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Tag: Massachusetts

  • Churches, stores spearheading sock, underwear drive

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    Imagine not having enough money to buy socks and underwear, or a hat and mittens to guard against the cold

    Three churches and two local businesses are working to ease this hardship for numerous Cape Ann residents, young and old. 


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    By Times Staff

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  • Mass. school gym teacher arrested for possession of child sex abuse images

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    A gym teacher who worked at schools in two Massachusetts communities was arrested this week for possession and distribution of child sex abuse images.

    Stephen McDonough, 60, of Waltham, was arrested Thursday for possession and dissemination of child sex abuse images, according to state police. Following his arriaignment, he is being held on $25,000 cash bail and is scheduled to return to court on Oct. 22.

    State police said McDonough worked as a gym teacher in schools in Belmont and Waltham, but didn’t release the names of the schools.

    McDonough’s arrest stems from an investigation that began in August, when the Massachusetts State Police Cyber Crime Unit received information from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children about suspicious online activity related to child sex abuse images. Troopers reviewed the material and determined the content violated state laws governing this type of material.

    Further investigation determined that the activity stemmed from a Waltham residence, and public information available online showed that the resident associated with that address was a gym teacher in several schools. State police said they moved quickly because the suspect’s occupation puts them in a position of trust with access to children.

    On Thursday, state and local police, along with Homeland Security, executed a search warrant at the suspect’s address in Waltham. Evidence found on the suspect’s phone and in his residence helped investigators establish probable cause that he owned the digital account and had possessed and distributed child sex abuse images.

    Anyone with information that could assist in the investigation is being asked to report it to police by calling 911.

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    Marc Fortier

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  • Preparing for the worst: First responders train for active shooter situations

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    WEST NEWBURY — Looking to make sure they are as prepared as possible during a hostile shooter situation, first responders from nearly a dozen communities spent the weekend training with Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training (ALERRT) instructors at Pentucket Regional/Middle High School.

    “I think it’s extremely important. You never know when something like this is going to happen, or where, or how, but as first responders, we can control how we prepare and train our people to respond to these types of events,” Merrimac Police Chief Eric Shears said.


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    By Matt Petry | mpetry@northofboston.com

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  • Government shutdown haunts Salem’s Halloween, scrambles more in Mass.

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    The government shutdown coincides with the arrival of Halloween in the Witch City.

    Salem’s National Park Visitor Center was closed, just when huge crowds eager to see October’s Haunted Happenings began arriving.

    “Shutting down everything — people need the services, and nobody’s proving a point,” one man said.

    It’s more of the same at the USS Constitution. The oldest commissioned warship sits silently in Charlestown as people from places like Nebraska react to Republicans and Democrats failing to reach a deal on funding the government.

    “We showed up yesterday from Kansas City and we thought, oh we’ll get in, and no, it was shut down,” one woman said.

    The U.S. government officially shut down at midnight after Congress and the White House failed to reach an agreement on how to extend federal funding.

    For Ellen Mei, the stakes are much higher. She is a federal worker in Boston, and president of NTEU, Local 255, and is now out of work.

    “I am in an OK financial situation, but for some of my coworkers, where they may be the sole breadwinner with children or they may have parents that they need to care for or just other others in their family,” she said. “Nobody is pleased about having to shut down because it’s always the last thing that we want.”

    At the Old North Bridge, federal park rangers have all been furloughed. October is the biggest month for tourism in Concord, prompting the historic town to adjust.

    “We will be staffing a temporary visitor center seven days a week, 10 to 3, as long as needed and we’re bringing in portable restrooms,” said Beth Williams, the town’s tourism director.

    There are more than 25,000 federal employees in Massachusetts, essential and non-essential.

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    John Moroney

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  • South Carolina Prosecutor Seeks Death Penalty in Murder Case After Biden Reduced Sentence to Life

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    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A local prosecutor in South Carolina said Tuesday he will seek the death penalty against a man whose federal death sentence for killing two bank employees in a robbery was commuted to life in prison by President Joe Biden at the end of his term.

    Brandon Council, 40, did not appear in state court in Horry County as prosecutors formally let the court know that if he is convicted of murder they will ask a jury to sentence him to death.

    State murder, armed robbery and other state charges against Council were dropped in 2019 after a federal jury found him guilty of similar charges and sentenced him to death.

    But in December, Biden reduced the death sentences of 37 federal inmates, including Council, to life in prison, saying he felt the federal use of the death penalty had to stop and he did not want the next administration to resume executions he had halted.

    That led Solicitor Jimmy Richardson to obtain new indictments against Council in Horry County in August which open the door to a state death penalty trial.


    A deadly bank robbery leads to a death sentence

    Council walked into the CresCom Bank in Conway in August 2017, waiting for a minute before shooting Donna Major as the stunned teller held papers in front of her face trying to protect herself. He then followed manager Katie Skeen into her office and shot her in the forehead as she hid under her desk, authorities said.

    Council left the bank with $15,000. He was arrested in North Carolina several days later after buying a Mercedes with the stolen money, according to his confession read in court.

    Families and law enforcement angry at Biden’s decision urged local officials to review cases. In Louisiana, prosecutors in Catahoula Parish were able to get a first-degree murder charge refiled against Thomas Steven Sanders in the 2010 death of a 12-year-old girl. That would allow the state to seek the death penalty against him.

    Richardson said prosecutors had dropped the state charges in case anything ever happened to change the outcome of the federal case, including commuting his sentence.

    “If there was a bump, we could always come in and try our case. And that’s why we dismissed them. So our powder could be dry,” Richardson told reporters after the hearing.


    Families and Bondi angry about the commu

    The other inmates who had their sentences reduced are being moved to Supermax prisons “where they will spend the rest of their lives in conditions that match their egregious crimes,” U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi posted on social media last week.

    Bondi called the commutations a betrayal of the families of victims and a stain on the justice system, comments that Richardson echoed when Biden’s decision was announced.

    The bank teller’s daughter, Heather Turner, said the victims of the crimes weren’t considered.

    “The pain and trauma we have endured over the last 7 years has been indescribable,” Turner wrote on Facebook, describing weeks spent in court in search of justice as “now just a waste of time.”

    “Our judicial system is broken. Our government is a joke,” she said. “Joe Biden’s decision is a clear gross abuse of power. He, and his supporters, have blood on their hands.”


    Council’s lawyers said he was remorseful

    Attorneys for Council argued at his federal trial his life should be spared because of a troubled childhood, especially after the grandmother who raised him died. They said he showed remorse and cooperated with investigators.

    After his arrest, Council asked investigators if the women at the bank were still alive and cried when he found out they were dead, investigators said.

    “I’m a doofus. I’m an idiot,” Council told police. “I don’t deserve to live.”

    Horry County had a second inmate have a federal death sentence commuted. Chadrick Fulks was convicted of kidnapping a woman from the parking lot of a Conway Walmart and killing her during a series of crimes across several states. His state charges were dismissed and court records indicate they have not been reinstated.

    Biden did leave three men on federal death row.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • Trump Can Slash Education Department’s Civil Rights Staff, Court Rules

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    (Reuters) -A federal appeals court on Monday allowed the U.S. Department of Education to proceed with plans to lay off civil rights staff as it paused an injunction that the Trump administration said should have been removed after a U.S. Supreme Court decision.

    A three-judge panel of the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals put on hold an injunction that President Donald Trump’s administration opposed. The injunction by U.S. District Judge Myong Joun ordered the Education Department to reinstate staff in its Office for Civil Rights.

    Joun declined in mid-August to lift the injunction. But the Trump administration argued that decision defied a Supreme Court ruling in July that allowed the government to fire 1,300 Education Department employees.

    The Department of Justice asked the 1st Circuit to intervene so it did not have to go back to the Supreme Court.

    The Education Department and lawyers for the plaintiffs challenging the cuts did not respond to requests for comment.

    Both cases followed a March announcement by Secretary of Education Linda McMahon of a mass layoff that would cut in half the staff of a department that Trump has called for shuttering, which only Congress could ultimately authorize.

    Joun, an appointee of Democratic President Joe Biden, in May blocked the department-wide job cuts at the behest of a group of Democratic-led states, school districts and teachers’ unions. But on appeal, the 6-3 conservative majority U.S. Supreme Court on July 14 lifted Joun’s injunction.

    That decision, though, did not address a narrower injunction Joun later issued covering just the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights, which enforces federal civil rights laws in schools and was facing a loss of half of its 550 employees.

    Those cuts were challenged by two students and the Victim Rights Law Center, which represents sexual assault victims. Citing the Supreme Court’s order, the Justice Department said the injunction those plaintiffs won could no longer stand.

    In declining to lift it, Joun called the Supreme Court’s brief July order “unreasoned,” echoing a critique by other lower-court judges of the short orders emanating from the high court’s emergency docket, also called the “shadow docket.”

    The Justice Department said Joun’s “disregard of the Supreme Court’s ruling represents an affront to the Supreme Court’s authority.”

    The 1st Circuit panel, comprised entirely of Biden appointees, on Monday paused the injunction, calling the cases similar.

    U.S. Circuit Judge Seth Aframe concurred but warned that the “unreasoned” Supreme Court order’s “import will be limited as this case moves ahead,” as the courts weigh whether the layoffs unlawfully impeded the office’s functions.

    (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Cynthia Osterman)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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    Reuters

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  • Mayor announces another business shuttered and creation of Human Trafficking Task Force

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    METHUEN — The city has followed up a “declaration of war” against human trafficking with the investigation of another business and the creation of a task force.

    On Monday, city inspectors shut down Eastern Bodywork Therapy, which officials allege is a front for human trafficking. Mayor D.J. Beauregard, who had announced the crackdown on Sunday, said in a press release that the task force would hold both the perpetrators and landlords accountable.


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    By Teddy Tauscher | ttauscher@eagletribune.com

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  • Sleep in a horror classic: Haunted stays and movie houses on Airbnb for a chilling October getaway

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    For those who love the macabre, it’s the most wonderful time of year. Plenty of historic hotels around the world are great for haunted stays, but Airbnb also has a number of options for spooky slumber parties for paranormal investigations or cinema buffs who want a shot at staying in a movie house.

    Here’s some inspiration for to die for Halloween getaway this October.

    Top 3 Halloween Destinations

    No. 1: Salem, Massachusetts

    Essex Street in Salem.

    With the countdown to Halloween on, Airbnb says its top trending destination for a spirited weekend is Salem, Massachusetts. This Halloween headquarters is famous for its witch trials and Halloween celebrations and has starred in movies like “Hocus Pocus.”

    Stay at the Henry Derby House, which was built in 1838 for tailor Henry Derby. The Salem home features creaky stairs and rattling windows.

    downtown Salem house

    Henry Derby House

    No. 2: New Orleans, Louisiana

    New Orleans is the country’s most “paranormal playground,” according to Airbnb. In fact, a mansion in the Garden District is the platform’s most haunted, according to reviews. (More on that below!)

    No. 3: San Bernardino, California

    Another top spot for horror seekers, San Bernardino is known for its top-notch haunted houses plus a Halloween EDM Festival.

    7 Airbnbs Perfect for Spooky Season Stays

    Parks-Bowman Mansion: The Haunted Bedroom in New Orleans, Louisiana

    The haunted room at the Parks-Bowman mansion on Airbnb

    The haunted room at the Parks-Bowman mansion on Airbnb

    Some guest reviews claim that this Garden District mansion is haunted. The historic mansion is famed for sightings of a ghostly young girl in a yellow 1890s dress. The listing says: “Don’t worry, our ghost is very shy; you probably won’t see her, although some people swear she exists!”

    Poltergeist Movie House in Simi Valley, California

    Poltergeist movie house

    Poltergeist movie house

    Stay in the original home from Steven Spielberg’s 1982 film “Poltergeist,” which is about a family that’s haunted by ghosts. This four-bedroom suburban house blends Hollywood history with eerie nostalgia and is perfect for movie fans and has some cool amenities like a pool, hot tub and fire pit. Note: Ghost hunting is not permitted without a written agreement. Ouija boards, séances, spirit summoning are also strictly prohibited.

    Twilight Swan House in Saint Helens, Oregon

    Twilight Swan House

    Twilight Swan House

    You can book a stay in the iconic movie home of Bella and Charlie Swan, where the fan-favorite series first began. Featured in the first movie of the cult following vampire franchise, this charming 1930s house in downtown St. Helens is perfect for fans and close to the riverfront and Portland.

    Linville Manor in Upper Marlboro, Maryland

    Linville Manor

    Linville Manor

    Dating back to the 1600s, Linville Manor is known as one of Maryland’s most haunted spots and was featured on HGTV’s :Scariest Houses America” this season. Legend has it that spirits convene in the house at 1:11 AM, and mysterious crashes echo through the halls. The four-bedroom historic home sits on four acres.

    Stranger Things – Byers Home in Fayetteville, Georgia

    Stranger Things - Byers Home_Photo Credit Arrived.

    Book a stay at the The Stranger Things’ Byers home

    Did you know that you can stay in the home where Strangers Things was filmed? The Byers home isn’t associated with Netflix, but it’s the iconic location that served as the home to Jonathan, Joyce, and WIll Byers in the hit show.

    For more than a year, dozens of fans and professionals worked to design this vacation rental, curating every VHS tape, vinyl record, board game, and trinket for you. Unique amenities include the opportunity to watch “Stranger Things” episodes under the interactive Christmas light wall inspired by the Byers’ living room from the series and play board games or Dungeons and Dragons in the Upside Down-inspired bunk room. You can also listen to vinyl records or play Amiga 500 games in Jonathan’s recreated room and ride BMX bikes around the property.

    Haunted Mansion Inspired Ghostly Retreat in Fullerton, California

    haunted mansion theme park retreat

    Haunted Mansion Inspired Retreat

    This immersive retreat features fan-favorite replicas and ghostly illusions, making guests feel like they’re spending the night in the beloved theme park mansion. If you choose, the home contains elements of illusion, sights, and sounds that occur throughout your entire stay.

    Historic Morgue and Paranormal Investigation! In Ozark, Missouri

    Historic Morgue and Paranormal Investigation

    Historic Morgue and Paranormal Investigation

    This eerie madeover morgue offers antique décor with a modern touch and even provides paranormal research equipment for brave guests.

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  • Mass. readying what-if plans ahead of possible federal government shutdown

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    State government officials are girding for the possibility of a federal government shutdown, and executive branch leaders have been instructed to summarize concerns about their ability to address payroll concerns and lay out their plans to protect Massachusetts residents and resources.

    “We are asking departments for a quick turnaround, with responses to this memo due on Tuesday, September 30 by 5:00 pm.,” officials in the Office of the Comptroller and the Executive Office of Administration and Finance wrote Sept. 23 in a memo to state chief fiscal officers, budget directors and general counsels.

    Thomas Smith-Vaughan, chief operating officer in the Office of the Comptroller, and Assistant Secretary for Budget Christopher Marino told state officials in the memo that with the federal fiscal year set to begin Oct. 1, Congress has not passed any of the 12 full-year appropriations bills needed to fund the government.

    In the event of a shutdown, they wrote, federal agencies “must discontinue all non-essential discretionary functions until new funding legislation is passed and signed into law” but essential services will continue to function, as well as mandatory spending programs such as Social Security.

    NBC10 Boston political commentator Sue O’Connell said President Donald Trump “isn’t bluffing” with his threat to use a government shutdown to fire federal workers permanently.

    The warning comes as partisan gridlock paralyzes Congress, which has failed to agree on a short-term continuing resolution or full-year appropriations. According to NBC News, members of Congress are on recess until Monday, Sept. 29, giving them just two days to act before the Oct. 1 deadline. With control of the House and Senate split, any funding deal will require bipartisan support — at least 60 votes in the Senate — a threshold that has proven elusive amid disagreements over priorities between Democrats and Republicans.

    The prospect of a shutdown comes as Massachusetts is navigating significant fiscal complexity. The Legislature passed a stream of funding bills earlier this year to address shortfalls in the fiscal 2025 budget, and the state’s $61 billion fiscal 2026 budget signed by Gov. Maura Healey this summer relies heavily on federal dollars.

    About $15.6 billion of the fiscal 2026 budget comes from federal reimbursements and grants, the vast majority of which support MassHealth through Medicaid payments.

    “A shutdown could create challenges for certain spending accounts in the General Federal Grants Fund, revenue collected through federal reimbursement, and for programs run and funded primarily by the federal government,” the memo says.

    Among the programs flagged as vulnerable are Medicaid waiver services at MassHealth and the Department of Developmental Services, the federal highway capital project fund, and Federal Emergency Management Agency grants. These categories align closely with where the state receives the bulk of its federal support.

    An analysis from the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation recently estimated that federal cuts to Medicaid alone could have a $100 million impact on the state’s fiscal 2026 budget.

    The memo also notes that “agencies should not assume that additional state funding will be available. Therefore, please identify any state funding that would be required for the state to take on responsibility for critical federal programs and indicate whether and when legislative authorization would be required,” the memo says.

    Departments are being asked to assess their ability to cover bi-weekly payroll for employees currently paid through federal sources.

    A hearing is planned at the State House on Tuesday, the day before the shutdown deadline, where state officials will hear from economists and policy experts about the implications of federal funding shifts on the state’s economy.

    Real gross domestic product increased in the United States at an annual rate of 3.8% in the second quarter, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, after a 0.6% contraction in the first quarter — a sign of economic growth that has yet to resolve underlying fiscal tensions.

    The potential shutdown coincides with a broader retrenchment in federal fiscal commitments, particularly in areas like health care and nutrition assistance, putting further pressure on state-level services.

    Departments in Massachusetts have been through this before. According to the memo, agencies were asked to develop contingency plans in case of federal shutdowns in 2013, 2015, 2019, 2020, 2021, and most recently in 2024.

    “Negotiations are ongoing to attempt to reach a budget deal before the October 1 deadline. However, we must be prepared for the possibility that federal government operations and/or federal funding for many purposes and programs will not be authorized beyond that date,” the memo says.

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    Michael P. Norton and Sam Drysdale

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  • MBTA approves plan to fine drivers who park in bus lanes or block stops

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    The MBTA’s board of directors has approved a new plan to use automated cameras on buses and at stops to fine drivers who park or stop in bus lanes or at stops.

    The state passed a new law in January opening the door for this type of ticketing. The goal of the program is to stop people from parking at the bus stops and in the bus lanes.

    Getting around Boston can be a full contact sport. Even for award-winning chef Jamie Bissonnette, who uses the Silver Line regularly.

    “It is incredibly frustrating,” Bissonnette said.

    Especially on a bus.

    “People are stopping to drop off packages, to pick people up, to wait for somebody,” Bissonnette said.

    “The bus has to stop, wait for an opportunity to get into the other lane and then go around,” added Maribeth Crane, of Boston.

    Starting on Jan. 1, 2026, the MBTA is launching automated camera enforcement that will send a ticket to any driver who stops or parks in a bus stop or bus lane.

    “So there is a lot of things that can go wrong when buses can’t access the curb,” said Alexandra Hallowell, director of transit priority for the MBTA. “And when they are blocked, riders using wheelchairs or walkers are prevented from accessing service.”

    The fines for passenger cars start at $25 and increase to $125. Commercial vehicles start at $50. The T said there will be a large education campaign out of the gate, with warnings. Some people contend the fines need to be higher.

    “No, it’s not enough,” one person told us. “My wife and I were talking about this this morning. It should be $500 right off the rip.”

    This will all kick off in January with a two-month educational campaign along two Silver Line routes in Boston’s South End. The MBTA said there are strict rules to help keep privacy, including only keeping the bus camera video for a limited time.

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    Robert Goulston

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  • Man stabbed multiple times in Brockton

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    A man was rushed to the hospital after he was stabbed multiple times overnight in Brockton, Massachusetts.

    The Brockton Police Department says it responded around 2:19 a.m. Thursday to several 911 calls reporting a disturbance in the area of Somerset Place and Main Street, and officers arrived on scene to find a 35-year-old man with injuries.

    Emergency care was provided to the victim, and he was taken to a local hospital where he’s listed in stable condition, police added.

    No arrests were immediately announced, and it’s unclear what led up to this stabbing.

    Anyone with information is urged to contact Brockton police at 508-941-0200. An investigation is active and ongoing.

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    Kaitlin McKinley Becker

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  • Massachusetts cranberry farmers choosing to restore their bogs into wetlands amid economic headwinds

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    Carver, Massachusetts — For Jarrod Rhodes, a fourth-generation cranberry farmer in Carver, Massachusetts, a 30-acre state project is taking a portion of his family’s land back in time.

    “In 10 years, I hope it looks like a natural swamp,” Rhodes told CBS News of the project’s outcome. “And just, kind of, everything that it may have looked like, you know, before we were here.” 

    As cranberry prices fall due to global competition and costs increase due to labor issues, higher utility costs and extreme weather, cranberry farmers like Rhodes are part of the Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration’s Cranberry Bog Program that pays farmers to turn unproductive bogs back into wetlands.

    The restoration project for the bogs owned by the Rhodes family is about 95% complete. It will be only a matter of time before native plants begin to return. 

    Massachusetts has restored over 500 acres of wetlands over the past 15 years through the program, with another 500 acres planned. 

    According to the Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration, the state has about 13,250 acres of cranberry farms. Massachusetts is the second-largest grower of cranberries in the U.S. behind Wisconsin, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    The state allocates around $1 million a year to the restoration program, while leveraging other local and federal grants to do these restorations. 

    For Massachusetts cranberry farmers, the program is one way to preserve their land as a generation of farmers nears retirement.

    “They want to make sure that the land that they’ve tended to for so long is like, in good hands, whether that be a restoration program, or passing it on to the next generation,” said Karen Cahill, deputy executive director of the Cape Cod Cranberry Growers Association, a trade group which represents cranberry farmers in the state. 

    Under the program, the farmers keep the land, but the public can enjoy it too. An example of a restoration process that worked was the Eel River headwaters in Plymouth in 2010, where 60 acres of former bogs are now beautiful wetlands, filtering water, storing carbon and providing storm resilience. They are also open for hiking and wildlife.

    Beth Lambert helps oversee the state’s restoration program, including the projects at Eel River and Carver.

    “Many of the cranberry farms in Massachusetts were constructed on wetlands,” Lambert said. “And what we’re doing is, we’re restoring those underlying drivers of water, the soil, and then we let Mother Nature take it from there.”

    Back on Rhodes’ farm, streams now wind through areas where cranberry vines once grew.

    “It’s cool to see it kind of all bare,” Rhodes said. “Just kind of waiting for it to grow back and see if it actually works the way that it was supposed to.” 

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  • Massachusetts cranberry bogs restored into wetlands amid economic headwinds

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    As cranberry prices fall due to global competition, and costs increase due to labor issues, higher utility costs and extreme weather, cranberry farmers like Jarrod Rhodes are part of the Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration’s Cranberry Bog Program that pays farmers to turn unproductive bogs back into wetlands. CBS Boston Meteorologist Jacob Wycoff reports.

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  • Police and MSPCA investigation underway in Plympton

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    Law enforcement and the MSPCA are investigating a situation in Plympton, Massachusetts, on Tuesday afternoon.

    Plympton police confirmed that they, along with the MSPCA, were on scene at a situation on Lake Street. The public is asked to avoid the area, though investigators said there is no threat to the general public.

    There is an increased law enforcement presence in the area, police noted.

    More details were not immediately available.

    This is a breaking story. Check back for updates.

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    Thea DiGiammerino

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  • Fall officially arrives with the autumnal equinox

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    Fall has officially arrived. Summer has come to an end, meaning cooler and shorter days are on the horizon. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Fall begins Monday, Sept. 22
    • The 2025 autumnal equinox happens at 2:19 p.m. ET
    • The largest daily loss of daylight occurs in September



    The change in seasons occurs with the solstice or the equinox determined by the Earth’s tilt and orbit around the sun. 

    What is the equinox?

    The Earth is tilted at a 23.5-degree angle, and as it travels around the sun, the Earth’s axis is tilted toward or away from the sun.

    During the equinox, the Earth’s axis and its orbit line up, allowing the sun’s rays to shine directly on the equator. This means that both hemispheres get an equal amount of sunlight.

    Meteorological Fall vs. Astronomical Fall

     

    The meteorological seasons are calendar-based, whereas the astronomical seasons rely on the Earh’s position to the sun. 

    Meteorological fall occurs from Sept. 1 to Nov. 30. The meteorological seasons are broken down evenly into 3-month periods based on temperature and weather cycles. 

    Astronomical fall typically starts between Sept. 21 and Sept. 23. This varies because of leap years, which can shift the start date by a day or two. 

    Why do we lose so much daylight?

    We have been slowly losing more and more daylight since the summer solstice in June, and will continue to lose more daylight until the winter solstice in December. The largest daily loss of daylight occurs in September, especially as the autumnal equinox approaches.

    The Earth’s 23.5-degree tilt is the main reason we see daylight changes throughout the year. Your latitude also plays a role as well.

    This time of year, the Northern Hemisphere tilts away from the sun, leading to a decrease in daylight. Areas located closer to the equator will see less variation in daylight hours as opposed to areas located closer to the North Pole.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Ramel Carpenter

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  • Arrest log

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    The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.

    LOWELL

    • Sanina Sang, 21, 9 Kimball Ave., Lowell; warrant (motor vehicle charges).

    • Sameer Abdu, 22, 353 Stevens St., First Floor, Lowell; disorderly conduct.

    • Neftaly Nunez De La Cruz, 37, 37 Bodwell St., Lawrence; fugitive from justice, warrant (failure to appear for jury duty).

    • Jennifer Toupin, 51, 1 Danforce Road, Apt. 21, Nashua, N.H.; warrant (failure to appear for fraud), courtesy booking (U.S. Park Police).

    • Winner Mandeni, 22, 190 First St., Apt. A, Lowell; indecent assault and battery on person 14 years or older.

    • Morselle Simmons, 20, 3 Ardell St., Lowell; assault and battery with dangerous weapon causing severe bodily injury (knife).

    • Dennis Foster, 46, homeless; possession of Class E drug, possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, possession of Class A drug with intent to distribute.

    • Kinh Do, 49, 176B Kinsley St., Nashua, N.H.; warrants (motor vehicle charges, suspended license).

    • Roland Rodriguez Jr., 34, 256 Market St., No. 115, Lowell; warrant (operation of motor vehicle with suspended license).

    • Carmen Ortiz, 36, 34 Hurd St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for assault and battery on disabled/person over 60).

    • Jahiem Smith, 18, 43 Exeter St., Lowell; warrant (failure to stop for police).

    • Amanda Bellan, 29, homeless; warrant (destruction of property).

    • Kenthynia Saintil, 19, 125 Dover St., Lowell; operating motor vehicle without license.

    • Tanisha Gray, 39, 186 Market St., Apt. 5, Lowell; public drinking.

    • Thubalethu Mnyama, 41, 10 Cottage Ave., Nashua, N.H.; public drinking.

    • Franklyn Liranzo, 46, 15 Chippewa St., Third Floor, Lowell; wanton destruction of property.

    • Andrews Lanzarin, 42, no fixed address; trespassing.

    • Jason Kasilowski, 49, homeless; trespassing.

    • Michael Carroll, 50, 201 Middlesex St., Lowell; unlawful camping on public property, violation of bylaws/ordinances (knife).

    • Jason Ribeiro, 36, 9 Fort Hill Ave., Third Floor, Lowell; receive/buy/possess/conceal stolen motor vehicle.

    • Danny Santos, 36, 4 Hill Ave., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for use of motor vehicle without authority).

    • Roeun Peov, 69, 43 Summer St., Apt. 219, Lowell; public drinking.

    • Jason Ferrer, 44, 25 Common Ave., Lowell; public drinking.

    • Alana Guarini, 21, homeless; assault with dangerous weapon (frying pan), warrants (larceny of motor vehicle, failure to appear for operating motor vehicle under influence).

    • Miguel Rivera, 34, 158 Concord Road, Billerica; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.

    • Catherine Doyle, 49, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for trespassing).

    • James Bowman, 64, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for two counts of larceny under $1,200, shoplifting by asportation, breaking and entering vehicle at nighttime).

    WESTFORD

    • Freddie Serrano, 58, King Street, Littleton; carrying dangerous weapon, two bicycle violations (false name, wrong side of roadway).

    WILMINGTON

    • Michael Adam Holden, 36, 2111 Avalon Drive, Wilmington; uninsured motor vehicle, unregistered motor vehicle.

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    Staff Report

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  • Trump admin asks Supreme Court to restore anti-trans passport policy

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    Donald Trump’s administration has filed an emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to reinstate a passport policy that doesn’t recognize transgender, nonbinary, or intersex identities.

    The policy had been blocked by a nationwide injunction from a federal judge in Massachusetts, and an appeals court declined to lift the injunction.

    In January, Secretary of State Marco Rubio directed his staff to stop issuing passports with an X gender marker, which had been available since 2022, and said the State Department would no longer allow passport holders to change their gender marker. Existing passports would remain valid, but new or renewed passports would not reflect the holder’s gender identity. The policy was in keeping with Trump’s executive order saying the federal government would recognize only male and female sexes as assigned at birth.

    Five trans people and two who are nonbinary filed suit against the policy in February in U.S. District Court in Massachusetts. In the case, known as Orr v. Trump, they are represented by the American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Massachusetts, and the law firm of Covington and Burling LLP.

    U.S. District Judge Julia Kobick issued a preliminary injunction in April blocking the policy for six of the seven people who sued — those who doctors said would suffer irreparable harm under the policy. In June, she expanded the injunction to cover almost all trans and nonbinary applicants. The policy is motivated by prejudice and “likely violates the constitutional rights of thousands of Americans,” she wrote. In September, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit refused to lift Kobick’s injunction.

    In the administration’s appeal to the Supreme Court, filed Friday, U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer contended that the injunction “has no basis in law or logic. Private citizens cannot force the government to use inaccurate sex designations on identification documents that fail to reflect the person’s biological sex — especially not on identification documents that are government property and an exercise of the President’s constitutional and statutory power to communicate with foreign governments.”

    Sauer called the passport policy “eminently lawful” and entirely rational, adding, “it is not discrimination based on sex to define a person’s sex as the person’s immutable biological classification rather than the sex with which the person self-identifies.”

    Jon Davidson, senior counsel for the ACLU’s LGBTQ & HIV Project, released a statement saying, “As the lower courts have found, the State Department’s policy is an unjustifiable and discriminatory action that restricts the essential rights of transgender, nonbinary, and intersex citizens.

    “This administration has taken escalating steps to limit transgender people’s health care, speech, and other rights under the Constitution, and we are committed to defending those rights including the freedom to travel safely and the freedom of everyone to be themselves without wrongful government discrimination.”

    The justices have not said if they will hear the appeal.

    This article originally appeared on Advocate: Trump admin asks Supreme Court to restore anti-trans passport policy

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  • When will you see the first freeze this fall?

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    Leaves are changing, and the first day of astronomical fall is next Monday, Sept. 22. Most of the country will begin to see cooler temperatures in the coming weeks, and some won’t have to wait long.

    Even though winter doesn’t begin until December, cold air and freezing temperatures arrive well before then for most of the U.S.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Northern Plains and Intermountain West usually dip down below freezing before September is over
    • Interior New England  and the Great Lakes also see freezing temperatures before most of the country
    • Cold air arrives in Florida, the Gulf Coast and the Desert Southwest last



    Winter arrives at the time time every year on the calendar, but not on your thermometer. Every year is different. The maps below give a good idea of when you can expect the first freeze where you live based on the 1991-2020 U.S. climate normals.

    The maps below show the ‘median,’ or average date of the first freeze. This is when you could expect the first freeze to arrive during a ‘normal’ year. The next one shows the ‘earliest 10%’ which shows a scenario of when colder air arrives early, about once every 10 years. And the last map shows the ‘latest 10%,’ so during a warm year when cold air arrives late.

    Northeast

    Most of the Northeast and New England see the first freeze before or during early fall, in September or early October. The mountains and high elevations across interior New England and the Adirondacks average freezing temperatures sometime in September, with the rest of the Northeast getting freezing cold sometime during October or early November.

    Midwest

    The Upper Midwest and Northern Plains also get in on the cold early. Around the Great Lakes and Dakotas, the first freeze typically arrives during September or early October. Further south the wait isn’t much longer. Freezing air usually arrives to the rest of the Midwest sometime before Halloween.

    Northwest

    There are many microclimates across the Northwest, so the arrival of cold air varies. Across the Rockies and Intermountain West, some areas experience cold year-round and as early as August and early September. The Pacific Northwest might not see freezing temperatures arrive until late October or November thanks to the maritime influence. 

    Southwest

    The Southwest has a variety of climates as well, so the temperatures differ greatly during the fall and winter. The Desert Southwest and coastal California don’t see the arrival of cold air until late in the season, sometimes not until December. Once you get into the high desert and Southern Plains, it arrives much earlier, around October or early November.

    Southeast

    If you live in the Southeast, it still gets cold, especially away from the large bodies of water. In the Appalachians and areas away from the Gulf and Atlantic coast, freezing temperatures usually begin before Thanksgiving in late October or early November. The Gulf Coast and Florida, however, wait much longer, with freezing temperatures not arriving until late November or December. In South and Central Florida and southern Texas, freezing temperatures may never even arrive.

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Meteorologist Reid Lybarger

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  • Three’s Company for Two Generations in One New England House

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    Nina Kelley thought she’d spend the rest of her life in Westwood, N.J., where she and her husband lived for 50 years, raising four children.

    But when her husband, Skip Kelley, who served as Westwood’s mayor from 1995 to 2003, died in 2022, she quickly tired of maintaining their 1,560-square-foot house on her own.

    [Did you recently buy a home? We want to hear from you. Email: thehunt@nytimes.com. Sign up here to have The Hunt delivered to your inbox every week.]

    “After my husband passed away, I found I really didn’t mind living alone,” said Ms. Kelley, 77. “I was devastated, but I wasn’t terribly lonely. But my handling the maintenance and the bills and all the stuff that he and I did together — I just found it exhausting.”

    Ms. Kelley’s three sons lived locally, “but they work, they’re busy, they have families,” she said. (All three of her sons did offer to have her move in, she added.)

    Then, last fall, a friend made an unexpected bid on her house. “The first time he walked into my house, he looked around, he goes, ‘I love your house. Do you want to sell it?’” she recalled. Within a few months, Ms. Kelley had sold it to him for $699,000, giving her the jumpstart she needed to find her next home.

    Her daughter and son-in-law, Erin and Chris Kellett, both 43, had settled in Rhode Island, and Ms. Kellett wanted her mother close by so they could support each other (both have mitochondrial disease, a genetic condition that leaves their energy depleted). With a budget of about $700,000, they started looking for a home in Rhode Island or southern Massachusetts that would accommodate the three of them, plus Ms. Kelley’s cat and the couple’s dog, Ollie.

    Ms. Kelley would purchase the property, and the Kelletts would pay a reduced rent in exchange for helping with chores and maintenance. The ideal place would have separate living areas so they could maintain privacy — a trend that’s gaining more traction.

    “We’re seeing an increase in families coming together and looking for multigenerational home opportunities, or even a property where they can build an accessory dwelling unit in the backyard,” said their agent, Lexi Cardoso of Residential Properties.

    The Kelletts wanted Ms. Kelley to be on the main level, and to have a yard for Ollie. There was one other non-negotiable, and it was a big one — or, rather, a long one: Ms. Kelley was taking her 13-foot longarm quilting machine. It didn’t have to have its own room — she’d always kept it in her bedroom — but it did require a significant space.

    “If we didn’t have floor plans, we’d have to bring the measuring tape,” Ms. Cardoso said.

    The Kelletts had lived in Providence, R.I., for years, so they were familiar with the area and would tour new listings first. “We had our pre-assessment routine,” Ms. Kellett said. “We’d look from the lens of: Can this really fit the quilting machine? Is mom going to be interested in this neighborhood? Is it separate enough? All the things.”

    Find out what happened next by answering these two questions:

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    V. L. Hendrickson

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  • Brockton native living in Florida fights alligator to save her puppy

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    When Danie Wright moved from Massachusetts to Florida 20 years ago, she knew alligators might be part of the picture.

    But she never imagined she’d not only come face to face, but fist to face.

    “I was like, ‘Punch, punch, elbow, elbow, kick,’” Wright told NBC10 Boston.

    Proudly wearing her Tom Brady jersey, the 53-year-old Brockton native talked about her frightening encounter with an alligator in her backyard in Land O’Lakes.

    “I heard this squeal, and then I was pulled,” she said.

    Wright was walking her dog, Dax, a 4-month-old Shih Tzu, along a creek when an alligator suddenly snatched her puppy.

    “I wasn’t going to listen to my dog get eaten, and see it and hear it,” she said. “I’d end up in a psych ward if I went through that.”

    The three of them struggled in the water.

    The alligator had grabbed Dax at his air tag, so Wright was able to pull Dax away, but then the gator latched on to Wright’s arm.

    “I started punching and elbowing and kicking,” she said. “I have no idea in what order, but I was like, ‘Somehow, you have got to get your arm out of this alligator’s mouth.”

    She credits her upbringing in Brockton for her ability to fend off the gator.

    “My dad was a Brockton cop,” she said. “He just said,’ Anyone ever gets ahold of you, just fight, fight for your life.’”


    Courtesy

    Courtesy

    Wright’s wounded arm

    Eventually, the alligator let go of her arm, giving up after taking a pounding.

    Dax wasn’t hurt at all, but Wright was left with multiple lacerations on her arm.

    “I could have lost my arm and my dog,” she said.

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    Michael Rosenfield

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