices — are things they weren’t able to do.”

    Reaching everyone, especially the young

    Walk into a CBHC and you enter a community of hope. Some have message boards for clients to leave notes for those entering. Others have comfy recliners for clients to relax in their lobbies as a hum of human activity comes and goes.

    “As a mental health agency, we’re providers of hope,” Godin said. “We have a hope board, so anybody can write on that board about what they’re experience has been to another person walking by who might have just started their first appointment, or is trying to decide… do I want medication? Do I want TMS services?

    “There was a young woman recently who wrote on our board, ‘I’ve been struggling with mental health for years, tried medication, been in therapy, nothing worked. I tried Spravato, and I have my life back,’” Godin continued. “For me, beyond anything else, that’s what we do this for. That’s why we’re opening 10 clinics, 10 more after that, and expanding further.”

    With CBHCs launching last January, data is now starting to show trends of their impact, Eigen explained.

    “Some of the data is showing that folks are able to access care more immediately,” he said. “It’s opening up other options for folks other than needing to go on waitlists or in the emergency room. … The data we’ve seen so far is showing people are progressing in the treatment we’re offering. We’ve been able to continue for over a year now with not having waitlists, so it’s definitely heading in the right direction.”

    But there’s still work to do to reach some subsets of the population. That includes youth and young adults heading to college, where many factors could collide and cause a drastic drop in mental health that shocks those back home — especially if it isn’t addressed before it’s too late.

    “There has to be an opportunity that mental health is brought up on every college campus, every high school, every elementary school,” Godin said. “At college campuses, the other thing we talk about is substance abuse. If we’re talking about college, there has to be an opportunity if there’s a moment on a Saturday at 4 a.m., where they’re like, ‘who do I call?’”

    Godin recalled going to college and seeing conversations around substance abuse, but not much more.

    “There was never a discussion on counseling, therapy, asking for help,” she said. “There needs to be more of that, posted in all of the guidance counselor’s offices.”

    Vicarious trauma, on the job or at home

    Then there are the others impacted by mental health as part of day-to-day life, more specifically work.

    Say you’re a police officer who witnessed a person dying by suicide, a firefighter helping a badly burned victim out of an engulfed building, or a doctor losing a patient. Vicarious trauma represents the harmful moments experienced by people as part of their daily lives — especially careers.

    It’s also something that affects those answering the phone at crisis centers. But vicarious trauma also goes deeper and can be further experienced by anyone at home, no matter their line of work or level of mental health awareness, according to Godin.

    “No one ever remembers that we’re humans,” she said. “Vicarious trauma is a real thing, and it can happen to the person answering a phone, can happen to me listening to a story, anyone watching a show or listening to the news. One of the things we try to do here at Northeast Health Services is our culture of self-care.

    “All our clinicians are licensed. I’m licensed as a clinician, and my supervisor as a chief operating officer is licensed as a clinician,” Godin continued. “If there’s a debrief that needs to happen that’s critical to make sure folks are okay, self-care regimens, boundaries… we have an EAP program for folks. If they need that, they can call it and get eight appointments right away.”

    Over at Eliot, “our staff have access to regular supervision and support,” Eigen said. “They have regular supervision with supervisors and managers, myself. Some of our teams also have group support where they’re meeting with other clinical directors to talk about tough calls or tough assessments, tough clients that they’re working with.

    “There’s so much trauma that the people we serve have been through,” he continued. “So it’s important and definitely a priority where we provide that kind of support.”

    For more information on CBHCs or to find one nearest you, visit tinyurl.com/3s59jpsp.

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    By Dustin Luca | Staff Writer

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  • Healey officials push affordable housing plan

    Healey officials push affordable housing plan

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    BOSTON — Healey administration officials urged lawmakers to approve the governor’s affordable housing plan, arguing the $4.1 billion borrowing bill would spur the construction of thousands of homes and generate tens of billions of dollars in economic activity.

    The Affordable Homes Act plan, filed by Gov. Maura Healey in October, includes a range of tax breaks, changes to state laws and borrowing to help spur construction of new housing.

    Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll said passage of the bill is an “economic imperative” for Massachusetts as it struggles to build more homes to fill a critical shortage of market-rate and affordable housing.

    “The bottom line is we can’t wait,” Driscoll, Salem’s former mayor, told members of the Legislature’s Committee on Bonding, Capitol Expenditures and State Assets during a hearing Tuesday on the bond bill. “We have to act with urgency and scale. Our residents, our communities and our employers are depending on it.”

    Housing Secretary Ed Augustus said the plan, if approved by the Legislature, would have a “catalytic impact” on the construction of housing in the Bay State while making it more competitive and attractive to new families and businesses.

    “We need a Herculean response to our housing crisis,” he told the panel. “Housing builds a stronger economy, housing generates good jobs and housing strengthens competitiveness.”

    A key plank of Healey’s affordable housing plan would create tax credits to spur the development of homes over the next five years for those with low and moderate incomes. It also calls for expanding the state’s community investment tax credit, which provides funding to community development corporations.

    The plan would allow communities to add a transfer fee up to 2% to property tax bills. If a community votes to accept the tax, it would exempt the first $1 million on a home sale.

    Healey’s plan also calls for giving single-family homeowners the right to build so-called “accessory dwelling units” of less than 900 square feet on their lots.

    Economic impact

    Affordable housing advocates called on lawmakers to approve Healey’s plan, arguing that the state needs to take aggressive steps to boost the amount of housing in the state.

    “It’s really not an exaggeration to say that we’re facing the greatest housing crisis in the commonwealth’s history,” said Clark Ziegler, executive director of the Massachusetts Housing Partnership, a quasi-public agency that works with banks to finance affordable housing projects.

    “We’re consistently ranked as the most expensive place in the U.S. to live, our chronic housing shortage goes back decades and when the final data is tallied, it looks like last year we’ll see a roughly 30% reduction in new housing starts over 2022,” Ziegler told the panel. “It’s a really serious problem.”

    A report released by the Healey administration said passage of Healey’s plan, when combined with two recently reauthorized programs from the tax cut package, could create $24.8 billion in total economic impact over five years.

    The study, conducted by the University of Massachusetts Donahue Institute, estimated the act could generate 29,700 jobs in the development, construction, finance and associated industries.

    Economic activity from the Affordable Homes Act would also allow the state to recoup $750 million in tax revenue over five years, the report’s authors said.

    But the transfer tax plan has prompted pushback from the real estate industry, which says the so-called transfer tax would compound the problem as housing prices and mortgage rates continue to rise, pricing people out of the market.

    Healey and legislative leaders are trying to spur more home building amid the shrinking inventory that is edging first-time buyers out of the market. The prolonged housing crunch is affecting the state’s economic growth, making it much harder to attract new families and companies, they say.

    A $1 billion tax relief package signed by Healey in October included reauthorization of a low-income tax credit program and housing development incentive program, also aimed at spurring housing production.

    Healey has filed a bond bill for capital projects, which needs approval from the Legislature, that includes $1.6 billion to repair and modernize state-run public housing units.

    The state faces a pressing shortage of affordable housing, with more than 184,000 people on the waiting list for state public housing units.

    Housing prices

    Amid the shortages, housing costs are continuing to increase to new records in the state as home sales remain largely flat.

    The latest monthly report from The Warren Group found the median price for a home in the state increased by 10% to $548,250 in February over the same month last year, setting a new monthly record. Meanwhile, the number of closed sales on single-family homes remained largely unchanged from the same month last year, according the report.

    During the hearing Tuesday, several lawmakers raised concerns that Healey’s plan does not go big enough on financial investments to ensure there is enough housing to meet demand.

    “One of my fears is that we are creating generations that perhaps will never have an opportunity for home ownership,” state Sen. Pavel Payano, D-Lawrence, a member of the bonding committee, said in remarks. “I know we are doing some investments here, but I wonder if that is enough.”

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • North Shore towns weigh MBTA zoning law

    North Shore towns weigh MBTA zoning law

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    Hamilton, Ipswich, Topsfield and several other North Shore communities have until Dec. 31 to adopt zoning that complies with the MBTA Communities Law requiring multifamily zoning districts of at least 50-acres in size with at least 15 units per acre.

    After the law was first passed in 2021, communities have spent the last few years formulating action plans, identifying potential districts for rezoning, collecting and considering public input and hiring consultants. They’ve also been creating MBTA task forces made up of local municipal leaders, resident volunteers, architects, and other stakeholders.

    All the communities that submitted an action plan to the state and had it approved — including Topsfield, Wenham, Ipswich and Hamilton — are technically in compliance with the MBTA Communities Law, as they have demonstrated an effort to rezone districts that follow the bylaw. However, they still have to vote to approve the newly zoned districts at Town Meeting this year, the majority of which will take place in the fall.

    As such, many North Shore communities have made an effort to involve affected residents in the decision-making process and hold public meetings to explain what the bylaw requires, how the community will handle the effect on services and infrastructure, and listen to and act on residents’ concerns.

    “We’re trying to maximize our public outreach on this for the community. The typical reaction to this is hesitancy and some opposition, because it’s not well understood,” Wenham Planning Board Vice Chair Dan Pasquarello said. “What we tried to make clear in our (previous info session) was that this is a zoning exercise, it’s not necessarily a building exercise. and I think that’s really important for people to understand.”

    In Danvers, Special Town Meeting in February approved a measure to amend zoning bylaws to come into compliance with the housing law. This didn’t come without opposition.

    “I’m aware of emails circulating saying that (this bylaw) should be opposed because it will ruin our town. This article is not going to ruin Danvers Square or result in any taller or bigger buildings than what has been envisioned in existing zoning,” said Danvers Select Board Chair David Mills at the time. “It will simply adjust the minimum density of our downtown to ensure that we are in compliance with a new state law. Non-compliance will cost us money.”

    Also that month in Milton, proposed zoning for that town was rejected at Town Meeting, leading to Milton losing out on grant funding, and prompting a lawsuit from Attorney General Andrea Campbell who has stated that compliance is mandatory.

    “The housing affordability crisis affects all of us: Families who face impossible choices between food on the table or a roof over their heads, young people who want to live here but are driven away by the cost, and a growing workforce we cannot house,” said Campbell in a press release on the lawsuit. “The MBTA Communities Law was enacted to address our region-wide need for housing, and compliance with it is mandatory.”

    To achieve compliance in Wenham, the town needs to adopt zoning to allow 365 units, with 73 of them within a half-mile of the train station. Wenham and Hamilton, which share a train station, are classified as “commuter rail communities” with more strict zoning guidelines, presenting a unique challenge to the towns.

    “We have to be within the half-mile radius (of the Hamilton/Wenham Station),” Margaret Hoffman, Wenham’s planning coordinator said. “So one of the unique challenges that Wenham and Hamilton face is that we have to share this station and we essentially only have a small half-circle radius to zone within.”

    Hamilton, which has to zone for 731 units, plans to utilize “form based zoning” to ensure that any potential developments follow specific building form and architectural design standards.

    “The bigger lift is going to be when developers actually look at the property to see what’s attainable and workable, and how much infrastructure they’re going to have to create to make it viable,” Patrick Reffett, Hamilton’s director of planning & inspectional services, said. “I think there’s a great deal of angst about the notion of this level of growth. and I totally get it — it’s scary if you don’t understand that the onus is really on the developers.”

    Cities and towns without a commuter rail station that are classified as “adjacent communities” or “adjacent small towns” have a lesser obligation to zone for multifamily and mixed-used development, but still required to allow developments within this zone “by-right” without the need for a special permit.

    In Topsfield, which is an adjacent small town and must zone for 118 multifamily units, Planning Board members have worked with consultant Ezra Glenn to identify areas in town where multifamily zoning would allow the town to comply with the bylaw.

    The town also plan to diversify its housing stock and make use of underutilized properties, a goal the town had previously set in its master plan.

    One option Topsfield is looking at is the 15.8 acres at the intersection of Central Street and Route 1, an area with easy accessibility to the highway and the rail trail.

    “We want to be clear amidst all this talk about how nothing is actually required to be built, that this isn’t to be taken as having no purpose. (The Planning Board) did not design the zone in a way in which nothing would be built,” Topsfield Selectboard Chair Marshall Hook said during a recent public info session.

    “I think there are towns that have tried to do that, but that was not the intent here,” he said. “I think we all see this as an opportunity and hope that things actually do get built.”

    Ipswich, which has a train station, is required to zone for 971 multifamily units. It has put significant effort into identifying potential districts for rezoning and collecting feedback from residents on their preferred location.

    The town is attempting to aggregate the feedback received in task force meetings open to the public, and from surveys about traffic, infrastructure, and design concerns that will lead up to a Special Town Meeting in the fall where a plan will be proposed.

    “(In the last survey) there’s 10 or so guiding principles that residents identified,” Director of Planning and Development Brendan Conboy said. “The top ones would be emphasizing green construction, encouraging mixed use downtown, elevating the quality of the design, and directing growth to infrastructure.

    “A little further down the line on preferences, but still relevant, was the affordability, consistency with previous plans, and encouraging diversity in town,” he said.

    Ipswich is scheduled to hold a task-force meeting on April 3 at 7 p.m. in Town Hall, and another on April 25 at the same place and time, with a broader community meeting in May. In Hamilton, Town Meeting will be asked on April 6 to approve funds to hire a consultant. Wenham plans to hold an info session about the work done thus far in May.

    Further information about the housing law can be found at mass.gov/info-details/section-3a-guidelines.

    Michael McHugh can be contacted at mmchugh@northofboston.com or at 781-799-5202

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    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

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  • Fact, fiction in essays by Andre Dubus III

    Fact, fiction in essays by Andre Dubus III

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    The essays in “Ghost Dogs, On Killers and Kin” by Andre Dubus III are pieces of memoir.

    They were written between 1988 and 2023 and focus on family and work, guns, dogs, the pandemic, sudden success, falling in love, and the life and craft of writing.

    But devoted readers of Dubus will have the added pleasure of recognizing people and places in these essays that were eventually transformed into his works of fiction.

    In many cases, readers are also exposed to something unique about the real person that wasn’t part of the fictional character.

    Dubus, a Haverhill native who now lives in Newbury, will discuss his latest work April 12 at Jabberwocky Books in Newburyport, then April 26-28 at the Newburyport Literary Festival, followed by appearances Sept. 19 at the Danversport Yacht Club in Danvers and Sept. 29 at the Andover Bookstore. For details on these and other presentations in the region visit www.andredubus.com.

    In Dubus’ essay “Blood, Root, Knit, Purl,” we meet a woman with a $2 million trust fund who seems identical to the ex-wife of disabled carpenter Tom Lowe in the novel “Such Kindness” from 2023.

    She is mentioned in several essays in “Ghost Dogs,” once by first name, where her relationship to Dubus is just as destined for failure as the one in the novel.

    But in an unexpected touch, in “Blood, Root, Knit, Purl,” she teaches Dubus how to knit, so that he can make a homemade Christmas gift for his aunt in Louisiana.

    It is not clear which is more unlikely, a woman with lots of money who takes the time to knit scarves and sweaters, or a rugged working man who would knit anything.

    But their practice of this humble, domestic art brings them together in a way that makes their backgrounds less important than the quantum of love that they share.

    In some cases, however, a connection to previous works by Dubus doesn’t tell the reader much, or prepare them for what happens in an essay.

    That is true of “The Golden Zone,” which recalls a figure who appeared in the 2011 memoir “Townie,” who has a second job as a bounty hunter and takes Dubus to find a brutal killer in Mexico.

    The plan is to turn the killer over to authorities who will take him back to the U.S. to stand trial, but someone finds Dubus and his partner first, and busts into their hotel room when they are out.

    It’s one fight that Dubus is happy to pass up. But he doesn’t leave Mexico without regrets about things he did there under the guise of gaining “experience.”

    “I vowed I would not be coming back here, not like this, a tourist of other people’s misery, a consumer of it,” he writes.

    As Dubus writes several times in “Ghost Dogs,” both his father and mother were born in Louisiana and most of his “kin,” to emphasize the term from his subtitle, are from there.

    In spite of Dubus’ identification with the Merrimack Valley, “Ghost Dogs” makes clear that this southern element is important to his self-image.

    Dubus explores this connection at length in “Pappy,” which is about Dubus’ maternal grandfather, Elmer Lamar Lowe, a former construction foreman from Fishville, Louisiana.

    Dubus traveled to Louisiana with his mother and siblings for vacations but rarely got a chance to relax, as Pappy would set Dubus and his brother Jeb to work clearing timber and tilling garden beds.

    Rather than resenting these demands on his time, Dubus appreciated the value Pappy placed on hard work, and the masculine role model that he provided.

    This was during a time when Dubus’ father, short story writer Andre Dubus, was mostly absent, as the son recorded in detail in “Townie.”

    The identification with his grandfather becomes so strong that Dubus tells his aunt, when she asks what he wants to be when he grows up, “I don’t want to be a writer. I want to be a working man like Pappy.”

    It is later that a mature Dubus realizes he wants to write, and a story, “Last Dance,” in his first book, “The Cage Keeper” from 1989, is both about his grandfather and also dedicated to his memory.

    It treats an incident that also appears in the essay on Pappy in “Ghost Dogs” in which Dubus, his grandfather and some men trap and butcher a loggerhead turtle.

    In the essay, where Dubus is just an observer, the incident appears as an example of Pappy’s rugged resourcefulness.

    But in the story a main character, Reilly, who is clearly based on Dubus, becomes the center of the action and wades into water to snag the turtle with a hook at the end of a pole.

    The physical challenge is matched by emotional struggles that Reilly carries with him, which are captured in a brutal final image.

    But if the work of fiction intensified the incident, “Pappy” fits it into a larger pattern that doesn’t become explicit until the last paragraph of the essay.

    At that point, Dubus makes it clear that he relies on some combination of his grandfather and father in everything he does.

    “I feel my grandfather’s eyes on me, my father’s too, the working man and the writer,” Dubus writes.

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    By Will Broaddus | Staff Writer

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  • History Happenings: April 2, 2024

    History Happenings: April 2, 2024

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    There was a little bit of good news for the widow of Rep. Samuel Coffin of West Newbury on this day in 1910. The $500 balance of Coffin’s salary and mileage to Haverhill had already been paid, but no allowance was made for additional fares from Haverhill to West Newbury. The dollar amount was not noted.

    — Museum of Old Newbury

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  • Oh say can you vote? Angilly files for clerk of courts

    Oh say can you vote? Angilly files for clerk of courts

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    The robust tenor voice that belts out the national anthem before puck drop at the Garden is now asking for votes in Essex County.

    Todd Angilly, voice of “The Star Spangled Banner” (and occasionally “O Canada”) at Boston Bruins games since he took over for singer Rene Rancourt in 2019, works a state job by day as director of workforce development at the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security.

    And on Feb. 27, the former probation officer opened up a campaign account to run for Essex County clerk of courts.

    The incumbent clerk, Thomas Driscoll Jr., has not faced a single opponent since he first won the seat in 2000 after defeating six fellow Democrats in a primary.

    Angilly, of Lynnfield, did not list a political party on his submission to campaign finance regulators, and a campaign Facebook page refers to him as “an independent candidate.” He did not respond this week to an email from the News Service.

    A probation officer for 12 years, Angilly was based out of Essex County Superior Court in Salem.

    According to his LinkedIn profile, he later worked for the Department of Correction and the Essex County Sheriff’s Department before starting with EOPSS in 2022.

    Court clerks are elected to six-year terms, and a lot of fresh candidates are running in various districts this year, including Sen. Susan Moran in Barnstable County, Sen. Walter Timilty in Norfolk County, and Rep. Daniel Carey in Hampshire County.

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    By Sam Doran | State House News Service

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  • Money flowing into jails for opioid treatment

    Money flowing into jails for opioid treatment

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    BOSTON — Money is flowing into state and county correctional facilities to help treat substance abuse disorders, putting sheriffs and jail wardens on the front lines of the state’s battle against opioid addiction.

    A first-of-its-kind report on funding for the 14 sheriffs offices across the state shows that a sizable chunk of more than $23.5 million in state and federal grants they received last year was earmarked for jail-based, medication-assisted treatment programs.

    The Essex County Sheriff’s Office received more than $2.7 million in federal and state grants for programs in the previous fiscal year, much of which was devoted to medication-assisted treatment and other substance abuse programs.

    The money was provided through grants from the U.S. Department of Justice and the state Department of Public Health, among other funding sources.

    Essex County Sheriff Kevin Coppinger said about two-thirds of the inmate population is struggling with some kind of substance use disorder, and the demand for drug treatment is increasing.

    He has an average of about 170 inmates on medication-assisted treatment and other programs at Middleton Jail and other locations.

    The efforts are crucial to prepare inmates for reentry into the community and reduce recidivism by breaking the cycle of incarceration, he said.

    “When people get released we don’t want them to end up back in the criminal justice system,” Coppinger said. “We want to get them out of here and keep them on the straight and narrow.”

    Essex County was one of the first in the state to set up a detox inside the jail, and has expanded its substance abuse treatments over the years. It has been approved for a license to administer medication-assisted treatments.

    In some cases, inmates request medication-assisted treatment to get clean while they are incarcerated. In others, people committed to the jail are already in a community-based program receiving medication and are able to continue their treatment while they do their time, Coppinger said.

    He said the Sheriff’s Office is building a new dispensary for opioid-related drug treatments at its prerelease center in Lawrence – known as the “farm” – which also will have the authority dispense treatments without transporting inmates to an outside facility.

    “Because we have a license, we can do this now, which is going to help us substantially,” he said. “Securitywise, it’s a no-brainer. We can dispense it in-house now.”

    Sheriffs see spike in need

    In Middlesex County, the Sheriff’s Office received more than $815,000 in grants in the previous fiscal year with the majority of the money devoted to opioid and other substance abuse programs, according to the report.

    The Barnstable County Sheriff’s Office received more than $3.7 million in the previous fiscal year, with more than $520,000 devoted for medication-assisted treatment and reentry services, the report noted.

    The Plymouth County Sheriff’s Office reported a nearly $900,000 grant from the Department of Public Health for medication-assisted treatment programs.

    Sheriffs say while the inmate population in state and county correctional facilities has been declining for years, the demand for substance use and mental health treatment in county jails has been spiking, putting a strain on resources. The grants are intended to offset those costs, but more funding is needed, sheriffs said.

    “It’s never enough money,” Coppinger said. “But I think it’s working based on feedback I’ve received from former inmates and the community.”

    Treatment drugs, costs

    There are three types of medication-assisted treatment in use in state prisons and county jails around the state, to varying degrees.

    Methadone, which is usually dispensed to addicts who visit clinics for a daily dose, has been used for decades to treat heroin addiction. Until recently, it was one of the only options for medication-assisted therapy. Methadone, which acts to block opioid receptors in the brain, can ease withdrawal symptoms that may trigger a relapse.

    Buprenorphine, which is sold by its brand name Suboxone and typically prescribed by a doctor, has become a preferred treatment.

    There’s also naltrexone, a non-narcotic drug often known by its brand name Vivitrol, which is injected monthly.

    None of the drug treatments come cheap. While methadone treatments can cost up to $3,500 a year per patient, even the generic form of Suboxone costs two to three times as much, according to the National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors. Vivitrol costs about $1,300 per shot, according to the group.

    Opioid-related overdoses killed 2,357 people in Massachusetts last year, setting a new record high fatality rate of 33.5 per 100,000 people – an increase of 2.5% from the previous year, according to public health data.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • City halfway there when it comes to school budget request

    City halfway there when it comes to school budget request

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    Even with the city planning to kick in $3 million of a proposed $6.1 million increase to keep Gloucester schools level funded in the new school year, Superintendent Ben Lummis cited possible cuts to balance the fiscal 2025 budget.

    He outlined a proposed $55.85 million level-services budget for the School Committee on Wednesday night. That is a 12.3% increase, or $6.1 million, more than this year’s spending, given a jump in costs for out-of-district special education and transportation, health care and contractual salary increases, among other things.

    Lummis said the city plans to meet the schools halfway.

    In doing so, the schools would have to cut $3.1 million worth of services, costs and staffing to balance its budget.

    “At this point, the city has let us know they can fund $3 million of the $6.1 million the schools require for a level-funded budget,” Lummis said.

    “But to be clear,” said School Committee Vice Chair Bill Melvin, “that’s not … It’s a reduction in services.”

    Lummis said coming to a balanced budget — not the level-services one — would depend on several factors, including:

    A $1.3 million supplemental appropriation prior to the end of the fiscal year in June to make pay prepaid tuition and special education costs. This would require a City Council vote.

    Another $200,000 for one-time costs for information technology and buses this fiscal year.

    A proposed $1.5 million annual increase in the schools’ operating budget from the city.

    Another $3.1 million in reductions in costs and staffing.

    “It is very unlikely that we’re going to be able to staff levels that we’ve had for recent years because of the increase in operating expenses, and also just to wage pressures as well,” Lummis said.

    What might the reductions look like?

    The administration wants to protect Tier 1 (core) instruction and curriculum and support vulnerable learners.

    In the elementary schools, the priority would be to protect social emotional learning and mental health. At the middle school this would mean maintaining the house structure, and at the high school, the priority would be preparation for post-secondary success, Lummis said.

    However, salaries and benefits make up 86% of the Gloucester schools’ operating costs, so reducing the operating budget means reducing staffing.

    A $500,000 cut in the operating budget equals about seven full-time equivalent positions, Lummis said.

    Reduction options

    Lummis referred to two different levels of cuts. The first would mean reductions of $1 million to $1.75 million.

    At the elementary level, this would include Tier II intervention and support, special education staff based on students’ Individualized Education Plan services, a move of some services to grants, and instructional support and curriculum initiatives.

    At the grade six through 12, the administration would look to trim Tier II intervention support, pause the planned medical assisting exploratory launch as a new career and vocational program at Gloucester High until September 2025, reduce special education staff based on IEP services, move related services onto grants, reduce staff in one or more academic areas which Lummis said would increase class size; and reduce increases in student support services for mental health and social emotional learning.

    At the district office, Lummis would trim IT infrastructure and delay upgrades, seek one-time funding for a one-to-one Chromebook initiative, and reduce administration and transportation costs.

    Lummis said the reductions would still mean smaller class sizes in the elementary schools and a range of class sizes at the middle and high schools. This level of reductions would allow for diverse academic offerings and a broad range of programming at Gloucester High, improvements at O’Maley Innovation Middle School and high-qualify art, music, and performing arts programs.

    However, those areas would be in jeopardy with reductions of $2 million to $3 million.

    The schools’ operating budget is not benefiting fully from the state funding increases that have come since fiscal 2023 as a result of the state Student Opportunity Act, Lummis said.

    For instance, in fiscal 2023, state Chapter 70 education aid to the city increased by $2.77 million and by $1.67 million last year, with the governor proposing $318,000 on top of that for this coming school year.

    Lummis said the state has determined the cost of educating students has increased $2.3 million for the upcoming school year, and that the local contribution should increase by $1.9 million, plus another $318,000 for Chapter 70 aid.

    Cumulative state aid for education increases since fiscal 2022 has totaled nearly $12 million.

    However, during that time, the city has increased the schools’ operating budget by a total of $1.85 million above the typical baseline increase to the schools each year which is typically $1.25 million, he said.

    Increased funding applied to the schools outside the operating budget since fiscal 2022 includes $2 million for DPW school facilities, $3.3 million for borrowing for school capital projects, and $4.2 million for one-time projects such as the Annisquam River flood barrier, demolition of East Gloucester Elementary School, grease traps, Gloucester High lockers, and American Rescue Plan Act funding for new playgrounds.

    Finding dollars

    There are opportunities to increase school funding, including the city funding the operating budget with the $2.3 million increase determined by the state, Lummis said.

    The city could put American Rescue Plan Act funding it received toward special education tuition, transportation and wage stabilization, which Lummis said are all eligible to be funded this way. The city could also reduce the facilities budget for such things as flooring projects and allocate those dollars to the schools, he said.

    Mayor Greg Verga, a member of the School Committee, said the city administration would continue to work with the school administration “to see what kind of rabbits we can pull out of our hats.”

    Verga said he shared with Lummis a spreadsheet showing the city spends $22.1 million outside the schools’ operating budget on the schools, an increase of $6 million from 2022 to 2024.

    “The kicker” is the city’s increase this year in new growth under Proposition 2 1/2 is 2.6% or $3.5 million. With a $130 million budget, total school spending represents about $72 million, he said.

    With another $1 million going toward the city’s pension liability, and the proposed increase to the schools of $1.5 million, Verga said he has $1 million in new growth funding to spread around to the rest of the city’s budget.

    One solution may be to lobby state lawmakers to pass the governor’s Municipal Empowerment Act to provide more opportunities for local option tax increases, he said.

    The School Committee’s Budget and Finance Subcommittee plans to take up the fiscal 2025 school budget April 8.

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    By Ethan Forman | Staff Writer

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  • BevCam to open studio in downtown Beverly

    BevCam to open studio in downtown Beverly

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    BEVERLY — The city’s local cable television station is heading to downtown Beverly.

    BevCam is scheduled to open a new media center next month at 261 Cabot St., the storefront formerly occupied by A New Leaf. The space will be called BevCam Downtown and will have two studios, including a podcast studio in the front window.

    “We’re very excited about this,” said Paul Earl, president of BevCam’s board of directors. “I think it’s a great move.”

    BevCam, which stands for Beverly Community Access Media, will keep its studio in Beverly High School. But officials are hoping the visibility of a downtown location will increase awareness of the organization.

    BevCam, which began in 2006, is known mostly for its coverage of local government meetings and high school sports. Earl said the organization does that very well, but acknowledged that the demographic of its viewers is “very old.”

    The station’s social media accounts have seen an uptick in recent months under new staff hired by Executive Director Rob Chapman. The opening of a studio on Cabot Street should expose BevCam to Montserrat College of Art students and other young people who visit the downtown’s coffee shops and shops. The studio will be open later hours in the evenings and on weekends, Earl said.

    “Once we get down there and we’re open for business it could help us a lot,” he said.

    In addition to a main studio and the podcast studio, the new location will have a common area that can hold up to 50 people for events and meetings; two edit suites; and an office for Chapman.

    BevCam launched a fundraising campaign to help pay for the new space. As of Friday, it had raised $5,355 toward its goal of $10,000. The fundraiser is scheduled to run through April 5.

    Chapman, who became BevCam’s executive director in 2022, said local access stations in other communities have opened locations in or near their downtowns. Salem, Danvers and Gloucester all have downtown-area studios.

    “There is sort of a move in the industry to be more accessible,” he said.

    Noting that organizations like BevCam are known as “PEG” channels, for public, education and government, Chapman said BevCam has traditionally done well on the government and education portions.

    “It’s building up that ‘P’, getting the public involved,” he said.

    Staff Writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2535, by email at pleighton@salemnews.com, or on Twitter at @heardinbeverly.

    Staff Writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2535, by email at pleighton@salemnews.com, or on Twitter at @heardinbeverly.

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    By Paul Leighton | Staff Writer

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  • Jesus never leaves us

    Jesus never leaves us

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    My Sisters and Brothers in Christ: 

    We make ready for Holy Week, a time to walk with our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, on the Way of the Cross. It is a time for our most sincere reflection of who we are as a people of God and how we are living our sacramental Covenant through, with, and in Him. It is a time to consider whether our thoughts, words and deeds are truly of God so that we, individually and as a people gathered, are a light for the nations. 

    Do our words open the eyes of our children to God? Do we enfold those who have heartbreak and brokenness with God’s tender mercy and prayer? Do we lead those whose joy has abandoned their own breath and bring them back to smile again, to be filled with God’s light? Do we live 24/7/365 through His victory of justice? 

    Jesus never leaves us. He remains with us through the Eucharist to guide us always as the Way of the Cross is not a moment in time but a time of life. He died for us that we might have everlasting life and by that, He calls us to be His dwelling place that there would be no difference between heaven and earth. By becoming flesh, He calls our humanity to divinity. How close are we to living as a Eucharist?

    On Monday, March 25, I will be joined by the priests serving in the Diocese of Orlando and you, the community of faith, for the celebration of the Chrism Mass. The Chrism Mass, celebrated at the Basilica of the National Shrine of Mary, Queen of the Universe at 11 a.m., is an invitation for the Church to acknowledge the essential of our daily living, Jesus the Eucharist. It is a beautiful presentation of the oils of anointing which are used throughout the liturgical year to bring forth the Sacraments of Initiation, Anointing of the Sick, and Holy Orders. We announce the Oil of Catechumens, Oil of the Sick, and Oil of Holy Chrism to God and ask Him to bless them that we might continue to imbue His dwelling place with the splendor of holiness by all the people. Each prayer of blessing includes an explanation of the power and effect of each oil. The newly blessed oils are apportioned and distributed to each Catholic church in the Diocese of Orlando and are brought forth during the Mass of the Lord’s Supper (Holy Thursday), intimating our oneness with one another through, with and in God.

    During the Chrism Mass, I invite all the priest concelebrants to reaffirm their ministry by renewing the promises made at Ordination. We were anointed with the oil of Holy Chrism, the oil of gladness, the Holy Spirit, to serve God’s people as priests of His Son. Together we pray to God, the author of the Sacraments and bestower of life, that we bring to completion the growth of His Church until she reaches the measure of fullness He proclaims through all ages. We pray that Christ visit his priests in their prayer, in their Bishop, in their brother priests and in their people. We ask that He upset our routine, disrupt our lives and disquiet us and lead us to employ all our talents and abilities to ensure that our people may have life and life in abundance (cf. Jn 10:10).  

    During the Chrism Mass, we celebrate our jubilarians, Redemptorist Father Aldrin Nunes on his 25th anniversary, Father William Zamborsky, on his 50th anniversary, Msgr. William Ennis on his 60th anniversary, and Msgr. David Page on his 65th anniversary. We thank the Holy Cross Fathers Joseph Long and Laurence Olzsewski for their service in our diocese as they celebrate 65 and 60 years respectively, and extern priests Father Hilario Rivera-Gonzalez and Father Joseph Maniangat celebrating 50 and 60 years respectively. 

    May we be set as a covenant of the people asking the Lord to bless us now and forever. Amen. 

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  • Warren renews push for U.S. wealth tax

    Warren renews push for U.S. wealth tax

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    BOSTON — Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren is leading a renewed effort in Congress to impose a wealth tax on the nation’s top earners.

    The proposed Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act, filed by Warren and other Democrats, would set a new 2% annual surtax on the net worth of households and trusts between $50 million and $1 billion and a 1% annual surtax on the net worth of households and trusts above $1 billion, adding up to an overall 3% tax.

    The plan also includes anti-tax evasion and avoidance provisions that seek to prevent wealthy families from squirreling away money in trusts to avoid taxation.

    The lawmakers say the new wealth tax would drum up an estimated $3 trillion over 10 years by requiring the nation’s top earners to “pay their fair share” of taxes.

    “No one thinks it’s fair that Jeff Bezos gets enough tax loopholes that he pays at a lower rate than a public school teacher,” Warren, a Cambridge Democrat, said in a statement.

    “All my bill is asking is that when you make it big, bigger than $50 million dollars, then on that next dollar, you pitch in 2 cents, so everyone else can have a chance.”

    Warren and other backers of the plan say the gap in wealth between the richest and the poorest in the U.S. is expanding.

    They cite Federal Reserve data showing the average wealth of the top 10% of the nation was $7.73 million, up 17% in 2022 from 2019. Despite that growth, families in the bottom 50% owned only 2% of the total wealth distributed across the country, according to the data.

    The proposal, backed by Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey and Reps. Ayanna Pressley and Jim McGovern, would affect about 100,000 families nationwide, according to Warren’s office.

    Warren filed a similar bill in 2019 when she was running for president, but it failed to gain momentum.

    Even if her proposal is approved by the Democratic-led Senate, it faces long odds in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives, where lawmakers have resisted calls from Democrats to take up a wealth tax.

    President Joe Biden, a Democrat who is seeking reelection this fall, is also pushing for higher taxes on the nation’s top earners.

    Earlier this month, Biden unveiled a federal budget proposal that calls for $5 trillion in additional taxes on corporations and high earners over the next decade.

    The plan, which is subject to congressional approval, includes raising the corporate tax rate to 28% from 21%, which is the level that was set by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act under then-President Donald Trump.

    Biden wants to raise the tax rate on capital gains such as stock sales for people who earn more than $400,000 to 39.6% and impose a 25% “billionaire tax” on those with assets of more than $100 million.

    Massachusetts has a tax – set by a voter-approved law that went into effect last year – which charges a 4% surtax on incomes above $1 million in addition to the state’s flat 5% personal income tax. The money is earmarked for education and transportation.

    A 2023 report by the nonpartisan Tax Foundation, a Washington D.C-based think tank, ranked Massachusetts 46th in the nation for its business tax climate, ahead of only neighboring Connecticut, California, New York and New Jersey, citing the negative impacts of the “millionaires tax”.

    The foundation cautioned states against taxing the rich to drum up money, saying it undercuts investment and drives entrepreneurs and innovators away.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com.

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • State eyes simplification of college aid process

    State eyes simplification of college aid process

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    With an array of more than 50 state financial aid programs available to college students, public higher education officials are embarking on an effort to simplify those offerings by 2026.

    The Department of Higher Education plans to evaluate gaps in financial support as officials consider redesigning the mix of tuition reimbursement, grant, loan forgiveness and tax programs. The overhaul is meant to expand education access, improve affordability, and ensure that aid delivery is reliable and predictable, Deputy Commissioner of Policy Michael Dannenberg said.

    “So part of our analysis will look at the ultimate unmet need or need of students, whether they are in state or out of state, whether they’re receiving financial aid programs from the state or not from the state,” he said during a virtual Board of Higher Education meeting Tuesday. ”We’ll try and simplify, and highlight, (and) prioritize those for needy families and socioeconomic mobility.”

    Developing a “more coherent financial aid system” would also focus on ensuring students complete their degrees and certificates, Dannenberg said.

    Earlier this year, DHE launched its Massachusetts Application for State Financial Aid (MASFA), a portal that’s meant to mimic the federal FAFSA form and allow undocumented students to unlock the millions of dollars available in state aid programs.

    Nearly 400 MASFA applications have been submitted or are in progress for the 2023-2024 academic year, with another 230 applications in the pipeline so far for the next academic year, a DHE spokesperson said Monday.

    At least 34 state financial aid programs serve less than 10,000 students, and more than 20 programs reach less than 2,000 recipients. At least two dozen state financial aid programs are not based on economic need, and at least 16 programs have a median award value under $200, Dannenberg said.

    Officials do not want to harm current financial aid recipients, and some programs may need to be adjusted with a grandfather clause to protect them, he said.

    The deputy commissioner showed board members a list of the programs, with some serving categories of students, including athletes, children of Sept. 11 victims, foster and adopted children, and aspiring educators, paraprofessionals and nurses. Also on the list were recent major expansions of financial aid, including making community college free for adults ages 25 and older and covering tuition costs and fees for Pell-Grant eligible students.

    “So we’ve got a lot of programs, a lot of very small small programs, and a lot of programs that are not linked to economic need,” he said.

    As the redesign continues, the plan is to conduct analyses this spring and summer, and review redesign options with the board in the fall. Officials would then seek input from advocates, experts and others at the start of 2025, share recommendations by spring 2025, and prepare to implement the changes for the fall 2026, Dannenberg said.

    Beyond the state’s financial aid portfolio, higher education officials are grappling with the ripple effects of the severely delayed launch of the updated Free Application for Federal Student Aid.

    The form only became available in January, compared to its typical fall rollout, after the system experienced multiple glitches with new funding formulas. During Tuesday’s board meeting, state officials urged students, including those frustrated by the FAFSA’s challenges this year, to still complete the form.

    Students need to submit the FASFA by May 1 for “priority consideration,” though officials are considering extending that deadline due to the form’s delay, said Clantha McCurdy, senior deputy commissioner of access and student financial assistance.

    The DHE is spending $1 million on “strategies” to boost FAFSA completion rates, said Robert Dais, director of GEAR UP, or Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs. Dais did not offer examples, and said the department has partnered with the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education on ideas to “excite and incentivize students.” The funding, outlined in the fiscal 2024 budget, can be used on public awareness campaigns and FAFSA “completion clinics.”

    “We are targeting Gateway Cities and students from historically underserved populations,” Dais said. “There’s more to come soon, but essentially we just wanted folks to know know that the Department of Higher Education is clearly focused on improving FAFSA and MASFA completion rates, and doing everything that we can to ensure that the neediest students are doing so.”

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    By Alison Kuznitz | State House News Service

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  • Keeping the ‘old’ in old school

    Keeping the ‘old’ in old school

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    BEVERLY — The lockers are staying. So are the chalkboards. Not to mention the windows and wood floors and the entire auditorium.

    The former Briscoe School is nearing the completion of a dramatic makeover into affordable housing and artists studios. But a recent tour of the building revealed there will still be plenty of “old school” left in the old school when it opens in the fall as Beverly Village for Living & the Arts.

    “We are really delighted with how the vision is turning into reality,” said Andrew DeFranza, executive director of Harborlight Homes, the Beverly-based affordable housing nonprofit that with Beacon Communities bought the building from the city in 2019. “It’s coming out better than I expected it would.”

    The Briscoe building was built in 1923 as the city’s high school. It went on to serve generations of Beverly students as a junior high school and middle school until it closed in 2018 when the city opened a new middle school.

    In its new life as Beverly Village, the building will have 85 apartments for low-income people 55 and older, and six live/work studios for artists. About 550 people have applied for the units. A lottery to determine who gets them is scheduled for April 4.

    On a tour of the building, Jake Briere, assistant superintendent for general contractor Keith Construction, pointed out how workers are retaining as many historic elements as possible.

    The most obvious feature from its school days are the student lockers that line the hallways. The orange and green lockers, which are original to the building and are built into the walls, will remain as a decorative element. They will also remain closed; they have been sealed shut.

    Inside the classrooms-turned-apartments, the old chalkboards remain on the walls, many in their original slate form. The windows — 564 of them — are staying, as are the wood floors. The auditorium will stay basically as is, with a plan to use it as a community theater. The stairways will retain their existing tiled walls and handrails.

    On the ground floor, the level of the former gym has been raised 16 feet to make it easier for residents to access. The space will be used for amenities including a fitness room, yoga studio, wellness center and community room with a kitchenette. The old locker rooms are being converted into the artist studios.

    Jay Leahy, a volunteer for Historic Beverly who was on the tour, said he was pleased to see the efforts to retain as much as the historical character as possible.

    “When you walk into that building you’ll know it’s a historic building,” Leahy said. “It will have modern amenities for the residents, but it still has the flavor of its original design and construction.”

    DeFranza credited city officials, including Mayor Mike Cahill, for their determination to retain much of the historic character of the building.

    The building is important to generations of Beverly residents who attended the school or know someone who did, and because it is so centrally located at the intersection of Colon Street and Sohier Road, DeFranza said.

    “If you were going to preserve a building in the city, can you imagine one that was more important than this one in terms of its impact on generations of families?,” he said. “It was a time and a place and a century worth of legacy.

    “These kind of chances are rare. They don’t make buildings like this anymore.”

    Staff Writer Paul Leighton can be reached at 978-338-2535, by email at pleighton@salemnews.com, or on Twitter at @heardinbeverly.

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    By Paul Leighton | Staff Writer

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